Pentecost Archives - Catholic All Year https://catholicallyear.com/blog/category/liturgical-living/pentecost/ Homemaking. Homeschooling. Catholic Life. Fri, 10 May 2024 18:18:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8 https://catholicallyear.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/cropped-CAY-monogram-green-32x32.png Pentecost Archives - Catholic All Year https://catholicallyear.com/blog/category/liturgical-living/pentecost/ 32 32 Is Pentecost the Birthday of the Church? (and if not, should we be mad about it?) https://catholicallyear.com/blog/is-pentecost-the-birthday-of-the-church-and-if-not-should-we-be-mad-about-it/ https://catholicallyear.com/blog/is-pentecost-the-birthday-of-the-church-and-if-not-should-we-be-mad-about-it/#comments Mon, 06 Jun 2022 07:16:25 +0000 https://skymouse.wpengine.com/?p=203269 Health update: The husband’s treatments are progressing and we * finally * got the test results we were waiting for and it was good news for the spine! Thanks so much for your prayers. Happy feast day! Red for Pentecost! #dontcountus #someofusareoutsick I’ve had some questions in my Instagram DMs today asking My answers are […]

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Health update: The husband’s treatments are progressing and we * finally * got the test results we were waiting for and it was good news for the spine! Thanks so much for your prayers.

Happy feast day! Red for Pentecost! #dontcountus #someofusareoutsick

I’ve had some questions in my Instagram DMs today asking

  1. Is Pentecost really the “Birthday of the Church”? and,
  2. If it’s not, is it important that Catholics try to stop people from celebrating it as such?

My answers are

1. Not . . . really.

and 2. Dude, no.

Lemme explain.

Folks were sharing with me conflicting information from different Catholic sources, some saying (I’m paraphrasing here), “Yay, Pentecost is the birthday of the Church! We must all have a birthday cake and celebrate!” and another saying, “Pentecost is not the birthday of the Church. That’s Protestant nonsense. We good Catholics have a solemn duty to ruin everyone’s party and let them know the Truth.”

I don’t find either of these positions particularly defensible, Catholic-wise.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church (766) says,

“The Church is born primarily of Christ’s total self-giving for our salvation, anticipated in the institution of the Eucharist and fulfilled on the cross.”

And references a quote from St. Ambrose (+397):

“As Eve was formed from the sleeping Adam’s side, so the Church was born from the pierced heart of Christ hanging dead on the cross.” 

So, according to the Catechism, the Church was “born” on Good Friday at Jesus’ death, with assistance from the Last Supper on Holy Thursday. 

But the issue with hoping to call ANYTHING the “birthday” of the Church is that “birthdays” are not a Christian thing. Early Christians considered celebrations of birthdays to be both pagan and vain. Early Christian writer Origen in his Homilies on Leviticus states,

The saints not only do not celebrate a festival on their birthdays, but, filled with the Holy Spirit, they curse that day. 

He sounds fun, right?

Christians historically celebrated (and in some countries still do celebrate) their saint namedays in lieu of birthdays. Saints are honored by a liturgical feast on their “dies natalis” meaning “day of birth” but referring to the anniversary of their “birth” into heaven a.k.a. their day of death. 

Today, most Christians see birthdays as a harmless cultural tradition that can be celebrated alongside religious holidays.

But early Christians wouldn’t have been looking to find a birthday of the Church. It wouldn’t make sense to them to be trying to insist that one “birthday” is correct and another is incorrect. Instead, we have multiple feast days on which we remember different aspects of how the Church came to be. We celebrate the Incarnation on Christmas and the Annunciation nine months before that. We remember the establishment of the Eucharist and of the sacramental priesthood at the Last Supper on Holy Thursday. We remember Jesus’ death on Good Friday and his Resurrection on Easter Sunday. On Pentecost we celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit, giving the disciples the strength to spread the gospel and face their martyrdoms. We remember the founding of particular early church buildings. It’s a whole calendar. ALL YEAR 😉 . It’s all important and worth honoring.

Do Protestants who say that what happened at the Last Supper was just symbolic have a vested interest in preferring to highlight the preaching and missionary spirit part of the birth of the Church over the Eucharist and sacramental priesthood part? Yes, they do.

Does that make it wrong for them to celebrate it? Or for Catholics to celebrate that part as well?

I say no.

We should ALL be celebrating Pentecost. It’s an important feast day that IMHO doesn’t get enough attention because there aren’t secular traditions associated with it. In our family we like to play up the “tongues of fire” part of the story and we celebrate with a bonfire, and wearing red, and (as of this year) tongues of fire bopper headbands. So fun. The aspect of Pentecost that I highlight in our family discussions is how the descent of the Holy Spirit made the apostles so fearless when that was definitely not the case previously. We are given that gift as well . . . in the sacrament of confirmation. (More on the muttonheadedness of the apostles here.

But there is absolutely nothing that says you can’t celebrate any feast day you choose with a cake. Except, ironically, Good Friday! 😆

In our house, we have a birthday cake for baby Jesus on Christmas. We have a lamb cake on Holy Thursday to celebrate the Eucharist and the priesthood. We fast on Good Friday. There’s nothing that says we can’t celebrate a different PART of the founding of the Church on Pentecost with a cake. And far be it from me to try to squelch the liturgical living inclinations of our Protestant brothers and sisters. A birthday cake on Pentecost today, and, who knows, maybe next year they’re getting confirmed at the Easter Vigil. 

There are times when, as Catholics, we HAVE to take a stand. I don’t think this is one of them. I hope you were able to celebrate in the way that worked best for your family. If you missed it, hey, you can always do a belated celebration! (Check out the resources in the June Liturgical Living Box here.)

Happy Pentecost! 

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Pentecost is Coming: Celebration Ideas and Free Printables https://catholicallyear.com/blog/pentecost-is-coming-celebration-ideas/ https://catholicallyear.com/blog/pentecost-is-coming-celebration-ideas/#comments Tue, 12 May 2015 14:00:00 +0000 https://skymouse.wpengine.com/2015/05/12/pentecost-is-coming-celebration-ideas/ Before Pentecost can happen, of course, we have to have the Ascension. The kids and I will be observing Ascension Thursday by flying from Los Angeles to Washington D.C. to meet up with the husband who is there for business all this week. It seems somehow fitting to be traveling by air on the feast […]

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Before Pentecost can happen, of course, we have to have the Ascension. The kids and I will be observing Ascension Thursday by flying from Los Angeles to Washington D.C. to meet up with the husband who is there for business all this week. It seems somehow fitting to be traveling by air on the feast of the Ascension, but not as good as, say, going to Mass. Technically, we’re cool, since the observation of the Ascension is moved to Sunday in both the LA and the DC dioceses, so it isn’t a Holy Day of Obligation for us.

I really do prefer the historical accuracy of a Thursday Ascension, but this year, we’re going with it.

After the Ascension (be it Thursday or Sunday), comes Pentecost, when the Holy Spirit descended upon Mary and the Apostles. If you are not in the habit of celebrating Pentecost, and for a very long time, *I* was not, you just might want to consider starting, because, as it turns out . . .

Pentecost is Bigger Than Christmas

Check out that post for all about how I learned that Pentecost is the second most important celebration of the liturgical year, my suggestions for some really complicated and fancy celebrations we might want to consider adopting, and the simple yet memorable way our family actually celebrates Pentecost. It totally involves fire. Kids love fire.
And I made you some new printables.

For LOTS MORE free printable prayers, check out my Pinterest board.

Come Holy Spirit, square, on white with dove:
Come Holy Spirit, 8×10, on white with dove:
Come Holy Spirit, 8×10, on red with fire:
Come Holy Spirit, 8×10, on white with globe:
And speaking of the Holy Spirit . . .  I’m also at Blessed in She today, waxing philosophical about the sheer muttonheadedness of the apostles of the gospels and the inspiring wisdom and courage of the apostles of the acts of the apostles.
What changed?
Pentecost.
Pentecost changed everything. And THAT is worth celebrating.———

One more thing . . . for my fellow Catholic bloggers.

Inspired by some of the beautiful conversion stories we’ve heard at local Catholic blogging conferences, I’m excited to be a part of a new initiative among Catholic bloggers called The Credo Project. We’re going to add a button to our sidebars that will allow our readers to easily click through to Catholics Come Home: a beautiful, faithful Catholic website where they can learn more about the Catholic faith. I designed the image, and Molly from Molly Makes Do made it do stuff when you click it.

So, if you’ve got a blog, please feel free to grab the code and share the love.

125×125Credo Project

200 x 200

Credo Project
300 x 300
Credo Project

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Pentecost is Bigger Than Christmas https://catholicallyear.com/blog/pentecost-is-bigger-than-christmas/ https://catholicallyear.com/blog/pentecost-is-bigger-than-christmas/#comments Mon, 20 May 2013 12:40:00 +0000 https://skymouse.wpengine.com/2013/05/20/pentecost-is-bigger-than-christmas/ Seriously.  And don’t try to pretend like you already knew.  Unless, like me, you have kids who use the 1963 Saint Joseph First Communion Catechism for school.  In which case, like me, maybe you found out that Pentecost is bigger than Christmas in front of your first grader then had to play it cool, like you […]

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Seriously.  And don’t try to pretend like you already knew.  Unless, like me, you have kids who use the 1963 Saint Joseph First Communion Catechism for school.  In which case, like me, maybe you found out that Pentecost is bigger than Christmas in front of your first grader then had to play it cool, like you totally knew that Pentecost was a really big deal and that you had every intention of building a traditional Pentecost tower* and putting your milk pails out on Pentecost Eve so that the Pentecost Dove would leave treats for your good little children.

No?  Just me then?

I have to admit, I only just thought of the Pentecost Tower and the Dove stuff, maybe for next year . . . ?  But we DO celebrate Pentecost now, usually with a bonfire cookout either at the beach or in our backyard.  And s’mores.  And red dresses.  And we pray Come Holy Spirit and handle venomous snakes.  (One of those isn’t true.)

 
 

That IS how I found out about Pentecost though.  I mean, I had heard of it and everything, but until I saw this page in Jack’s catechism, I never really thought much of it.

And going by their order in the book (which is not by the calendar), Christmas is actually fourth or fifth in importance, also after the Immaculate Conception and maybe the Ascension (depending on if we’re going left-right or up-down).

Thanks to Lindsay for pointing out that (duh) they are listed in order of the liturgical calendar.

 
Not that ranking feasts is in any way an important exercise, I just found it surprising, considering the amount of celebrating that goes on for the various feasts.  But WE celebrate all of them.  As we have expected more from ourselves and our children in the way of duty to God, we also try to equally focus on the ways that our faith rewards us with joy — even in this life.  
 
I want my kids to remember Pentecost because it’s the day that God as the Holy Spirit descended upon Mary and the Apostles, turning them (the apostles anyway) from bewildered men cowering in an upper room, into bold leaders and teachers and martyrs who spread the faith to the ends of the known world.
 
But I know they’ll remember it if it’s the day we always make a bonfire and roast marshmallows in our own backyard.  And the rest of it will be there in their consciousness too.
 
And since it’s Sunday, thanks to the ladies at Fine Linen and Purple, you get to see What I Wore Sunday.  Which was . . .  my first maternity dress of this go ’round, picked up off the clearance rack at Target because I thought it looked a bit like tongues of fire.  Perfect for Pentecost!
 
Earrings: Anthropologie
(they should be doves, I know . . . )
Sweater: Anthropologie
Belt: Old Navy
Bump: 12 weeks
Shoes: Zappos
 

Happy Pentecost everyone, hope you enjoyed it!

* and since I was really curious about what a traditional Pentecost Tower might look like, and I figured you might be too, I created this high-quality prototype:

It’s made of water, wind, fire, and a dove.  You really need to balance that middle part just right.  

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