Monday
O Thou who camest from above,
the pure, celestial fire to impart,
Kindle a flame of sacred love,
on the mean altar of my heart.
When the flames of Pentecost rested on the heads of the Apostles they learned how to speak of Jesus to the international crowds of pilgrims in Jerusalem. Wesley is a theologian of the heart, knowing that it is on “the mean altar of my heart” that love and gratitude are kindled. They too are gifts of the Spirit, just as much as the words and courage to speak about Jesus to others. Come Holy Spirit and ignite my heart.
Tuesday
Creator Spirit, by whose aid
the world’s foundations first were laid,
Come visit every waiting mind,
Come, pour Thy joys on humankind;
From sin and sorrow set us free,
and make Thy temples worthy Thee.
From the brooding Spirit of Creation in Genesis 1 to the Spirit of the Churches in Revelation, the Holy Spirit is the active presence and creative agent of God’s purposes. The Christian mind and heart are made new in Christ, each indwelt by the Spirit of truth and love. Only the self-giving love of Christ and the renewing power of the Holy Spirit can make us worthy recipients of the indwelling gift of the living Christ in us, the hope of glory. “Come Creator Spirit and renew me in thought and action.”
Wednesday
Breathe on me breath of God:
fill me with life anew,
That I may love as Thou dost love,
and do what Thou woulds’t do.
Edwin Hatch who wrote this beautiful prayer-hymn, was a brilliant scholar and academic. He produced a huge Concordance of the Greek version of the Old Testament. Yet his spirituality is in such simple devotional prose. To love as Jesus loved, and do as Jesus did, is the fruit of a God-breathed life. “Come Holy Spirit, breathe on me the breath of God, and fill me with the love of Christ.”
Thursday
Spirit of holiness, wisdom and faithfulness,
wind of the Lord blowing strongly and free;
strength of our serving and joy of our worshipping –
Spirit of God bring your fullness to me.
Holiness, wisdom, faithfulness, freedom, strength, joy – yes the fullness of God poured into our emptiness, igniting all that will burn within us. The Holy Spirit is the gift and grace and generosity of God, poured out and poured into those who in Christ are a new creation. The Holy Spirit is the fount of blessing, the conduit of the grace that strengthens our hearts and fills them with joy. Come Holy Spirit, bring your fullness and freedom to me.
Friday
Spirit of God unseen as the wind,
gentle as is the dove
Teach us the truth and help us believe,
show us the Saviour’s love.
Jesus told Nicodemus the wind blows wherever and whenever, you can’t see it but you can see its influence. The gentle dove descending on Jesus at his baptism, and later Jesus described himself as ‘gentle and lowly of heart’. But gentleness is not weakness. In Jesus it is strength harnessed to purpose, disciplined power expressed in love to the Father. The Spirit of God is unseen, gentle, shaping and forming us in ways we don’t always realise. Come Holy Spirit, show us the Saviour’s love.
Saturday
We sing the Holy Spirit, full of love,
who seeks out scars of ancient bitterness,
Brings to our wounds the healing grace of Christ:
Come radiant Love, live in our hearts today.
The Holy Spirit is not the Church’s personal possession. The Spirit is God’s active presence throughout the world, in the sustaining of creation, and in the structures and systems of human life. That means where there is systemic injustice, chronic poverty, wastefulness of Creation, violence between peoples and nations, hatreds that are centuries old – to such brokenness the Holy Spirit, full of love brings to the world’s wounds the healing grace of Christ. Come Holy Spirit, live in our hearts that we may be couriers of the healing grace of Christ in our wounded world.
Pentecost Sunday
Thou Christ of burning, cleansing flame, Send the fire!
Thy blood-bought gift today we claim, Send the fire!
Look down and see this waiting host, give us the promised Holy Ghost,
We want another Pentecost, Send the fire!
William Booth’s hymn is the Salvation Army anthem. The passion and fire of the Spirit at Pentecost are the essentials of mission and evangelism. They cleanse the church, inspire our worship, make us urgent in loving a broken world, hold us true to Christ in our discipleship, push back the limits of our vision, and make real in the life of the church the gift and promise of the Father, in the Son, through the Spirit. Come Holy Spirit, send the fire; then send us “to live a dying world to save.”
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