No-One
Should Seek What is His Own, But What is Christ's
We have talked about
what it means for a shepherd to “drink the milk of his flock.” Now, then, what
does it mean when he “clothes himself in its wool”?
To give milk is to
give sustenance; to give wool is to give honour. These are the two things that
pastors demand when they want to feed themselves rather than their sheep: the fulfillment
of their bodily wants and the pleasure that comes from honour and praise.
Clothing is a good
image of honour because clothing covers nakedness. Now every man is weak –
and whoever is placed over you is a man just like you. He has a body; he is
mortal. He eats, he goes to sleep, he wakes up. He has been born and he will die.
If you consider him in himself, he is nothing but a man; but by giving him
honour you give him, as it were, clothing to cover up his human nakedness.
See what kind of
clothing Paul received from the good people of God: You welcomed me as an angel of God.
I swear that you would even have gone so far as to pluck out your eyes and give
them to me. But with all the
honour that was given to him, did he spare the feelings of those who had gone
astray, so that he could avoid being contradicted or being praised less than
before? He did not. If he had withheld correction from those who needed it, he
would have been one of those pastors who feed themselves and not their sheep.
He would have been saying to himself, “What has that to do with me? Let them do
as they like: my food is safe, my honour is safe – I have as much milk and
wool as I want, so let everyone wander wherever he likes.” But then, if you
think like that, are all your goods really safe if everyone goes wherever he
wants? If you think like that, I refuse to make you a leader and you will be
like every one of your own people: If
one part of the body is hurt, all parts are hurt with it.
So when the Apostle
Paul is recalling how the Galatians behaved towards him, he does it because he
does not want to seem forgetful of the honour they gave him. He remembers that
they received him as if he had been an angel of God, that if it had been
possible they would have torn out their own eyes to give to him. But despite
all this, he has come to the sick, the rotting sheep to lance its abscesses and
cut away its rotting flesh. He is driven to say Is it telling the truth that has
made me your enemy?
Paul received the
sheep’s milk, as we heard before, and he received their wool to clothe him, but
he did not neglect the care of his flock. He did not seek his own interests but
those of Jesus Christ.
Source: The
Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From a Sermon by Saint
Augustine on Pastors
Photo taken from Wikimedia Commons
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