Of course, most saints are celebrated on the anniversary of
their death; and, if the saint was a martyr, that itself is often his or her
principal claim on our attention. Paul was in fact martyred in Rome along with the Apostle Peter, and the two are indeed celebrated together every year on June 29.
But then, every January 25, there is this atypically additional celebration of St. Paul –
focused on the event in his life that we now commonly call his “conversion.”
That great event transformed Paul into a disciple of Jesus and put him on an
equal footing with the others to whom the Risen Lord had appeared,
highlighting for us what it means to be converted to Christ, to become a
disciple of Jesus, his witness in the world, and an apostle sent with mission
to evangelize, to make disciples of all peoples - Predicator veritatis in universo mundo (Preacher of the truth to the whole world).
Until then, Paul had been, first and foremost, a devout Jew, well
educated in the Law, a Pharisee, that is, a member of the group most zealous
about religious observance. But he was also a Greek-speaking Jew, from what we
call the Diaspora, those living outside the land of Israel. He grew up in what is today Turkey, in a Greek city, and enjoyed Roman
citizenship.
All of this was very important, because one of the
critical issues which confronted the apostolic Church was figuring
out how Jews and Gentiles were connected in God’s plan for the salvation of the
world through Jesus Christ – and how Jews and Gentiles should relate to one
another within the one community of the Church. The way this issue was
eventually resolved (thanks in no small part to Paul) helped transform what
would otherwise have been a small Jewish sect into the biggest and
longest-lasting multi-cultural institution in the world - the Roman Catholic
Church.
What Paul experienced when he met the Risen Lord on
the way to Damascus was a revelation of God’s plan to include all people in the
promises originally made to Abraham and his descendants and now being finally
fulfilled in Jesus. The God who revealed himself to Paul in the person of Jesus
was the same God whom Paul had always served so enthusiastically as a Jew. What
changed was that now Paul recognized Jesus as the One, though whom all people
are included in God’s plan of salvation.
And because the newly converted Paul now understood
that it was Jesus that ultimately mattered, he also recognized no conflict
between Gentile culture and faith in Christ. For the pagan peoples of the Roman
Empire, that was good news indeed. It’s easy to see why Paul’s mission was so
successful among different types of people and why he continues to serve as a
model. The world has changed a lot since Paul’s time, but the Church’s mission - our mission - remains the same.
Paul was not one of the original 12.
He wasn’t there when Jesus said to his
disciples: go into the whole world and proclaim the gospel to every creature. But he absorbed those words as
surely as if they had been initially addressed to him – as we also must do.
Photo: Papal Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls, Rome.
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