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As
a missionary, the Apostle Paul was second only to our Lord. The great
apostle is the archetypal missionary and the supreme exemplar to every
man and woman aspiring to undertake the most precious labor available
to human activity: the proclamation of the Gospel.
As a missionary and missionary statesman, Paul was a divine appointee.
There are no less than three accounts of his supernatural calling on the
road to Damascus (Acts 9:3-9; 22:6-16; 26:13-18). The accounts supplement
each other, but the last of the three spells out specifically and in detail
the missionary task laid upon the great Apostle by our Lord: "I have
appeared to you for this purpose, to make you a minister and a witness
both of the things which you have seen and of the things which I will
reveal to you. I will deliver you from the Jewish people as well as from
the Gentiles, to whom I now send you, to open their eyes and to turn them
from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, that they
may receive forgiveness of sins and an inheritance among those who are
sanctified by faith in Me" (Acts 26: 16-18).
Although the Apostle was supernaturally called, it is more than
probable that would never have been able to carry out his missionary calling
without the academic and other grounding he received in early life. Paul
left an account to posterity which throws much light on his youth, early
manhood, how his spiritual foundations where laid and other details.
The following account is compiled from what Paul revealed of himself in
Acts 1:39; 18:3; 22:3; 22:25; 22:28; Gal 1:13,14; Phil 3:5-6:
He
was a Jew, born in Tarsus, the Roman province of Cilicia (now part of
modern Turkey). Tarsus was "no mean city." Paul's upbringing
was Jewish in every respect. He was fortunate in being born into a family
possessing Roman citizenship; Paul always valued his Roman citizenship
and availed himself of its benefits. He was educated in Jerusalem at the
school of Gamaliel according to the principles of the sect of the Pharisees.
He was so zealous for the traditions of Judaism that he advanced in his
studies far beyond his contemporaries. He would even go so far as to claim
to be almost faultless in his adherence to Old Testament legalism. In
addition to his religious studies, Paul was taught the practical trade
of tent making.
From this description of himself it is obvious that Paul was well
equipped to evangelize Jews. As a profound student of all things Jewish
he would have known Hebrew but as a man born into the first century Middle
East he would also have been instructed from childhood in Greek, the lingua
franca of the region. It is even possible that Greek was his mother tongue.
His first Bible may well have been the Greek edition of the Old Testament,
the Septuagint. It is known that most Jews living outside Palestine used
the Septuagint in preference to the Hebrew Bible. Since Paul in later
life had many contacts with Roman officials, it is probable that he also
knew Latin.
Before his conversion, Paul was prominent among those ardent Jews
whose lives were dedicated to bringing what they regarded as the blessing
of the Jewish law to their contemporaries. It is no doubt to this that
Paul was referring when he wrote: "I advanced in Judaism beyond many
of my contemporaries in my own nation, being more exceedingly zealous
for the traditions of my fathers" (Gal 1:14).
While having had a very thorough training in every aspect of Judaism,
Paul was emphatic that the Gospel he preached was of wholly supernatural
origin. To quote his own words from Galatians, chapter 1, vv 11 and 12:
But
I make known to you, brethren, that the Gospel which was preached by me
is not according to man. For I neither received it from man, nor was I
taught it, but it came through the revelation of Jesus Christ.
Although we cannot know for sure, it seems probable that the revelation
received by Paul was not instantaneous. It is a singular fact that it
was literally years from the time of Paul's conversion before he began
active and systematic missionary work. To continue with the Apostle's
own account:
When
it pleased God... to reveal His Son in me, that I might preach Him among
the Gentiles, I did not immediately confer with flesh and blood, nor did
I go up to Jerusalem to those who were apostles before me; but I went
to Arabia, and returned again to Damascus. Then after three years I went
up to Jerusalem to see Peter...
The chronology of Paul's ministry is not known with any certainty,
but from Galatians 2:1 it seems likely that more years went by before
he begun active mission work.
What is the significance of this? Different answers might be given
to this question, but my own opinion, for what it is worth, is that deep
spiritual preparation is an essential prerequisite for a dynamic mission
a career. This was true of Paul and it remains true today.
It is clear that Paul did not embark on his missionary labors without
a definite strategy. Missionary work cannot be done in a haphazard manner.
Paul's outreach, initially, was "to the Jew first". With the
background he had had, it was natural for the Apostle to have fervent
desire for the salvation of his own people. He even when so for as to
declare: "I could wish that I myself were accursed and cut off from
Christ for the sake of my brethren, my kinsmen by race" (Rom 9:3).
All the greater, then, was his grief at their adamant refusal to recognize
God's chosen Messiah. One can appreciate Paul's exasperation, but also
sense his sorrow when he told the Jews of Corinth after they had opposed
him and blasphemed: "Your blood be upon your own heads; I am clean.
From now on I will go to the Gentiles" (Acts 18:6). Paul later wrote,
"It pleased God to reveal His Son to me that I might preach Him among
the Gentiles" (Gal 1:16). Paul also twice described himself as "a
teacher of the Gentiles" (1 Tim 2:7; 2 Tim 1:11).
A natural aspect of Paul's strategy was to go where people were
most receptive. He found them among the "God-fearers." These
were men and women, Greeks of pagan background, who had attached themselves
to the synagogue. Disillusioned with pagan idolatry, they there were attracted
by the ethical monotheism of the Jews and the other positive elements
of the Hebrew religion. However the God-fearers demurred at circumcision
and full conversion to Judaism. A penumbra of God-fearers was found around
every synagogue in the world of the first century, and to this people
Paul went. From among them he drew the human material for his first Gentile
congregations. From this example of Paul we draw the conclusion that it
is enlightened common sense for the missionary to go where he is more
welcome and where his message will be more readily received. In the African
context, for example, the black African is very much more receptive to
the message of a Orthodoxy than the Arab Muslim, even where access to
the Arab is attainable.
In Romans 15:19 Paul mentioned that his missionary itinerations
had taken from him from Jerusalem to Illyricum (former Yugoslavia) and
added that in all that large area he had "fully preached the gospel
of Christ." But in verse 23ff of the same chapter he makes the
astonishing statement: ... no longer having a place in these parts...
I shall come to you." By this, Paul did not mean that the whole large
area had been so completely evangelized that no further work there was
required. The Apostle was motivated by other considerations. His urgent
desire was to get to Rome. As a missionary statesman he aimed at establishing
dynamic churches at strategic points throughout the Roman Empire. From
these the surrounding regions could be reached.
When he wrote his letter to the Romans (who incidentally were not
his own converts) Paul's great objective was to disseminate Christianity
throughout the whole civilized word, which he equated with the Roman Empire.
He put on record his desire to evangelize Spain (15:24), which would have
completed the cycle of his evangelistic outreach from the Eastern and
of the Mediterranean to the Western. Yet at the same time he believed
that as the "apostle to the Gentiles" he had something to contribute
in the most strategic center of the Empire, Rome itself. It is obvious
that the same methodology applies today. Missionary outreach must be planned
and executed like a military operation.
One of the issues which convulsed the Gentile congregations that
Paul had brought into being was a basis of which Gentile converts where
to be received. Christians of Jewish origin tended to regard the Christian
faith as little more than a Jewish sect and were insistent that converts
must submit to circumcision and the full ritual of Judaism. Worse still,
"certain men from Judea" (Acts 15:1) visited the Gentile congregations
and told them that if they were not circumcised, they could not be saved.
This obviously caused devastation and resulted in the ruling of the Council
of Jerusalem that the rituals of Judaism were not to be imposed on Gentile
converts.
There are various analogous situations today. Men and women of
non-European nations can be converted to Orthodoxy without being required
to become synthetic white people first. The adoption of white culture
is not the gateway to Christianity. The rich heritage of Orthodoxy is
well able to accommodate the cultures of others civilizations, obviously
excluding those elements in them that might be sinful or unedifying. From
its beginning, Orthodoxy has assimilated different cultural features.
The earliest church in Jerusalem, which was Hebrew, was swiftly supplemented
by Greek and Latin elements. Russia was evangelize by Byzantine Greeks
but the Orthodoxy they brought was very soon enhanced by the native Slavic.
No men's culture has anything to fear from Orthodoxy; on the other hand
those things that are positive in an indigenous culture are gladly received
as an enrichment of Orthodoxy. In East Africa, for example, indigenous
features have been introduced into the celebration of the Divine Liturgy.
It was Cyprian of Carthage, one of the greatest among the saints
and martyrs of Africa, who gave out the well-known aphorism that he who
does not have the church as his Mother cannot have God for his father.
This is a pearl of divine wisdom which could well have come from Paul
himself, because it is an eminently "Pauline". The Apostle's
missionary theology is inseparable from his doctrine of the church. The
widespread heresy that "all we need for salvation is Christ"
and that the church is of marginal importance is utterly alien to the
spirit and letter of Paul's teaching. For Paul salvation can never be
achieved apart from the Church and its sacraments. The glory of Christ
and His saving power can only be found within His Church. This is the
central message of Paul's letter to the Ephesians, in which he refers
to the Church as the Body of Christ (4:12ff; 5:30). Devine grace and deification
comes to the Christian through the sacraments; the dispensers of the sacraments
are of course, the clergy.
From this it follows that the building up of indigenous ministry
is of the essence of the missionary task. The Church is sacerdotal or
it is nothing. Well before the end of the first century the threefold
ministry of episcopoi, presbyteroi and diaconai where established in the
Church. The Pastoral letters which Paul addressed to Timothy and Titus
reveal a Church organization that is so developed that number of scholars
have put forward the theory that they were not written by the Apostle
of all but are forgeries dating from the second century! No countenance
need be given to such fanciful theories. The Pastoral Letters were written
by Paul to Timothy and Titus (between AD 62 and 65) clearly show the two
younger man functioning as monarchical bishops in their respective dioceses
of Ephesus and Crete. The hierarchical and sacerdotal ministry came from
our Lord himself and was in full effect in the first century Church.
For 20 centuries men and women of every race and nation on earth
have been won for Christ. My own long experience as principal of the Patriarchal
Seminary in Nairobi, Kenya, impressed me with the fact that young men
of any ethnic background can be trained for the priesthood of our Church.
To be sure, I had my share of frustrations and disappointments. At the
same time I had the consolation of seeing a continuous procession of fine
get men, trained and equipped both spiritually and intellectually, going
out into the mission field. What has been achieved in Kenya can be achieved
anywhere.
Another important missionary principle that we can learn from Paul
is that episcopal oversight must be duly exercised. Paul's first missionary
journey was to Cyprus and a segment of Asia Minor known as Galatia. Accompanied
by Barnabas (a Cypriot) they went first to Salamis, then crossed overland
to Paphos. From there they took a ship to the south coast of Asia Minor.
Pressing north into the interior they preached and planted churches in
a number of towns. They then retraced their steps to the coast and returned
to Syrian Antioch, from which they had originally set sail. When they
went over the ground the second time, Paul and the Barnabas revisited
each newly-established assembly: that faith of the believers was strengthened
and elders ("presbuteroi")were ordained and installed. It goes
without saying that the requirement for diligent episcopal oversight applies
to every congregation in a missionary milieu, not only to those newly
established.
I have been told that most Roman Catholic and Anglican lay folk
regard their bishops as remote and rather awe inspiring persons whom they
rarely see and with whom they have little to do. Whether this is so or
not, one of the strengths of Orthodoxy polity is that our bishops have
always had a close relationship with their people and have always been
accessible to them.
Paul's pastoral concern did not of course end with personal visits.
We are indebted to the Apostle for that large portion of the New Testament
comprising his letters to the churches he had founded. As most of us are
aware, and large part of each letter contains doctrinal teaching (usually
in response to questions raised by converts) and a moral plea for Christian
living. It is a revealing commentary on the timeless character of the
task that the modern missionary Bishop often finds himself writing letters
on the same nature as those of St. Paul, and sometimes dealing with the
self-same problems.
On his second missionary journey Paul (this time accompanied by
Silas and Timothy) again revisited his converts it Galatia. After a supernatural
dream of a man of Macedonia appealing for help, the Apostle, for the first
time, set foot on the soil of Europe. Within a day or two, the missionaries
were in Philippi and founded a church which has lasted continuously to
the present day. Paul went on to found churches in Thessalonica, Berea
and Athens, which also continue to flourish.
Up to this time, there had always been a certain sameness in the
pattern all of Paul's preaching. Those to whom he preached were either
Jews or "God-fearers" familiar with the Hebrew scriptures and
the promises it contained. Paul's preaching to these people may be briefly
summarized as follows:
- The Scriptures have been fulfilled
- The Messiah has come
- In the person of Jesus of Nazareth
- Whom you slew (or whom your rulers slew)
- Whom God raised up
- Of which we are witnesses
In Athens, for the first time in his life, Paul found himself addressing
a very different audience. They were neither Jews nor God-fearers but
pagan Gentiles. They had no knowledge whatever of the Hebrew scriptures
nor of the concept of the coming Messiah. They also knew nothing of earth-shattering
events that occurred in Palestine 30 or more years earlier. For such
an audience a very different approach was needed. Paul's sermon delivered
on Mars Hill (Acts 17:22-32) was given in a language and categories of
thought that would be intelligible to pagan Greek philosophers. The sermon
met with some success. In the words of verse 34:
... Some men joined him and believed, among them Dionysious the
Areopagite, a woman named Damaris, and others with them.
The moral of Paul's outreach in Athens is that the missionary must
take careful cognizance of the audience he is seeking to evangelize and
must speak to them in a way they will understand. Paul grasped this principle.
Many other missionaries do not.
Throughout Paul's letters there is a wealth of practical guidance
for the missionary. In some cases the actual advice might still the applicable;
in others, the principles laid down provide invaluable guidelines. Many
examples could be given but I will cite one. In his first letter to the
Corinthians, Paul answers a number of quarries that have been raised.
Among them was the question of meat offered to idols (chapter 8). The
Christians in Corinth were all aware that much of the meat offered for
sale in the public market had been offered ritually to pagan idols. Was
it permissible for Christians to eat it? There was a difference of opinion
among the Corinthian Christians. One group held that the meat was contaminated
by paganism and should not be eaten under any circumstances. The other
group held that since the pagan gods did not really exist, meat offered
to them was no different from any other meat; therefore it was permissible
to eat it.
Characteristically, Paul resolved the issue by invoking the principle
of the love which all Christians must have for one another. With the
second group, he agreed that the idols of the heathen where nothing and
their gods non-existent. However, the thing that counted more than anything
else was the conscience of "the weaker brother". "Therefore"
Paul concludes, "if food makes my brother stumble, I will never again
eat meat, lest I make my brother stumble" (verse 13). The principle
underlying this advice is applicable in all manner of situations.
In 2 Corinthians 12:1-6 Paul speaks of "visions and revelations
of the Lord" and gives an account of an enigmatic vision "a
man in Christ" who "was caught up to the third heaven."
No one doubts that in this passage, Paul was referring to himself; and
he gives to himself the title which he no doubt cherished most: "a
man in Christ." Paul was many things: missionary, preacher, spiritual
genius and very much else. But above all, "a man in Christ."
For Paul, this was not just a theological theory. From the first moment
that he had stood face-to-face with the risen Lord of the Damascus road,
Paul knew that from then on his life must be guided, directed and sustained
by Christ. What Paul received was not some new table of commandments to
be complied with but a new life to be lived, a life that gives victory
over sin and progressive transformation into the divine likeness, in other
words, theosis.
Paul found also that in Christ he (and all other Christians) received
something further: a new koinonia in which all barriers between Jew and
Gentile, rich and poor, men and women, young and old, and between differing
racial and cultural groups are broken down, since all are one in Christ
Jesus. In Orthodoxy alone is the fullness of this koinonia to be found.
Read
other writings by His Eminence Metropolitan Makarios in Adventures
in the Unseen
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