God the Holy Spirit. Third person of the Holy Trinity,
truly God and absolutely equal to the Father and the
Son, co-eternal. Now, what else can you tell me about
the Holy Spirit? It gets a little tougher after that,
doesn’t it? We find it much easier to describe God the
Father, because we understand what a father is. And it’s
even easier to speak of Jesus Christ Who came to us in
the flesh as a man. But the Holy Spirit, God, is not so
easily talked about. And that’s one reason you don’t
hear many priests giving sermons about the Holy Spirit.
It’s difficult for me to speak, so I will let others do
the talking.
St. Athanasius, tells us that God the Spirit performs
the work of sanctifying people, and when we possess Him,
we possess God. The Father created everything by Him,
and He is unchangeable, immense, unified and divine.
The texts for this evening’s vespers teach us that God
the Holy Spirit is Life and the Giver of Life, Light and
the Giver of Light, good by nature and the source of all
goodness, and it is through Him that the Father is known
and the Son is glorified. He is the Living Spring,
mystically gushing forth for us, the Spirit of Wisdom
and the Spirit of Knowledge, good, upright,
understanding, majestic. He purifies us from our sins.
He is God and He deifies us. He brings light to our
hearts and strengthens our faith.
All of these are poetic descriptions of the Spirit and
perhaps most suitably so, because, since He is Spirit,
even as the theologians attempt to tie Him down to
academic and intellectual explanations, perhaps He is
best spoken of in terms of symbols, analogies and
poetry.
Another way we can learn about the Spirit is through
what He does. How many can remember the seven Gifts of
the Holy Spirit? The only reason I ask is because that
is one list that I can remember. Wisdom, Understanding,
Counsel, Knowledge, Fortitude, Piety and the Fear of the
Lord. These are the gifts the Holy Spirit brings to us
and desires to increase in us.
The gift of Wisdom helps us better contemplate and
meditate on divine truth and to judge all things
according to that truth. Understanding allows us to more
easily grasp and comprehend revealed truth. Counsel
helps us to judge promptly and correctly what should be
done in difficult situations. Knowledge perfects our
faith and allows us to see God’s providence for us in
whatever situation enters our lives and helps us
distinguish between impulses to temptation and
inspirations of grace. The gift of Fortitude provides us
with strength for our wills so that we may be ready to
undergo trials for the love of God, courage to bear with
difficulties, firmness of purpose in doing what is good
and perseverance in the face of trials, disappointments,
persecution and humiliation. Piety gives us the ability
to have a love for God as our Father, and a willingness
to obey Him as loving children. Fear of the Lord is a
gift that inspires us with profound respect for the
majesty of God. It helps us be people who dread to
offend the Lord, and who are confident in His power to
help us.
And then we can learn about the Holy Spirit through the
twelve Fruits He provides. They are: Charity, Joy,
Peace, Patience, Kindness, Goodness, Generosity,
Gentleness, Faithfulness, Modesty, Self-control and
Chastity. May I repeat them?
I have thought of seven “gifts of the world” to contrast
with the gifts of the Spirit: Self-centeredness, Quest
for Power, Love of Money and Material Goods, Desire for
Pleasure, Lust, Dishonesty and Deception and Lust
(because some gifts are stronger than others and twice
as prevalent.) My list. But notice the contrast between
those who live with the Fruits of the Spirit and those
who live according to the spirit of the world. I think
it is not always easy for us who live in this world to
live apart from the spirit of this world. Sometimes it
may even be difficult to tell the difference. When
people use the word “love” does it necessarily mean the
same thing as when we speak of Christian love / charity?
When non-believers say they perform works of charity,
even though they may indeed be very good works, is that
what we mean by Christian charity? And these days does
the word “modesty” even appear in the vocabulary of most
people in our community?
How do we live as Christians in a world where so many
people reject or ignore the love of God for them, and
the truth of God for them? How do we live in a world
where people tell us not to impose our religious
morality on them even while they impose their secular
morality on us? How can we distinguish true love from
false, genuine compassion from sentimentality, authentic
truth from “truth for today”? It is only by the gifts of
the Holy Spirit that we can live faithfully in a culture
that has little faith, and so that we can stand for the
truth instead of for the latest fads and slogans.
And if we live as people who enjoy the Fruits of the
Holy Spirit, and by the Gifts He provides, we give
example to others of God’s love for us. May we be bold
enough to invite others to share I that same love, even
as we pray for and encourage one another in faith.