Compassion for the sufferings of others was surely one of the
hallmarks of the life of Jesus Christ. Not only did He Himself heal the sick, raise the
dead, and expel demons, He also gave His followers the command and the ability to do the
same. In this weeks Gospel, we see the Lord choosing His Apostles and entrusting to
them a share in His own mission.
When Jesus sees the crowds, His heart is moved with pity "because they were
troubled and abandoned." The Greek word for "abandoned" literally means
"thrown down," and it is used only two other times in the Gospel of Matthew:
when the crowds lay down the sick at the feet of Jesus to be cured (Mt 15:30) and when
Judas throws down into the Temple the silver pieces he was paid to betray Jesus (Mt 27:5).
In other words, to be "abandoned" means to be overwhelmed by a sense of
helplessness and hopelessness serious predicaments that only Jesus Christ can
transform.
We might wonder, though, why the crowds felt abandoned. After all, was Jesus not with
them? Their situation helps us to understand how easy it is to overlook the presence of
Jesus in our midst to get wrapped up in ourselves and absorbed in petty concerns.
Jesus rescues the crowds from their helplessness and hopelessness by giving them something
that will keep them from forgetting just how present He always is in their midst. Christ
blesses them with a gift that assures Gods people that He remains with them in every
circumstance: He gives them the Twelve Apostles.
At first, this seems not so much a gift as the booby prize: the crowds want Jesus, but
they get Peter, James, John and all the rest (including Judas). Why does Jesus send these
twelve men instead of miraculously going Himself to every hurting heart? The answer is
that, as the people encounter the Apostles in their ministry, they encounter the
transforming power of Jesus Christ. Jesus sends His people the Twelve Apostles because in
them, we see ourselves. In their impulsiveness, lack of comprehension, simplicity,
failings and even betrayal, we are reflected as if in a mirror. Their struggles are ours,
their faith is ours, their love for the Lord is ours.
But we also experience the saving power of Jesus in the Apostles. Through the ordained
instrumentality of these men (and their successors, the bishops), Jesus Himself does go
personally to every hurting human heart to heal, console and strengthen it. Every time we
recite the Creed, we say, "We believe in one, holy, Catholic and apostolic
Church." The Apostles are at the heart of our Faith, the heart of our belief, the
heart of the Church. The Church is apostolic because she continues to be taught,
sanctified and guided by the Apostles through their successors.
The Apostles, though, do more than offer words. People demand proof, and Jesus grasps
this truth when He commands His Apostles to support their preaching with saving actions.
What the Apostles do "cure the sick, raise the dead, cleanse lepers, drive out
demons" is nothing other than what Jesus Himself does. The Apostolic mission
is not something separate from or different than Christs own mission; they coincide
exactly, and indeed the Apostles can do nothing except through the power and grace of
Christ at work in them. This is as true today as it was in Jesus own day. The
Church, rooted upon the Apostles, fulfills today, in the circumstances of modern life, the
same task of teaching, sanctifying and governing that the Lord handed on to His chosen
Twelve.
How does Christ care for us today, in the Year of Our Lord 2002? He does so through the
apostolic nature of His Church. As the Lord came to change and transform the lives of
those who heard and believed in Him, so through the Apostles and their successors, Christ
accomplishes the same transformation and renewal of life. Through our own obedient
response to the teaching, sacramental care and pastoral guidance of our shepherds, the
bishops, each of us can come to know and experience the continuation and perpetuation of
the Good Shepherds constant care and love, and thus find hope in the apostolic
proclamation: "The kingdom of heaven is at hand."