Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Come Holy Spirit Series: The Spirit who Transforms.

 Come Holy Spirit Series

Come Holy Spirit



 Come Holy Spirit — The Spirit Who Transforms

 Continuing the Journey

As we continue our Easter journey toward Pentecost, we move more deeply into the work of the Holy Spirit within us.

We have reflected on:

  • the Spirit of Revelation — who opens our eyes
  • the Spirit Who Reminds — who brings truth back to our hearts
  • the Spirit Who Dwells Within — who makes His home in us

Now we come to the natural unfolding of all these gifts:

 

 The Spirit Who Transforms

Because the Holy Spirit does not simply visit us. He changes us.

 

 Scriptural Foundation

“And all of us, with unveiled faces, seeing the glory of the Lord as though reflected in a mirror, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another; for this comes from the Lord, the Spirit.”
— 2 Corinthians 3:18

“Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds…”
— Romans 12:2

St Teresa of Ávila compared the soul to a crystal castle or mirror capable of reflecting the beauty of God. The transforming work of the Holy Spirit gradually clears away whatever obscures that reflection, so that Christ may shine more fully within us.

 

The Holy Spirit Changes Us From Within

Transformation is usually gradual.

We often want:

  • instant holiness
  • instant clarity
  • instant peace

However, t the Holy Spirit tends to work more deeply than quickly.

The Spirit transforms:

  • the way we think
  • the way we respond
  • the way we love
  • the way we see ourselves and others

Over time:

  • fear becomes trust
  • bitterness becomes mercy
  • restlessness becomes peace
  • self-focus becomes love

This is the quiet work of the Spirit.

 

 Transformation After the Resurrection

After Easter, the disciples were not suddenly perfect.  They were however changing.

The frightened disciples hiding behind locked doors eventually became:

  • courageous
  • joyful
  • faithful witnesses

What changed them?  The Holy Spirit. Pentecost did not simply give them enthusiasm. The Spirit transformed:

  • their hearts
  • their priorities
  • their courage
  • their identity

He continues to do the same in us. Do we desire this change?

 

 How the Spirit Transforms Us Today

The Spirit often transforms us through ordinary faithfulness:

  • daily prayer
  • Scripture
  • silence
  • the sacraments
  • acts of love
  • repentance
  • perseverance through suffering

Transformation is not always dramatic.

Sometimes we only realise later:
 “I don’t react the way I used to.”
 “Something in me has softened.”
 “I’m becoming more peaceful.”

This is the Spirit at work.

 

Considering the Mirror: What does God see?

Transformation in the Holy Spirit is not about:

  • becoming someone else
  • despising ourselves
  • or constantly focusing on flaws

It is about:
 learning to see ourselves as God sees us.

That  can be very difficult.

What do you see when you look in the mirror? Many people look in the mirror, they immediately notice:

  • wrinkles
  • tiredness
  • age
  • imperfections
  • failures
  • what they think is “wrong”

The Holy Spirit does not look at us with contempt.

The Spirit sees:

  • dignity
  • belovedness
  • possibility
  • grace already at work
  • Christ slowly being formed within us

That ties beautifully into the mirror imagery from St Teresa and 2 Corinthians:

“being transformed into the same image…”

The mirror is not meant to become a place of criticism alone.

It can become:
 a place of truth and compassion.

Not vanity.
Not denial.
But gentle honesty held within love.

Perhaps one of the hidden works of the Holy Spirit is this:
 helping us stop looking at ourselves only through the lens of judgment.

Instead:

  • we begin to see growth
  • resilience
  • kindness
  • faithfulness
  • wounds that have survived
  • grace that has carried us

That is not pride.

That is learning to see ourselves through God’s eyes. Wow

We often look at ourselves through:

  • criticism
  • disappointment
  • comparison
  • exhaustion
  • old wounds
  • unrealistic expectations

 

Most importantly:
 
He sees who you are becoming.

That is the heart of transformation.

The Holy Spirit does not stand over us saying:

“Why aren’t you holier yet?”

The Spirit says:

“Come… let Me transform you.”

Slowly.
Lovingly.
Faithfully.

 

 A Personal Reflection

One of the hardest things is accepting that transformation takes time.

We can become discouraged because:

  • we still struggle
  • we still fail
  • we are not yet who we want to be

However, the Holy Spirit is patient.

He does not force growth.

He forms us slowly, deeply, lovingly.

Often the transformation is happening even when we cannot yet see it ourselves.

 

 Preparing for Pentecost

As Pentecost approaches, perhaps this is the invitation:

 not to strive harder but to become more open

Some simple ways to prepare:

  • Spend a few quiet moments each day inviting the Holy Spirit in
  • Read slowly through Acts 1–2 during the week
  • Pray: “Come Holy Spirit” throughout the day
  • Ask the Spirit:
    • What in me needs transformation?
    • Where are You already changing me?
  • Go gently to the Sacrament of Reconciliation if possible before Pentecost
  • Ask for a renewed openness to the gifts and fruits of the Spirit

Pentecost is not just something we remember.

It is something we prepare our hearts to receive again.

 For Reflection This Week

  • Where have I noticed growth or change in myself over time?
  • What part of my heart most needs the Spirit’s transforming work?
  • How can I prepare my heart more intentionally for Pentecost?
  • Who do I see when I look in the mirror? Does my self talk match what God says about me?

 Prayer

Come, Holy Spirit,
Spirit Who Transforms.

Change what needs changing within me.

Where I am hard, soften me.
Where I am fearful, strengthen me.
Where I am restless, bring peace.
Where I resist You, gently open my heart.

Teach me to trust the slow and holy work
You are doing within me.

Prepare me for Pentecost.
Prepare me to receive more fully
the life and fire of Your presence.

Come, Holy Spirit.
Transform me from within.
Amen.

 

 



Sunday, May 3, 2026

Collect Series: Fifth Sunday Easter Year A

 Collect Series

The Mass: Collect Series Icon


COLLECT SERIES

 

COLLECT

 

Almighty ever- living God,
You constantly accomplish the Paschal Mystery within us,

That those you were pleased to make new in Holy Baptism

 may, under Your protective care,

Bear much fruit and come to the joys of live eternal.

Through our Lord Jesus Christ Your Son,

Who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit,

One God for ever and ever.

 

REFLECTION QUESTIONS

 

In making this prayer tangible for during the week, the following reflection questions emerged:

 

1.What does the Paschal Mystery mean to me?

2. How has God accomplished the Paschal Mystery within me during my life up to this point?

3. How will God accomplish the Pascal Mystery within me during this coming week?

4. What does Holy Baptism provide throughout my life?  Why not spend some time this coming week reading either Compendium of Catholic Church and/or Catechism of Catholic Church to understand more about the gift of Baptism.

5.Consider how God has protected You in my life. Have I acknowledged this protective care and said thanks to God?

6.What fruits will I bear this coming week?

7. Why do I want to come to the joys of life eternal?

8 How can I live the joys of life eternal this coming week?

 

GOSPEL REFLECTION

Here is a Gospel reflection for the 5th Sunday of Easter (Year A), based on John 14:1–12: “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life”

In this Gospel, we find ourselves at a deeply intimate moment. Jesus is speaking at the Last Supper. The atmosphere is tender, but also heavy. He has just told the disciples that he is going away. Understandably, their hearts are troubled.

And Jesus responds not by giving them a detailed plan… but by giving them himself.

“Do not let your hearts be troubled.
Believe in God; believe also in me”.

1. The Heart of the Passage: Relationship, not Roadmaps

Thomas asks a very human question:

“Lord, we do not know where you are going. How can we know the way?”

He is essentially saying: “Just tell us what to do.”

But Jesus does not give directions. He says: “I am the Way.”

This is a shift that can unsettle us. We often want clarity, steps, certainty.
Jesus offers something deeper — relationship over control.

  • The Way is not a method — it is a person of Jesus.
  • The Truth is not information — it is a living encounter with Jesus.
  • The Life is not just future salvation — it is a present participation in God’s life now in our daily lives.

 

  Living This Gospel

Let’s bring this down into daily life.

1. When we feel uncertain, the key is to stay close to Jesus but not in control. Give the control to Jesus.

We often say: “I just need to know what to do.”

But this Gospel invites a different response:

  • Sit with Christ asking Him for His solution to the problem
  • Pray even when there are no answers. This can be tough but even when we think there are no answers, there are graces to receive in the no answer phase. For example when we have no answers, we need to ask whether we have been given an answer and the answer is not what we want or thought. It is still the best answer because Jesus gives it to us.  Maybe in this time of seemingly no answers, we thank God for the answers He does gives us and ask for the grace to submit to His way not ours.
  • Trust that walking with Him is already the way. We walk with Him when we spend time with Jesus in prayer, in meditation of the scriptures, through the sacraments especially and by committing our daily lives to be under His reign.

Simple practice:

Before making a decision, pause and say:
“Jesus, be my way in this moment”.

 

2. When your heart is troubled → Return to trust

Jesus does not deny that life is difficult.  He says: “Do not let your hearts be troubled”.  That is not a command to suppress emotion rather it is an invitation to anchor your heart in trust. It also makes psychological sense because when our hearts are troubled, our mental and emotional capacity is diminished. When we feel troubled, small problems can feel like big problems. Things can be distorted to  the reality

Practical step:

  • When anxiety rises, name it honestly
  • Then gently redirect:

“Jesus, I trust that you are with me here”. I do not need to be troubled.  Then breathe in  the breath of the Holy Spirit.

 

3. When faith feels abstract → Look at Jesus

Philip says:

“Show us the Father, and we will be satisfied.”

And Jesus replies:

“Whoever has seen me has seen the Father.”

This is profound.

If you want to know what God is like:

  • Look at how Jesus speaks
  • Look at how he forgives
  • Look at how he suffers and loves

Practical step:

  • Take one Gospel scene each day
  • Ask: “What does this show me about God’s heart?”

 

4. “You will do greater works than these”

This can sound overwhelming — or even unrealistic.

However, notice: Jesus is not talking about greater power or the power that the world understands as power. He is speaking about the spread of his love through us.

Because:

  • He goes to the Father
  • He sends the Spirit
  • And now we become his presence in the world

Practical step:

Choose one small act of love each day:  It might be stopping and being with someone and providing them with a kind word. It might be being patient when it is really difficult or it might be showing up for someone quietly

These are not “small” in the Kingdom. Any action which imitates Jesus is how  Christ continues his work through us.  We have countless opportunities to be like Christ but we need to make that choice and ask Him to act in us each day.

 

This Gospel is not asking you to figure everything out.

It is asking you to:

  • Walk with Christ
  • Trust him when the path is unclear
  • Let your life reflect his love

Because in the end, the Christian journey is not about mastering the way.  It is about walking with the One who is the Way.

.

 


Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Come Holy Spirit Series; The Spirit who dwells within

 Come Holy Spirit Series

Come Holy Spirit:




Come Holy Spirit — The Spirit Who Dwells Within

 Continuing the Journey

As we continue through Eastertide, we are not simply learning about the Holy Spirit — we are learning to live with Him.

We have reflected on:

  • the Spirit of Revelation — who opens our eyes
  • the Spirit Who Reminds — who brings truth back to our hearts

Now we come to something even more profound:

 The Spirit Who Dwells Within

 

 Scriptural Foundation

“Do you not know that you are God’s temple and that God’s Spirit dwells in you?”
— 1 Corinthians 3:16

“The love of God has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.”
— Romans 5:5

 

 What Does It Mean That the Spirit Dwells Within Us?

This is not symbolic.

This is not poetic language.

This is real.

The Holy Spirit is not:

  • just around us
  • just helping us
  • just guiding us from a distance

He is:
 within us

To dwell means:

  • to remain
  • to live
  • to make a home

God has not chosen to stay far away.

He has chosen to make His home in us

 

 From External to Internal

Before the Resurrection, the disciples experienced Jesus externally:

  • walking with Him
  • listening to Him
  • watching Him

But after the Resurrection — and through the gift of the Spirit — everything changed.

God was no longer just with them.

 He was now within them

This is the great shift of Eastertide.

And it is the same for us.

 

 How We Experience the Spirit Within

The Spirit who dwells within us is often:

  • quiet
  • gentle
  • easily overlooked

But He is always present.

We experience Him when:

  • there is a deep peace beneath everything else
  • we are drawn to prayer without force
  • we sense a quiet “this is the way”
  • love rises in us where it didn’t before
  • we feel held, even in difficulty

This is not emotion alone.

This is:
 the presence of God within

 A Personal Reflection

It is easy to live as if God is:

  • somewhere “out there”
  • something we visit
  • someone we reach toward occasionally

But this truth changes everything:

 The Holy Spirit is already within me.

Not waiting to arrive.
Not distant.
Not absent.

Already there.

The question is not:
“Where is God?”

But:
 “Am I aware of Him within me?”

 

 Living With the Indwelling Spirit

This week, the invitation is simple but profound:

 Become aware

  • Pause during the day
  • Sit in stillness, even briefly
  • Notice the quiet presence within

You don’t need to create anything.

You don’t need to strive.

Simply:
 acknowledge

“Holy Spirit, You are here… within me.”

This is where relationship deepens.

 

 Prayer

Come, Holy Spirit,
You who dwell within me.

Help me to become aware of Your presence.

When I feel alone,
remind me that You are here.

When I am restless,
draw me back within.

When I forget,
gently call me back to You.

Make my heart a place where You are welcomed,
not ignored.

Come, Holy Spirit —
teach me to live with You,
not just seek You.
Amen.

 

 For Reflection This Week

  • Do I live as though the Holy Spirit is truly within me?
  • When do I become most aware of His presence?
  • What would change if I remembered this throughout my day?

 

 

Come Holy Spirit










Sunday, April 19, 2026

Collect for Third Sunday of Easter Year A

 

COLLECT SERIES

The Mass: Collect Series Icon.

 

COLLECT

The Collect for 3rd Sunday of Eastertide reads as follows:


May Your people exult for ever, O God in renewed youthfulness of spirit,

So that, rejoicing now in the restored glory of our adoption,

We may look forward in confident hope to the rejoicing of the day of Resurrection.

Through our Lord Jesus Christ your Son,

Who lives and reigns with You in the unity of the Holy Spirit,

One, God, for ever and ever.

 

REFLECTION QUESTIONS

 

In making this prayer tangible for during the week, the following reflection questions emerged:

 

1.How will I exult in renewed youthfulness of spirit this coming week?

2. What does it mean to me to exult and praise God?

3. How often each day do I praise and exult God in my prayers and throughout the day?

4.What are the areas of my life that needs to be renewed in youthfulness of spirit?

5.What does it mean me to be an adopted son/daughter of God?

6.Why is the resurrection of Jesus central to my Catholic faith?

7.When I experience difficult seasons or times, how will I live in confident hope this coming week?

 

 

 

GOSPEL REFLECTION

 

There are many aspects to the Gospel of the Disciples on the way to Emmaus.

Some of these may be:

  • The grief and downheartedness of these disciples and their expectations of Jesus.
  • Importance of sharing grief/emotions with others who understand and listen.
  • Importance of sharing our life with Jesus- every aspect not just the big things in our lives.
  • The role of scripture in our lives- Scripture is God’s love letter to us. How often do we read it and understand it?
  • What happens when scripture comes alive in us’ How often can we say’’ did our hearts not burn as He explained the scripture to us?’
  • The importance of recognising Jesus as we listen and converse with Him in prayer and also, recognising Him in other people in the circumstances of our lives.

 

If we are to recognise Jesus, we need to spend time with Him  to converse, to listen, to share our lives, hopes, disappointments and daily up and downs.  We need also to spend time to read the scripture- our hearts cant burn within us like the disciples on the road to Emmaus if we do not spend time with Jesus in the scripture. He alone can explain it to us in the best possible way for each of us individually. We too can experience our hearts burning as Jesus speaks to us.

In this time of world uncertainty, we need to re-evaluate our lives on all levels- the physical, emotional, spiritual, financial, social. We need to take stock and  change where necessary our habits, behaviours, attitudes and mindset.  We need to set appropriate goals too so that each day we continue to live in hope in the light of the risen Lord.

 

Remember, regardless of the current world difficulties, the decision to place Jesus no 1 in our lives is a choice- a choice we need to continue to do every day.  However, if we truly love Jesus, then we will want to spend some time with Him every day, we will want to hear Him speak to us and we will want to listen to Him.

 

 

On this third Sunday of Easter when we are reminded of the importance of God’s word for us and recognising Jesus too who also resides in other people, let us recommit ourselves to knowing, loving and serving God this coming week in whatever way we can.  Every task done however small offered to God and done cheerfully can be a gift from us to God, can provide for us more graces we need and ultimately shows our faith in action. We too can be like the disciples from Emmaus, turning back to share the Good News with others of the Risen Lord. We too can experience a watershed moment

 if we are open to God and His grace in our lives.




May our hearts burn within us as we recognise Him this coming week.

 

Alleluia.