“Father,
may everything we do
begin with your inspiration
and continue with your saving help
Let our work always find its origin in you
And through you reach completion.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.”
may everything we do
begin with your inspiration
and continue with your saving help
Let our work always find its origin in you
And through you reach completion.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.”
The modern definition of
inspiration is the drawing in of breath. A more exact meaning is to breathe
into something. The Greek word used for Holy Spirit in Holy Scripture is pneuma. Pneuma deals with the movement of air. It is
also translated as wind or breath. Anywhere in Holy Scripture you see the word
wind or spirit you can substitute breath, as in the breath of God. It really
gives scripture a new feel when read this way.
“In the beginning God
created the heavens and the earth. The earth was formless and void, and darkness was over the
surface of the deep, and the breath
of God was moving over the surface of the waters.” – Genesis 1: 1 -2
“But God remembered Noah
and all the beasts and all the cattle that were with him in the ark; and God
caused his breath to pass over the
earth, and the water subsided.” – Genesis 8:1
“And suddenly there came
from heaven a noise like a violent rushing breath,
and it filled the whole house where they were sitting. And there
appeared to them tongues as of fire distributing themselves, and they rested on
each one of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Breath and began to speak with other tongues, as the Breath was giving them utterance.”
– Acts 2: 2-4
There are two parts to breathing, inhalation and
exhalation. We breathe in, we breathe out. Kids often threaten their parents
with holding their breath until they turn blue. If they hold their breath long
enough they will pass out and begin to breathe normally again. The opposite of
inspire is expire, to breathe out of the lungs.
When God inspires us, that is, when he breathes into
us his Holy Spirit we must expire this breath for breathing to be complete. We
cannot hold it in. It is not ours to keep. God fills us with his spirit so we
may accomplish his will. He gives us talents and gifts to serve him and our
fellow man but he also fills us with the breath we need to do this. We do not
get inspiration to serve ourselves. Inspiration is always given for the service
of others.
A body that has no breath within it is dead.
Likewise, a person without the Holy Spirit is also dead. We receive the Holy
Spirit at our baptisms when God breathes into us our new life in Christ. We
rise from the font of baptism as a baby emerging from the womb. As we suck in
that first breath of our new life the Spirit of God fills our lungs anew. And
like the baby just from the womb there is little more we can do but breathe. We
must learn to use this new spirit within us. We must continue to grow in faith
until we are mature enough to use this breath for the purpose God gave it to
us. Baptism is not just a onetime event where we get pictures with a man in
funny robes and then go home, have some cake, and return to our lives lived the
same way. We have just received God’s Holy Breath and have been made into new
creatures with new life.
“Father, may everything we do begin with your
inspiration,”
Breath into us Lord your Holy Breath,
“and continue with your saving help”
Lead us and guide us throughout this day,
“Let our work find its origin with you”
Not my will but yours be done,
“and through you reach completion.”
Use me, Lord, as an instrument of your will.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Breathe in – breathe out – repeat.
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