ACT ALWAYS ACCORDING TO THE TRUTH OF THE GOSPEL
VATICAN CITY, 1 OCT 2008 (VIS) - In his general
audience, held this morning in St. Peter's
Square in the presence of 20,000 people, the
Pope continued his series of catecheses on St.
Paul.
The Holy Father concentrated his attention on
two episodes described in the Letter to the
Galatians, episodes "that show the veneration
and, at the same time, the freedom with which
Paul treated Peter and the other Apostles: the
Council of Jerusalem, and the incident at
Antioch in Syria".
"Each Council and Synod of the Church is 'an
event of the Spirit'", the Pope explained. "The
Spirit, Who works in the entire Church, led the
Apostles by the hand down new roads to achieve
His plans. He is the main architect of the
edification of the Church".
The Pope recalled how the Council of Jerusalem
was called to determine "whether it was
necessary to impose circumcision on the pagans
who were following Jesus Christ the Lord, or if
they could legally be freed from the restraints
of Mosaic Law, in other words from the
observation of norms established to make a men
just, ... especially those relating to ritual
purity, clean and unclean foods, and norms
concerning the Sabbath".
"If", he went on, "for Luke the Council of
Jerusalem expressed the action of the Spirit,
for Paul it represented the decisive recognition
of the freedom that all the participants shared:
freedom from the obligations arising from
circumcision and from the Law".
"Nonetheless", the Holy Father continued,
"Christian liberty is never to be identified
with libertinism or with the freedom to do as
one pleases; it is enacted in conformity with
Christ and, hence, in true service to our
bothers and sisters, especially those most in
need".
In this context he mentioned the collection
organised by St. Paul for the poor of Jerusalem,
explaining how it "was an expression of his
communities' debt towards the Mother Church of
Palestine, from which they had received the
priceless gift of the Gospel".
The incident between Peter and Paul in Antioch
was caused by Peter's decision to abstain from
eating with the Gentiles "so as not to
scandalise those who continued to observe the
laws of food purity", said the Pope.
"In reality the concerns troubling Paul on the
one hand, and Peter and Barnabas on the other,
were different", he explained. For Peter and
Barnabas "the separation from pagans was a way
to protect and to avoid scandalising believers
from Jewish backgrounds, while for Paul it
risked causing a misunderstanding of the
universal salvation in Christ offered to both
pagans and Jews".
Benedict XVI pointed out the fact that around
the mid 50s Paul himself "had to face a similar
situation, and he called on the strong not to
eat unclean food so as not to alienate or
scandalise the weak. ... The incident of
Antioch, then, was a lesson both for Peter and
for Paul. Only sincere dialogue, open to the
truth of the Gospel, could guide the path of the
Church".
"This is a lesson we too must learn", he
concluded. "With the different charisms
entrusted to Peter and to Paul, let us all allow
ourselves to be guided by the Spirit, seeking to
live in the freedom that has its guide in our
faith in Christ and its concrete form in service
to others. It is vital to conform ourselves ever
more closely to Christ. In this way we truly
become free and find within ourselves the real
centre and profound essence of the Law: love of
God and of neighbour".
AG/ST.
PAUL/...
VIS
081001 (610)