![]() |
Nice chair you got there; shame it's empty... |
Who would want to be an apostle, anyway?
These days after Easter we walk through the beginnings of the Church, as the silly, selfish, and unaware group of disciples Jesus specifically chose for the work are transformed into Apostles. Peter and Thomas are singled out so that everyone know of their betrayal of the Lord and rejection of the testimony of their friends.
Then the Word begins to work and the Church begins to grow as souls are drawn to ‘the Way,’ as simultaneously comes the persecution. Dragged from their homes and put in prison, beaten, and even killed, the believers do not turn away, but persist and draw yet more souls to join them. James, the ‘brother of the Lord’ and first bishop of the church in Jerusalem, is beheaded by the king, who is delighted by this gruesome act and starts the hunt for his next victims.
So, really, who would want that job? Part of their credibility is their testimony of their own foolishness and infidelity, for it is precisely there that the power of the Risen Lord reveals itself in His merciful forgiveness and insistence, Follow me. Follow me, clearly, to the cross; follow me, insistently, to your own suffering and death. Quite the recruitment slogan, that.
In our own time, all eyes turn to the Vatican Hill where a small group of men strangely dressed in a small but splendid chapel wrestle with this divine imperative and their own responsibility to respond with neither a king nor a counselor but rather another sheep for the slaughter. Who will follow Peter whose following of Jesus led him to his own cross on this very hill?
Yes, wherever two or three are gathered, there is politics. Yes, the will to power is strong even in the hearts of men consecrated to the Lord. Yes, tribal allegiances and ideological blinders bend souls to grasping. But look closely and you will also see souls aware of the deep reality to which they have been called and in which they must act.
One of the greatest works of human genius and artistic expression is in the room for the very purpose of reminding these men of what is at stake for themselves and all who depend on them. Michelangelo’s Last Judgment is beautiful and terrible all at once, and ‘in your face’ when as a cardinal elector you are forced to do what no tourist is ever permitted, to sit and stare and search it, fully illuminated, for untold hours. Dated in both style and theology, as so much of greatness is, still it conveys truth in a way impossible to misunderstand.
They are all selfish fools slow to understand and quick to exempt themselves from pain and penalty, as the very words of Scripture have been reminding them for days and weeks. Those same scriptures also point out that this is precisely the qualification that Peter, James, John, James, Philip, Bartholomew and the others brought to the recruiter who chose, called, taught, and sent them to extend His own risen life to the end of every road. Therefore, among them is the one whose loins they must gird for him, and take where he does not want to go -- not if he is honest about himself and the call, anyway.
The longer they sit there under the eyes of that recruiter who is also their judge, the more they recognize the selfishness and striving of some of their own companions, the longer they have to marinate in both their own embarrassing qualifications and their merited obligation, the more compelling His call. In this condition, they deliver their charge to compel one of their own number to respond to that terrifying Follow me.
Because really, who would want to be this apostle, anyway?