Petrus and Paulus -- Luke Tuymens (1998) |
This week’s readings record two of the most important events
in the history of the Christian church – Christ’s post-Resurrection commissions
to the apostles Paul and Peter. Together these two figures tower over all
others in the Acts of the Apostles,
and even now, two thousand years later, they remain compelling models of what
really it means to be an ‘evangelist’ – a preacher of the news that humanity’s
salvation is to be found in the life and death of Jesus.
The contrast between them is instructive. Christ’s
appearance on the road to Damascus is probably the most famous conversion
experience in human history. Saul, renowned for his strength of will and
motivated by a profound hatred of Jesus, is first reduced to being led by the
hand, and then transformed into Paul, Christ’s most passionate and
theologically articulate servant. Peter is a simpler and a softer character. In
his case, the risen Christ transforms an almost dog-like faithfulness into
inspirational leadership that quickly wins him the deepest respect of the
earliest Christians.
Calling of St Paul He Qi (2001) |
Peter and Paul were both good Jews, and as Christians they remained
so. When they finally met it was their attitudes to Judaism that caused their
disagreements. Paul heard in Christ a call to transcend traditional boundaries
that Peter was reluctant to abandon. It was a dispute they found ways of
negotiating, and like the other differences between them, it reveals something
very important. Right from the outset, the Bible tells us, Christ chooses to
entrust his ‘flock’ to shepherds with a wide variety of gifts and sharply
contrasting styles.
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