The Gospel to the Nations
The persecution that strikes the Church of Jerusalem, far from smothering the Gospel, scatters it abroad. The Good News then crosses the frontiers of Israel: it reaches Samaria, touches an Ethiopian, seizes the persecutor Saul and turns him into an apostle, and above all, through Peter, it opens officially to the pagans. The great turning point of the Acts is there: salvation, brought by the Messiah of Israel, is offered to all the peoples of the earth.
The Gospel beyond Jerusalem
Driven from Jerusalem by the persecution that follows Stephen’s death, the believers announce the Word everywhere they pass. Philip evangelizes Samaria, that people despised by the Jews, then explains the Scripture to a high Ethiopian official whom he baptizes on the road. The Gospel knows nothing of the barriers that separate men: it goes toward the Samaritan, the foreigner, the outcast. What seemed a catastrophe, the scattering of the community, becomes the very means of mission. The persecution, by throwing the believers onto the roads, sows the Gospel far beyond the holy city. Thus at Antioch, a great city of Syria, the first community forms where Jews and pagans live side by side, and it is there, Luke tells us, that the disciples receive for the first time the name of Christians. Antioch will become the starting point of Paul’s great journeys, as if the mission to the whole world now set out from a new hearth, open from the outset to the nations.
The conversion of Saul
The most resounding account is that of Saul, the fierce enemy who persecutes the Church. On the road to Damascus, where he goes to hunt down the Christians, a light envelops him, he falls to the ground, and a voice is heard: “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?” Acts 9:4 These words reveal a mystery: to persecute the Christians is to persecute Christ himself, so much is he one with his own. Blinded, Saul is led by the hand to Damascus, where he recovers his sight and is baptized. The persecutor becomes a preacher; the one who hunted the Name will carry it to the ends of the earth. This lightning conversion shows that no one is too far for grace, and that God can make of his worst adversary his greatest apostle. Luke holds this account so important that he reports it three times in his book: the conversion of Saul is no minor incident, but the turning point by which God gives himself the instrument of the mission to the pagans. The one who wanted to destroy the Church will become its greatest missionary, and his letters will nourish the Christian faith until the end of time.
Peter and the pagans
There remained the decisive step: to admit the pagans into the Church without first making them pass through the Jewish Law. It is to Peter that God makes it understood. Through a vision, then through the meeting with the Roman centurion Cornelius, whose whole household receives the Holy Spirit, Peter discovers that God also calls the non-Jews: “God shows no partiality among people.” Acts 10:34 He then baptizes Cornelius and his household, the first pagans to enter the Church. It is an upheaval: the Gospel is not reserved for the chosen people, it is for every nation. What the prophets had glimpsed, the Church now lives: in Christ, there is no longer Jew or pagan, but one single people of believers. What the prophets had glimpsed here takes its full meaning: Isaiah had announced a servant given as a light to the nations, and promised that distant peoples would see the salvation of God; the psalms already sang that all the nations would come to worship the Lord. The entry of Cornelius, the first pagan baptized, is therefore not a break with the Old Testament, but its fulfillment: the God of Israel had always been the God of all men, and the wall that separated Jews and pagans falls at last in Christ.
The council of Jerusalem
The entry of the pagans raises a grave question: must one impose on them circumcision and the Law of Moses? To settle it, the apostles and the elders gather in Jerusalem, in the first council in the history of the Church. After listening and debating, they decide that salvation comes from the grace of Christ, not from the Law, and that the burden of the Jewish observances will not be laid on the pagans. Their decision is formulated in a decisive way: “For it has seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us not to lay on you any burden.” Acts 15:28 The Church recognizes there the model of all its councils: men gathered, but guided by the Spirit, who take decisions together in the name of God. The freedom of the Gospel is saved: one enters the Church by faith and baptism, not by the Law. To support this decision, James, who presides over the assembly of Jerusalem, cites the prophet Amos: God had promised to raise up the fallen tent of David, so that the rest of men and all the nations might seek the Lord. The welcome of the pagans is therefore not an improvised novelty, but the fulfillment of a prophecy: in gathering the nations around the Messiah, son of David, God keeps his word. The first council of the Church thus rests on Scripture to discern the work of the Spirit, giving the model of every decision of the Church: to listen at once to the Word received and to the Spirit who makes it understood anew.