A Pentecost Reflection
Order Out of Confusion
Fr. Rene
Butler
Remember
learning about mixed metaphors, where two or more incompatible images are used
to describe one thing? Years ago I saw a cartoon from the New Yorker magazine,
where an executive speaking to his staff says, “Gentlemen, I smell a rat. I can
feel it in the air. And I will nip it in the bud!”
We seem
to have a similar confusion about the Holy Spirit, presented in the New
Testament as a dove, wind, fire, and called “Paraclete,” which in turn is
translated sometimes as Comforter and sometimes as Advocate. The hymn “Veni Sancte Spiritus” calls on the
Spirit to “melt the frozen, warm the chill,” just after describing the Spirit
as “Grateful coolness in the heat.”
But all
this isn’t so strange as it might at first appear. The key lies in John
3:8, “The wind blows where it wills… but you do not know where it
comes from or where it goes.” (See 1 Corinthians 12, Galatians 5:22-23 for just a few examples.)
The Spirit is “spontaneous,” unpredictable, bestowing extraordinary gifts,
often on unsuspecting, unlikely persons, precisely to meet a particular need in
the Church or the world.
It’s no
wonder that Pentecost is such an exciting feast!
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