"i believe in the holy spirit" general audience of april 26, 1989

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"I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

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Page 1: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

"I Believe in the Holy Spirit"

General audience of April 26, 1989

Page 2: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

The Christological cycle is followed by that which is called

pneumatological. The Apostles' Creed expresses this

concisely in the words: "I believe in the Holy Spirit."The Nicene-Constantinopolitan

Creed develops this at greater length: "I believe in the Holy Spirit,

the Lord and giver of life, who proceeds from the Father and

the Son. With the Father and the Son he is

worshipped and glorified. He has spoken through the

prophets."

Page 3: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

The creed, a profession of faith

formulated by the Church, refers us back to the biblical

sources where the truth about the Holy Spirit is

presented in the context of the revelation of the Triune

God. The Church's pneumatology

is based on Sacred Scripture,

especially on the New Testament,

although to a certain extent the Old Testament

foreshadows it.

Page 4: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

The first source to which we can turn is a text from John's Gospel in Christ's farewell discourse to his disciples on

the day before his passion and death on the cross.

Page 5: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

Jesus speaks of the coming of the Holy Spirit in connection with his own "departure,"

by announcing the coming (or descent) of the Spirit upon the apostles.

"I tell you the truth; it is to your advantage that I go away,

for if I do not go away, the Counselor will not come to you;

but if I go, I will send him to you"

(Jn 16:7).

Page 6: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

The content of this text may appear paradoxical.

Jesus, who makes a point of emphasizing

"I tell you the truth," presents his own "departure"

(and therefore his passion and death on the cross)

as an advantage: "It is to your advantage...."

However, he explains immediately what the value of his death consists in.

Since it is a redemptive death, it is the condition for the fulfillment of

God's salvific plan which will be crowned by the coming of the Holy

Spirit.

Page 7: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

It is therefore the condition of all that this coming will bring about

for the apostles and for the future Church, as people will receive new life through the

reception of the Spirit. The coming of the

Spirit and all that will result in the world from its coming will be the

fruit of Christ's redemption.

Page 8: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

If Jesus' departure takes place through his death on the cross,

one can understand how the evangelist John can already see in this death the power and glory of

the crucified. However, Jesus' words also imply the ascension to the Father as the

definitive departure (cf. Jn 16:10),

according to what we read in the Acts of the Apostles:

"Being exalted at the right hand of God,

and having received from the Father the promise of the Holy

Spirit" (Acts 2:33).

Page 9: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

The descent of the Holy Spirit occurred after the ascension into

heaven. It is then that Christ's passion and

redemptive death produce their full fruit.

Jesus Christ, Son of Man, at the climax of his messianic mission, received the Holy Spirit from the

Father, in the fullness in which this Spirit is

to be given to the apostles and to the Church throughout all ages.

Jesus foretold: "I, when I am lifted up from the

earth, will draw all men to myself" (Jn 12:32).

Page 10: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

This clearly indicates the universality of

redemption both in the extensive sense of salvation for all

humanity,

and in the intensive sense of the totality of graces

offered to the redeemed.

This universal redemption, however,

must be accomplished

by means of the Holy Spirit.

Page 11: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

The Holy Spirit is he who comes as a result

and by virtue of Christ's departure.

The words of John 16:7 express a causal

relationship. The Spirit is sent by

virtue of the redemption effected by Christ:

"If I go, I will send him to you" (cf. DV 8).

Page 12: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

Indeed, "according to the divine plan,

Christ's 'departure' is an indispensable condition for the 'sending' and the

coming of the Holy Spirit, but these words

also say that what begins now is the new salvific self-giving of

God, in the Holy Spirit" (DV 11).

Page 13: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

Through his being "lifted up" on the

cross, Jesus Christ will "draw all people to

himself" (cf. Jn 12:32).

In the light of the words spoken at the Last

Supper we understand that that "drawing" is

effected by the glorified Christ through the

sending of the Holy Spirit.

Page 14: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

It is for this reason that Christ must go away.

The Incarnation achieves its redemptive efficacy through

the Holy Spirit. By departing from this

world, Christ not only leaves his

salvific message, but gives the Holy Spirit, and to that is linked the

efficacy of the message and of redemption itself in all its

fullness.

Page 15: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

A distinct Person The Holy Spirit,

as presented by Jesus especially in his farewell

discourse in the upper room, is evidently a Person distinct

from himself: "I will pray the Father, and

he will give you another Counselor"

(Jn 14:6).

"But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the

Father will send in my name will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you"

(Jn 14:26).

Page 16: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

In speaking of the Holy Spirit, Jesus frequently uses the personal

pronoun "he." "He will bear witness to me"

(Jn 15:26).

"He will convince the world of sin" (Jn 16:8).

"When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth"

(Jn 16:13).

"He will glorify me" (Jn 16:14).

From these texts it is evident that the Holy Spirit is a Person,

and not merely an impersonal power issuing from Christ

(cf. e.g., Lk 6:19: "Power came forth from him...").

Page 17: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

As a Person, he has his own proper activity of a

personal character. When speaking of the Holy Spirit,

Jesus said to the apostles: "You know him, for he dwells in you,

and will be in you" (Jn 14:7).

"He will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you"

(Jn 14:26). "He will bear witness to me"

(Jn 15:26). "He will guide you into all the truth."

"Whatever he hears he will speak" (Jn 16:13).

He "will glorify" Christ (cf. Jn 16:14),

and "he will convince the world of sin" (Jn 16:8).

Page 18: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

The Apostle Paul, on his part, states that the Spirit

"cries in our hearts" (Gal 4:6);

"he apportions" his gifts

"to each one individually as he wills"

(1 Cor 12:11);

"he intercedes for the saints" (Rom 8:27).

Page 19: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

The Holy Spirit revealed by Jesus is therefore a personal

being (the third Person of the Trinity) with his own personal activity. However, in the same farewell

discourse, Jesus showed the bonds that unite the person of the Holy Spirit with the Father and the

Son. He announced the descent of

the Holy Spirit, and at the same time the

definitive revelation of God as a Trinity of Persons.

Page 20: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

Jesus told the apostles:

"I will pray the Father,

and he will give you another Counselor"

(Jn 14:16),

"the Spirit of truth who proceeds from

the Father" (Jn 15:26),

"whom the Father will send

in my name" (Jn 14:26).

Page 21: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

The Holy Spirit is therefore a Person distinct from the

Father and from the Son and, at the same time,

intimately united with them. "He proceeds" from the

Father, the Father "sends" him in the name of the Son and this is in

consideration of the redemption effected by the

Son through his self-offering on the cross.

Page 22: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

Therefore, Jesus Christ said: "If I go, I will send him to

you" (Jn 16:7).

"The Spirit of truth who proceeds from the Father" is announced by Christ as

the Counselor, whom "I shall send to you from

the Father" (Jn 15:26).

John's text which narrates Jesus' discourse in the upper room contains the revelation of the salvific action of God

as Trinity.

Page 23: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

John Paul II wrote in the encyclical

Dominum et Vivificantem: "The Holy Spirit,

being consubstantial with the Father and the Son in divinity, is love and uncreated gift from

which derives as from its source (fons vivus)

all giving of gifts vis-à-vis creatures (created gifts):

the gift of existence to all things, through creation;

the gift of grace to human beings through the whole economy of salvation"

(n. 10).

Page 24: "I Believe in the Holy Spirit" General audience of April 26, 1989

The Holy Spirit reveals the depths of the divinity: the mystery of the Trinity

in which the divine Persons subsist,

but open to human beings to grant them life and

salvation. St. Paul refers to that

when he writes in the First Letter to the Corinthians

that "the Spirit searches

everything, even the depths of God"

(1 Cor 2:10).