Astounded

Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

“The circumcised believers who had accompanied Peter
were astounded that the gift of the Holy Spirit
should have been poured out on the Gentiles also,
for they could hear them speaking in tongues and glorifying God.”
Acts 10:45-46 [from the first reading for the Sixth Sunday of Easter]

ASTOUNDED.

The disciples are astounded. This is not what they thought would unfold. They were expecting the kingdom of Israel to be restored. They probably expected there would be healing, but joining together with those who were for sure outside the fold, outside of God’s plan for salvation?

Astounded. 

The disciples are learning what it is to be a community led and renewed and expanded by the Holy Spirit. This moment in Cornelius’ household is a scandal. It challenges the disciples’ notions of who is in and who is out — who the Holy Spirit can be poured out upon, what it means to be part of the life of faith on this side of the Resurrection.

Peter cannot deny what he has witnessed with his own eyes. He asks, “Can anyone withhold the water…?” He seems to say: Who am I to withhold the grace of baptism from those who have received the Holy Spirit “even as we have”? God has poured it out. Of course, we will recognize it with the grace of the sacrament. 

In the two weeks since we launched I have been astounded. 

So many people are drawing near to this work: sharing deep stories of call, offering donations, sharing their prayers and words of encouragement, asking how they can be involved, showing up to Welcome Calls and meeting others like them who are ready to pray with their feet as we work to grow the conversation.

Astounded. 

How will the Holy Spirit press us toward those we do not know? How is the Holy Spirit again joining us together in the life of the Church, formed in Christ’s body — the same body the powers put to death, but God raised up. In whose name people can be healed. From all division. 

Here, friends, is our work. To be astounded. And to witness to what we have seen and heard. Women called. The Holy Spirit poured out. Divisions healed. 

Casey Stanton is a co-director of Discerning Deacons casey@discerningdeacons.org

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Ser testigos
“I was not raised Catholic but converted in my adult life. As a child, Mother Mary would appear to me often…I believe Mary appearing to me as a child who knew nothing about the Catholic Church was more than her wanting me to find Christ through the Church. I believe she came to me because I was meant to do more for the Church.”
Christina Kovar
Adult Faith Formation Leader, Chicago, IL
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“I felt seen in my call to pastoral care, to teaching, to preaching—just as clearly as my ordained colleagues are seen in theirs. I felt valued. Not invisible. Not dismissed. I don’t know what the future holds—for me, or for the role of women in the Church. But I know this: I have hope.”
Jolaine M.J. Liupakka, PMin
Coordinator of Middle School & Confirmation, St. Thomas Becket, Eagan, MN
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Ser testigos
“If I were a deacon, I would have the support of other deacons and a community where I could draw strength through prayer and discernment. Women would have the privilege of speaking about Catholic social teaching from the ambo. I do believe women as deacons would renew the face of the Church.”
Beth Brinkmann Cianci
Volunteer with the Ignatian Spirituality Project, Boston, MA

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