YOU TOO WILL BEAR WITNESS
A homily from St Bede the Venerable7
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We find from many places in the holy gospel that before the coming of the
Holy Spirit, the disciples were less capable of understanding the hidden
mysteries of the divine sublimity and were less brave in tolerating the
adversities brought on by human depravity. When the Spirit came upon them
with an increase of divine insight, there was given them the constancy [needed]
to overcome human persecution as well. Hence it is said to them now, in the
Lord’s promise, ‘When the Paraclete comes, whom I shall send you from the
Father, the Spirit of truth who proceeds from the Father, he will bear witness
about me; and you too will bear witness’…
The Spirit, upon his coming, bore witness concerning the Lord. Breathing
into the hearts of the disciples, he revealed to them by his bright light everything
about which mortals were to have knowledge concerning [the Lord], namely,
that he was equal and of the same substance with the Father before the ages;
that he became of the same substance as we at the end of the ages; that he was
born of a virgin and lived in the world without sin; that he went forth from the
world when he wished and by the kind of death that he wished; that by rising
from the dead he truly destroyed death and raised up the true flesh in which he
had suffered, and at his ascension took it up into heaven, and established it at
the right hand of his Father’s glory; that all the writings of the prophets bear
witness to him; that the confession of his name was to be extended even to the
end of the earth, and that the rest of the mysteries of his faith were unlocked for
his disciples by the testimony of the Holy Spirit. Nor was whatever they
7 Bede the Venerable. Homilies on the Gospels: Book Two – Lent to the Dedication of
the Church. Trans. Lawrence T. Martin and David Hurst, OSB. Kalamazoo, MI:
Cistercian Publications, 1991. 149-151.15
correctly discerned conceded to them alone by the gift of the Spirit, but also to
all who believe in the Lord through their word.
‘He’, Jesus says, ‘will bear witness concerning me, and you will bear
witness’. Once they had put aside their initial fear, they ministered outwardly
by telling others what they had received inwardly by the Spirit’s teaching. The
Spirit himself both illumined their hearts by knowledge of the truth, and by the
preeminence of his power roused them to teach what they knew. Hence in
Isaiah the Spirit is rightly called ‘of strength and knowledge’. He is indeed the
Spirit of knowledge, since it is by his help that we rightly acknowledge what we
must do and even think; he is also the Spirit of strength, since it is by his help
that we receive [the strength] to carry out what we know well that we should do,
lest we be driven away by some adversity from the good deeds we have begun…
He who warned them ahead of time that the hour of persecution would
come is the one who, a little later, pledged his help to his faithful in the
persecution, saying, ‘You will have distress in the world; but have confidence;
I have overcome the world’. He elsewhere promised the crown of life to those
who are sincerely engaged in strife, saying, ‘Blessed are those who suffer
persecution for the sake of justice, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven’.