A Publication of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland
Catholic Voice Online Edition
Front Page In this Issue Around the Diocese Letters Bishop's Column News in Brief Calendar
   
Mission Statement
Contact Us
advertise
Circulation
Publication Dates
Back Issues


Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland

El Heraldo



Movie Reviews

Mass Times



Web
Catholic Voice
placeholder
articles list
placeholder Parishioners provide microfinancing for Malawi project

Missionaries of Faith begin parish ministry in Alameda

Social worker targets crucial needs of low-income Concord seniors

Survey finds youth crave more family, community connections

Priest sent to Siberia ‘always wanted to do mission work’

Conference to focus on role of religious faith in public policy

Diocese to develop comprehensive plan for prison ministry

Franciscan Institute empowers catechists to teach effectively

Parental notice law back on ballot in November

Thousands march in Mexico against increased kidnappings

No ‘Yahweh’ in songs at Mass, Vatican rules

‘Humanae Vitae’ remains a vital directive, scholars say

Orders plan joint border effort for migrant women

USF law school students take on
death penalty cases in two states

St. Louis Bertrand Parish to celebrate 100 years

The Year of St. Paul: A look at Paul’s conversion

Festival highlights floral design in churches

OBITUARIES

placeholder
placeholder September 8, 2008   •   VOL. 46, NO. 15   •   Oakland, CA
The Year of St. Paul: A look at Paul’s conversion

Editor’s note: This is the first in a six-part periodic series on the Year of St. Paul.

By Father Richard J. Cassidy


Pope Benedict XVI has proclaimed that throughout the entire Church, a Year of St. Paul be celebrated June 29, 2008, through June 29, 2009. The reason for selecting June 29 is that this date marks the Feast of Sts. Peter and Paul.

At the conclusion of this series of articles, I intend to profile the relationship between St. Paul and St. Peter.

However, for this initial article, the logical place to begin is with the conversion of St. Paul, an event the Church celebrates Jan. 25.

St. Luke, the author of the Acts of the Apostles, is himself is a great admirer of St. Paul.

When St. Luke considers a development to be extremely important, he reports it not once but twice within his narrative. Because St. Luke considers Paul’s conversion to have unsurpassed importance he narrates it three times. Consider Acts 9, Acts 22 and Acts 26.

Powerful intervention

One way to appreciate the ferocity and the viciousness with which Saul was trying to destroy those who professed the name of Jesus is to focus upon how he used the weapon of chains.

Saul had acted brutally against Christians in Jerusalem and he was striving to get to Damascus, chains in hand, to capture disciples there and bring them to Jerusalem, bound in chains.

The laser-bright light of Christ then knocked Saul to the ground. Because of this astonishing intervention by Christ, there were major consequences for Paul personally and for the Church as whole.

The following list of effects is only a partial list.

First, Paul now addressed Jesus with the title of “Lord.” In fact, during the first moments of his conversion, Paul did not know that he was encountering Jesus. He just knew that he was encountering someone with such surpassing power that he must be addressed as “Lord.”

Second, Paul ceased persecuting Christians and instead started to proclaim Jesus with unsurpassed conviction and eloquence. In the beginning he did this through his preaching. Later he would be renowned for the power of his written words.

Third, according to Acts 9, the risen Jesus instructed Ananias to indicate a fourfold mission for Paul. Paul was to testify to Jews, to Gentiles, to rulers, and he would have to suffer much for Jesus’ name.

Fourth, at the time of Paul’s conversion, he gained the fundamental insight that the disciples of Jesus constitute the Body of Christ. When he asked, “Who are you, Lord?” the Lord replied, “I am Jesus whom you are persecuting.”

Paul had had no knowledge that he was persecuting Jesus, but now he learned that, in brutalizing Jesus’ disciples, he had been doing exactly this.

The Body of Christ

When he later wrote I Corinthians 12, Paul drew upon this insight and wrote persuasively about the many members of the Body of Christ.

Fifth, from the very first moment of his conversion experience, Paul knew that he had done absolutely nothing to merit it. In fact, he had been doing exactly the opposite of what was laudable!

There was no reason for Jesus to treat him with such graciousness! Yet, Jesus had chosen to do so.

And this astonishing free gift by Jesus Christ was something that Paul would continue to reflect upon and write about throughout his entire ministry (see Romans 3 for example). Paul simply could not get over the fact that Jesus treated him with such unmerited love.

Up until now, these paragraphs have focused upon the decisive personal encounter Saul had with the Lord Jesus Christ on the road to Damascus. Yet, in order for Saul to become welcome with the Christian community, he needed to have critical assistance from two of Jesus’ other disciples.

Christian community

Ananias, one of the figures who played a pivotal role in terms of Paul’s entry into the Christian community has already been mentioned. To use today’s terms, Ananias might be described as Paul’s RCIA director.

The other figure is Barnabas, an exemplary disciple first mentioned in Acts 4. At the end of Acts 9, Barnabas served as the intermediary to introduce Paul to the other apostles and to help alleviate their fear about him.

Subsequently, in Acts 11, Barnabas traveled up the Mediterranean coast to bring Paul from Tarsus to Antioch. Paul’s initial major journeys as Jesus’ apostle then commenced from Antioch.

(Father Richard J. Cassidy is a professor of sacred Scripture at Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, Michigan, and author of “Paul In Chains: Roman Imprisonment and the Letters of St. Paul.” This article is reprinted with permission from The Michigan Catholic.)

 
back to topup arrow

home

 
Copyright © 2008 The Catholic Voice, All Rights Reserved. Site design by Sarah Kalmon-Bauer.