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August 24-30, 2008 Issue |
Posted 8/19/08 at 12:35 PM
The apostle to the Gentiles proclaimed the Gospel
to a multicultural and embattled world very much like ours. Here are some
things we can learn from him as we enter more deeply into a time of
persecution.
We
live in the crybaby age. The world is chockablock with people in need of
insensitivity training. From people who gasp in anguish at the little
leprechaun who is the Notre Dame mascot (insensitivity to Irish-Americans!) to
the recent kerfuffle over the Dallas County official who complained that the
term “black hole” was racist, we are up to our ears in overwrought victimhood.
Catholics, too, can fall for this and start whining about “hate crimes” every
time somebody looks at us cross-eyed.
St.
Paul was not like that. His life was one of imprisonments, beatings and brushes
with death (2 Corinthians 11:24-27). Simply getting dissed on the Internet
would not have even raised his pulse. Being castigated as a mackerel snapper or
otherwise mocked as an idiot by some disciple of PZ Myers would not have
registered on the Richter scale. And from jail, he wrote, not letters of
complaint, but “Rejoice!” (Philippians 4:4-7).
So
was Paul some sort of quietist who never dealt with injustice? Far from it. On
numerous occasions, he made use of what he knew of the political and social
situations in order to advance the Gospel.
So,
for instance, he more than once appealed to the fact that he was a Roman
citizen, not only to prevent the civil authorities from beating him, but also
to protect those entrusted to his care. We can see an example of this in Acts
16. In Philippi, after preaching the Gospel, he was taken into custody and
flogged by the city magistrates. Instead of nursing a grudge against the civil
authorities who abused him, he preached to his very jailer and brought him and
his family into the fold. When the magistrates of the city discovered, to their
horror, that they had beaten a Roman citizen, Paul had a number of options. He
could have cost his persecutors their jobs or their heads.
Instead,
when they tried to hustle him out of town with profuse apologies and as little
publicity as possible, he made a great show of going to visit the nascent
Church he had just founded. Why? In order to spread his mantle of protection
over them. His message to the magistrates of Philippi was clear: Harm them and
this unfortunate incident will reach the ears of top people.
In
short, Paul’s first concern was not himself, but the good of God’s people and
the progress of the Gospel. We should imitate that. Instead of joining in our
culture’s tendency toward hypersensitivity to personal slights, we should take
the wrongs done us and hand them over to God, asking “Is there some way you can
use this to glorify your name?”
Another
point Paul understood clearly was “all things to all”(I Corinthians 9:22). This
does not mean that Paul ever sacrificed core principles. He was utterly adamant
about those. But it did mean that he knew exactly where those principles
stopped and what was negotiable began. So, for instance, Paul understood that
there was no excuse at all for demanding circumcision as somehow necessary to
salvation. On multiple occasions, he bitterly condemned those who tried to
force Gentiles to be circumcised in order to earn the grace of God. He knew
that the love of God was not earned by works of the law, but was freely given
in Christ.
But
precisely because he was governed by the law of love, he also knew that those
who were making their appeal to Jews should honor Jewish sensibilities, not for
the sake of their own salvation, but to avoid giving unnecessary offense. So he
circumcised Timothy, a Jewish Christian with a Greek father, lest his Jewish
hearers suppose he was trying to destroy the customs of their ancestors.
In our culture, too, there are
things which are offensive to God (like abuse of the human person and
desecration of the Eucharist) and things which are merely cultural or aesthetic
differences of no moral consequence one way or the other. For all his sound and
fury against the Judaizers, it is important to remember that, for Paul,
circumcision was morally neutral.
It
only became an issue when some Christians insisted upon it as a necessary
prelude to earning God’s love. As a mere custom, he saw no problem with it — and
even honored the custom when doing so opened doors to the Gospel. We modern
Catholics should imitate him in our battle for souls.
In
our next and last installment, we will finish looking at Paul’s strategies for
preaching the Gospel in a time of persecution.
Mark Shea is senior content editor
for CatholicExchange.com.
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