"Love follows knowledge."
"Beauty above all beauty!"
– St. Catherine of Siena

Thursday, June 4, 2026

LotR, The Fellowship of the Ring, Post 1

I am starting a new series of posts on J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings, hereby the acronym, LotR.  As you may know, the LotR is divided into three volumes, each a novel length work in itself.  It is a modern day epic, and some call it the greatest novel of the 20th century.  I would not go that far, but it is a great work.  The three volumes go under the titles, The Fellowship of the Ring (Vol I), The Two Towers (Vol II), and The Retrurn of the King (Vol III). 

The LotR became a recurring read at my Goodreads Catholic Thought Book Club.  A recurring read is a book that is too long for one group read, and so broken down into segments.  We read one segment, pause to read other books in a cycle of genres, and when the cycle returns to the recurring read we pick up where we left off for another segment.  The natural divisions of the LotR made it natural to read a volume for each segment.  Last year we read The Fellowship of the Ring.  The posts that come out for this volume came out of that discussion.  We are currently reading The Two Towers, and eventually I will be posting those discussions.  I expect the discussions for The Return of the King may be ready for posting next year.  The series of posts will be linked to each volume of the trilogy. 

 


Introduction

It’s hard to write an introduction on The Lord of the Rings.  Everyone has either read it, saw the movie, or heard people talking about it.  Heck, it’s referenced even in a few of Led Zeppelin songs, most famously in “Ramble On.”  

 

I ain't tellin' no lie

Mine's a tale that can't be told

My freedom I hold dear

How years ago in days of old

When magic filled the air

T'was in the darkest depths of Mordor

I met a girl so fair

But Gollum and the evil one

Crept up and slipped away with her

Her, her, yeah

Ain't nothing I can do, no

 

The song doesn’t really have much to do with LotR, but the allusion to Mordor is fascinating.  I remember hearing the song as a teen before I had heard of LotR, and the allusion certainly went over my head.  Allusions to LotR are in a number of Zeppelin songs: “Ramble On,” “Stairway to Heaven,” “Misty Mountain Hop,” “The Battle of Evermore,” and “Bron-Y-Aur.” 

 

When one of the greatest and most popular rock bands, who’s morals and themes are hardly in line with that of J.R.R. Tolkien, has a love of LotR, it is evident that the cultural influence of LotR is deep and wide.

As an introduction, I’m not going to highlight the story.  What I’m going to provide can certainly be found on the internet, but I am mostly going by a biography I read last year on Tolkien, Tolkien, Man and Myth: A Literary life by Joseph Pearce.  It’s a good bio and I recommend it.

The background Tolkien provides in the Prologue—that is, that the story is a sequel to Tolkien’s previous work, The Hobbit, and that the story is part of a prehistory where the earth is in a stage in time called “Middle-Earth,” where humanoids called hobbits, elves, dwarves, and several other categorizations, including men, lived upon the earth.  As I write that, some doubt on that sentence enters my mind.  I’m not exactly sure Tolkien considers all those categories humanoids.  I will go with that until proven otherwise, but the story is certainly fantastic.

The novel is considered a fantasy novel, but it is also considered an epic.  It fits the form of ancient epics, and it’s scope is most certainly vast and epic!  The novel starts as a quest, utilizes the narrative form of a journey, and before the end is achieved a war between forces of good and evil rages around the questing hero.  There are struggles against outer forces and there are internal struggles within many of the characters, especially Frodo, the questing hero.  The continuity with the predecessor book is explained early.  Bilbo Baggins, a hobbit from the shire, on an adventure of his own some sixty years prior finds a magic ring that allows the wearer of the ring to become invisible.  Suffice it to say Bilbo returns prosperous from his adventures and lives a comfortable life in the shire.  But in his old age and with coming death he gives the ring to his nephew Frodo.  In time Frodo learns of the danger associated with the ring and is asked to dispose of it.  We’ll get into these details as the novel unfolds.

###

Kerstin Comment:

We'll encounter a lot of geography reading this book. Both hardcopies and electronic versions of the book contain at least the Middle Earth map, and maybe even the Shire segment, though they may be hard to read. On my ancient kindle maps are worthless. Last time I read the book l printed out various segments, though I don't remember the exact websites. There is plenty online. An interesting one is an interactive map where you can map out the journeys of the various characters.

My Reply to Kerstin:

Thanks Kerstin. That's quite amazing. It will probably take me weeks to figure out how to interact with the map.

###

J.R.R. Tolkien

The author’s biography is pertinent to this work.  Here are some raw facts.  John Ronald Reuel (J.R.R.) Tolkien was born in 1892 in what I think now is South Africa.  His father was a bank manager there and married Mabel, who had come out be with him, in the Anglican Church.  JRR’s younger brother Hilary was also born in that same region of South Africa, but because of JRR’s health, Mabel took the children back to England, outside the city of Birmingham, in 1896.  That same year, the father dies in South Africa, leaving Mabel impoverished trying to sustain two small boys.  She received help from several of her and her husband’s family members.

Mabel and her sister became interested in Catholicism, and both converted in 1900, taking along her two boys.  There was a huge push back from their families, and Mabel’s sister was forced to abandon her new faith by her husband.  Mabel refused to leave Catholicism, and most of the financial help she was getting from her family was stopped.  She really struggled and fought for her faith, and this left a strong impression on JRR.  Because she did not have the money to send her boys to school and because she was herself apparently well educated (she could speak four languages including Latin) she became the primary educator of her boys.  JRR’s love of languages must have had its source from his mother. 

Mabel moved to Birmingham to be closer to a Catholic Church, and it was there the family became friends with Fr. Francis Xavier Morgan.  The contrast between the country life outside of Birmingham and the city life inside of the city also made a strong impression on Tolkien.  He hated the city with its trams, busy street life, smoking factories, and railroads.  All of Tolkien’s life he would despise automobiles. 

In 1903 Mabel died from what appears to be complications of diabetes.  So at the age of eleven, JRR and his brother, a couple of years younger, were left orphans.  They were taken in by Fr. Francis, who Mabel had made sure would prevent her and her husband’s families from taking away their Catholicism.  Fr. Francis turned out to be a very good foster father to the boys, encouraging their learning, their faith, and their development.  The boys helped in the church, and so learned their faith very well. 



In 1909 JRR met a young lady, Edith, who was three years older, and fell in love.  Tolkien was only eighteen at the time, and this was a big issue for Fr. Francis who refused to allow JRR to pursue this relationship.  As far as I can tell, it was strictly because Fr. Francis felt JRR was not old enough to be in a romantic relationship.  He forbid JRR to pursue it and forced him to break it off until JRR was legally independent at the age of twenty-one.  JRR honorably did as he was ordered, but upon immediately turning twenty-one, re-located Edith (in 1913) and asked to resume the relationship.  She happened to now be involved with another man, but she broke that off and returned to JRR.  Despite anger from her family, she converted to Catholicism in 1914.

JRR was also now in college at Oxford, and they put marriage off until he could be stably employed, but then the Great War (WWI) had started.  Upon completing his degree in 1915, Tolkien enlisted in the Army and married Edith in 1916.  He saw action at the front throughout this time.  Many of his friends were killed in the war.  Late in 1916 he contracted Trench Fever, a disease transmitted by lice and was sent home as an invalid.  Trench Fever is a recurring bacterial infection, and apparently it led to Tolkien being emaciated.  He remained invalid for the remainder of the war.

His marriage was by all accounts a good marriage.  They had four children: John (b. 1917), Michael (1920), Christopher (1924), and Priscilla (1929).  He became a professor of philology and literature, a translator, a scholar of ancient works, a writer of stories, novels, and poetry.  He was a college professor at several universities, most notably Oxford.  At Oxford he became friends with C. S. Lewis, and was instrumental in Lewis’s conversion from atheism to Christianity.  The two with other literary professors at Oxford formed a group called the Inklings where they met twice weekly and shared their ideas and writings.  I’m reminded of a story of Tolkien reading from his drafts of LotR, and one of the Inklings, Hugo Dyson, an important Shakespeare scholar, who in the middle of Tolkien reading blurted out, “Oh no, not another [expletive] elf!”

Tolkien published The Hobbit in 1937.  He said he wrote it as a children’s book for his children.  He, and many others, distinguish the narrative between The Hobbit and LotR by stipulating that the former is a children’s book while LotR is an adult book.  Frankly I can’t tell the difference.  As far as I’m concerned, The Hobbit can be read as adult story, and the LotR can be and is enjoyed by many children.  I don’t know what makes one a children’s book and one an adult.  The Hobbit is a finely crafted book with subtle themes, superbly structured, and great character insights.  I’ve said in the past that I thought The Hobbit was the greater novel, but I’m looking forward to being persuaded otherwise in this read.

###

Patrick Comment:

WWI affected Tolkien tremendously. Reading about his wartime experience helped me understand LOTR better. Courage is a major theme.



Ellie Comment:

Thank you for the introduction, Manny, it was super interesting! Earlier this year I read a spiritual biography called Tolkien's Faith by Holly Ordway and I definitely recommend that to everybody here, it was amazing to learn how Tolkien's faith had evolved and how it shaped his stories, too.

My Reply to Ellie:

Oh I know of Holly Ordway. I read her biographical, conversion story Not God's Type: An Atheist Academic Lays Down Her Arms. I thought I wrote a review for Goodreads, but apparently I forgot. In fact I don't even have it marked as read. I will have to update that. It was a good read and I recommend it. 

###

What can we say about LotR as a work?  It was written over an extended time period, from 1936 to 1949.  World War II certainly had a hand in inspiration of the work, as well as Tolkien’s experience in the First World War.  Tolkien insisted that the work was not “allegorical nor topical.”  Tolkien states in the introduction his intention.


The prime motive was the desire of a tale-teller to try his hand at a really long story that would hold the attention of readers, amuse them, delight them, and at times maybe excite them or deeply move them.

It should be noted that Tolkien despised allegory, and he did not like most of the fiction of his friend C. S. Lewis, who’s Narnia Chronicles rely on allegory.  That statement of intention is a statement of the pure aesthetics of fiction.  Tolkien first and foremost wants to tell a story of epic proportions.  In this epic narrative, the author creates several languages, a prehistory to humanity, a geography of an earth prior to the current continental positions, and a world populated with different humanoids and fantastical creatures.  It really is epic in proportion.



Though Tolkien states there is no allegory, it’s very hard not to spot some.  “Middle-Earth” is suggestive of Middle English, a time period before the modern.  A war takes place in LotR which seems to be analogous to either of the World Wars.  The fellowship of the central characters seems to suggest Tolkien’s biographical Inklings.  The history of Middle-Earth seems to parody prehistorical movements.  The hobbit shire life seems analogous to small town country English life, current and past.  The various classes of humanoids seem to suggest an analogy to racial differences between actual humans.  Tolkien insisted that there was not a racial component to the book, and I believe him in the sense of the negative associations with race.  The racial component I think should be associated with linguistic family groups such as Germanic, Slavic, Romance languages.  I think—and I’m just speculating—that Tolkien’s philological knowledge of language groups inspired him to create imagined, similar humanoid groups.  Perhaps Tolkien might dispute my speculations.  Here is his statement on use of analogy.

 

Other arrangements could be devised according to the tastes or views of those who like allegory or topical reference. But I cordially dislike allegory in all its manifestations, and always have done so since I grew old and wary enough to detect its presence. I much prefer history, true or feigned, with its varied applicability to the thought and experience of readers. I think that many confuse ‘applicability’ with ‘allegory’; but the one resides in the freedom of the reader, and the other in the purposed domination of the author.

Perhaps I am confusing “applicability” with allegory, but I don’t know what he means by that and he never explains it.  While what I perceive as allegory in LotR is not a strong corresponding allegory (there are levels of allegorical correspondence), I still perceive some.  Frankly this subtle allegory I think helps the novel, and perhaps is what he means by “applicability.”  Perhaps we are in some agreement.

Some of the themes we will see is good versus evil, the power of evil to disorder our inner being, the fellowship between friends, the simplicity of rural life, and the richness of folklore of common folk.  I think LotR is part of the folkloric Renaissance and artistic movements that began with Romanticism in the 19th century and has blossomed since then.  Indeed, Tolkien in LotR uses folklore and creates the folklore of the characters in a way that is truly remarkable.  I personally am not so interested in the fantasy aspect of the novel, but I captivated by the folkloric elements, taken from real life and imagined. 

I’m sure there is more to point out, and I look forward to discussing them, but we need to leave the introduction here.

I hope that’s a satisfactory introduction. 

###

Kelly’s Comment:

I read somewhere that CS Lewis also denied that the Narnia books used allegory. For some reason the idea of one's works containing allegory suggests putting limits on what the reader might experience? Which I take as using the term applicability -- the way in which you can read something and I can read something and both go away with something different.

And you're right Manny, this is my (at least) fifth reading of this series, PLUS having seen the movies several times, and still I come away with something new each time!

I am using my old set of physical books, which I have to turn pages very gingerly. I got the Kindle version as backup, haha.

Happy reading!

Bruce’s Reply to Kelly:

That depends on how you define allegory. If CS Lewis did say that Narnia was not allegory, maybe it was because he saw the allusions in Narnia as so obvious that it was like hitting the reader in the head with a 2X4.

My Reply to Kelly:

Well, there is a stronger level allegory in the Narnia books than LotR. I understand Tolkien's point about over use of allegory. I think Tolkien's dislike is just a little quirky on this. Great works of literature have used allegory. Dante's Divine Comedy, the greatest. Gawain and the Green Knight, which Tolkien translated from the Middle English, has strong levels of allegory. Why Tolkien dislikes allegory is there at the end of the quote I put up; he dislikes the "domination of the author." Yes, as you point out, allegory forces the reader to a particular way of reading, and Tolkien prefers a multiplicity of way of reading a book.

 

Funny you should mention old hardcopy books. I too am reading from my old hardcopy from some forty years ago. It was read twice, so not as flimsy as yours but it's still delicate. To my surprise, I had no notes inside the book. It was from so long ago it was before I started writing notes in the pages. I always do that now, and I am now writing notes in this old hardcopy!

Frances’s Comment:

There’s a lovely, informative video on You Tube which adds color to the story of Tolkien, LOTR and Tolkien’s role in leading C.S. Lewis to Christianity. The video is only 13 minutes long. Just Google: You Tube, “On the Power of Fiction, Tolkien, Lewis.”

         

 

Michelle’s Comment:

Word on Fire has an article today on The Fellowship of the Ring.

My Reply to Michelle:

That really is a good article. “Celebrating the Epochal Publication of “The Fellowship of the Ring” 70 Years On” by Holly Ordway.  The relinquishing of power as the central theme. Yes, I had not thought about it in that way before, and it is spot on. Thank you Michelle.  Here is an excerpt:

 

According to Eugene Vinaver, Tolkien once said that “his typical response upon reading a medieval work was to desire not so much to make a philological or critical study of it as to write a modern work in the same tradition.”4 Tolkien was not an antiquarian whose eye is forever fixed on his rearview mirror, but a translator who looks both ahead and behind, aiming to preserve the best that history had to offer by making it accessible to contemporary readers. And to achieve that translation, he had to know both languages, as it were—tongues ancient and modern.

###

What I hope to do from here is go one to three chapters at a time, give a chapter summary, provide my thoughts on the chapters, and provide pertinent discussion of the book that happened at the book club.  I aim to put out a post per week.  Stay tuned.

 


Sunday, May 31, 2026

Sunday Meditation: The Heart of God

On the first Sunday after Pentecost the Church celebrates the Solemnity of the Holy Trinity.  Each liturgical year has different readings, and for Year A the Gospel is the often quoted, “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son.”  Why is this passage read for the Feast of the Holy Trinity?  On the surface it only mentions two of the three persons of the Trinity.  God the Father and the Son are clearly stated.  But look carefully.  The Holy Spirit is a spiraling forth of the love between the Father and the Son.  That love is clearly there, and so then is the Holy Spirit.

 


Today’s Gospel:

 

 

God so loved the world that he gave his only Son,

so that everyone who believes in him might not perish

but might have eternal life.

For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him.

Whoever believes in him will not be condemned,

but whoever does not believe has already been condemned,

because he has not believed in the name of the only Son of God.

~Jn:3:16-18

 

It is so hard to describe the Trinity.  I don’t think you can capture it with one image.  It takes a complex set of words to formulate the Christian notion of the Trinity.  This program, Catholic Saints & Feasts, does a noteworthy job of it in short of a seven minute video. 

 


Catholic Saints & Feasts:

God is the ultimate superlative adjective whose nature admits of no competing God. Christian monotheism stops us from approaching different gods for different things. We believe in one God with one will, one mind, and one plan for mankind.  The Holy Trinity, the God of Christianity, is complex. Clear language must be used and clear thinking deployed to grasp the Christian God.

 

The church believes that God is one in his nature and three in his persons.  This means that if you were in a pitch black room and sensed a presence nearby, your first question would be, "What is that? Is it the dog or the cat, my spouse or the wind?" If it were God in the darkness, he would answer the question of what by saying, "I am God." Satisfied that the presence was a person and not an animal or the wind, the next question would be, "Who are you?" And to that question, God would reply in three successive voices. I am the father. I am the son. I am the holy spirit. A nature is the source of operations, but a person does [music] them. A statue has eyes, but it is not its nature to see.  It is not man's nature to lay eggs or to breathe underwater, but it is the nature of a bird or a fish to do so. Our nature sets the parameters for what actions are possible for us. The daughter of a lion is a lioness and does what lions do. The son of a man is a man and does what men do. And the son of God is God and knows, loves, and acts as God does perfectly.  Our trinitarian supernova is both a unity and a plurality, both one and many at the same time. This means that God does not exist alone but in a community of love. God is not narcissistic admiring his own beauty and perfection.  Instead, the love of the father is directed toward the son for all eternity. And the love of the holy spirit animates and passes between the father and the son. The trinity's three persons do not share portions of the divine nature. They each possess it totally.

 

Our God, distinct in his persons, one in his essence and equal in his majesty, is solemnly invoked as the water spills on our heads at baptism and as the oil is traced on our palms at our anointing. God in all of his complexity and in all of his simplicity is with us always in this world and hopefully in the world to come. Most Holy Trinity, we look to your three persons as a model of true love, knowledge, and community life. Help all marriages and families strive for the high ideal of perfection you set before the world, no matter the discouragement resulting from our sins and imperfections. Amen.

 

Not only did the words make the Trinity understandable, but there were so many beautiful images to present how artists through the ages have tried to capture the Trinity.

For the pastoral homily I turn to Fr. Kris Janczak in his YouTube Channel, Good Soil.  I’m not sure if I’ve ever posted one of Fr. Janczak’s homilies before but I have listened to a few.  I think today he really highlights what is a pastoral understanding of this Solemnity.

 


Fr. Kris:

Even though we celebrate this feast day once a year, every single day we pray to the holy trinity. In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. May almighty God bless you, Father, Son, and the Holy Spirit. Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit. Through him and with him and in him, O God, almighty Father, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, all glory and honor is yours forever and ever.  Sound familiar? See, sometimes we automatically repeat these prayers, forgetting that when we say them, we honor one God who is in three persons.

 

There were much smarter and more educated people in the past who tried but failed. However, I am here to tell you that this is not about understanding but believing. That is not to grasp all this with our brains but with our hearts. And that makes all the difference. There were endless times during Jesus ministry when he repeated, "Believe, have faith, trust me." He didn't ask people to understand.  He asked them to believe. Today he is asking us to believe to believe that the father and the son and the holy spirit are one. One God. Yet what does this mean to us? What does it mean to believe in the Holy Trinity? Well, the holy trinity is united in the greatest love.  The one thing that connects these three, father, son, and the spirit is love. It is love that makes them one God.

 

If I could compare this truth to something, it would be to a marriage between a man and a woman.  During our Catholic wedding ceremony during the mass, before the end of mass, the priest blesses the couple using a unique and beautiful blessing.  It is called the Nuptial Blessing. It is a rather long blessing or prayer if you wish. But there is one sentence in there that says, "God, we pray that they husband and wife become one flesh, become one body." How can they become one flesh? How can they become connected? Only by a true love that they have for each other. They are still two separate people, but they are equal. And by their sacrificial love, they become one, one flesh, husband and wife. And nothing should separate that union.

 

If I could summarize it, through love, persons become one.

 

 

Sunday Meditation: God so loved the world that he gave his only Son.

 

We sang this at our parish today, “All Hail Adored Trinity.”

 


 

All hail, adored Trinity!

All hail, eternal Unity!

O God the Father, God the Son,

And God the Spirit, ever One.

 

Three persons praise we evermore,

One only God our hearts adore:

In thy sure mercy, ever kind,

May we your strong protection find.

 

The Trinity is at the heart of God.

 

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Sunday Meditation: The Birth of the Church

We have come to the conclusion of the Easter season, the Feast of Pentecost Sunday.  It is interesting that of the readings, there are differences between the liturgical years but there are similarities.  The first reading from Acts (2:1-11) where the Holy Spirit descends in tongues of fire is always read no matter which year.  The second reading varies per liturgical year, and the Gospel is usually fixed to the one today, though I have seen options.  I don’t recall any of those options ever being read.

Two years ago, I embedded a clip from Dr. Brant Pitre explaining the Jewish roots of Pentecost.  It is only four minutes long, but it is well worth listening to.  A key takeaway is that the descent of the Holy Spirit in tongues of fire mirrors the descent of God on Mount Sinai in a fire when He brings down the Ten Commandments.  There is more and you should listen to it all.

I found the introduction to today’s Pentecost Mass in the magazine Magnificat (May 2026 Issue, p. 364) particularly insightful.  I will quote it.

 

By the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost, the Church remains in every age vivified and sanctified by Christ’s presence.  The Holy Spirit prepares us with his grace to draw us to Christ.  He manifests the risen Lord to us, opening our minds.  He makes present the mystery of Christ.  He reconciles us, bringing us into communion with God.  And he interiorly perfects our spirit, communicating to it a new dynamism so that it refrains from evil for love.  When the Holy Spirit comes within us, “it is quite natural for people who had been absorbed by the things of this world to become entirely otherworldly in outlook, and for cowards to become people of great courage” (Saint Cyril of Alexandria).

The quote from St. Cyril is excellent but I particularly liked the sentence, “And he interiorly perfects our spirit, communicating to it a new dynamism so that it refrains from evil for love.”

 



Today’s Gospel:

 

On the evening of that first day of the week,

when the doors were locked, where the disciples were,

for fear of the Jews,

Jesus came and stood in their midst

and said to them, "Peace be with you."

When he had said this, he showed them his hands and his side.

The disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord.

Jesus said to them again, "Peace be with you.

As the Father has sent me, so I send you."

And when he had said this, he breathed on them and said to them,

"Receive the Holy Spirit.

Whose sins you forgive are forgiven them,

and whose sins you retain are retained."

~Jn:20:19-23

 

There are many aspects of Pentecost we can explore.  In my introduction above I linked to a post on the Jewish roots of Pentecost.  I also spoke on the Holy Spirit entrance into our hearts, and more on that later in the pastoral homily.  But for the exegesis I would like to post this homily from Archbishop Edward Weisenburger on the meaning of Pentecost as the birth of the Church.


 

Archbishop Weisenburger:

We then come to the Christian experience and meaning of  Pentecost, which is the fiftieth day after Easter, when we celebrate the outpouring of the Holy  Spirit on the Apostles gathered together with our Blessed Mother in the upper room after Jesus'  ascension and the beginning, some would say the "birthday," of the Church itself. But that image of "birthday of the Church" is not a perfect one.  Let me explain. 

 

When that great historical event of Pentecost took place, St. Peter, whom Jesus clearly left in charge, was there. But the papacy as we understand it today was still a long way off. That humble fisherman left in charge often stumbled, made mistakes, and eventually it took his co-workers and St. Paul to correct him in error and get him back on track with the Gospel.  No.  On that first, great, historical Pentecost, with its outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon those gathered in the upper room, there were no basilicas or cathedrals. Not until the 4th century. There was no St. Peter's Square. That would come 16 centuries later. There was no Vatican. That would come 18 centuries later.  There was no pope putting on military armor, like Pope Julius II, going into battle against his enemies to defend the Papal States. There were no encyclicals. We believe the first one came in the early 1700s. There were no Cardinals.  They appeared in the 11th century. There was no formal canon law, which evolved primarily from the 12th century. No Benedictine monks until the fifth century, and no Jesuits until the 16th. 

 

No, at that first, historic Pentecost, with the empowering of the Apostles, and our Blessed Mother with the Holy Spirit, none of this was there. And don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that these developments were not willed directly and inspired by the Holy Spirit, or profoundly helpful as the Church grew through the centuries. I'm only saying that all too often we identify "the Church" with real estate, bureaucracy, titles, offices, and laws, instead of the foundation upon which it would be built, which were the faithful, the people themselves. 

 

When you think about it, what the Holy Spirit fell upon at Pentecost was unwashed fishermen, peasant carpenters, housewives, greedy tax collectors, and a lot of other marginal people, who found themselves glued together by three things. First, baptism into Jesus. Second, the breaking of bread in the Eucharist. And third, the overwhelming, loving witness of very ordinary people.

 

It seems that these three factors were the basic building blocks of the Church.  And what's more, each of those present discovered that he or she had some gift to offer, some ability, talent, or something in some way useful for the building up of the Church, and their gifts were honored, put to use, and treasured.  Brothers and sisters, that's what we find when we look to the early Church. The Church   immediately after the great outpouring of the Holy Spirit at that first, historical Pentecost.  And if you had been there in the first century, and asked, "What is the Church?"  The response you would have received, perhaps worded or articulated in a host of ways, would simply have been something more like, "We are simple people, baptized into Jesus' life, and gathered together around God's word and the breaking of bread. We have a variety of gifts, joyfully putting them to use for the Lord. And knowing that in God's power, nothing can stand against us. We will continue on, joyfully allowing the Lord to use us as he pleases."

That was a long, extended quote but a very insightful one.  That point is one to remember.

For the pastoral homily I’m going to go to an Italian Dominican, Br. Giovanni Castellano, who serves in England with the historic Black Friars.

 


Br. Giovanni:

Well, today we have yet another episode in the Easter drama we've been living for weeks now. But we should beware of thinking that Pentecost is merely an extra episode, an optional addition to what the Lord has already done. It is not something we could do without. Pentecost is truly the fulfillment for us of the Lord's death, resurrection, and ascension.  And the reason is that if all the wonderful things that happen to our Lord are to have any meaning or any effect in our lives, that is because of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost.  Receiving the spirit is our way of entering the history of salvation which the Lord accomplished in his own life.

 

What exactly this means of course is another very good question. The fathers compare the spirit to a sunbeam which has of course all sorts of effects. It nourishes plants. It produces solar energy and it also makes us sweat during a rather unwelcome heatwave in Britain.  The spirit in the same way works in many ways in us. I found a page online listing the 70 effects of the Holy Spirit. And I was tempted to go through all of them with you this morning, but I thought they might not be a good idea.  So perhaps I'll just comment on a couple of them. First, the spirit gives us a new heart.  God had promised this through the mouth of the prophet. I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you.  We are given the capacity for a supernatural love… in Christian theology, supernatural means what exceeds our natural capacity and is then a gift from God. And the most supernatural thing of all is a love like Christ's, a divine love which gives itself up for its friends. And this is the love that the Holy Spirit makes possible in us.

 

But there is a second crucial thing the spirit does. He makes us work for the kingdom of God. Again, black friars exists today because of the visionary leadership of be Jared. He was certainly inspired by the Holy Spirit to bet on something which perhaps others would not have dared to do. He said, "We are beginning without a penny, but we shall build as the money comes in." He'd been given a vision for the future and had the courage to act on it.  The apostles after the ascension were gathered together in prayer, but they were still paralyzed by fear like on the day of the resurrection as we saw in John's gospel. Only when the spirit comes upon them do they receive the boldness to go out and proclaim the gospel to the world.  So the spirit changes our heart, but he also gives us a vision and a mission and with it the strength to carry it out.  The spirit teaches us how to love the world and how to build up the church.

 

So, with the Spirit teaching us “how to love the world and how to build up the church,” Br. Giovanni combines two of the major themes for today. 

 

 

Sunday Meditation: Jesus said to them again, "Peace be with you.”

 


Let us turn to this beautiful hymn, “Come, O Holy Spirt, Come,” set to the melody of Beethoven’s Ode to Joy.

 

 

Come, thou Holy Spirit, come,

and from thy celestial home

shed a ray of light divine;

Come O Holy Spirit Come.

come, thou Father of the poor,

come, thou source of all our store,

come, within our hearts to shine,

Come O Holy Spirit Come.

 

Thou of comforters the best,

thou the soul's most welcome guest,

sweet refreshment here below;

Come O Holy Spirit Come.

in our labour rest most sweet,

grateful coolness in the heat,

solace in the midst of woe,

Come O Holy Spirit Come.

 

O most blessed Light divine,

May that Light within us shine,

And our inmost being fill!

Come O Holy Spirit Come.

In your absence, we have naught,

Nothing good in deed or thought,

Nothing free from taint of ill.

Come O Holy Spirit Come.

 

Have a blessed Feast of Pentecost!