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When in Rome, Do as the Roman Christians Did
BY Father Michael E. Giesler
September 27-October 3, 2009 Issue |
Posted 9/18/09 at 10:18 AM
When people
think of the early Christians, they often picture doomed individuals thrown
onto the floor of the Colosseum to face starving lions. Or they may think of
small congregations huddled in dark underground catacombs. While such popular
depictions are certainly based in historical facts, the mental images they
conjure often leave out the most important message those first Christians
wished to communicate: their indomitable hope.
This virtue, given to them in
baptism along with faith and charity, also gave them their primary reason for
living. They believed they had God’s own life within them, enabling them to
live in an unwelcoming world — and die in it — with bold confidence. For their
hope was not for fulfillment in this life. It was for eternal happiness in the
next.
They
would often say “Maranatha” in their prayers and liturgies: Come, Lord Jesus.
Their conviction about the afterlife and the power of Christ’s resurrection
gave them extraordinary courage.
A
common characteristic of the ancient world was a kind of depression of
the spirit. Many people lacked hope. What could new things or experiences
matter if human existence had no apparent meaning or larger purpose? A Latin
epitaph from those days reads “De nihilo ad nihil quam cito
recedimus” — How quickly we fall back from nothing to nothing. With
nothing true and transcendent to live for, people filled their lives with games
and other pastimes, many of them violent. But, in the end, these things
couldn’t fill the human heart. In fact, they only left it feeling more bitter
and empty.
Pagan religions attempted to fill
that emptiness. People in the first three centuries had some belief in gods and
goddesses, but the elaborate mythologies that sprang up to support them were
obvious projections of human wants, fears and frustrations. Eastern myths based
on nature and the seasons spoke of new life, but they were either ambiguous or
self-contradictory. None of them really asked a person to change his attitude
or behavior from within. None gave a compelling reason for living each day.
Meanwhile,
the followers of Christ believed that everything, even pain and suffering,
brimmed with meaning. Their happiness derived not from their earthly
circumstances, but from their trust in Christ — which held fast regardless of
their circumstances. Instead of mysterious nature rituals, instead of
complicated Gnostic formulas of salvation, these men and women had a source of
hope that came from Christ’s Church and from receiving the Eucharist, God’s own
body and blood. The early Christians lived these mysteries as the most
important reality of their lives. Little by little, as the years went by, they
transformed ancient society.
Fast-forward to our world. Many
people today worship “gods and goddesses” of various kinds. Some revere the
gods of science and technology, others the god of progress (whatever that
means), others the goddess of hedonism. There are many ideologies and religions
that worship nature, including the goddess Earth with all of her adherents.
Some place their trust in political correctness, while others simply adopt a
cool indifference to mankind and his suffering — a sort of neo-Stoicism. Some
respect and celebrate human virtue, as the Stoics did, but only for the sake of
pride or self-satisfaction.
None of these ideologies can truly
bring hope to the world. This was the main thesis of Pope Benedict’s 2007
encyclical, Spe Salvi (Saved in Hope). After
delineating some of the lesser hopes people live by in our day, the Holy Father
concludes that our only true hope is God, “who encompasses the whole of reality
and who can bestow upon us what we, by ourselves, cannot attain. The fact that
[hope] comes to us as a gift is actually part of hope. God is the foundation of
hope: not any god, but the God who has a human face and who has loved us to the
end, each one of us and humanity in its entirety.”
Because of their supernatural hope,
early Christians endured all kinds of persecutions, though some of them fell
away through human weakness. They believed in the marriage bond, which they
held to be indissoluble, based on Christ’s own words. This was almost like an
affront in a world where many Roman men had their mistresses and their wives
had secret lovers. They would not practice contraception in their marital relations,
but were open to children, since they valued every child as a gift from God,
destined to be part of Christ’s eternal Kingdom. Procured abortion was an
unspeakable crime in their sight, since it was an offense against the
life-giving God they believed in. Their love for children went so far that they
even went to the street corners of the big Greco-Roman cities where pagan
couples would leave their unwanted children, then adopted these boys and girls
into their own homes. Where many non-Christians or Gnostic heretics rejected
marriage and the family, the Christians exalted it.
There were also many men and women
throughout the Roman Empire who gave themselves completely to Christ in
celibacy, as a way of imitating Christ himself and spreading his Kingdom on
earth. There were not only priests who made this commitment, but also ordinary
lay faithful. This extraordinary example of faith and hope astounded the pagan
world, as it continues to astound people today. That young men and women would
give up their right to sex and marriage for the sake of a higher love was, at
least for some, a witness almost as strong as martyrdom.
The hope of the early Christians had
two factors that almost seem in tension: They dearly longed for the Parousia,
Christ’s coming with his everlasting Kingdom — but, at the same time, they
looked at the world as something to be loved and redeemed now.
The earliest Christians did not separate themselves from the world, but
remained within it, trying to sanctify it.
All of these factors had a
transforming effect on ancient society. Little by little the “mustard seed”
grew, as in the Gospel parable. Christians began as a small and despised group
of individuals and families in a pagan world, but eventually converted that
world to Christ. How did they do it? One heart at a time.
“To be truly alive is to be
transformed from within, open to the energy of God’s love,” Pope Benedict told
the throngs of young people at World Youth Day in Australia last year. “In
accepting the power of the Holy Spirit, you can also transform your families,
communities and nations.”
To transform something is not to
destroy it or alter it in a radical way. It is to change something from within,
giving it a new form of life or state of existence. That is what the early
Christians did for their society. It is what we Christians must do for ours.
Opus Dei Father Michael E.
Giesler is the author of Grain of Wheat (Scepter,
2008) and two other works of historical fiction.
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