Our Indebtedness to the Apostles
by Father Paul K. Raftery, O.P.
Now that we have reached the Two-Thousand-Year mark since
God, in Christ, entered our Human Condition, there is reason for us to
remember how nothing about Christ would have been announced to the World, nor would
Our Blessed Lord have successfully founded His Church,
were it not for a few extremely Key People. These Key People are the Apostles, those Chosen Men whom Our
Lord instructed in His Message of Salvation for Humanity and Commissioned
to form the "Assembly of the Faithful".
The Church's Apostolic Foundation
The Metaphor we are all familiar with for describing the Mystery of the
Church, is that of a 'Building'. Saint Paul speaks of the
Faithful as "built upon the Foundation of the Apostles and Prophets, Christ Jesus Himself
being the Cornerstone, in Whom the whole structure is joined together and grows into a Holy Temple in the Lord; in Whom you also are
built into it for a Dwelling Place of God in the Spirit" (Ephesians 2:19-21).
Christ, as the 'Cornerstone' of this Living Temple, is the
One without Whom the entire Edifice would
Collapse, each stone in the Structure resting on it, no stone being able to stand without it. But intimately
connected with the 'Cornerstone's' support of the entire Structure is the 'Foundation'. For the
Church, the Apostles have this "Ground-Level" placement from which the rest of the building rises.
God's construction of this Temple begins, then, with
Christ, but intimately connected with Him in establishing this
"Spiritual Edifice" are the Apostles. In fact so intimate is this association with
Christ, that in the Gospels, Our Lord
will speak of the Apostles' Mission in the World in the same-breath as His Own:
"As the Father has sent Me, even so I send you" (John 20: 21).
"He who receives you receives Me, and he who receives Me receives Him Who sent Me"
(Matthew 10:40). The point here is that the Transmission of Christ's Power
and Authority to the Apostles was a real one. The Office of Apostle is in fact to continue
Christ's Presence and Activity in the
Church without any Reduction in His Power
and Influence. As the Father Speaks and
Acts through Christ, so
Christ Speaks and Acts through the
Apostles.
How wonderful are the ways of God Who calls Men to join
Him in this Magnificent Structure of the Church.
Christ could have done everything important for the development of the Church
Himself. In forming Her, He
could have dispensed with Human Participation in establishing the Church in all but the
most Insignificant and Accidental Aspects. Human Sin and
Ignorance certainly provided ample occasion for the Lord to relegate Men to
responsibilities with little or no consequence. The stories of Peter in the
Gospels indicate so well the kind of Human Weakness
Christ had to deal with. Especially after his Three-fold (3)
Denial, one marvels that Jesus continued to
work with Peter, let alone entrust him with an Office of such Great Consequence. His
choice of Peter and the rest of the Apostles as a Foundation for the Church
is a profound statement of:
His Plan to conquer Human Weakness through
the Power of His
Grace, and
His yearning to have Men share fully in His Mission.
He seems to say to us through the Apostles, "Let none of
your personal and spiritual imperfections, not even serious sins, be the cause of your holding back from joining My Work of Redeeming
the World. Look at the Men I used to found My Church. See what I can do when anyone allows Me to purge him of sin, and make him a Vessel
of Grace".
Christ's Chosen Twelve
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Calling of the First Apostles, Simon Peter and Andrew -
by GHIRLANDAIO, Domenico -
from Cappella Sistina, Vatican
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Early in His Public Ministry, the Gospels
record for us how Jesus called from the group of His
Followers Twelve (12) Men. It was a Decision preceded by a Night of
Prayer, a Sign of the Great Event that it was. These Men were carefully chosen in conversation with
His Heavenly Father, in the Unity of the Holy Spirit. So there was a
Trinitarian exchange as a background for this choosing of the
Twelve (12), an exchange, certainly, that had been taking place in Eternity long before
this particular moment. Here was its Temporal Manifestation, as Jesus went off alone to immerse
Himself in Prayer, an 'Outward Sign' of the attention
God had given this decision from all Eternity. With the
Entire Future of the Church, with the Well-Being of all Humanity, with the Defeat of
Satan, Prince of this World, all at stake,
Our Lord was not about to Hastily and Arbitrarily beckon
Twelve (12) People forward: "You there, you will do, come be My Apostle!"
This could only be a Decision that arose from the 'Depths' of the Divine Plan for the World.
In these days He went out to the Mountain to Pray; and all night He continued in Prayer to God. And when
it was day, He called His Disciples, and chose from them Twelve, whom He named Apostles; Simon, whom he named Peter, and Andrew His
brother, and James and John, and Philip, and Bartholomew, and Matthew, and Thomas, and James the son of Alphaeus, and Simon who was
called the Zealot, and Judas the son of James, and Judas Iscariot, who became a Traitor. (Luke 6:12-16).
What took place in the next Three (3) Years was an intense Schooling involving both the
Words and Deeds of Our Blessed Lord. Mere Traveling Companions they were not. A Body
of Courtiers who served His needs they were not. They were Men set aside from the
rest of the Disciples to be taught Mysteries that in former times had been
Hidden, but now were to be made clear in Christ. The other Disciples who
followed Him, in often great numbers, were a group that came and went. Some were Dedicated, some
were not. The Apostles, on the other hand, were only rarely out of His Presence.
He placed them in a setting of Direct, Lengthy, and Deep Exposure. They would have
His Words resounding in their ears throughout the day, His
Deeds before their eyes from dawn to dusk. Opportunities for Divine Wisdom
and Power to settle into their Minds and
Hearts were Maximized.
And all this was done for the sake of the rest of us who have and will take our place in the
Church throughout the Ages. Christ took no chances with these Men who would be
alone responsible for setting the Church on her
Centuries-Long course of development. They were to be Formed and Instructed with the utmost care.
The importance of the task deserved no less. As we can now Witness at the end of this Second Millennium,
through His Careful Instruction of these Chosen Twelve
(12), He was preparing the World for His Remarkable
Instrument of the Catholic Church. Remarkable in its Boldness, for it has not
been Afraid to become a part of every Time and Culture; in its Endurance, for as the Institutions of
the World come and go, it continues on; in its Teaching, for amid the World's passing fashions of thought, it proclaims the same
Truths it always has. All this began with what we can only say was an astounding
Three (3)-Year Period of Enlightenment and
Grace the Twelve (12) experienced through
Our Blessed Lord. Judging from the Church that has
emerged from this First Apostolic Instruction, how can
Christ's preparation of these Men be considered anything but astounding?
But we should also notice how Christ chose to take this
Enlightenment and Grace, given to the entire Apostolic Group, and focused it on
One (1) Individual, the one He renamed
"Rock". He makes
Peter the Bedrock that 'Grounds' His Apostolic Foundation. To the Stability the
Apostles will provide for the Church, Our Lord
adds further Stability; to insure that what He intends to remain
Immovable always remains Immovable, He
provides another Anchor. And again, as with the Twelve (12), this strengthening of Peter
arises from Christ's Immense Love for the Church. For
the sake of the Church's Enlightenment, Peter is
Blessed with the Knowledge of Christ's
Divinity: "Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jona! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but My
Father Who is in Heaven" (Matthew 16:17). For the sake of the Stability of the
Church, he is made the Unassailable Rock on which the
Church is founded, against which the Powers of Hell
will not prevail (Matthew 16:18). For the sake of the Unity of the Church he
is elevated to a Position of Authority over the rest of the Apostles and Disciples: "I will give you the Keys
of the Kingdom of Heaven . . ." (Matthew 16:19). His own Failings, which
Our Blessed Lord certainly foresaw, only permit us to announce more emphatically that
Peter's Special Position in the Church arises from no Greatness in Peter
himself. In Peter and his Office see Christ's Love for the
Church! The depths of this Love of Christ
for the Church will never be fully appreciated among the
Christians of our World until the Special Gifts given to Peter and the
Bishops of Rome, who have assumed his Office, are not Denied, but
Joyfully Acknowledged and Proclaimed by all.
Entrusted with Revelation
In this setting of Intense Contact with Christ, the Apostles were at the very
Fount of Revelation:
"In many and various ways God spoke of old to our Fathers by the Prophets, but in these last days He
has spoken to us by a Son" (Hebrews 1:1-2). Christ, the Son of God made Man, is the
Fathers One, Perfect, and Unsurpassable Word. In Him He has said everything; there will be no other word than this One.
(The Catechism of the Catholic Church, #65)
The special place they have for the rest of the World as bearers of this Divine Revelation to
Humanity has been acknowledged from the very earliest days of the Church. Saint Clement,
who was the Third Successor (88-97) of Saint Peter as Bishop of Rome
and who himself knew the Apostles, writes around the end of the First Century:
The Apostles received the Gospel for us from the Lord Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ was sent from God. The
Christ therefore is from God and the Apostles from Christ. In both ways, then, they were in accordance with the Appointed Order of
Gods Will. Having therefore received their Commands, and being fully assured by the Resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ, and
with Faith confirmed by the Word of God, they went forth in the assurance of the Holy Spirit, preaching the Good News that the Kingdom
of God is coming. (First Letter of Saint Clement to the Corinthians, 42).
Thus,
God had made them His Chosen Medium for addressing the World at large. All
that God wished to Reveal to Mankind was made known through
Christ; all that Christ meant to Teach
the World has come to us through the Apostles. He instructed them in the
Sacraments that He would use to pour
Divine Power into the lives of the Faithful. At the
Last Supper He entrusted them with the Greatest and the Culmination of all the
Sacramental Rites of His future
Church, the Holy Eucharist. He
arranged for them to witness the One (1) Act through which Humanity is
Cleansed of Sin and Reconciled to
God, His Own
Death and Resurrection. After
His Resurrection He gave them further Teaching to Proclaim to the World.
Throughout their Three (3) Years with Him the
Apostles beheld Marvel after Marvel,
Mystery after Mystery, such that Saint
John was compelled to acknowledge at the end of his Gospel:
. . . there are also many other things which Jesus did; were every one of them to be written, I suppose
that the World itself could not contain the Books that would be written (John 21:25).
What had in effect happened by God's Design, and despite their own
Sins and Failings, is that the Apostles had been turned into
Vessels of Revelation. Our Lord called them to
Himself as Ordinary Men, a Tax Collector, Fishermen, Tradesmen. He
turned them loose on the World as Living Sources of Divine Knowledge, Men who speak on behalf of
God Himself. Christ's Last Words to the
Eleven (11) Apostles who were present at His Ascension
express the goal to which He had been working throughout the previous
Three (3) Years of Intense Formation, the moment when He could say to them:
Go therefore and make Disciples of all Nations, Baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have Commanded you, and lo, I am with you always, to the Close of the Age
(Matthew 28:19-20).
Continued Guidance
Because of this Unique Role of the Apostles in Christ's Plan to found
His Church, we say that the Body of Revealed Knowledge God has given to Mankind ended
with the Death of the Last Apostle. From the Apostles the
Church has received the Sacred Deposit of the Faith (Depositum
Fidei), found in both Sacred Scripture and
Tradition.
By adhering to [this Heritage] the entire people, united to its Pastors, remains always Faithful to the
Teaching of the Apostles, to the Brotherhood, and to the Breaking of Bread and the Prayers
(Catechism of the Catholic Church #84).
Christ's Guidance of the Church through this
Sacred Deposit is indeed a Fulfillment of His
Promise to remain with us always, to the End of the Ages. But this is not without a continued
Apostolic Presence through which He cares for His Church
as He once attended to her needs through the
First Apostles themselves. The Apostolic Nature of the Church is not something that
has passed away. It continues to be one of the defining characteristics of the Church, as we
profess in the Creed: "We believe in One, Holy, Catholic, and
Apostolic Church". From their place in Heaven, we acknowledge an ongoing care
of Christ for the Church through the Apostles. In
the Liturgy of the Mass the Priest Prays:
You are the Eternal Shepherd Who never leaves His Flock untended. Through the Apostles You watch over us
and protect us always. You made them Shepherds of the Flock to share in the Work of Your Son, and from their place in Heaven they Guide
us still (Preface of Apostles I).
Yet, Heaven is not the only source of Apostolic Guidance for the
Church. On this Earthly Plane, New Generations of Apostles have replaced the old. These we understand to be the
Bishops that the Apostles appointed. With a view to continuing the Teaching,
Sanctifying, and Governing they had begun,
and in order that the Full and Living Gospel might always be preserved in the
Church, the Apostles left Bishops as their Successors. "They
gave them their own Position of Teaching Authority". Indeed, "The Apostolic Preaching,
which is expressed in a special way in the Inspired Books, was to be preserved in a continuous Line of Succession until the End of
Time" (Catechism of the Catholic Church #77).
The
New Testament records a number of instances where we can see how the Apostles were beginning to pass-on their
Power and Authority to others. Saint Luke tells us of the
First Council of the Church, the Council
of Jerusalem, when the Apostles entrusted Paul and Barnabas with a Message for the Gentile
Community in Antioch, Syria, and Cilicia (Acts 15:22-29). We are told how
the Apostles initiated Men in the Jerusalem Church into their work through a Ritual of
Laying on of Hands (Acts 6:2-6). There are signs of how this
Liturgical Practice then began to spread to other Communities. This can be witnessed when Paul and
Barnabas were sent on their Mission to Evangelize cities of Asia
Minor. Acts of the Apostles relates how the Holy Spirit had spoken to
the "Prophets and Teachers" in Antioch and said,
"Set apart for Me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them'. Then after Fasting and
Praying they laid their hands on them and sent them off" (13:2-3). Later in his Ministry, Paul
Ordains Timothy and Titus in this way as Bishops for the
Churches in Ephesus and Crete. In writing to Timothy
he reminds him to "Rekindle the Gift of God that is within you through the laying on of my
hands" (2Timothy 1:6).
Apostolic Succession is the Theological Term we use to describe what was beginning then, and has
continued to take place from the Apostolic Period down to our own, an Extension of the Power
and Authority Christ gave to Apostles. In this
way Christ keeps alive the Gifts He gave them for
the Good of the Church, namely the
Gifts of Teaching, Sanctifying, and
Governing. This is the Church Our Lord intended to
endure until His Second Coming and to be sustained by the very
Power and Authority granted to the Apostles. These same Men who, although they
have now taken their place with Him in Glory, still
continue to be through their Successors, the Bishops, the Lasting Foundation of the Church.

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