The Seven Gifts of the Holy
SpiritDo They Matter?
By F.X. Blisard*
Remember
confirmation class? You were probably
taught that, at the moment the Bishop anointed you with the holy oil, you would
be endowed by God with several spiritual gifts or charisms. Youve probably wondered more than once
since then why your teacher(s) made such a fuss about such obscure notions as
Wisdom, Understanding, Counsel, Fortitude, Knowledge, Piety, and Fear of the
Lord. As an antidote to this common
ecclesial ailment, I ask you to travel with me in your imagination to a
dramatic, desperate scene from ancient history that, Believe It Or Not, has
more than a little bearing on the situation.
DATELINE: Jerusalem, 722 B.C. -- Refugees from the north are pouring into the southern kingdom, Judah, with tales of the terrors inflicted upon Galilee and Samaria by the Assyrian army. For a whole generation now, Israel and Judah have watched with increasing anxiety as one Assyrian king after another has conquered nation after nation along the eastern Mediterranean coast. The Prophet Isaiah portrays the advancing Assyrian forces as an instrument in the hands of God, a divine axe felling the surrounding nations like trees in an attempt to get His wayward Peoples attention:
Behold, the Lord, the LORD of hosts will lop the boughs with terrifying power; the great in height will be hewn down, and the lofty will be brought low. He will cut down the thickets of the forest with an axe, and Lebanon with its majestic trees will fall. (Isaiah 10:33-34)
During
this tumultuous period, the kings of Israel and Judah alike have failed
miserably to provide the kind of leadership that the Chosen People need in
order to enjoy the peace, prosperity, and security that God promised their
ancestors if only they would keep His law.
Not only have they allowed the rich to trample upon the poor, but they
themselves worship the idols of the surrounding nations and seek to establish
national security by way of treaties with those same nations rather than
through intimate relationship with the Lord.
The divided monarchy itself is but a symptom of this deep alienation
from the God who originally created a united people and nation.
Chapter
11 of the Book of Isaiah opens with a shocking image, one that implies that the
House of David never got the message and, in its turn, fell to the blows of
that same divine axe:
There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse [father of King David] , and a branch shall grow out of his roots. (Isaiah 11:1)
Isaiahs vision, however, is that of a slate wiped clean, upon which the Lord will write anew:
There
shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out
of his roots. And the Spirit of the
LORD shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding,
the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and the fear
of the LORD [ancient Greek
versions translated this as piety ]. And his delight shall be in the fear of
the LORD. He shall not judge by
what his eyes see, or decide by what his ears hear; but with righteousness he
shall judge the poor, and decide with equity for the meek of the earth; and he
shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his
lips he shall slay the wicked. (Isaiah 11:1-3)
This
apocalyptic vision of the Prophet Isaiah provides us with the earliest recorded
instance of those heroic character traits that the Church has come to call the
Seven Gifts of the Holy Spirit. In the
midst of national disaster, with no hope in sight, Isaiah sees a new king of a
renewed Israel, establishing a kingdom in which every person is treated justly
and evildoers do not escape detection and retribution. As Christians, we believe that that king is
none other than Jesus of Nazareth and that he calls us to join him in his
efforts to establish that kingdom. Any
takers?
[Originally
published May 27, 2004 in The Monitor,
official
newspaper of The Diocese of Trenton, New Jersey]
*F.X. Blisard is a member
of Blessed Sacrament Church, Trenton, which he serves as a lector and extraordinary
eucharistic minister. He works as a
technical editor for a medical education and marketing firm in southeastern
Pennsylvania. He can be reached for
comment at: frankblisard@msn.com .