6th Week of Easter
May 9, 2018
Acts 17: 15, 22—18: 1
I didn’t actually preach this homily, which I prepared after
misreading our liturgical assignments for this week.
In Acts 17 we read of St. Paul’s brief
mission in Athens. This most
sophisticated Greek city makes a startling contrast with Corinth, Paul’s next
destination (18:1-11). Corinth was a moral
sewer, yet Paul was welcomed there and stayed 18 months, whereas he made only a
handful of converts and stayed a very short time in “wise” Athens.
St. Paul Preaching at Athens (Raphael) |
In Athens Paul uses a different
approach than his usual one. We don’t
hear that he began by presenting Jesus in the synagog but among the cultural
elite, the philosophers. He uses a
tactic that today we call “see, judge, act.”
That is, he observes the religious practices of the Athenians, evaluates
what he observes, and preaches according to his assessment of their
religiosity.
The Athenians are pagans, not
Jews. But Paul thinks he finds in them
an openness to the truth of a single Creator God (17:23-27); he doesn’t think
those intellectual sophisticates really believe the foolishness of Greek
mythology. He even quotes some of their
own cultural heritage (17:28), as among the Jews he quotes the Scriptures.
Unfortunately, Paul misreads what the
Greek sophisticates are open to. With
very few exceptions (17:34), they reject out of hand the idea that someone has been
raised from the dead (17:32). They’re
amused at such silliness. They can’t
imagine that God really cares so much about people. Maybe they can’t even accept the idea of
personal sin, for Paul has also spoken of judgment (17:30-31). Paul’s Athens experience, especially in
contrast to what will come in Corinth, evidences the truth of Jesus’
words: “I praise you, Father, … for
altho you have hidden these things from the wise and the learned, you have revealed
them to the childlike” (Matt 11:25).
Paul models evangelization for us,
however. He attempts to lead people from
their own experience toward the Gospel, and he speaks plainly the truth of the
Gospel—in this case, that God created us, that we are morally responsible
creatures, and that Jesus Christ, risen, is the Savior.
This is the mystery mentioned in our
Collect this morning, the mystery in which we participate at this altar, the
mystery we pray to be worthy of when Jesus comes in judgment.
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