DAILY DEVOTIONS, LIFELONG FAITH

The Octave of Pentecost: The Biggest Difference Between the Two Missals

20 May 2024

In a letter to bishops accompanying his Motu Proprio Apostolic Letter Summorum Pontificum (2007), Pope Benedict XVI wrote that the Ordinary and Extraordinary Forms of the Roman Rite โ€œcan be mutually enriching.โ€ Over fifteen years since Benedict allowed for a wider use of the 1962 Missal of John XXIII, the Church has gained a greater appreciation of how this โ€œtwofold use of one and the same riteโ€ can lead to such mutual enrichment.

As paradoxical as it may seem, I propose that the greatest contribution the 1962 Missal of John XXIII offers the Roman Rite is that it makes it more charismatic. In short, whereas the โ€œnewerโ€ Missal confines the Solemnity of Pentecost to a single day, the โ€œolderโ€ Missal prolongs the celebration for an entire week. Just as we have an octave of Christmas and Easter, so we haveโ€”or should haveโ€”an octave of Pentecost. The older Missal can help the Church rediscover the power of the Holy Spirit through a more robust and extended liturgical celebration of Pentecost.

Gregory DiPippo offers a wonderful summary of the history of the Pentecost Octave and argues that โ€œone of the best possible examples of the mutual enrichment of the two forms which the Holy Father spoke of in Summorum Pontificum would be restoration to the post-Conciliar liturgy of at least some of the major features which were eliminated from the Proper of the Seasons,โ€ the โ€œmost prominentโ€ of which is the โ€œOctave of Pentecost.โ€ Even though most practicing Catholics attend Mass only on Sunday, think of the message an eight-day celebration of the Holy Spirit would send to the Church and to the world!

In a rich and probing Encyclical Letter, Saint John Paul II contextualizes the Holy Spirit within manโ€™s inner conflict between sin and sanctity. โ€œOpposition to God,โ€ he writes, โ€œto a certain degree originates in the very fact of the radical difference of the world from God, that is to say in the worldโ€™s โ€˜visibilityโ€™ and โ€˜materialityโ€™ in contrast to him who is โ€˜invisibleโ€™ and โ€˜absolute Spiritโ€™; from the worldโ€™s essential and inevitable imperfection in contrast to him, the perfect beingโ€ (Dominum et Vivificantem, 55). This opposition plays out on an ethical plane since, as Saint Paul writes, โ€œthe desires of the flesh are against the Spirit and the desires of the Spirit are against the fleshโ€ (Gal. 5:17). John Paul reminds us that it is the Holy Spiritโ€™s mission to โ€œconvince the worldโ€ of sin (Jn. 16:8). Saint Paul provides a detailed list contrasting the โ€œworks of the fleshโ€ (enmity, strife, jealousy, anger, selfishness, dissension, โ€œparty spirit,โ€ envy) with the โ€œfruit of the Spiritโ€ (love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control) (cf. Gal. 5:16ff). These two lists give the โ€œpermanent dispositionsโ€ or โ€œvirtues and vicesโ€ that are โ€œthe fruit of submission to (in the first case) or of resistance to (in the second case) the saving action of the Holy Spirit.โ€ Pope John Paul emphasizes the inevitability of that struggle in this world. We donโ€™t seek it. Rather, it is inherent to our condition and to a fallen world. Saint Paulโ€™s words โ€œenable us to know and feel vividly the strength of the tension and struggle going on in man between openness to the action of the Holy Spirit and resistance and opposition to him, to his saving giftโ€ (Dominum et Vivificantem, 55). โ€œWho will win?โ€ he asks. โ€œThe one who welcomes the giftโ€ (Ibid).

If the octave of Pentecost were re-incorporated into the Novus Ordo, we would have ample room to welcome this gift. Liturgically, it would place the welcoming of the Holy Spirit on the same level as the welcoming of the Christ Child at Christmas and the welcoming of the Risen Lord at Easter. It is no coincidence that, just as we fast in preparation for Christmas and Easter, so the Church should fast in preparation for Pentecost. Matthew Plese explains the centrality of this fasting to the traditional Pentecost Vigil. Nothing could remind us more of the struggle between the โ€œfleshโ€ and the โ€œspiritโ€ indicated by Saint Paul and explained by Saint John Paul than a temporary denial of our bodily needs to receive Godโ€™s spiritual pledge of everlasting life.

Yet John Paul also presents a caveat. We donโ€™t engage in this battle in isolation or merely for sake of our individual souls. The struggle taking place in the human heart โ€œfinds in every period of history and especially in the modern era its external dimension, which takes concrete form as the content of culture and civilization, as a philosophical system, an ideology, a program for action and for the shaping of human behaviorโ€ (Dominum et Vivificantem, 56), the clearest expression of which is โ€œmaterialism,โ€ the extreme systematization of which, in turn, is Marxism (Ibid). Thus, the worldโ€”let alone the Churchโ€”is in need of a longer celebration of Pentecost. One day is not enough. It remains to be seen if the โ€œolderโ€ Missal will influence the โ€œnewerโ€ enough to restore the Octave of Pentecost.

Interestingly, one step in this direction may have been Pope Francisโ€™ introduction of the Memorial of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church, on the Monday after Easter. The decree instituting the Memorial teaches that Mary, โ€œas a caring guide to the emerging Churchโ€ฆhad already begun her mission in the Upper Room, praying with the Apostles while awaiting the coming of the Holy Spiritโ€ (cf. Acts 1:14). The Catechism conjoins the mission of the Holy Spirit and that of God the Son precisely through Mary: โ€œThe Holy Spirit, โ€˜the Lord, the giver of Life,โ€™ is sent to sanctify the womb of the Virgin Mary and divinely fecundate it, causing her to conceive the eternal Son of the Father in a humanity drawn from her ownโ€ (CCC 485). Thus, Mary is โ€œthe masterwork of the mission of the Son and the Spirit in the fullness of timeโ€ (CCC 721). It is through Mary that โ€œthe Holy Spirit begins to bring men, the objects of Godโ€™s merciful love, into communion with Christโ€ (CCC 725). Hence, rather than impeding the reinstitution of a Pentecost Octave, the Memorial of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church, could well enhance it, or, at the very least, the latter could be transposed to the Monday after the Octave.ย 

It remains to be seen if and how the post-Vatican II Missal will evolve in the wake of Summorum Pontificum, but it is hard to think of a good reason not to reintroduce the Octave of Pentecost. Extending the celebration of Pentecost for a week would rightly remind us of our personal sins and the sinful systems of the world. But most of all, it would rekindle in us the โ€œdesires of the spirit,โ€ the โ€œexhortations echoing in the night of a new time of advent, at the end of which, like two thousand years ago, โ€˜every man will see the salvation of Godโ€™โ€ (Dominum et Vivificantem, 56. Cf. Lk. 3:6 and Is. 40:5).


Photo by John Canada on Unsplash

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Daniel B. Gallagher, a Lecturer in Literature and Philosophy at Ralston College, holds degrees in philosophy and theology from the Catholic University of America and the Pontifical Gregorian University. Prior to teaching at Notre Dame and Cornell, Professor Gallagher had worked on the secretarial staffs of Popes Benedict XVI and Francis as an English and Latin specialist.

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