F
friardchips
Guest
Going back to elaborate on this post, where it says: ‘So, it is not a new event’…we see that St. Pope John Paul II, said that it is a ‘new outpouring’, so I was standing corrected, and then I wrote, it is new, in context, theologically. By that I mean, that God is eternally present, while also acting in a ‘new’ way. I wonder whether this is the two-way understanding that God is both outside of time - being the beginning and the end - but acts within time (linear). So, the graces are always there, have always been, with God as the Divine source, while at the same time, events are experienced as new, to us. Also, because we are in God, it could be said that God both acts and has acted.
Relating to the thread-subject, of the ‘Renewal’, Pentecost has already happened but we do relive it and remember it, both, I believe, but this does not mean a second Pentecost, but rather, the original Pentecost is being lived out, within us, and through us, liturgically. Along with the whole of Scripture, because Revelation is The Word of God. Scripture is the Word of God.
In terms of a kind of ‘baptism of fire’, we can come alive in the Spirit, but I recognise this as a conversion or reversion / conversion. Sometimes post-baptism. Is that the Scriptural Pentecost event happening within our hearts? Certainly, it seems to come by way of opening a door. I would say that to state scriptural Pentecost as being the sole movement of a person’s will towards conversion, in grace, as too specific. It is more likely that conversion has happened because of the whole of Revelation, via grace, and because God has invited said-person to conversion, which, in some way said-person has responded to, in, with and through the Word of God.
Relating to the thread-subject, of the ‘Renewal’, Pentecost has already happened but we do relive it and remember it, both, I believe, but this does not mean a second Pentecost, but rather, the original Pentecost is being lived out, within us, and through us, liturgically. Along with the whole of Scripture, because Revelation is The Word of God. Scripture is the Word of God.
In terms of a kind of ‘baptism of fire’, we can come alive in the Spirit, but I recognise this as a conversion or reversion / conversion. Sometimes post-baptism. Is that the Scriptural Pentecost event happening within our hearts? Certainly, it seems to come by way of opening a door. I would say that to state scriptural Pentecost as being the sole movement of a person’s will towards conversion, in grace, as too specific. It is more likely that conversion has happened because of the whole of Revelation, via grace, and because God has invited said-person to conversion, which, in some way said-person has responded to, in, with and through the Word of God.
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