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Pentecost Retreat - Session One

Season 100 Episode 19 Published 1 month, 4 weeks ago
Description

The Fire That Remains
Life in the Spirit After the Collapse of the Religious Self

Week I — The Fire That Reveals the False Life

Pentecost and the Beginning of the Dismantling in the Spirit

Opening Invocation

O Heavenly King, Comforter, Spirit of Truth,
Who art everywhere present and fillest all things, Treasury of blessings and Giver of life,
Come and dwell in us,
Cleanse us from every impurity,
And save our souls, O Good One.

I. The Fire Has Come — And Nothing Remains Hidden

Pentecost is not comfort. It is fire.

And the tragedy is that most Christians have learned to speak of the Spirit as though He were gentle in a way that leaves us intact. As though He were a consolation that confirms what we already are.

But the Spirit who descends at Pentecost is the same Spirit who drove Christ into the wilderness.

The same Spirit who descends as tongues of fire rests upon men
and begins to undo them.

Not improve them. Not refine them.

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Undo them.

Because what we call “the spiritual life” is often nothing more than a refined version of the same self we have always been.

Religious. Structured. Disciplined. Even devout.

But still centered in itself.
Still subtly seeking itself.
Still preserving itself.
And the Spirit does not come to decorate that life. He comes to expose it.

II. The First Work of the Spirit — Illumination That Wounds

When the Spirit comes, He brings light. But this light is not what we expect.

It is not merely the light of understanding. It is not simply insight or clarity.

It is the light that shows you what you are.

And this is why so many turn away from it.
Because the first gift of the Spirit is not consolation. It is truth.

“For everyone who does evil hates the light... lest his deeds should be exposed.” (John 3:20)

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And the truth is unbearable
to a heart that has built itself on illusion.

You begin to see:

That much of your prayer was self-seeking.
That your devotion was mixed with vanity.
That your desire for God was entangled with a desire to feel something, to be something, to be seen as something.

You begin to see how deeply rooted the self is even in your most sacred actions.

And this is the moment where everything is decided. Because at this point, a man either:

Steps back into illusion
and begins again to construct a spiritual identity

Or
He remains.
He allows himself to be seen.
And wounded.

III. The Religious Self Cannot Survive the Spirit The Lenten work began the dismantling.
But Pentecost intensifies it.
Because now the dismantling is no longer external. It is interior.

The Spirit enters the heart
and begins to uncover the hidden foundations of the self.

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Not the obvious sins. Those are easy.
But the deeper things:

The need to be right.
The need to be secure.
The need to be recognized.
The need to feel that one’s life has coherence and meaning.

Even the need to feel that one is progressing spiritually.
All of this is brought into the light.
And slowly, painfully, it begins to collapse.
This is why the fathers speak so rarely of “experiences.”
Because the true work of the Spirit is not the giving of experiences. It is the removal of illusions.

“The Holy Spirit... shows man his sins.” — St. Silouan the Athonite And this feels like death.
Because it is death.

IV. The Terror of Seeing Without Defenses

There comes a moment
when the usual defenses no longer work.

You cannot console yourself with prayer in the same way. You cannot rely on your thoughts.
Even spiritual thoughts begin to feel empty.
The structures that once held your life together

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begin to loos

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