An old-fashioned way to look at missionary work would be to take the attitude of bringing God to the people of a foreign land for the very first time very. However, presently in the Catholic Church, missionaries are taught that people have God present to them and working in their lives in many ways even before they formally adopt Christianity as their faith. Many times, they may be unaware of the different ways God is at work in their lives.
We might think of this in the context of today’s first reading in the Acts of the Apostles, as we hear of Paul preaching to the people of Athens. It's astounding to hear about Paul's travels throughout the ancient Mediterranean world, but it's even more noteworthy to hear how Paul speaks not only to those Greeks educated in philosophy, but also how he can relate so well to peasants, city dwellers, rural residents, and slaves alike, helping to bring so many diverse people together in the Way of Jesus. In today's reading, Paul makes use of a shrine “to an unknown god” to introduce the faith in our Lord Jesus Christ to the Athenians, telling them that they unknowingly have worshipped the God who made heaven and earth, the God who gives life and breath and all of creation. He is the God that the poets and the philosophers of the world have in common.
As we hear the words of Paul today in modern America, in a culture and a time so different from the context in which they were originally proclaimed, let us give thanks and rejoice for the privilege we have in hearing the truth of God’s holy word preached to us, in setting our hearts free by the words of holy scripture. Let us pray in our own words and from our own hearts for what we still need to know in order to be able to follow Jesus without reservation. May the honesty and integrity in which Paul preached the Good News of Jesus always be an inspiration to us on our own journeys of faith.
No comments:
Post a Comment