CHAPTER THREE
I BELIEVE IN THE HOLY SPIRIT
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"No one can say 'Jesus is Lord' except by the Holy Spirit."1
"God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, 'Abba!
Father!"'2 This knowledge of faith is possible only in the Holy
Spirit: to be in touch with Christ, we must first have been touched by the Holy
Spirit. He comes to meet us and kindles faith in us. By virtue of our Baptism,
the first sacrament of the faith, the Holy Spirit in the Church communicates to
us, intimately and personally, the life that originates in the Father and is offered
to us in the Son.
Baptism gives us the grace of
new birth in God the Father, through his Son, in the Holy Spirit. For those who
bear God's Spirit are led to the Word, that is, to the Son, and the Son presents
them to the Father, and the Father confers incorruptibility on them. and it is
impossible to see God's Son without the Spirit, and no one can approach the
Father without the Son, for the knowledge of the Father is the Son, and the
knowledge of God's Son is obtained through the Holy Spirit.3
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Through his grace, the Holy Spirit is the first to awaken faith in us and to
communicate to us the new life, which is to "know the Father and the one
whom he has sent, Jesus Christ."4 But the Spirit is the last of
the persons of the Holy Trinity to be revealed. St. Gregory of Nazianzus, the
Theologian, explains this progression in terms of the pedagogy of divine
"condescension":
The Old Testament proclaimed
the Father clearly, but the Son more obscurely. the New Testament revealed the
Son and gave us a glimpse of the divinity of the Spirit. Now the Spirit dwells
among us and grants us a clearer vision of himself. It was not prudent, when
the divinity of the Father had not yet been confessed, to proclaim the Son
openly and, when the divinity of the Son was not yet admitted, to add the Holy
Spirit as an extra burden, to speak somewhat daringly.... By advancing and
progressing "from glory to glory," the light of the Trinity will shine
in ever more brilliant rays.5
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To believe in the Holy Spirit is to profess that the Holy Spirit is one of the
persons of the Holy Trinity, consubstantial with the Father and the Son:
"with the Father and the Son he is worshipped and
glorified."6 For this reason, the divine mystery of the Holy
Spirit was already treated in the context of Trinitarian "theology."
Here, however, we have to do with the Holy Spirit only in the divine
"economy."
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The Holy Spirit is at work with the Father and the Son from the beginning to
the completion of the plan for our salvation. But in these "end
times," ushered in by the Son's redeeming Incarnation, the Spirit is
revealed and given, recognized and welcomed as a person. Now can this divine
plan, accomplished in Christ, the firstborn and head of the new creation, be
embodied in mankind by the outpouring of the Spirit: as the Church, the
communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and
the life everlasting.
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