In today's reading from the Acts of the Apostles St.
Paul is hurrying to try and get to Jerusalem before the
great feast of Pentecost and he stops at Miletus. From
there he calls for the presbyters of the Church in the
nearby great city of Ephesus to come and meet with him.
And we heard part of his speech to them in the reading.
He said, "I know after my departure savage wolves will
come among you and they will not spare the flock." Of
course he's talking about the persecutions the Church
will face in the future. Then he continues, "And from
your own group men will come forward perverting the
truth to draw the disciples away after them." It's
almost certain that here he is speaking of those
Christians, both Jewish and even some Gentiles, who keep
trying to impose parts of the Law of Moses on their
fellow Christians.
In time the Judaizing heresy gradually fades away
especially as the Church faces, for the next 250 years,
attacks from different kinds of wolves as periods of
great persecution breakout from time to time in
different parts of the empire. Then, with the victory of
Constantine in 314, Roman persecution comes to an end.
No more wolves outside the gate attacking the sheep of
Christ's flock. Instead the trouble comes from men
within the Church who pervert the truth "to draw the
disciples away after them," as St. Paul said. Not many
years after persecution ends comes a priest named Arius.
For those of you who may have forgotten, and, trying to
keep this short, basically Arius taught that Jesus was
not equal to God the Father, and was not truly God.
Instead, He was created by God the Father, and was the
most perfect of all beings, incredibly higher than human
beings, and even angels, but, all in all still just a
creature, not a divine person. Arius teaching made sense
to a lot of people because it seemed to solve the
problem of how Christians could speak of believing in
one God, and yet also call Jesus the Lord. If Jesus,
although the highest in all creation, was still just a
creature, we can easily say there is only one God, our
Father. Problem solved.
This teaching began to spread throughout the Church and
became widely popular, with even some bishops beginning
to embrace this new idea. Those who held to the orthodox
faith refused to cave in to the Arian party and division
racked the Church. In 325 the emperor Constantine called
and invited all the Christian bishops in the world to
come to Nicaea and settle this doctrinal question. About
a third of them showed up and they declared their belief
in the divinity of Christ, and wrote the first part of
the Nicene Creed we still say today, that Jesus is
"Light of light, true God of true God, begotten, not
made, of one substance with the Father." The true faith
triumphed in this creed.
And yet Arianism did not go away so easily and it took a
much longer time before it finally died out. But that
was not the end of the attacks upon the faith from
people within the Church. Over the next several
centuries new and different heresies were taught and
preached, causing great, new divisions in the Church,
and wounding the Body of Christ. The situation never
completely changes for it seems that in nearly every
century there is some person, some group, some idea or
philosophy that comes forth and contradicts the
authority of the Church as teacher and attacks the truth
of Christ's teaching as the Church explains it. I was
thinking of how long that list would be from the past
2,000 years. Sometimes the damage to the faith was
small, but other times, such as in the Protestant
Reformation, the damage was severe and large.
Even today we find those within the Church who pervert
the truth and seek to lead others astray. I can think of
a number of Catholic politicians who fit that
description. And other people who may not be famous or
even have a large impact, but they also work to chip
away at the foundation of faith. There are bishops and
priests and religious in the Church who seem to have no
problem tinkering with the faith, or even denying basic
Catholic truths. And there are bishops and priests and
religious who seem to think their primary job is to deal
in politics, and there are bishops and priests and
religious, who though very small in number make big
headlines because of their criminal actions. These
things are deplorable and awful, but there have been
wolves in the Church since the earliest day. Nothing new
there. It just seems new when we forget the history of
sin.
The Fathers of the First Council of Nicea, standing
against popular opinion, upheld the truth about Christ
as true God of true God, and saved the integrity of the
Church. This made me think of the Church I've belonged
to all my life, and how grateful I should be to Christ
for this great gift. If it were not for the Church I
would not have a share in God's own divine life, I would
not have a steady and reliable resource to tell me what
is good and what is evil, what is life-giving and
loving. Without the Church I would not have the Sacred
Scriptures, the grace that flows from the sacraments,
the examples of so many heroic men and women and and
even bishops, priests and religious who have helped me
so much in my life. Without the Church, I would not know
what true purpose or place my life has in the world, or
what it would be like to have my sins forgiven. Without
the Church I would not know what comes after this life,
and I doubt that I would know any of you. But so much
worse than that, without the Church I would not know
Christ, the Lover of Mankind, who loves even me. Just as
Christ’s divinity cannot be separated from His humanity,
neither can He be separated from His Body, the Church.
St. Paul’s prediction was correct and there are still
wolves out there who seek to ravage the flock. There are
still those within who distort the truth and lead others
into error and sin. And there are those who think that
their independence from faith is a sign of great wisdom.
But for me, I am going to think and give thanks to God
every day this week as we move to the birthday of the
Church next Sunday, and praying for all of you, as well
as myself, that we never fall away, never allow
ourselves to be separated from, that we never choose to
neglect or diminish or destroy our place in the Body of
Christ — for that is where we will find Him, and that is
where He will save us.