Friday, August 18, 2023

Catholic = Charismatic, Part III: Baptism in the Holy Spirit



As we continue our reflection on the Holy Spirit and the charismatic dimension of our Faith, we have to reflect on what is called "baptism in the Holy Spirit." This experience is considered the central grace and the most defining feature of charismatic Christianity. It is typically the entry point to life in the Spirit, to the transformation of identity and prayer, and to the release of charisms. Baptism in the Holy Spirit itself is often a simple experience, yet it is also unique to each person. For this reason, I want to approach it from a broader context to show how desperately we need this grace. The better we understand our need, the greater our desire for God's gifts will be.

What happened to the “New Springtime?"
In the 1990s, there was a growing sense of optimism and hope in the Catholic Church. The Church was recovering a sense of stability and clarity after the cultural, liturgical, and moral confusion that came in the wake of Vatican II. Much of this stability and clarity came from the leadership of Pope St. John Paul II. In his 1990 encyclical, Redemptoris Missio, John Paul began to speak of a "new springtime" that Christianity and the Church were about to experience. He wrote: “As the third millennium of the redemption draws near, God is preparing a great springtime for Christianity, and we can already see its first signs" (RM 86). Likewise, in his homily for Pentecost in 1998, he spoke of the Holy Spirit bringing “a new springtime in the Church.” This was certainly an exciting time filled with possibilities. However, in his 1994 encyclical announcing the year 2000 Jubilee, Tertio Millennio Adveniente, John Paul identified a condition for this new springtime: "[this] new springtime of Christian life . . . will be revealed by the Great Jubilee, if Christians are docile to the action of the Holy Spirit" (TMA 18).
That's a big "if!" While there have been small signs of renewal and growth in a few parts of the Church since the year 2000, it would be extremely difficult, if not impossible, to make the case that we've been enjoying a "springtime." At this point, we are all well aware of the problems. The list sounds like a broken record: the clergy sex abuse crisis (while mostly occurring decades ago, we are still suffering its consequences), declining baptisms, marriages, and vocations to the priesthood and religious life, declining frequency of Confession/Reconciliation, declining Mass attendance, declining belief in the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist, parish closures, school closures, declining influence of Christianity and the Church in the culture and throughout the world, etc. etc. The recurring theme is "decline." Despite a few exceptional parishes, dioceses, and religious communities that are seeing slight growth or recovery, "decline" is probably the single word that best describes the state of the Church in Western countries over the last several decades. To quote the title of one bishop's recent book, it seems fair to speak of "The Springtime that Never Came." It many ways, it feels more like winter.

The solution to every problem
I realize that it's simplistic to attempt to identify a single cause for any problem, and the Church's decline over the last 60 years is no exception. However, while a problem might be complex and difficult to understand, this doesn't necessarily mean that its solution needs to be complicated. As Christians, we know that every crisis in the Church is ultimately a crisis of faith. No matter the situation, if we trust more in God, rely more on Him, surrender more to Him, and open ourselves more to His grace, things will improve. Two verses of Scripture come to mind: "I can do all things through him who strengthens me" (Php 4:13); ”...apart from me you can do nothing" (Jn 15:5). There is the contrast between doing things with God vs. without Him.
From a human perspective, our problems are overwhelming and their solution seems illusive and endlessly complicated. From God's perspective, however, things are much simpler. Recently, I shared a passage from a book with a few friends, and it became a theme during our retreat together. It captures what I'm trying to say here:
In the beginning you may feel you need a lot of different things but, as you progress, your needs decrease. In the end, everything is reduced to a single need: the need for God himself, for God's Spirit. Our lives are often so petty and poor because we view ourselves as the center of the world. But in praise we are torn away from ourselves and become rooted in God. Then we acquire an unimaginable capacity to receive the Holy Spirit (Fr. Wilfrid Stinissen, This Is the Day the Lord Has Made).
Every need boils down to our need for God, and the Holy Spirit in particular, since He is God’s love poured into our hearts (Rom 5:5). Historically, Pentecost was that defining moment when God poured out the Holy Spirit on the Church to empower her for the great commission Christ had just given her: “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations” (Mt 28:19). Before ascending in to heaven, Christ had made it clear that the disciples wouldn't be able to fulfill their mission until the Holy Spirit had filled them: “But stay in the city until you are clothed with power from on high” (Lk 24:49). Imagine if they hadn’t waited to receive the Holy Spirit? What would have happened? Nothing.
The same holds true for us today. As the Church, anytime we feel powerless or stuck, we need to return spiritually to the Upper Room and beg God the Father to clothe us with more "power from on high,” the Holy Spirit. In this time of “Eucharistic Revival,” let us remember that the Last Supper and Pentecost took place in the same room. That’s obviously not a coincidence! As he overshadowed Mary at the Incarnation, the Holy Spirit makes Jesus present in the Mass. He is the one who will revive our faith in the Eucharist. Jesus said, “When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth […]. He will glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it to you” (Jn 16:13-14).
The Holy Spirit renews, heals, convicts, strengthens, and teaches. The words of the Sequence of Pentecost Sunday, Veni Sancte Spiritus, beautifully express our need and longing for the Holy Spirit, whom the hymn presents as the solution to every problem.
Come, Holy Spirit, come!
And from your celestial home
    Shed a ray of light divine!
Come, Father of the poor!
Come, source of all our store!
    Come, within our bosoms shine.
You, of comforters the best;
You, the soul’s most welcome guest;
    Sweet refreshment here below;
In our labor, rest most sweet;
Grateful coolness in the heat;
    Solace in the midst of woe.
O most blessed Light divine,
Shine within these hearts of yours,
    And our inmost being fill!
Where you are not, we have naught,
Nothing good in deed or thought,
    Nothing free from taint of ill.
Heal our wounds, our strength renew;
On our dryness pour your dew;
    Wash the stains of guilt away:
Bend the stubborn heart and will;
Melt the frozen, warm the chill;
    Guide the steps that go astray.
On the faithful, who adore
And confess you, evermore
    In your sevenfold gift descend;
Give them virtue’s sure reward;
Give them your salvation, Lord;
    Give them joys that never end.
Amen. Alleluia.
Come...again, Holy Spirit?
Traditional prayers and hymns invoking the Holy Spirit always ask him to "come." Examples include the above Sequence as well as the traditional “Prayer to the Holy Spirit,” which begins, “Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful and kindle in them the fire of your love.” If we reflect on this language, it’s actually a bit strange. Why would we ask the Holy Spirit to come to us or to dwell in us if we have already received him? The Holy Spirit was poured about upon the first disciples at Pentecost 2000 years ago. And each of us in turn received him personally at our Baptism and Confirmation. How then can the Holy Spirit “come” if he is already here? The answer is that, until God’s plan of salvation is fully accomplished, we will always need more of the Holy Spirit. And because the Holy Spirit is God, there is always more of him to receive: “for he gives the Spirit without measure” (Jn 3:34). As the outpouring, he does not change, but as the “containers,” we do! 

The critical importance of our disposition
The Holy Spirit’s role is to make actual what Jesus made possible. The Spirit accomplishes in us the transformation that Jesus revealed by word and example and paid for on the cross. The grace of God needed to effect this transformation comes to us above all through the sacraments. However, there is a critical distinction in theology between the objective grace of a sacrament and the subjective disposition of the person receiving the sacrament. There is a famous philosophical principle that applies here: Quidquid recipitur ad modum recipientis recipitur [Whatever is received is received according to the mode/condition of the receiver]. This means that the subjective disposition of the recipient greatly determines how he receives something. Note that “subjective” disposition here means one’s personal disposition. It is not only one’s subjective feelings, knowledge, or awareness, but also the objective state of one’s soul, heart, mind, spirit, body, etc.
In the case of the sacraments, this means that one’s disposition can determine the efficacy or fruitfulness of the sacrament. For example, if someone has a strong desire to receive the Eucharist and his heart is filled with reverence and anticipation, the fruits of his reception will be great. In contrast, if another person approaches the Eucharist in a casual manner without praying or reflecting on what he is about to receive, the fruit will be minimal, perhaps virtually non-existent. Here I am not discussing the problem of someone receiving Communion in a state of serious sin. In that case, one is totally undisposed to receive. I am referring only to someone who is poorly disposed to receive. Such a person may not be spiritually harmed by doing so, but he will benefit very little or not at all.
We see a perfect illustration of the importance of personal disposition in Jesus’ parable of the sower and the seed: 
“A sower went out to sow. And as he sowed, some seeds fell along the path, and the birds came and devoured them. Other seeds fell on rocky ground, where they did not have much soil, and immediately they sprang up, since they had no depth of soil, but when the sun rose they were scorched. And since they had no root, they withered away. Other seeds fell among thorns, and the thorns grew up and choked them. Other seeds fell on good soil and produced grain, some a hundredfold, some sixty, some thirty” (Mt 13:3-8).
Notice that the seed is not the variable—it is the same in each case. Rather, the soil is what varies and determines the growth and fruitfulness of the seed. In the same way, the sacraments themselves do not change. The same grace is objectively available each time they are validly celebrated. What varies greatly is our personal disposition. All of us have experienced this distinction when it comes to praying at Mass and receiving Holy Communion. The times when we’re recollected, peaceful, and prayerful, and when the Mass is celebrated beautifully and reverently, are more spiritually fruitful than the times when we’re distracted and unprepared, or when the Mass is celebrated in an unworthy manner. In this case, we’re well aware of the relationship between our disposition and the fruitfulness of the sacrament for our spiritual well-being. But what about the other sacraments of initiation, Baptism and Confirmation, which are not repeated but received only once? What if we weren’t well disposed for these at the time we received them? Are we now doomed to bear no fruit because the soil of our heart was (to use Jesus’ imagery) rocky, thorny, or prey to birds at the time the seed of grace was planted in us? Absolutely not! It’s certainly a powerful and beautiful experience for those who are baptized and confirmed as adults and with a proper disposition toward these sacraments—they will undoubtedly bear fruit more quickly and visibly. There is nothing in such persons to impede the sacraments from having their God-intended effects immediately.

Becoming who you already are
But most of us Catholics were baptized as infants. Infants obviously aren’t capable of desiring Baptism in a conscious or explicit way. They are baptized because of their need for salvation, and the faith of their parents stands in proxy for their own. This situation is analogous to when parents came to Jesus begging him to heal their sick or demonized children—he didn’t wait for them to be mature enough to decide for themselves if they wanted to be healed. The Church baptizes us as infants with the expectation and prayer that we will later be disposed so that the grace of our Baptism can fully flourish in us. Of course, this is not to suggest that nothing happens already at the moment of Baptism. An infant may not actively desire Baptism, but neither is he closed to it (despite how much crying might occur during the celebration!). From the moment of our Baptism, we are already cleansed of original sin and born again (regenerated) by water and the Spirit (see John 3:5). By grace, we become adopted sons and daughters of the Father. But the free gift of this new identity is a reality that we must progressively become aware of and grow into throughout our lives. Fr. Stinissen writes,
In Baptism we die to sin and arise from the water as a new creation, dripping with divine life. The whole of our existence from then on is a matter of trying to realize the fullness of that one moment (This Is the Day the Lord Has Made).
In other words, the actualization of the grace of our Baptism is not automatic or inevitable. Like every grace, our conscious cooperation is needed to fully realize it. Until we arrive at a certain level of openness, desire, and faith, the grace of our Baptism remains largely dormant, in a state of potential. The “gap” between our reception of the sacrament and the full release of its grace is overcome as we personally respond to God in faith, saying, “Yes, Lord. I want you!” In Baptism we are claimed for Him, we are chosen, but we still need to respond. Each of us has our own relationship with the Lord. Yes, our father’s or mother’s or godparents’ or sibling’s or friend’s relationship with Him can inspire and encourage us, but it cannot replace our relationship with Him. The five foolish virgins in Jesus’ parable discovered this fact too late when they asked to borrow oil from the wise virgins (see Matt 25:1-13). The bridegroom responds to them, "Truly, I say to you, I do not know you” (see Mt 25:1-13). Relationship with God does not happen by accident, nor can it be borrowed or bought. 

One Baptism, two dimensions
Now we come to it: “Baptism in the Holy Spirit.” Admittedly, this use of the term “baptism” can be confusing. As noted above, the sacrament of Baptism is a once-in-a-lifetime event. The Catechism states: “Baptism imprints on the soul an indelible spiritual sign, the character, which consecrates the baptized person for Christian worship. Because of the character Baptism cannot be repeated” (CCC 1280). So then, if there is only one Baptism and it is unrepeatable, why speak of a “baptism in the Holy Spirit?” Cardinal Leo Joseph Suenens has a helpful explanation. After serving as one of the four moderators of the Second Vatican Council, Suenens became a leading voice in the Catholic Charismatic Renewal. He contributed greatly to a series of theological writings called the “Malines Documents” (published 1973-1988), which became the foundational texts for the theological and pastoral understanding of the Renewal. In his book, A New Pentecost?, Suenens wrote the following about baptism in the Holy Spirit and its relationship to sacramental Baptism:
For us, as well as for the majority of Christian Churches, there is not a duality of baptisms, one in water and one in the Spirit. We believe there is but one Baptism. Baptism in the Holy Spirit is not a sort of super-baptism, or a supplement to sacramental Baptism which would then become the pivot of the Christian life. […] Our one and only Baptism is at the same time both paschal and pentecostal (pp. 82-83).
Baptism is paschal in that it unites us to the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ (the “Paschal Mystery”). The Catechism states, “[Baptism] signifies and actually brings about death to sin and entry into the life of the Most Holy Trinity through configuration to the Paschal mystery of Christ” (CCC 1239). This is grounded in scriptural statements such as the following from St. Paul:
Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life. For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we shall certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his” (Rom 6:3–5).
Baptism makes our life and death a sharing in the life and death of Christ, so that we may also share in the new life of his resurrection. This aspect of Baptism changes the meaning of our death, which should in turn transform the way we live: "
he died for all, that those who live might no longer live for themselves but for him who for their sake died and was raised" (2 Co 5:15). Our old, sinful self died in Baptism so that we could be reborn and live a new life in the Spirit. After Baptism, the rest of our life is meant to be lived in radical dependence on the Holy Spirit, because that’s how Jesus lived. St. Paul says that the Holy Spirit makes us children of God, enabling us to cry out with Jesus, “Abba! Father!” (Rom 8:15). The Spirit even prays in us because “we do not know what to pray for as we ought” (Rom 8:26). We need the Holy Spirit to receive what God gives us and to do what He commands us. St. Paul even says that “no one can say ‘Jesus is Lord’ except in the Holy Spirit” (1 Cor 12:3). This is the pentecostal dimension of Baptism: responding in faith to the gift of the Spirit we've received so that he accomplish his work in us.
My point here is that what charismatics call “life in the Spirit” is not some unique or optional spirituality. It is essential to the Christian life. We cannot live out the paschal dimension of our Baptism (share in Christ’s life, death, and resurrection) unless we embrace the pentecostal dimension (welcome the Holy Spirit). Have you ever met someone who was baptized but never raised in the Faith and now is unable to say, “Jesus is Lord”? I certainly have. That’s an example of Baptism without Pentecost.
Let’s return to the term, “baptism in the Holy Spirit.” Cardinal Suenens himself thought it was unclear and wrote: “To avoid from now on all ambiguity, it would be better not to speak of ‘baptism in the Spirit’ but to look for another expression” (A New Pentecost? p. 83). In the decades that followed, however, no other expression caught on (in English, that is). The reasons for this are interesting but too long to recount fully here, so I will summarize them. First, baptism in the Holy Spirit remained the term in English simply because it had already been popularized, making difficult to change. Second, it is biblical. John the Baptist says that Jesus “will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire” (Mt 3:11). Third, other proposed terms, such as outpouring and effusion, do not capture the deep connection to sacramental Baptism and Pentecost, nor do they suffice to describe the dramatic change that so many people experience through baptism in the Holy Spirit.

What is baptism in the Holy Spirit?
Catholic Charismatic Renewal International Service (CHARIS) is the association recognized by the Holy See for the promotion of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal. CHARIS has a doctrinal commission in Rome that published an excellent book in 2012 titled Baptism in the Holy Spirit. In the opening pages, the book provides the following definition of baptism in the Holy Spirit: 
Baptism in the Spirit is a life-transforming experience of the love of God the Father poured into one’s heart by the Holy Spirit received through a surrender to the lordship of Jesus Christ. It brings alive sacramental Baptism and Confirmation, deepens communion with God and with fellow Christians, enkindles evangelistic fervor, and equips a person with charisms for service and mission (p. 15).
Notice the language: baptism in the Spirit “brings alive sacramental Baptism and Confirmation.” This indicates that it is not a second baptism, but the full activation of the sacramental Baptism and Confirmation one already received. To this point, I also appreciate Cardinal Raniero Cantalamessa’s description of baptism in the Holy Spirit. He calls it “a renewal and a reactivation and actualization not only of Baptism, but of all that Christian initiation involves” (Come, Creator Spirit, p. 54).

But what about Confirmation?
Some will object, “But isn’t it the purpose of Confirmation to fully activate our Baptism?” To be fair, if candidates for Confirmation were properly prepared and well disposed, then many of them probably would experience it as a baptism in the Holy Spirit (i.e., with the manifestations and gifts of the Spirit seen at Pentecost). The Church seems to expect as much. Describing the effects of Confirmation, the Catechism says,
It is evident from its celebration that the effect of the sacrament of Confirmation is the special outpouring of the Holy Spirit as once granted to the apostles on the day of Pentecost (CCC 1302).
Given most people’s actual experience of Confirmation, I think this description would surprise them. Think about it: the Church says here that “it is evident from its celebration” that the effect of of Confirmation is the same outpouring of the Holy Spirit that the apostles received at Pentecost. I for one wish it were much more evident! Imagine what that would look like! People might feel uncomfortable… Once, while in seminary, I had a discussion with a Protestant man who was critical of Catholic Confirmation. He had recently attended one for a family friend, and he said to me, “You cannot tell me that those kids received the Holy Spirit!” When I asked why not, he responded with something like, “They just stood there looking bored.” My answer, then and now, is that the problem is their disposition, their desire and sense of expectation going into it. If you aren’t taught to expect powerful things and prepared to received them, then you probably won’t experience them. Also, it is fair to point out that the “fireworks” of manifestations are not necessary to demonstrate the presence of the Holy Spirit. At the same time, some kind of fruits are necessary. The Holy Spirit does not leave us unchanged.
A second point: even if people did experience Confirmation as a full baptism in the Holy Spirit, this sacramental outpouring of the Spirit would in no way preclude or eliminate the need for later outpourings of the Spirit. As an activation or release of the grace of sacramental Baptism, there is no reason to suppose that baptism in the Holy Spirit has to be a one-time event. There is an important scene in Acts 4 that proves this point. It is when the disciples are faced with resistance and persecution and so they gather to pray for more boldness. Remember that this takes place after Pentecost (Acts 2), after they had already been filled with the Holy Spirit. We read:
And when they had prayed, the place in which they were gathered together was shaken, and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and continued to speak the word of God with boldness (Acts 4:31).
They were all filled…again. No one objected that they had already been baptized and confirmed. This is baptism in the Holy Spirit, being filled again in a powerful way that renews you in your Christian identity and empowers you to live it boldly. Who doesn’t desire that? I understand when people initially feel uneasy about theological terminology that sounds ambiguous or even inaccurate. But even if the experience of baptism in the Holy Spirit can be somewhat messy and tough to pin down theologically, the actual fruits of it are astonishing. People are radically changed. They are set on fire. It’s a simple before-and-after that speaks for itself. God’s ways are not our ways. An excessive desire for clarity and control can be an obstacle to God acting in and through us, especially in new ways (or at least ways that are new to us). Remember that at Pentecost St. Peter had to assure the naysayers that the disciples weren’t drunk! Messy? Yes. Beautiful? Absolutely. Fruitful? “There were added that day about three thousand souls” (Acts 2:41). Not bad!

Why now?
Someone could reasonably object, “If baptism in the Holy Spirit is a real grace of God that activates the graces of our Baptism and Confirmation, then why is it such a recent phenomenon? Why wasn’t it happening earlier in the Church?”
First, I think it was happening—a lot, in fact. While it wasn't called baptism in the Holy Spirit, I think we see it in the conversion stories of many saints and in their mystical experiences. These point to reality of the Holy Spirit being poured out in powerful ways both within the context of celebrating the sacraments and outside of that context. Second, Cardinal Cantalamessa and others make a strong historical argument that a “desynchronization” developed between authentic repentance and conversion and the sacraments, especially Baptism. In the early Church, people mostly came to faith through conversion as adults and then received Baptism with great desire and expectation. Eventually, the “desynchronization” between conversion and Baptism became common because of the legalization of Christianity (it became politically advantageous to be Christian) and because of infant Baptism. Infant Baptism itself was not an obstacle to sincere conversion and faith as long as one grew up in an environment of genuine faith. Outside of that environment, however, the value of the sacrament diminished and became an empty ritual to many. Finally, Cantalamessa argues that, in God’s wisdom, baptism in the Holy Spirit came in a time when we human beings had reached an unprecedented level of pride and self-reliance, even in the Church (the 20th century). It is God's antidote to our lack of trust and desire for control. Cantalamessa writes:
We could say, by paraphrasing a famous saying of the Apostle Paul: Because Christians, with all their organization, were not able to transmit the power of the Spirit, God was pleased to renew the believers through the foolishness of the Baptism in the Spirit. In fact theologians look for an explanation and responsible people for moderation, but simple souls touch with their hands the power of Christ in the Baptism of the Spirit.
Of course, at the end of the day, no one can completely “explain” the what, how, why, or when of any spiritual experience because it is an act of God that touches each person in a unique way. We can only show that it is consistent with Divine Revelation, Church Tradition, and the experience of the saints and other Christians throughout history. We can also point to its fruits, to stories and testimonies of how people’s lives have been transformed by the grace of baptism in the Holy Spirit.

The New Springtime still to come?
In 1997, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) published a statement of affirmation and support regarding the Catholic Charismatic Renewal. The document is titled “Grace for the New Springtime.” As the title itself indicates, the document praises the Renewal as a special grace of God that is particularly suited to help bring about the “New Springtime” in the Church about which Pope Saint John Paul II spoke and for which he earnestly prayed. Here I will cite just one longer passage in the document that beautifully captures what baptism in the Holy Spirit is and expresses the bishops' explicit approval of it, as well as their strong desire to see it promoted throughout the Church:
In this statement, we want not only to affirm the good fruit of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal but also the grace which is at the heart of this Renewal, namely, baptism in the Holy Spirit, or the fuller release of the Holy Spirit, as some would prefer. As experienced in the Catholic Charismatic Renewal baptism in the Holy Spirit makes Jesus Christ known and loved as Lord and Savior, establishes or reestablishes an immediacy of relationship with all those persons of the Trinity, and through inner transformation affects the whole of the Christian's life. There is new life and a new conscious awareness of God's power and presence. It is a grace experience which touches every dimension of the Church's life: worship, preaching, teaching, ministry, evangelism, prayer and spirituality, service and community. Because of this, it is our conviction that baptism in the Holy Spirit, understood as the reawakening in Christian experience of the presence and action of the Holy Spirit given in Christian initiation, and manifested in a broad range of charisms, including those closely associated with the Catholic Charismatic Renewal, is part of the normal Christian life. We encourage the whole Church to look into and embrace baptism in the Holy Spirit… (emphases added)
Returning to our opening reflection, I don’t think St. John Paul was necessarily wrong when he foretold a “new springtime” in the Church. Perhaps what has happened is that we as Catholics—and as Christians in general—have not been open to the powerful new grace of the Holy Spirit that God wants to pour out during this dramatic moment in salvation history: “where sin increased, grace abounded all the more” (Rom 5:20). If baptism in the Holy Spirit really is, as the bishops themselves wrote, the “grace for the new springtime,” then the Church 
obviously needs to know about this grace and pray for it if she is ever going to experience that springtime. The document also directly implies that our Christian initiation should be “manifested in a broad range of charisms.” The fact that this is so often not the case means that something is wrong, that the grace of our initiation is blocked or inhibited in some way and needs to be released. The bishops go so far as to say that, “Baptism in the Holy Spirit…is part of the normal Christian life,” and they “encourage the whole Church to look into and embrace baptism in the Holy Spirit.” So then, the question is: are we ready to embrace the normal Christian life, as radical and beautiful and different as that new normal might be? 

Some practical first steps
If you desire to receive baptism in the Holy Spirit, the first thing you should do is simply ask God for this gift! You never need to be afraid of asking God for more of the Holy Spirit, whether you pray by yourself or, even better, with a group of fellow Christians. There is no risk involved in asking your heavenly Father for more of His promised Holy Spirit. Jesus himself said:
"What father among you, if his son asks for a fish, will instead of a fish give him a serpent; or if he asks for an egg, will give him a scorpion? If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!” (Lk 11:11–13)
While baptism in the Holy Spirit is a sovereign gift of God and not the result of any program or human effort, there are groups in the Church, often called “Life in the Spirit” seminars, which are designed to facilitate greater openness to the Holy Spirit. Importantly, as their name suggests, they also address what it means to live in the Spirit. Baptism in the Holy Spirit is not about having a powerful, one-time experience or a really pleasant but fleeting feeling—it is about experiencing as much as possible the transformation that is ours through Baptism and Confirmation.
It is always preferable to imitate Our Lady and the first disciples at Pentecost by praying in community for the gift of the Holy Spirit. Praying together creates an atmosphere of faith and expectancy, and Jesus promised that, “if two of you agree on earth about anything they ask, it will be done for them by my Father in heaven. For where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I among them” (Mt 18:19-20).
There are also video series available that a group could use to learn more and prepare. One series that I can recommend is The Wild Goose, which can be found for free here.1 I recommend getting a group together at your parish or school, or going to a neighboring parish if you can’t find enough people. In general, if your life is stagnate, change things up! Go on a retreat or pilgrimage. Go to a conference like the ones at Steubenville. Find people who are filled with the Holy Spirit and moving in the spiritual gifts and spend time with them. Then you will catch fire.
In closing, I pray that your desire for the Holy Spirit will grow, and that God will grant you your desire.
Come, Holy Spirit, open our hearts to receive the grace of renewal for ourselves and for the whole Church! Mary, Spouse of the Holy Spirit, teach us how to welcome him!

Under the Mercy,
Fr. Christopher Trummer



Recommended Resources:

International Catholic Charismatic Renewal Services Doctrinal Commission, Baptism in the Holy Spirit 

1 The Wild Goose is well produced and hosted by Fr. Dave Pivonka, TOR, the president of Franciscan University of Steubenville. For free access to the Wild Goose series, just click on “More purchase options,” then click “Free Access” and set up a free account.

Other articles in this series:

Part I: The Reality and Importance of the Spiritual Gifts

Part II: Answering Objections to Charismatic Christianity


Part IV: The Gift of Tongues

Part V: The Gift of Healing

Part VI: The Gift of Prophecy

Part VII: Other Spiritual Gifts

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