en espanol Mass Times Employment St. John Center About Contact

 


About Us

Ad Limina Visit

Advent/Christmas Resources

Arkansas Mass Times

Audio Library

Bishop Anthony B. Taylor

Bulletin Resources

Calendar of Events

Campus Ministries

Catholic Resources

Charismatic Liaisons

Cemeteries

Clergy Boards

Clergy and Seminarian Directory

Coat of Arms

College of Consultors

Confession Times

Day Care Centers

Deaneries

Deanery Officials

Diaconate Directory

Diaconate Candidates

Diocesan Staff Directory

Directions to Our Offices

Disaster Preparedness Tips

Disaster Resources

Employment Opportunities

Eucharistic Adoration

Engaged Couples Ask

Facebook Page

Fast Facts

Former Bishops

Getting Married Guide

Hispanic Ministries

History

Hospitals and Health Centers

How to Become Catholic

House of Formation

Korean Ministry

Lent Resources

Marriage Preparation

Marriage and Family

Mass and March for Life

Minister to Priests

Minister for Religious

MOMMS Prayer Watch

Morris Hall Chapel

Natural Family Planning

News

Organizations

Open Your Hearts

Pastoral Letter 2008

Pastoral Planning Process

Pray With Us

Protect Religious Liberty

Public Associations

Prison Ministries

Religious Directory

Religious Order News

Retirement Centers

Retreat Centers

Report Abuse of Minors

Roman Missal Q&A

Sacramental Records

Safe Environment Resources

Schools By the Numbers

Seminarians

Seminarian Fund

Senior Ministry

Special Collections

Social Services

Submit a Calendar Event

Submit a Job Listing

Submit a Prayer Request

Theology Institute

Vietnamese Ministries

Virtus Training

Volunteer Opportunities

Welcome Home

YouTube Channel



Little Rock Scripture Study

Paul’s Gospel Message Still Reaches Us

This is the 13th column in a 13-part series.

By Clifford M. Yeary

Associate Director
Little Rock Scripture Study

Paul had a bold take on the Gospel. He proclaimed that all peoples of the world were invited into a saving covenant relationship with the God of his Jewish ancestors through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. He put it quite simply to the Corinthians: “God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting their trespasses against them and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation” (2 Corinthians 5:19).

logoAfter nearly 2,000 years, what can we say of Paul’s heritage in our own time? Is Paul’s first-century Gospel relevant to 21st-century complexities of culture and diverse values? As with any question, the answers given might well depend on who is asked. In just the last few decades, millions of sub-Saharan Africans have fervently accepted the good news that God sent his only Son into the world to redeem them.

Conversely, since the end of World War II, millions of Europeans have abandoned belief in Paul’s message of salvation, apparently regarding it as ancient cultural baggage that ill equips them to navigate the maze of modern challenges. In America, the percentage of individuals who profess faith in Christ has not radically changed since the Second World War. Professing Christians are still a majority of our population. But if we listen hard for Paul’s authentic voice in American life we might go deaf trying to hear the whisper beneath the clanging, banging and screeching of competing noises.

If Paul does have a viable heritage to offer us as a society there are some deeply held fears and beliefs he must either allay or dispel. In more or less ascending order, a short list of widely held cultural beliefs and fears that compete with Paul’s Gospel would include:

1. The ivory-tower certitude that all sense of meaning and value is an irrational delusion.

2. The fear that religious commitment is a sign of fanaticism that is the root cause of most violent conflicts in the world.

3. The belief that traditional sexual morality is an impediment to personal growth and psychological well-being.

4. The impression created by wave after wave of technological development that our culture and society are somehow being transformed for the better.

5. The secret fear that the meaning of life is to be found in the right mix of fame, wealth and exotic experiences.

I seek no argument with anyone who would add to the list or rearrange the order. As a former high school teacher, however, it is number five that worries me the most. The message of Hollywood and the music industry to our youth is that only the rich, glamorous and (in)famous have lives worth living. Our youth do not so much believe the message as they fear its possible truth. If only the rich, famous and daring have meaningful lives, what hope is there for the rest of us?

Many of our youth turn to drugs as a shortcut to experiencing life as something other than “ordinary.” In this modern climate of intellectual doubt, technologically induced cultural evolution, rampant materialism, escapist mentality and frenzied lust, what can an itinerant preacher from 20 centuries ago with a gospel about a crucified Jew do to compete? What heritage does he yet have to offer in exchange for the wonders and thrills of modern life?

The answer lies in part in the realization that the wonders and thrills of modern life are often out to rob us of what we truly need in life. Paul’s Gospel has not changed in 2,000 years. It still requires conversion in order to be understood or adequately grasped. However ill suited to modern life many may find Paul’s Gospel to be, its enduring heritage is its appeal as an alternative to whatever else we might seek from life.

Paul’s Gospel can change us and our relationship to the world. Paul’s Gospel can rob the world of its power to deceive us into believing there is something in the world that can actually bring us complete fulfillment. For all the possibility of being happy in the world, the greatest sadness for us would be to become happy enough in the world that we never look beyond it. Nothing in the world was ever meant to be the final object of our longing. It was meant to be the place where we would carry out God’s love and concern for creation.

But it is in being recipients of God’s personal love that we will discover what it means to be happy, even if it takes a lifetime of stumbling on the way there. Paul conveys that message so very well.

Return to Life is Christ Series Index.