4th Week of Easter
April
26, 2018
Acts
13: 13-25Nativity, Washington, D.C.
“From
Paphos, Paul and his companions set sail and arrived at Perga in Pamphylia”
(Acts 13: 13).
Parts
of the middle section of Acts of the Apostles, where we are now, read like a
travelog, and you probably wonder where all these strange places are. St. Paul and his fellow missionaries are roaming
all over the territory that is now Turkey and then on to Greece.
Paul Preaching in Athens, by Raphael |
On the
feast of St. Mark yesterday we omitted the reading from Acts that describes how
St. Paul and St. Barnabas were commissioned as missionaries by the Church at
Antioch in the Roman province of Syria—the 3d-largest city in the entire Roman
Empire and the site of a major Christian community, where—as we heard in the
reading on Tuesday, the Gospel was beginning to be preached to pagan Greeks and
not only to Jews. Thus St. Luke, the
author of Acts, is showing us the gradual expansion of the faith. In fact, we believe that Luke himself was a
native of Antioch.
We’ve
already heard of the 1st steps in that expansion to the Gentiles with Philip’s
preaching in Samaria and to the Ethiopian, and Peter’s receiving the household
of Cornelius into the Church. That
expansion continues as Paul and Barnabas, accompanied by John Mark, undertake
what we now call Paul’s 1st missionary journey.
In the 1st lines of ch. 13, which we didn’t read yesterday, they go to
Cyprus—where Barnabas was from (Acts 4:36)—and preach the Gospel with some
success. Today it’s back to the
mainland. They land at Perga on the
coast of southern Turkey, in the province of Pamphylia, then make their way
about 100 miles inland to another town called Antioch in the province of
Pisidia. (These different cities with
that name were all named for members of a Greek dynasty that ruled the region
after Alexander the Great until they were conquered by Rome, in the 3d and 2d
centuries B.C.)
We’ll
hear often how Paul and his companions go into the synagogs on the Sabbath in
different cities and preach Jesus Christ.
The sermon that begins today will continue tomorrow, and it’s similar to
the long sermon that St. Stephen delivered back in ch. 7 before his
martyrdom. Luke presents these sermons
as typical Christian preaching, showing how Jesus of Nazareth brings to
completion all that God has been doing in Israel, starting with Abraham and
continuing thru Moses and David. Jesus
is the Son of David who fulfills what God promised, the salvation of his
people. And John the Baptist—whose
disciples also had spread around the eastern Mediterranean—pointed to Jesus as
the savior of Israel.
Thus
far today’s reading. What does it tell
us? 1st, Jesus comes forth from a people,
a people with a definite, God-directed history.
He’s not a myth, like the stories of the Greek and Roman gods. 2d, Jesus fulfills a plan that God set forth
thru that people, Israel. 3d, by
referring to that people and their history and showing forth God’s plan, Paul
more effectively preaches the Gospel.
Of
course that message holds true for us in the 21st century, and not just for the
people of the 1st century. It would mean
even more for us if we were more familiar with Israel’s history and the words
of Israel’s prophets—for they truly are our own history, our own ancestors; the
Old Testament is our own Scriptures. Our
Scripture reading has to begin with the Gospels and the rest of the New
Testament; but then we have to reach back to the Torah, the prophets, the
Psalms, etc.
The
reading, or more generally, the preaching set forth in Acts, can also point out
to us that it’s important for us to know the history of Christianity after the
apostles—the story of the Church from the 1st century to today. Who are we, how did we get here, how has God
continued to direct the history of his people?
How is what we believe and teach as true today in continuity with what
Paul, Barnabas, Peter—and Jesus—preached?
No comments:
Post a Comment