Since Pentecost | We Live in the Age of the Spirit

Since Pentecost, we live in the age of the Spirit. Christian spirituality is a journey with God—a hand-in-hand walk, not a checklist of beliefs carved on a tablet.
What does that look like? Not dogma. Not gatekeeping. Not spiritual scorekeeping.
I sometimes joke that I’m a contemplative or a mystic—maybe even “so spiritual I’m no earthly good.”
But the truth is, throughout my ministry I’ve sensed a calling to help people grow in their awareness of knowing God and being known by God. Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—the Three in One—drawing us into relationship.
How many of you remember learning to drive? White-knuckled hands on the wheel, checking the mirrors every two seconds, praying you wouldn’t take out the trash cans on the way out of the driveway.
And how many of you made a few mistakes? A curb jumped out at you. The mailbox leaned in a little too close. Maybe a parent in the passenger seat rediscovered their prayer life.
But once you learn to drive, you don’t quit because of a rough day on the road. You get back in the car.
Our spiritual life is like that. We drift. We overcorrect. We miss a turn. And the Spirit keeps whispering, “You’re still on the journey. Keep going.”
Sometimes we say, “Not right now, God. Let me get my life together first.
Come back when I’m more spiritual.” But God meets us exactly as we are—not defined by our past, not disqualified by our mistakes, not waiting for us to become perfect.
The message you’ve heard from me before, and will hear again, is this: God loves you right now. Not the cleaned-up version of you. Not the future version of you. You, as you are.
That’s what transformation means—being changed from the inside out as we come to know God more fully and allow God to know us. Our world and God’s world begin to weave together.
Wow! This message is golden!
Enjoy the summer months. We might even have some sun in our Borrego forecast.
Blessings,
Fr. Dave+






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