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From Scott Richert:
Beginning with the reading from Acts, which speaks of the persecution in the wake of the martyrdom of Saint Stephen,
the Holy Father stressed the centrality of the Church's missionary
activity. Rather than continuing to preach only to the Jews, some
reached out to the Greeks, prompted, Pope Francis said, by the Holy
Spirit. But the Church in Jerusalem, the Holy Father noted,
became
nervous and sent Barnabas on an "apostolic visitation": perhaps, with a
little sense of humor we could say that this was the theological
beginning of the [Congregation for the] Doctrine of the Faith: this
apostolic visit by Barnabas. He saw, and he saw that things were going
well.
This visit was important, because what Acts calls "the Church in Jerusalem" was the
Church, and so the Church in Jerusalem was responsible for spreading
and safeguarding the Gospel. She was a "Mother"; a "Mother who gives us
the faith, a Mother who gives us an identity." It is through her that we
have our identity as Christians: "Christian identity is belonging to
the Church."
And now Pope Francis has arrived at the crux of the
matter, the part that will surprise both those who trumpet "the spirit
of Vatican II" and those who denounce the council as a departure from
tradition. We can only be Christians through the Church,
Because
it is not possible to find Jesus outside the Church. The great Paul VI
said: "Wanting to live with Jesus without the Church, following Jesus
outside of the Church, loving Jesus without the Church is an absurd
dichotomy." And the Mother Church that gives us Jesus gives us our
identity that is not only a seal, it is a belonging. Identity means
belonging. This belonging to the Church is beautiful.
This
is why the missionary activity of the Church is so essential: We cannot
know Christ outside of the Church. We are called to preach the Gospel
to all nations, because that is the only way they can know Christ.
Unless the Church is growing, preaching the Gospel and adding new
members, we are not doing what we are called to do as Christians:
Think
of this Mother Church that grows, grows with new children to whom She
gives the identity of the faith, because you cannot believe in Jesus
without the Church. Jesus Himself says in the Gospel: "But you do not
believe, because you are not among my sheep." If we are not "sheep of
Jesus," faith does not come to us. It is a rosewater faith, a faith
without substance.
"Now this is eternal life: That they may know thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent" (John 17:3). Yet we can know Christ only through the Church.
The
Holy Father's words aren't a message of universal salvation; quite the
opposite. Those who do not come into the Church "cannot believe in
Jesus," and if they cannot believe in Jesus, then, as Christ Himself
tells us, they cannot have eternal life. And that places a tremendous
responsibility on our shoulders: We must expand the missionary activity
of the Church in our own lives, bringing others to the Church not by
"travel[ing] a little along the road of worldliness, negotiating with
the world," but by preaching the Gospel in its fullness, despite the
very real possibility of persecution by a world that hates Christ as
much today as it did at the time of Saint Stephen's martyrdom. (Read more.)
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