History,
as Blessed Pope John XXIII is supposed to have said, is the greatest of
teachers. So it is no accident that the bulk of the Bible – both Old and New
Testaments – is history of one sort or other.
And
so it is also that every day of these seven weeks we call the Easter season the
Church reads from the New Testament book called the Acts of the Apostles,
actually the second volume of Luke’s Gospel, his continuation of the story of
Jesus in the history of the Church.
Acts
tells the amazing story of the Church’s growth, of the gradual but definitive
expansion of its membership and the widening of its mission as the Good News
spread – first in Jerusalem, then through Judea, then in to Samaria, and
eventually into the Greek-speaking, pagan world of the Roman Empire. All this
took place not by happenstance, but as
part of God’s long-term providential plan – as Saint Paul makes clear quoting
Isaiah in today’s 1st reading [Acts 13:14, 43-52]: I
have made you a light to the Gentiles, that you may be an instrument of
salvation to the ends of the earth.
We get some sense of what that is
supposed to mean from the Book of Revelation’s vision of the heavenly liturgy [Revelation 7:9, 14b-17],
with its great multitude which no one could
count, from every nation, race, people, and tongue. But how do we
get from here to there? Getting from here to there
– that’s the mission of the Church and the history of the Church,
modeled for us in the Acts of the Apostles.
It’s called the Acts of the Apostles,
but after the first few chapters most of the original 12 fade from center
stage. Paul (who wasn’t one of the 12 and who never knew Jesus during his
earthly life) eventually emerges as one of the central figures in the history
of the Church’s growth and expansion. Perhaps that had something to do with the
fact that Paul was bi-cultural and bi-lingual – a Jew from a Greek city (and a
Roman citizen besides).
In any case, Paul’s conversion to
Christ has been so complete that it compelled him to share Christ with
everyone. Paul recognized in the Risen Lord the fulfillment of God’s promise to
Israel and God’s plan to include all people in eternal life. Since it
was ultimately Christ who counted, Paul saw no conflict between being a Gentile
and having faith in Jesus – thus making it possible for the Gospel to be really
Good News for all.
The world has changed a lot
since Paul’s time, but the Church’s mission hasn’t. There is always a
temptation to turn inward, to become a cozy kind of community, caring a lot
about ourselves, concerned with who we are and what we have together. But the
mission of the Church, our literally quite Catholic mission, remains
that of the Good Shepherd, whose voice in the world we now are – we, who have
been commanded, as Paul was, to be an
instrument of salvation to the ends of the earth.
On this 50th annual World Day of Prayer for Vocations, we
are also reminded of what we might call the “personnel needs” of the Church for
it to fulfill its mission of making the Good Shepherd’s voice heard in today’s
world. The wonderful story Acts tells of the growth and expansion of the Church
needed people like Paul and Barnabas to respond to the Risen Christ’s
invitation to full-time involvement in the mission – even at the risk, as Acts
acknowledges, that such a life might put one at odds with prevailing cultural
and societal trends.
All the more reason, therefore, why it
is so necessary for all of us to be always ready to respond filled with joy and the Holy Spirit to
the challenge of God’s call – whatever in particular it may be in our
individual lives – and ever on the alert to identify, encourage, and support
the Pauls and Barnabases of our day, who may be right here in our
community today and whose energy and commitment will be needed if the Good
Shepherd’s voice is to continue to be heard in our world.
Homily for the 4th Sunday of Easter (50th Annual World Day of Prayer for Vocations),, Immaculate Conception church, Knoxville, TN, April 21, 2013.
Homily for the 4th Sunday of Easter (50th Annual World Day of Prayer for Vocations),, Immaculate Conception church, Knoxville, TN, April 21, 2013.
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