• About Me
  • What I’m reading/listening to
  • The Blog
  • Julie’s Book
  • Contact Me

Julie Henkener - Integrating Toward a Wholly Life

  • Welcome
  • Art Gallery
  • About
  • Blog
  • Recommendations
  • Book
  • Contact

Flames of the Spirit – Pentecost 2019

Flames of the Spirit – Pentecost 2019

June 9, 2019 Abstract Art, Acrylic Monoprints, Art, Spirituality 4 Comments
Acrylic monoprint, copyright © Julie Henkener, made to go with "Pentecost 2019" blog post.

Last updated: May 13, 2024

Today is Pentecost Sunday, which is the day that we celebrate the gift of the Holy Spirit.  It coincides with the Jewish celebration of Shavuot (the Feast of Weeks) that was originally a harvest festival, but also commemorates the gift of the ten commandments to Moses at Mount Sinai. The word Pentecost is derived from the Greek word πεντηκοστή, romanized as pentēkostē, that translates into English as “fiftieth day.”  The Feast of Weeks lines up as 50 days after the Passover for Jews, and Pentecost is 50 days after Easter Sunday for Christians.  Some Catholics pray a novena to the Holy Spirit for the nine days between the feast days of the Ascension and Pentecost, such as the one you can find here.

Immediately after Jesus had ascended, the apostles, Mary, and a number of women were again holed up in the upper room in Jerusalem for the Feast of Weeks.  They were probably sad, confused and hesitant, not knowing what to do next and here is what happened:

When the day of Pentecost arrived, they all met in one room.  Suddenly, they heard what sounded like a violent, rushing wind from heaven; the noise filled the entire house in which they were sitting.  Something appeared to them that seemed like tongues of fire; these separated and came to rest on the head of each one.  They were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages as She enabled them. (Acts 2:1-4)

Painting of Pentacost by El Greco, 1600 exhibited in the Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain.

This masterpiece by El Greco depicts the descent of the Holy Spirit, and it now resides in the Prado Museum in Madrid. It was painted in 1600 and incorporated into the main altarpiece for the church of the

Augustine College of María de Aragón, opposite another El Greco painting of the resurrection that you can see at my 2023 blog post about Resurrection Iconography.  Like many of El Greco’s paintings, the figures are elongated, but here the faces of those gathered are almost ghostly in appearance, as they gaze upward. The image clearly manifests the intensity of the rushing wind and descent of the flames, and there is certainly a lot of spiritual movement going on.

It may sound a little childish, but I have always liked that, in images of the Pentecost story, each person gets their own little flame above their head.  Yes, the Holy Spirit was sent as the Consoler, but in addition to giving peace to those gathered, the Spirit produced an enormous amount of energy and changed the journeys of those who were gathered and then sent out to preach the good news to all.

The seven gifts of the Holy Spirit are wisdom, understanding, judgment, courage, knowledge, reverence and wonder/awe.  I believe that one of the greatest of these is courage and that it was likely immediately essential for the followers of Jesus as they traveled widely to preach the good news.  It could not be an easy life, and Paul especially kept up a busy correspondence with the churches he established.  As some competitive grumblings were going on about which gifts are best, Paul writes to the church in Corinth that there are many gifts of the Spirit and that we are all one body in Christ:

There is a variety of gifts, but always the same Spirit.  There is a variety of ministries, but we serve the same One.  There is a variety of outcomes, but the same God is working in all of them. 

To each person is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good.  To one, the Spirit gives wisdom in discourse, to another the word of knowledge through the same Spirit.  Through the Spirit, one person receives faith; through the same Spirit, another is given the gift of healing; and still another miraculous powers.  Prophesy is given to one; to another, power to distinguish one spirit from another.  One receives the gift of tongues; another, that of interpreting tongues.  But it is one and the same Spirit who produces all these gifts and distributes them as She wills. 

The body is one, even though it has many parts; all the parts – many though they are – comprise a single body.  And so it is with Christ.  It was by one Spirit that all of us, whether we are Jews or Greeks, slaves or citizens, were baptized into one body.  All of us have been given to drink of the one Spirit.  And that Body is not one part; it is many.  (1 Corinthians 12:4-14)

I really love the diversity and inclusiveness of this reading and it makes a lot of sense to me too – everyone has talents that can be used to pursue justice and holiness, and every person has different experiences and approaches to life.  The important thing is just to do what we have the gifts and power to do.  We are enough.

 

UPDATE: This blog post was updated on May 13, 2024 to include two more images of the Pentecost event and to make minor editorial changes.

Readings: The Inclusive New Testament, Priests for Equality, Brentwood, MD, 1994.

Reference 1: Asbury, Chad, Easter’s Resurrection Power and Global Mission, blog post at International Mission Board website, March 26, 2018.

Reference 2: Pentecost Novena, blog post at Infinite Windows website, May 7, 2016.

Reference 3: Duffy, Margaret, Tongues of Fire, blog post at Ad Imaginem Dei website, May 26, 2023.

Image 1: Pentecost 2019, Julie Henkener, 2019.

Image 2: Pentecost, El Greco, 1600, Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain, inventory number P000828.

Image 3: Pentecost, Illuminated Image, KB 76 F 25 fol. r18, Nationale Bibliotheek, the Netherlands. 

Image 4: Pentecost, Juan Bautista Maino, circa 1600-1625, Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain, courtesy wikimedia commons.

4 Comments
0

4 Comments

Leave your reply.
  • Melissa
    · Reply

    July 11, 2019 at 10:45 PM

    Beautiful post, Julie! The older I get, the better I understand the ways in which I am gifted and long to use my gifts instead of longing for the gifts I see in others. Is that your artwork on the top left? I love it!

    • Julie
      · Reply

      July 12, 2019 at 1:06 PM

      Thanks Mis. What a great insight that you have about using the gifts that we have been given! I agree and believe that we just need to share what we have the power to share and give what is uniquely ours to give. The more wholly we become, the more authentic that feels. Yes, that is my artwork – I’m so glad you like it. 🙂

  • Karen L.
    · Reply

    June 9, 2019 at 6:58 PM

    Thank you for educating me about Pentecost Sunday. Enjoyed reading your article and seeing both your and El Greco’s artwork.

    • Julie
      · Reply

      June 11, 2019 at 5:05 PM

      You’re Welcome, Karen. And thank-you for all of your support!

Leave a Reply

Join the conversation by submitting a comment to this blog post below.
Cancel Reply

Newsletter

Most Popular Posts

Here are the most popular posts from the last 30 days.

  • Prayer Against Envy and Jealousy 502 views

  • Resurrection Art Iconography 427 views

  • The Apocalypse is Here 228 views

  • Assumption of Hairy Mary 132 views

  • Prayer for the Universe 55 views

  • The Figure 8 – Ebb & Flow 39 views

  • Karankawa Indians in Texas 35 views

  • Mary of Egypt 28 views

  • Stations of the Cross 24 views

  • Acrylic monoprint, copyright © Julie Henkener, made to go with quote by Amma Theodora (fourth century.) Amma Theodora 23 views

  • Mary Magdalene and the Blue Tunic Relic 21 views

  • Mary Magdalene Rises Again 17 views

  • James Webb Space Telescope 17 views

  • Black Madonnas Matter 16 views

  • Saint Josephine Bakhita 16 views

Categories

  • Abstract Art (19)
  • Acrylic Monoprints (21)
  • Art (45)
  • balance (14)
  • Bible verses (11)
  • Book Reviews (9)
  • Climate Change (7)
  • Current Events (12)
  • feminism (10)
  • Food (1)
  • History (30)
  • Holidays (5)
  • Indigenous People (3)
  • Madonna (2)
  • Mary (1)
  • Mary Magdalene (4)
  • Music (14)
  • NASA (6)
  • New Testament (5)
  • New York (7)
  • Old Testament (4)
  • Prayer (21)
  • psychology (3)
  • Quotes (15)
  • Saints (11)
  • Spirituality (51)
  • Travel (13)
  • Uncategorized (1)
  • Women (39)

Tags

19th Amendment advent African Americans art art history Astronauts Carrie Chapman Catt change chanting Climate Change Earth Day Easter Environmental Protection feminism food Fourteenth Century hardware hipster history holidays light mac Madonna Mary Magdalene Mary of Egypt Mystic NASA new beginnings New Testament New York Nuns O Antiphons Poetry Power prayer Religious Women Resurrection Seventeenth Century travel vespers video-2 waiting women Women's History Womens Suffrage

Contact Me

Welcome. Please use this contact form to send me a message.

Send
Never miss a post by subscribing to my occasional mailing list. Here

  All text and original artwork copyright © Julie Henkener 2025.  

Prev Next