From: Acts 9:26-31
Barnabas and Paul in Jerusalem
The Growth of the Church
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Commentary:
26. This is the first time Paul presents himself in Jerusalem after his conversion.
He went up to see Peter, with whom he spent fifteen days (cf. Gal 1:18), and put
himself at Peter’s disposal; and to check that his teaching was in line with that
of the Apostles.
Barnabas (see note on 4:36) dispelled the Jerusalem community’s initial under-
standable suspicion of their one-time persecutor. They had been only too well
aware of his determination to suppress the Church and had not yet heard about
his preaching in Damascus.
During his short stay in Jerusalem Paul preached boldly his faith in the divinity of
Jesus and met the same kind of opposition as he did in Damascus.
30. For the second time St Paul has to flee for his life. Commenting on this epi-
sode, St John Chrysostom explains that, in addition to grace, human resourceful-
ness has a part to play in apostolic activity. “The disciples were afraid that the
Jews would do to Saul what they had done to St Stephen. This may be why they
sent him to preach the Gospel in his homeland, where he would be safer. In this
action of the Apostles you can see that God does not do everything directly, by
means of his grace, and that he frequently lets his disciples act in line with the
rule of prudence” (”Hom. on Acts”, 20).
Chrysostom also sees in Paul’s earlier flight from Damascus an example of pru-
dent conduct: “Despite his great desire to be with God, he first had to carry out
his mission for the salvation of souls. [...] Jesus Christ does not preserve his
Apostles from dangers: he lets them confront them, because he wants men to
use the resources of prudence to escape from them. Why does he arrange things
in this way? In order to have us understand that the Apostles are also men and
that grace does not do everything in its servants. Otherwise, would people not
have seen them as inert and lifeless things? That is why the Apostles did many
things by following the dictates of prudence. Let us follow their example and use
all our natural abilities to work with grace for the salvation of our brethren” (”ibid.”).
31. St Luke breaks his narrative to give an overview of the steady progress of the
Church as a whole and of the various communities that have grown up as a result
of the Christians’ flight from Jerusalem (cf. Acts 2:40, 47; 4:4; 5:14; 6:1, 7; 11:21,
24; 16:5). He emphasizes the peace and consolation the Holy Spirit has brought
them. This note of justified optimism and trust in God confirms that God is with
his Church and that no human force can destroy it (cf. 5:39).
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Source: “The Navarre Bible: Text and Commentaries”. Biblical text from the
Revised Standard Version and New Vulgate. Commentaries by members of
the Faculty of Theology, University of Navarre, Spain.
Published by Four Courts Press, Kill Lane, Blackrock, Co. Dublin, Ireland, and
by Scepter Publishers in the United States.