St. Barnabas, whom the Church calendar commemorates today, shares with Saint Paul the distinction of being one of the
only two (outside the select group of the 12) whom the Church honors with the
title “apostle.” Presumably, he has that title because, along with Paul, he was
divinely commissioned for the mission. According to the account at the
beginning of Acts 13, while five early Christian prophets and teachers were worshiping the Lord and fasting, the Holy
Spirit said, "Set apart for me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I
have called them." And so it was that the two set out on what we now
call Paul’s 1st Missionary Journey.
We call it Paul’s 1st Missionary Journey and tend to think
of Barnabas as Paul’s associate, but it is evident from this account of their
commissioning - as well as from the later mis-identification of Barnabas with
Zeus at Lystra (Acts 14:12), where the two were together referred to as
apostles (Acts 14:14) – that Barnabas was at first the more senior partner. Acts
11 already told us that it was Barnabas who had been the Jerusalem community’s
emissary to the new Christians in Antioch, who then fetched Saul back form
Tarsus, and that the two together met
with the Church and taught a large number of people.
Actually, Barnabas had appeared
on the scene even earlier – as early as Acts 4:36-37. At that very early stage
in the story of the apostolic Church, Joseph,
also named by the apostles Barnabas (which is translated “son of
encouragement”), a Levite, a Cypriot by birth, sold a piece of property that he
owned, then brought the money and put it at the feet of the apostles.
Now that I am a pastor of a
church (and about to replace a roof), I can easily understand why, when Barnabas
brought the profits from the sale of his property to the apostles, they named
him “son of encouragement”!
Money aside, what a nice name!
The Church is forever in need of missionaries - apostolic evangelizers, as
Barnabas was along with Paul. The Church is also forever in need of pastors –
apostolic shepherds of evangelized communities, as Barnabas was at Antioch,
together with Paul. But both missionaries and pastors – and those they serve –
all need encouragement! In today’s
world, discouragement seems so easy,
and encouragement so correspondingly necessary
- as I’m sure must have been the case in the apostolic Church of Acts and in
every age of the Church ever since. That’s one of the reasons why I think the
Acts of the Apostles is such a great book, because it is such an encouraging book!
Being a disciple has many
dimensions and makes many different demands. Obviously, not all have been called like Barnabas to be sent
out as missionaries. Neither have all been called to sell their property or to
supervise the religious life of a community. Spreading the gospel and living
a Gospel life as a Church community challenge each of us in different ways. But
all of us need encouragement –
everyday! And we all need to encourage one another in the day-in, day-out drama
of ordinary life, shaped and reshaped by our extraordinary story.
No comments:
Post a Comment