Friday, May 20, 2022

Friday of the Fifth Week of Easter

(Acts 15:22-31; John 15:12-17)

Today’s first reading reports the most consequential decision of the Church in history.  It tells how Church leadership universally agreed to dispense non-Jews from practicing the Jewish law.  Effectively, it turned the Church from a sect of Judaism to a separate religion.  It is worthwhile to understand how the decision came about.

Paul, Barnabas, and Silas travel to an assembly of church leadership in Jerusalem.  There they defend their practice of baptizing non-Jews who believe in Jesus.  Peter from personal experience note that non-Jews can receive the Holy Spirit.  James also recognizes the Spirit’s testimony in non-Jewish believers.  He calls the judgment of the assembly in the first place a decision of the Holy Spirit.  When all the elders of the Jerusalem Church agree, the practice is adopted.  Soon baptizing non-Jews becomes dominant in Christian evangelization.

We can be thankful for the decision of the Jerusalem assembly.  Few of us would probably be Christians if our ancestors had to endure circumcision before being baptized.  Perhaps more importantly, however, we need to recognize how Jews are our elder brothers and sisters in faith.  Of course, Jesus lived and died as a Jew.  Also, Jewish Scriptures enable us to understand Jesus Christ.  Christianity is not a sect of Judaism, but it could not be a religion at all if it were not for the Jews.