Saints Simon and Jude, Apostles
Our Lord Jesus Christ has appointed certain men to be guides and teachers of the world and stewards of his divine mysteries. Now he bids them to shine out like lamps and to cast out their light not only over the land of the Jews but over every country under the sun and over people scattered in all directions and settled in distant lands.
That man has
spoken truly who said: No one takes honor upon himself, except the one who is
called by God, for it was our Lord Jesus Christ who called his own disciples
before all others to a most glorious apostolate. These holy men became the
pillar and mainstay of the truth, and Jesus said that he was sending them just
as the Father had sent him.
By these words he
is making clear the dignity of the apostolate and the incomparable glory of the
power given to them, but he is also, it would seem, giving them a hint about
the methods they are to adopt in their apostolic mission. For if Christ thought
it necessary to send out his intimate disciples in this fashion, just as the
Father had sent him, then surely it was necessary that they whose mission was
to be patterned on that of Jesus should see exactly why the Father had sent the
Son. And so Christ interpreted the character of his mission to us in a variety
of ways. Once he said: I have come to call not the righteous but sinners to
repentance. And then at another time he said: I have come down from heaven, not
to do my own will, but the will of him who sent me.
For God sent his Son into
the world, not to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through
him.
Accordingly, in
affirming that they are sent by him just as he was sent bythe Father, Christ
sums up in a few words the approach they themselves should take to their
ministry. From what he said they would gather that it was their vocation to
call sinners to repentance, top heal those who were sick whether in body or
spirit, to seek in all their dealings never to do their own will but the will
of him who sent them, and as far as possible to save the world by their
teaching.
Surely it is in
all these respects that we find his holy disciples striving to excel. To
ascertain this is no great labor; a single reading of the Acts of the Apostles
or of Saint Paul’s writings is enough.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From a Commentary on the Gospel of John by
Saint Cyril of AlexandriaPhoto taken from Wikimedia Commons
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