October 15, 2021

3 Reasons for sending out two by two: Companionship - Teamwork - Accountability

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By sending out his disciples on Mission two by two, Jesus demonstrates a great knowledge of psychology: no one lives alone, we are not islands, as we all need one another. On Mission, we can easily lose heart, hope, we need company; with companionship, sorrows diminish, while joys increase.

He also knew a great deal about sociology and the operation of companies and institutions. In this sense, the evangelist should not be like a lone gunman, he must work as a team, since two heads think more and better than one. Evangelization is carried out by the community, on behalf of the community and with the community.

Finally, he knew well about man’s fallen nature so he placed supervision, or accountability, as an antidote to corruption, in order to prevent one from becoming a dictatorial and fanatical leader who turns a Christian community into a sect cut off from other Christians.

What to take and what not to take on the way
He called the twelve and began to send them out two by two, and gave them authority over the unclean spirits. He ordered them to take nothing for their journey except a staff; no bread, no bag, no money in their belts; but to wear sandals and not to put on two tunics. Mark 6:7-9

The list of things to take on the journey is identical in the three gospels and it denotes simplicity, humility, and poverty. Even though he goes like a sheep among wolves, the evangelizer must not go prepared or equipped with material resources, nor must he even provide for himself. At every moment, in every place, he must trust fully and exclusively on divine providence, he must seek first the Kingdom of God and the rest will be given to him in addition (Matthew 6:33) because God knows what we need before we ask him (Matthew 6:8), the worker deserves his wages (Leviticus 19:13, Matthew 10:10, Luke 10:7; 1 Timothy 5:18).

There is only one discrepancy in the three gospels with regards to two items  – the staff and the  sandals – which in our view, and I assume in Mark's view, are not luxury items, but rather "subsistence aids", to the extent that they facilitate the journey of the evangelizer.

Matthew leaves the evangelizer barefooted, without sandals and without a staff to lean on. Luke, in the mission of the twelve (9:1-6), forbids the staff and ignores the sandals, while in the mission of the seventy-two, he ignores the staff and forbids the sandals. Mark differs from these two gospels in letting the evangelizer carry a staff and almost requiring him to wear sandals. As Mark is the first to be written, and from what I know of pilgrimages and treks as a missionary in Ethiopia, I can ignore Luke and Matthew and follow what Mark says.

The staff is what all pilgrims carry on their pilgrimages, and it is what the shepherd carries. It has many uses: it helps us in going up and down a mountain, and not to slide and fall walking through mud, and during a river crossing, it serves as a third leg, that is, it transforms an arm that is useless during the crossing into a leg support.

We can get into all kinds of accidents walking barefooted, a simple splinter or thorn can get in our foot and act like a thorn in the flesh that hurts and bothers us nonstop; it forces us to sit down to try to remove it, but oftentimes we can’t see it and it remains inside our flesh bothering us continuously and slowing our walk. In Ethiopia, during the dry season, those who walk barefoot catch penetrating fleas that enter the skin and even make nests there.

The Mission is of all and for all
After this the Lord appointed seventy-two others and sent them on ahead of him in pairs to every town and place where he himself intended to go. Luke 10:1

As for the ones sent out, both Mark and Matthew only refer to the Mission of the twelve; Luke has two sending offs, one for the twelve and the other for the seventy-two, to tell us that the Mission is not only for the twelve of whom the clerics like to say they are descendants, but for all the disciples of Jesus, because the number 72 has an all-encompassing universal meaning. According to W. Barclay, 72 was the number of elders chosen to help Moses with the task of leading and directing the people in the desert (Num.11:16-17, 24, 25).

It was also the number of members that makes up the Sanhedrin, the Supreme Council of the Jews. Finally, it was also considered the number of nations in the world. Luke was the man with a universalistic vision and it is quite possible that he was thinking of the day when all the nations of the world would know and love his Lord.

The number 12 also has a universal all-encompassing meaning and it is not restricted to bishops and clerics as they claim. Saint Paul, as we know, was not one of the twelve and yet he claimed for himself and for many of his male and female collaborators the title of apostle, which was previously exclusive to the twelve. By doing this, he meant to affirm that an apostle is not someone who has a diploma or a pedigree or who was given the title, but someone who behaves as such, as an evangelizing missionary ready to suffer for the gospel, as indeed Paul did more than any of the 12, as he himself said (2 Corinthians 11:22-33).

Twelve are the tribes of Israel that make up the people of God, the months of the year, twelve are the hours of the day and hours of the night; twelve are the signs of zodiac, twelve are the knights of the round table, twelve are the stars that adorn the crown of Mary, Queen of Heaven and Earth, and in reference to her, 12 are the stars on the flag of the European Union, in which each star does not represent a member state (the member states are 27) or has any individual meaning, but represents as a group the totality of the member states, to say that just as God's people are made up of 12 tribes, so the European Union is a new people, a new Europe.

Because Jesus did not want to reformulate or restore Israel, he did not choose an apostle from each tribe, instead Jesus wanted to found a new people that would be the leaven of the Kingdom of God in this world, and as the result, he randomly chose 12 apostles to use the all-encompassing symbolism of the number 12. As in the flag of the European Union, what matters is not the twelve stars or the twelve individuals, but the all-encompassing meaning of the number 12, which allows Paul to also be an apostle.

Ite, Missa est
This is what the priest used to say at Mass when it was in Latin, which means "the Mass is over, you are on mission", that is, "the Mass is over the mission begins". The life of the Christian takes place between the Mass and the Mission, that is, when he is not at Mass, he is on mission and vice versa, when he is not on mission it is because he is at Mass, because the Christian is called to celebrate in community what he lives, and to live or put into practice what he celebrates.

Do this in memory of me – It was not the Church that invented the Sunday precept. It was the Master himself who knew very well that when a group does not come together to share their faith, it ceases to be a group. There is no Church without the Eucharist, and no Eucharist without the Church.

Every Sunday, the weekly day of rest, the Lord's Day, the Master continues to call his disciples to be with him, to instruct them and to give himself to them in the Eucharistic bread; then, at the end, he sends them out for another week of life of work and Mission. This is the same vital movement of the heart that draws the blood to itself to purify it in the lungs and fill it with oxygen, and then sends it back out to the cells.

Nature of the mission - This mission is not exactly of going out into the streets to preach or to go door to door. We must preach the gospel at all times and all places, whether intentionally or unintentionally, as St. Paul said (2 Timothy 4:2), and when necessary, as St Francis of Assisi said, "we can use words" or, in St. Peter's view, give reasons for the faith and hope that animates us to all who asks (1 Peter 3:15).

But this only when it is necessary; most of the time it will not be because the Christian, according to his Master, preaches by example. The symbols of being a Christian, salt and light, are silent because “good makes little noise and noise does little good", as Blessed Joseph Allamano used to say, and because the example both credits and discredits the word. The word without the example is empty of content, it serves no purpose. It is the example that authorizes the word as Christians saw in Jesus (Matthew 7:29) and as the first Roman converts saw in the early Christians ("see how they love each other").

Two by two
The Mission of the 72 disciples, as well as that of the 12 amid Jesus' ministry, are supervised missions, something like the practical classes in a school; in these missions, because they are part of the curriculum and because the disciples are not yet prepared for the great universal mission, the mission field is restricted exclusively to the lost sheep of the house of Israel (Matthew 10:6), which in reality was the same field as the Trinity (Matthew 15:21-28). Because the field of mission was very limited, the disciples were forbidden to leave Israel, to preach to the pagans, and they could not even enter the city of Samaritans. The universal mission comes later and is no longer strictly Jesus’, but of the Holy Spirit.

The two by two was not only observed during these practical lessons, but also after Christ left. Already in the context of the universal mission, it became a distinctive feature of Christian evangelization. On the first missionary journey, the Holy Spirit sent Paul and Barnabas (Acts 13:1-3), in the second he paired Paul with Silas, and later with Timothy (Acts 16:1; 1Timothy 1:2, 4, 14). Saint Paul often speaks of his collaborators whom he calls apostles, men as well as women.

In Israel, the testimony of one person is not considered acceptable (1 Corinthians 14: 29, 2 Corinthians 13: 1). In the Old Testament, the testimony of a single witness was not sufficient to convict someone of murder (Numbers 35:30, Deuteronomy 17:6). In fact, two or three witnesses were required to determine that a person had committed a sin deserving of punishment (Deuteronomy 19:15).

(...) What we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, what we have looked at and touched with our hands, concerning the word of life – this life was revealed, and we have seen it and testify to it (…) what we have seen and heard so that you also may have fellowship with us…  1 John 1:1-3

The apostles are, above all, witnesses of Christ, they proclaim the salvific experience they had with him. They do not so much proclaim a doctrine, as to what Jesus did for them, how he changed their lives, how he gave them salvation, that is, health of body and soul, and how he opened the doors of eternal salvation for them.

The gospel preached by a lone outspoken sniper is, on the other hand, less credible than what is preached by a group of people who claim to have had the same experience. Being sent out two by two, therefore, also increases the credibility of the preached message.

Matthew (10:2-4) presents the list of the 12 chosen by Jesus to be apostles two at a time. That is, he calls them two by two and send them out two by two. In the Gospel of John, two disciples, James and Andrew  feel the call to follow the master; in the synoptics, first two brothers, Peter and Andrew are called to leave their fishing behind, then another pair of brothers, James and John, are invited to leave their fishing nets and their father in order to follow him.

Already in the Old Testament, the idea of two was present. Moses does not stand alone before Pharaoh, but always with Aaron. David would not have realized the gravity of his sin if he had not been confronted by the prophet Nathan. We are a social being from the moment two half-cells come together, forming a single human cell. It takes two people of opposite sex to have a new being. This is why we conclude that the idea of pair is already inscribed in our genes. We are not islands, we cannot and should not live as such or act alone.

COMPANY
Jesus went up the mountain and called to him those whom he wanted, and they came to him. And he appointed twelve, whom he also named apostles, to be with him, and to be sent out to proclaim the message, and to have authority to cast out demons. Mark 3:13-15

Jesus and his friends
We live in a society that gives extreme importance to functional relationships, allocating affective relationships to second place, and even forbidding them for the sake of efficiency. According to the theorists of this society, we should all behave like robots, with only mind and hands at work, without feelings and without heart, keeping emotions at bay.

The affective is the one who is effective, someone said... We are not robots no matter how much they tell us to behave like one; two cogwheels fitted together, one turning with the other, do not arouse feelings for each other because they are material entities; this is not the case between two people who relate to each other: their relationship cannot fail to evoke and invoke feelings and emotions. As the proverb says, "Boat, game and road, turn strangers into friends".

"Love is born between equals or it makes people equal" – There is no problem when feelings arise between equals, from the same rank, or between co-workers or people working on the same project. The problem arises when these feelings arise within relationships of authority, such as Father-child, teacher-student, doctor-patient, priest-faithful, psychotherapist-client. These relationships, say the codes of professional conduct, should be friendly, but not one of friendship.

It is not easy to maintain this balance, preventing friendly relationships from turning into friendship relationships, but it is possible; one of the models for me is the relationship that is established between parents and children when the latter are already adults. The other model is that of Christ.

I do not call you servants any longer, because the servant does not know what the master is doing; but I have called you friends, because I have made known to you everything that I have heard from my Father. John 15:15

The relationship that Jesus had with his disciples began as a relationship of authority, Master-Disciple, but with time and coexistence it became a relationship of friendship, just like that of a Father with an adult child. During the last years of his life, my Father even sought me out for the sacrament of penance and shared a great deal with me.

As Mark says, Jesus called his disciples to be with Him, to live with Him, therefore to a relationship of friendship, to be his companions, and not only to relate to them in a cold and professional manner, but to instruct, prepare, and send them out. In fact, even among the 12, there was a group of three closest to Him and, among the three, there was one even closer, the beloved disciple. During one of the bitterest hours of his life in the Garden of Olives, he asked them to watch over him (Matthew 26:39-44).

There was also a group of women who followed Him, and among them there was one who was closest to Him than all the others. Mary Magdalene was a close friend of Jesus, but not even with her was the Master-Disciple relationship broken. When Jesus appeared to her after the resurrection, he called her by her name, Mary, but she answered "Master” (Teacher). And when she reported this event to the other apostles, she did not tell them that she saw the beloved of her soul, Jesus, but that she saw the Lord (John 20:11-18).

The importance of companionship
Like we said, it takes two people to procreate a human being. We are intrinsically social beings. Our personality is built on the interactions we have with our educators, parents, siblings, teachers, friends, etc. In this sense, the human being is not born, but is made. At least eighteen years pass between birth and adulthood, and it is only at 7 years old that human beings become aware of themselves.

The first truly human need, beyond the physical ones that we have in common with animals, is the need to love and to be loved. Without love, there is in fact no human life because we are the fruit of the love between two people, not only during pregnancy but also during the first 18 or 20 years of our existence, or even for the rest of our existence, so we can say that to live is to love and to be loved.
 
The clearest proof that friendship and companionship are as essential as the bread we eat and the air we breathe is the fact that a shared sadness diminishes, but a shared joy increases.

The world has never been more connected than today through the globalization of social networks on the internet and mobile phones, and yet there has never been so much loneliness as now. In the summer of 2003, when it was estimated that 70,000 people died in Europe from the extreme heatwave, France, especially Paris, was very much affected, and many of these people were elderly living alone who died alone. By September 3rd of that same year there were still 57 bodies in Paris that nobody had claimed; fathers, mothers, brothers or sisters, uncles, aunts, cousins or cousins of someone, since there is no human life outside of these parameters and we all share them, we are parents or uncles or nephews or cousins of someone.

I am a fierce critic of having dogs, cats or other pets at home; however, I have to recognize that when human companionship is lacking, the company of an animal is a remedy to be considered as a last resort. More and more people are seeking companionship in these domestic animals because they do not find it in humans.

Friendship in popular wisdom
Friend of all and friend of none, it’s all the same – It is one thing to be known and have many acquaintances, but they are not friends. Jesus treated everyone in a friendly way, but he did not consider them all his friends. He who embraces many holds tightly to a few, says the proverb. As we have already said, Jesus also had those closest to him, even within the 12.

The one who disagrees with you may be a great friend, free yourself from those who always agree with you – The big question that arises in a friendship is the question of faith and trust. Are our friends real or fake? There are many tests to find this out; in hard times good friends are made known. The most suspicious ones say, "God deliver me from my friends as from my enemies I deliver myself".

The victor has many friends, but it is the loser who has the best friends – This Mongolian proverb is a good solution to our problem of trust. When we fail in life, the real friends are the ones who are still by our side, because during hard times, when the ship is about to sink, the first to abandon it are the rats.

When you walk beside a friend, a kilometer has ten steps – The company of a friend makes everything easier, both the journey and the task. One more proof that what is truly effective is the affective. In fact, what we do for love and with love is what we do best. Aristotle, who wrote about friendship, when explaining the kind of union that exists between two friends, went so much as to say that friendship is one soul in two bodies.
 
Company in the apostolate
Now on that same day two of them were going to a village called Emmaus, (….) talking with each other about all these things that had happened. While they were talking and discussing, Jesus himself came near and went with them, (…) they stood still, looking sad. Then one of them, whose name was Cleopas, answered him, (…) But we had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel. Luke 24:13-35

The image of the two disciples of Emmaus is very meaningful and is the one that I use in the header of the Itinerant Mission blog. They are husband and wife who are going away from Jerusalem after what happened there. It is the only place in the entire New Testament that tell us of the apostles' feedback concerning the passion and death of the Master. This text tells us what the disciples thought and felt regarding the passion and death of their beloved Master.  

The power to cry together over failures and celebrate successes, is one of the advantages of companionship. When an apostle evangelizes with a friend, he can count on the other for everything, for his help, his encouragement, and his advice, he doubles his action because his companion energizes him.

Furthermore, the evangelizer can also count on the help of the Master himself who tells us, "Where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them" (Matthew 18:20). And if what the gospel says is true, with this help in their apostolate they cannot count on those who act alone, like the lone gunman.

After the apostolic times, there have always been men and women who united in the same task of evangelization, have joined their efforts and walked together the way of the gospel, like the disciples of Emmaus. The vast majority of them are not known, but there are some canonized by the Church who have lived a holy and productive friendship. Here is a list of some of the best-known friendships in the Church:

Among people of the same gender:
•    St. Perpetual and St. Felicity
•    St. Basil and St. Gregory Nazianzen
•    St. Cyril and St. Methodius
•    St. Bonaventure and St. Thomas Aquinas
•    St. Ignatius of Loyola and St. Francis of Xavier

Among people of opposite gender:
•    St. Jerome and St. Paula
•    St. Benedict and St. Scholastica
•    St. Francis of Assisi and St. Claire of Assisi
•    St. Teresa of Avila and St. John of the Cross
•    St. Francis de Sales and St. Jane de Chantal
•    St. Vincent de Paul and St. Louise de Marillac
•    St. Martin de Porres and St. Rose of Lima

TEAMWORK
Two are better than one, because they have a good reward for their toil. For if they fall, one will lift up the other; but woe to one who is alone and falls and does not have another to help. Again, if two lie together, they keep warm; but how can one keep warm alone? And though one might prevail against another, two will withstand one. A threefold cord is not quickly broken.  Ecclesiastes 4:9-12

Two oxen pulling a car or a plough illustrate well the thought of this sacred author. A single ox could not do what two can; the question is in getting them to pair up. We see a yoke of oxen pulling in unison and we think it has always been this way, that they were born for each other, but this is not so.

The fact that we put companionship or friendship before teamwork in this text is not by chance. Between enemies or rivals, collaboration does not take place, for one wants to outdo the other; ideas have copyright, envy poisons relationships, dialogue turns into an argument and controversy where the objective is no longer to discover the truth, but to win the quarrel, humiliating the loser.

Just as there is a process of pairing the oxen so there must be friendship between the members of a group or team so that working together will bring result. Many run away from teamwork and even think that it is a waste of time. "Fa per tre chi fa per se" says an Italian proverb, he does for three what he does by himself alone.

Like someone said, an elephant is a horse designed by a group. Maybe it won't be a perfect horse, but the fact that everyone participated will bear fruit in the future. "If you want to go faster, go alone, but if you want to go far, go together".

"Libri ex libris fiunt" – It can be translated as "conversation is like cherries: when you grab one, others follow". Only God creates from nothing, we create from what already has been created. The idea from a colleague raises another idea in me and together we build the puzzle of truth or the solution to the problem at hand.

The values that enable one to work in a team
Just as nobody can love his neighbour if he does not love himself, he also cannot be an active member of a group without having acquired the personal values that are oriented towards social and group life:

Communication – The ability to communicate your ideas clearly, either in writing or orally, in a non-imposing way, in a warm, professional, friendly tone. There are people whose arrogance is already noticeable in the tone they use in their communication, done ex cathedra and in an intimidating way. This has nothing to do with being persuasive and expansive, with speaking at ease, with self-confidence and assertiveness.

Listening – Silence is part of the communication; while one speaks, we pay attention, we absorb everything the other is saying. It is depressing and very demotivating to see how there are people in a meeting who are inattentive, playing with their cellphones while someone is talking. This is a way of humiliating those who speak, of setting them aside, of considering them unimportant.

Peacemaker – It is inevitable that conflicts will arise, and when they do, we must be neutral with regard to people, but not with regard to truth and justice. We must never side with anyone against someone else, because they are both our brothers or colleagues; siding with someone even when that person is right, leads to dividing the group into factions, into opposing parties and ultimately into open war. We must, however, always be on the side of truth and justice, supporting positions that are in line with them, without praising those who stand by them, just as we must denounce what is not in line with truth and justice, without accusing those who take such positions.

Trustworthy – A king does not go back on his word. To be trustworthy to what one has promised and committed, trustworthy to the tasks of our responsibility, meeting the established deadlines, to be punctual. To whoever has been trustworthy in little things, much will be given, says the gospel. Many group projects are divided into different parts and each one is called upon to do their portion. In such cases, it is like riding an Airbus, it is assembled in France, but the wings are manufactured in England, the engines in Germany, other parts in Spain, etc.

Be respectful – Few people see the lack of punctuality as a lack of respect, but I see it that way. When I'm not punctual, I'm saying indirectly that I am more important than you, that my time is more valuable than yours. When I do not listen to others, I am putting them aside, when I do not look at them when they speak, I am ignoring them; When I do not know their name or bother to learn it and I address them without calling them by name, I'm putting them aside.

When any member of the group does not act according to these values, the work becomes harder, a lot of time and creativity is lost because minds and hearts deal instead with issues such as envy, esteem and self-esteem, conflicts, rivalries, power struggles, etc.

How to work as a team
For everything there is a technique to follow, an accumulation of operative knowledge or tactics that have been used over time by many groups and have worked.

Dividing the work into small tasks – Teamwork does not mean everyone does everything at the same time. The work must be divided among the members of the group, according to each one’s talents. Nowadays a company is contracted for a given project, but it will not do everything within the company; instead, it hires other companies under subcontracts to complete the project.

Ask for help – When you are focused on your own task, difficulties can arise: it is not humiliating to be humble and ask for help when faced with doubt, difficulty and lack of ideas. Nobody knows how to do everything, no one is an expert in everything.

Working out loud – Sharing details of the task we are doing, what we discover, the difficulties we are having with members of the group or those around us. Hold meetings to share the current state of each task, and so remain open to suggestions and details that had not crossed our minds.

Share a prototype – With the same intention as the previous point, share a prototype, a draft, an example of what we are doing. Do not be afraid to present the project with the scaffolding still on, with the errors of spelling or agreement and let others correct us, present us with alternatives.

Review meetings – Still in line with the previous point, hold a review meeting when everyone is still halfway into their part of the project or task, and encourage other members to find flaws, to be the devil's advocate so that we can perfect our work. Many book authors ask a friend for his opinion, or ask an expert to read the draft to give him criticism before the final draft and publication.

Common goal – A group, a team, a community, a family, are made up of different people with different personalities, genders and talents, but with a common goal. It is the common goal that keeps them united in the same project divided into different tasks. In this common goal, it is important that everyone knows their place in the group.

Celebrating successes together – Together triumphs are celebrated and together, like the disciples of Emmaus, we cry over failures. Not only the end of the project should be celebrated, but also each of the most important stages; in this way, the spirit and motivation are reinvigorated to continue until the project is complete.

Teamwork in the apostolate
The mission of the 12 and of the 72 was a teamwork between Jesus and the apostles, since the gospel clearly states that Jesus sends them out to places where he intended to go. All evangelization is a preparation of the way to the Lord, just like the Baptist did. After the Lord’s Resurrection and Ascension into Heaven, his disciples maintained the tradition of working in teams. Let us look at some of those teams that were formed.

•    Peter and John (Acts 3)
•    Philip and, thereafter, Peter and John (Acts 8)
•    Peter and certain brothers (Acts 10)
•    Paul and Barnabas (Acts 13-14)
•    Judas and Silas - join Paul and Barnabas (Acts 15)
•    Barnabas and John Mark (Acts 15)
•    Timothy joins Paul and Silas (Acts 16)
•    Paul takes Priscilla and Aquila with him (Acts 18)
•    Timothy and Erastus are sent to Macedonia (Acts 19)
•    Going to Asia, Paul was accompanied by Sopater, Aristarchus, Secundus, Gaius, Timothy, Tychicus, and Trophinus (Acts 20)

The Church is an assembly, it is a group of people united in the same faith. It is the mystical body of Christ animated by the Holy Spirit. It is certain that on earth there must be a structure and this structure, until the Second Vatican Council, was graphically represented by a pyramid. Western democracies have overcome the monarchy, and in those who still have a monarchy, the king reigns, but he does not govern and has no decision-making power, he is only a symbol.

The Second Vatican Council presented another structure for the Church. It replaced the pyramid by concentric circles, with Peter's successor at the center. The absolute power of the Pope would be limited by the Synods of Bishops, and a greater collegiality between the Pope and the bishops was sought, as there is in the Orthodox Church; with the death of Paul VI, the leader of the Council, and the accession of John Paul II to the chair of Peter, everything went back as before.

Whatever happens at the level of the highest spheres of ecclesiastical power – of the Pope and the cardinals of the Curia – is reproduced at the diocesan and parish level. The Pope governs the Universal Church, the bishop governs his diocese and the parish priest governs his parish, just as the Sun King ruled France before the French revolution. In fact, this Revolution succeeded in wiping out the blue blood of nobility, but it achieved nothing against the caste type Old Testament priesthood that we have in the Catholic Church.

The wind blows where it chooses, and you hear the sound of it, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. So it is with everyone who is born of the SpiritJohn 3:8

From the Pope to the parish priest, or from the parish priest to the Pope, the clergy have forgotten that they have no copyright on the Holy Spirit. The third person of the Most Holy Trinity is the one who governs the Church as a whole and each Christian born of water and the Spirit.  

The divine Holy Spirit assists us all, not only the clergy, so many revolutions in the Church have not come from the clergy, but from the laity. As an example, Francis of Assisi, who was never a clergyman nor wanted to be one, reformed the Church without dividing it, whereas a cleric, Luther, divided the Church without reforming it.

The Pastoral Council is one of the creations of Vatican II. It should exist in all parishes, but it does not exist in many of them and in those where it exists, its members are not chosen democratically in an assembly or in the different groups they represent; on the contrary, they are handpicked by the parish priest and the latter chooses those who do not overshadow or oppose him. Their job is to say amen to whatever the parish priest decides. When someone has a divergent voice, the parish priest reminds him "I am the parish priest", and the strife is over.

In my understanding, the figure of the Pastor of the Church is very much abused. The Church is not a flock, but an assembly of different people, united by a common faith. I was a shepherd of sheep and goats in Serra da Estrela, Portugal, and from what I know of sheep and goats, I don't think this image should be applied to the Church.

The clergy has been relating to the adult faithful as if they are children, as if they have never grown up, keeping them tied to norms, precepts and laws, choking their moral conscience in such a way that the faithful have to ask the priest whether this or that is a sin or not. The Church has not let the faithful decide on vital matters such as sexuality.

In a flock, sheep and goats do not think. In fact, ‘borreguismo’ (being sheepish) is a Spanish word that refers to the attitude of those who, without any judgment of their own, allow themselves to be carried away by the opinions of other people, in this case the pastor’s. I saw how a flock was lost on a precipice just because the sheep that was ahead fell over and the others uncritically all went over too.

The people of God is not a flock, and the priest is not a pastor. Just as the Pope is the servant of the servants of God, so must the priest in his parish be a servant of the people of God. This title lends itself more to teamwork than that of pastor.

ACCOUNTABILITY
Accountability in English is a widely used concept nowadays and means many things at the same time:
•    To take responsibility for one's own actions and their consequences, before oneself and others. Denial is, in this sense, the opposing attitude: to make excuse, to disclaim oneself of one's own responsibilities.
•    To be transparent is to issue periodic reports of one’s own activity, without hiding anything under the rug or having skeletons in the closet. Always be ready for an audit, as Domenic Savio was ready to die, without having to make adjustments to his life at the last minute.
•    To be disciplined is to stay on the right path without being derailed by competing, discordant priorities or desires contrary to our mission.
•    To be righteous is to be honest, avoid corruption, do our best in carrying out our commitments; acknowledge mistakes and take the blame when something doesn't go the best way.

Accountability in politics – “Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely”; it is not known who said this, but it alludes to a great truth. Early in the West it was discovered that there could not be one power or that it could not be concentrated in one single instance; hence the separation of power in three instances that are at the same time independent and interdependent of each other.

They are the legislative power, the executive power and the judicial power. These three powers are evenly interdependent, because one supervises the other. They are all supported and regulated by a democratic constitution, the source of all popular power.

While this is happening, the powers do not relate to each other, they function harmoniously like the cogwheels of a clock's mechanism. However, when one of these powers exceeds its competence, one of the other two intervenes in order to bring it back to the normal functioning enshrined in the State Constitution. The mechanism that democracies have for this to work has to do with accountability and is designated as brake and counterweight or check and balance.

Accountability in economy – Inspections and audits are mechanisms of accountability for the use of public money to prevent it from ending up in the pocket of an official.

Accountability in society – It is done by the police and the courts when someone acts against the norms that govern a society. If he is unable to govern and control his basic instincts and live in harmony with his neighbour, the State exercises a coercive power of accountability on the individual whose conduct is not in keeping with that of a mature and responsible citizen.

Accountability in psychotherapy – In order to avoid the psychotherapist’s existential matters, his own psychological problems, his personality and character, from becoming mixed up with the client's problems, as well as to avoid the psychotherapist from becoming affectively involved with the client, supervision is necessary, that is, the psychotherapist must be in therapy with another psychotherapist.

Accountability in the apostolate
So then, each of us will be accountable to God.  Romans 14:12

Therefore confess your sins to one another, and pray for one another, so that you may be healed. The prayer of the righteous is powerful and effective. James 5:16

My friends, if anyone is detected in a transgression, you who have received the Spirit should restore such a one in a spirit of gentleness. Take care that you yourselves are not tempted. Bear one another’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ. Galatians 6:1-2

Iron sharpens iron, and one person sharpens the wits of another. Proverbs 27:17

Unus christianus, nullus christianus – St. Augustine said, “one Christian, no Christian”. The Church is the people of God marching through history transforming this earth into the Kingdom of God and history itself into a story of salvation. This Church has a deposit of faith that are the scriptures and the tradition over 2,000 years.

The Holy Inquisition which throughout history has not shown to be so holy and which today is represented by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, exercises over Christians, especially theologians, the power of accountability, lest they teach against the truths of the faith revealed in apostolic times and throughout the tradition of the Church. If we are to remain united in one faith, this faculty must be exercised. If it were to stop being exercised, the Church would easily be divided into a hundred and one sects or churches, as happened in Protestantism after Luther.

The power of sending out two to two helps to prevent Christians from falling into sin. If one makes a mistake, the other can and should correct him. We all need someone who cares about us, who knows us well enough to acknowledge our shortcomings, who can challenge us if we stray from the path or overstep our competencies. Each one of us needs someone to challenge us from time to time. It goes without saying, the best criticism comes from a friend, from someone who wants our good. Any criticism, however true, that does not come from a friend or is not done out of goodness, will not be well received.  

For where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them.  (Matthew 18:20) is the best guarantee that the Church does not stray outside the doctrine of the Master, it is the best guarantee that an evangelizer does not fall into the temptation to isolate himself as a lone gunman and become the leader of a sect.

The Church should not have lone gunmen or snipers, we must all stay in constant dialogue of confronting our thoughts and actions with those who walk with us, to remain in communion with the Church, the mystical body of the One who is the only Way, Truth and Life, to proclaim him and not ourselves and the doctrines that are not His.

Conclusion - Deeply aware of human nature, under the yoke of the Gospel, Jesus pairs his disciples two by two, so that together they may cry over failures, learn from their mistakes and celebrate the victories of working in the Lord's Vineyard.

Fr. Jorge Amaro, IMC





October 1, 2021

3 Christian entities: Priest - Prophet - King

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God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ has freed you from sin, given you a new birth by water and the Holy Spirit, and welcomed you into his holy people. He now anoints you with the chrism of salvation As Christ was anointed Priest, Prophet, and King, so may you live always as members of his body, sharing everlasting life. Anointing with Chrism Oil after Baptism

Christ, though rich, became poor for our sakes to enrich us (2 Corinthians 8:9). Jesus of Nazareth is God incarnated in the Man that God created before sin entered into the world. Jesus died for us in order to save us from eternal death, he lived for us and with us as the Way, the Truth and the Life, to be the model, the archetype and the paradigm of humanity for Man of all times.

Before returning to the Father, Christ shared with us all his power, talents and faculties, and even told us that if we have faith we could do greater works than his. As the fulfillment of all prophecies, Christ incarnated in himself the three figures or archetypes of the servant of God's people, being at the same time priest, prophet, and king.

As stated above in the prayer that the priest prays while anointing the newly baptized with the Oil of Chrism, every baptized person, by the fact that he is one, is united to Christ as a member of his Mystical Body which is the Church, so that he participates in the priesthood of Christ, assuming also the function of being a prophet and a king.  

The concept of Priest in the early world
When the agricultural society, especially with the cultivation of cereals, allowed a certain social stratification, the figure of priest was one of the first to emerge, since religion in early societies encompassed culture in general, in other words, everything that was not agriculture.

The priest was the person who performed religious rituals to the divinity, read and interpreted the sacred texts, and maintained the place of worship. He was an intermediary between the divinity and the people. In all Jewish religions, from Sumeria, Egypt, Rome or other, in Buddhism, Hinduism, in traditional African or Latin American religions, this has always been the function of the priest.

Shamans and mediums would be other more sophisticated versions of seeking a relationship and communication between this world and the spiritual and divine world of spirits and people who have passed away. There is a resurgence of these practices with the New Age religion which is a syncretism of many religions, including the traditional American, Asian and African ones.

The concept of Prophet in the early world
It is difficult to find in the early world outside of Israel a figure that resembles closely or remotely with the figure of prophet, since a prophet in ancient Israel is not primarily a diviner, as many think. Prophet and prophecy have a very complex meaning in the Bible as we will see later. However, the meaning of soothsayer and divination are also somehow included, although they are not the main ones.

‘Prophesy to us, you Messiah! Who is it that struck you?’  (Matthew 26:68) This New Testament text distorts the function of a prophet in ancient Israel, resembling that of a diviner. The prophet prophesied, but not in the sense of the pythonism of the past and the fortunetellers of the present seen in all cultures.

The prophet was a skilled observer, and a reader and interpreter of the signs of the times; that is, he saw in the present signs of a future that is to come and often announced this future, so that the people could prepare themselves or even for the people to avoid it, as in the case of Jonah with Nineveh.

Diviners, sorcerers, wizards and witches, fortune tellers, there have always been them in our world. These figures would most likely be a secondary facet of being a prophet, but that also happened and made history with many of the prophets of Israel.

The concept of King in the early world
As with animals close to us in the evolution of species, leadership is a natural phenomenon. When forming a group of people where individuals start to act and interact with each other, inevitably one or more leaders will emerge from the group. Autocratic or democratic, who serves others or who serves themselves, leadership appears spontaneously. What is not natural in a group is anarchy, that is, the lack of a leader.

The ancient world has known various forms of government of a tribe, people, or nation. Before the Greek and Roman civilizations, power was concentrated in one person and passed from fathers to sons, as was the case with the kings of the Sumerians, Mesopotamia and Babylon, and the pharaohs of Egypt, until the Persian Empire. The Greeks invented democracy in which and by which the government belonged to the people who delegated their power to various leaders; the same was true of the Romans, with a more complex system than the Greek democracy which they called republic.

When the primitive peoples and barbarians without culture of northern Europe conquered the Roman Empire, Europe degressed for several centuries both culturally and politically, returning to absolute monarchy, to the government of one single person who passed his power to his son, from one generation to the next.

Priest - Prophet - King in the Old Testament
(…) but you shall be for me a priestly kingdom and a holy nation. These are the words that you shall speak to the Israelites. Exodus 19:6

Not only the Church, but also Israel, were already in their time fated to be for God a priestly and prophetic Kingdom. The three offices of the Old Testament had to be the three facets of every Jew's vocation before God.

Priest – Long before Israel became a nation, already a mysterious figure named Melchizedek (Genesis 14:17-20) appeared in its prehistory. He is at the same time a priest and a king. Abraham pays him homage and tithes him. Although the priesthood instituted later in Israel was a priesthood practiced exclusively by members of the tribe of Levi, this first or early priesthood remained in a pure and idyllic state.

Jesus who was from the tribe of Judah, could not be a priest, but he will be an eternal priest according to the order of Melchizedek, King of Salem. His name and title broken down means good and righteous priest, king of peace.

The priest represents the people before God and his garments said exactly this: he wore a tiara with the inscription "holiness to the Lord", and on his chest he wore a plate with 12 precious stones, each of different color, representing the 12 tribes of Israel.

Prophet – If the priest represented the people before God, the prophet represented God before the people. His whole life, words, works and behaviors are facets of a message that is embodied in his life. All of it is an audiovisual aid of manifesting God's designs for his people. The first great prophet was Moses, who not only delivered the people from Egypt, but also guided them through the desert and at the end, gave them a law to observe.

The law and the prophets is another way of designating the Old Testament. In fact, outside the five books of the Pentateuch, that is, the Law and the books of the prophets, only the wisdom books are left out which came later, and not all of them were accepted into the Hebrew canon.

The priests had a routine, ordinary and regular office without great changes, which is why they did not make history. In contrast, prophets were appearing in every historical situation and context, always incarnating the will of God for his people in that precise historical cultural context.

Therefore, we have a book for each prophet, as they are God who walks with his people, revealing himself and acting in the history of his people, never abandoning them but always guiding them, as the first prophet Moses did in the desert in the past. The priest always represents the status quo, the prophet represents the criticism of this status quo and innovation.

King – The office of king did not arise primarily out of God's will. Israel was a theocracy and just as in every time and historical situation, just as a prophet was emerging to guide the people morally, a Judge was also emerging to defend them politically and deliver them from the surrounding hostile peoples. The sons of Samuel, prophet, judge, and priest, were to succeed him, but since they already did not follow in their father’s footsteps during his lifetime, the people asked for a king to be anointed to rule over them just like the other peoples.

God was displeased with this step from theocracy to monarchy, and in the beginning, he felt rejected (or better said, this is how Samuel interpreted it) but gives in. God writes straight in the crooked lines of men, and grants them a king, but the experience of monarchy was not very positive; only the first three kings, Saul, David and Solomon, were able to maintain the kingdom together.

In a simplified overview, the three offices of the Old Testament can be understood as follows: the priest represents the interests of the people before God, the prophet is the mouth of God, representing God before the people, and the king rules the people according to God's designs.

The Messiah that the people of Israel was waiting for was someone who ideally embodied these three offices. In this sense, Israel had to wait for a priest like Melchizedek, a prophet like Moses, and a king like David (2 Samuel 7:12-13, Isaiah 55:3). Jesus of Nazareth is the Lord, he is the Christ who in his life perfectly incarnates these three offices and after him, all his followers are called to do as He did.

PRIEST
(...) like living stones, let yourselves be built into a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. 1 Peter 2:5

The Priest in the Old Testament
Every high priest chosen from among mortals is put in charge of things pertaining to God on their behalf, to offer gifts and sacrifices for sins.  Hebrews 5:1

The universal concept of being a priest is to be an intermediary between God and the people. The priest seeks, through rituals and sacrifices, to placate the divine wrath and gain for the people the benefits that God bestows upon all who observe his precepts and obey his will.

Intercedes for the people – The priest is the "Cohen" which is the Hebrew word for priest, to the extent that he is the intermediary between God and the people. We see Moses performing this function when the people of Israel, on their desert crossing, faced the Amalekites; while Moses remained with his arms raised in an attitude of prayer, interceding for the people, Israel prevailed, but whenever he lowered his arms out of weariness, the Amalekites prevailed (Exodus 17:11-12).

Mediators in conflicts – The priests had the function of educating the people in the Law (Leviticus 10:10, 11; Deuteronomy 33:10; 2 Kings 17:27, 28; 2 Chronicles 15:3; 17:7-9; Jeremiah 18:18; Ezekiel 7:26, 44:23; Malachi 2:6-7). They were also responsible for certain areas of jurisprudence, dealing with certain civil matters (cf. 2 Chronicles 19:8-11; Ezekiel 44:24). In complex criminal cases, it was up to the priests to indicate the correct sentence, according to the standard of the Law (cf. Deuteronomy 21:5).

It was the priest's job to diagnose certain types of leprosy. The priests examined the person in question and attested whether he was clean or unclean. When Jesus healed the lepers, he sent them to the priest to declare them healed (Luke 17:14).

Offers sacrifices – The sacrificial system was a means to re-establish the relationship between God and the people, wherever they disobeyed God’s Law. Forgiveness was obtained by offering a sacrifice of atonement. In addition to these sacrifices that took place daily, one in the morning and the other in the afternoon, the people gave the first fruits of their harvest and 10% of their total harvest to maintain the priestly caste.

The rights of priests are well described in the book of Deuteronomy 18:1-8. The priests took care of the temple, the meeting place between God and men, and they were the custodians of the Ark of the Covenant which they carried during processions. They also had the task of teaching the Law to the people.

The ideal priest is to come – Psalm 110:4 again put Melchizedek as the ideal priest; his priesthood, unlike the priesthood of Aaron, will be eternal. The ideal priest of Israel is the Messiah and he will follow the order of Melchizedek and not the order of Aaron. He will be like Melchizedek: good, just and the Prince of peace. The entire chapter 7 of the letter to the Hebrews presents Christ as this priest who was to come.

Christ High Priest
(…) where Jesus, a forerunner on our behalf, has entered, having become a high priest forever according to the order of MelchizedekHebrews 6:20

Not being from the tribe of Levi, Jesus’ priestly predecessor is Melchizedek as we have already said. Christ exercises par excellence all priestly duties and lifts them all to an unparalleled and unrepeatable perfection, so that he becomes forever the model and paradigm for all ministerial and ordinary priests of the faithful.  

Intercessor – (Christ) is able for all time to save those who approach God through him, since he always lives to make intercession for them (Hebrews 7:25). What makes Christ the true intermediary between God and men, the true bridge between God and men, is the fact that divine nature and human nature are concentrated in him. The very person of Christ is already the harmonious encounter between God and men, in Christ human nature is already reconciled with divine nature.

Christ is not limited to being an intermediary, he is the savior, because by incarnating into human nature he brings God to humanity, and when he returns to the Father he brings humanity to God. Christ is the perfect bridge by which God comes to humanity and humanity goes to God.

This very thing is evident and symbolized by Jesus' visit to Jericho before going up to Jerusalem. Jericho, the city of darkness, the oldest and the lowest in the world, represents sin; in the parable of the Good Samaritan, the man who fell into the hands of robbers came down from Jerusalem, the city of peace and the symbol of grace, to Jericho the symbol of sin. So, he is falling from grace.

Jesus enters Jericho and stays at Zacchaeus’ house, then leaves Jericho followed by a large crowd, and even heals a blind man who joins this crowd. Jesus goes up with this crowd of redeemed people from Jericho, 400 meters below sea level, to the grace of Jerusalem, 800 meters above sea level.

Offers the perfect sacrifice unparalleled, insurmountable, unrepeatable – It was the priests’ main task to offer sacrifice for the people, but before offering any sacrifice, they had to first purify themselves by offering a sacrifice for themselves and only then offer another sacrifice for the people to purify them as well. Jesus does not need to offer this first sacrifice because he is already pure: He himself is God and man in a full and perfect way.

Christ's sacrifice is perfect because He himself is the priest, the lamb, the temple and the altar. The temple is the place where God dwells; Christ was man and God, so God dwelt in Him in his fullness. The altar was the place where the sacrifice was offered; Christ is this altar because he offers it in his life; Christ is the lamb without blemish because he was like us in everything, except sin.

A sacrifice this perfect cannot be made more perfect or surmountable, so the priest today acts according to this same sacrifice of Christ, he celebrates the memory of this sacrifice which, once and for all, redeemed humanity because of it being perfect and cannot be perfected further.

Called to be priests
All Christians, by the fact that they are baptized, are called to be prophets and kings. However, when it comes to being priests too, it is not without suspicion the fact that there are two types of priesthood: the lay priest or the lay person, also called common of the faithful, and the clerical ministerial priest opposed to the people and above the people.

Ministerial priesthood versus common priesthood of the faithful
Knowing that Jesus throughout his life was against the temple and its sacrifices, it is difficult to understand that his death was interpreted as a sacrifice required by God to atone for the sins of mankind.

Jesus identified himself historically with a movement that abandoned the temple as the center of Judaism, the Essenes. They acquired forgiveness of sins without offering any sacrifice, but by way of continuous ritual purifications of water. John the Baptist was an Essene who understood that this way of salvation should be offered to all. So he left the monastery and began to forgive sins by immersion in the waters of the Jordan River.

Jesus was a disciple of John the Baptist, he was baptized by him; in the beginning of Jesus’ ministry he baptized people in the same river, just like John, later taking the forgiveness of sins to the towns, villages, and cities where he walked and preached.

Here is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world! John 1:29 – Only in the late Gospel of St. John is Jesus called by the Baptist as the Lamb of God. Even in this Gospel, Jesus does not refer to himself as the Lamb of God. In the synoptic gospels no one says that He is the Lamb of God nor does He sees himself as the Lamb of God. Only the letter to the Hebrews, a writing that no one signed and which revolves around the idea of Jesus being a priest, refers to the lamb, the altar and the lamb, the perfect adscription that once and for all takes away the sin of the world.

Unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains just a single grain; but if it dies, it bears much fruit. Those who love their life lose it, and those who hate their life in this world will keep it for eternal life. (…) ‘And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself’. He said this to indicate the kind of death he was to die. John 12:24-25, 32-33

Even in the Gospel of John when Jesus speaks of his own death, he interprets it as the death of another prophet, that is, of someone who dies for a cause, to bear witness to the truth, a death similar to the death of Socrates. Jesus gives his life for his project of humanizing man as an individual being and a social being: the Kingdom of God. It is in this sense that he saves us, that he gives his life for us.

In the synoptic gospels, Jesus announces his own death, but never interprets it. There were only two occasions where Jesus seems to interpret it. The first time was in the parable of the Wicked Tenants (Matthew 21:33-46). It is clear that the vineyard represents Israel, the wicked tenants represent the priests, scribes and Pharisees to whom the vineyard has been entrusted; they kill all the messengers, that is, the prophets that the owner of the vineyard, God, sends to them; at the end, He sends them his own Son, that is, Christ, who is also killed and thrown out of the vineyard.

(...) ‘The things about Jesus of Nazareth, who was a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people, and how our chief priests and leaders handed him over to be condemned to death and crucified him. (…) Then beginning with Moses and all the prophets, he interpreted to them the thing about himself in all the scriptures. Luke 24:19-20, 27

The other occasion when Jesus seems to interpret his death is on the road to Emmaus, when he explains to the two disciples why the Messiah had to die. We do not know textually what Jesus said to them, but apparently, as in the parable of the wicked tenants, Jesus interprets his death as the death of another prophet, for he comes following Moses and all the prophets before him who had the same end, as the text says.

The God of our Lord Jesus Christ is a God who forgives and forgets, and needs no satisfaction. He does not need us to pay the price of our redemption. This act of offering sacrifices of atonement for sins is an anthropomorphism, that is, it is how we understand God, and not how God really is according to the way Jesus reveals Him.

The same is said of purgatory which was not created by God because He requires us to expiate our sins before entering into Glory with Him. It is we who from our human nature need purgatory to regain our self-esteem and because even though God forgives us easily from the moment we recognize our sin, it is we who do not forgive ourselves easily and some never forgive themselves like the apostle Judas.

Therefore, to forgive humanity God did not need the sacrifice of his son. It was interpreted this way by men in the light of the sacrifices of the ancient law, but Jesus truly died as a prophet. He died for humanity, for all of us, not because God the Father required it to be so in order to forgive us, but because this humanity rejected his plan of salvation. Jesus not only died for us, he also lived for us: the cause of his death was the same as the cause of his life.

The life and death of Jesus alone would not have been redeeming if after his death he had not risen. It would have been a victory of evil over good, as so often happened in history. His Resurrection came to prove and validate his saving project, that He is the Truth and the Way, that is, the only way to live the temporal life that leads to eternal life.

Last Supper, the Institution of the Eucharist or of the ministerial priesthood?
The Eucharist is the celebration not only of the Passion, Death and Resurrection of Jesus, but also of his life. The Eucharist is the celebration of the total memory of the person of Jesus by his disciples. Jesus says, "Do this in my memory", he does not add, "of my passion, death, and Resurrection", but of the memory of his person and of what his life means to all of us.

The Last Supper is the celebration of Jesus' farewell and the institution of the sacrament of the Eucharist, that is, a way for him to be with us until we are together again and can drink from the fruit of the vine in the Kingdom of God. The Eucharist is the concretization of what Jesus had said, "Where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them." (Matthew 18:20)

Do this in memory of me – It is said to the community in its totality, to the disciples in their totality. No theologian still believes that at the Last Supper there were only the 12 disciples present. Present at the Last Supper were also his female disciples, his Mother, Mary Magdalene and the other women who supported them financially, certainly the mother of Zebedee's sons would be present, as well as other women.

If they followed him from Galilee and were at the foot of his cross, they would certainly have been present at his farewell gathering. The Passover Seder of the Jews was not a thing just for men, it did not exclude women, quite the contrary, the women even started the Supper with the ceremony of light, the lighting of candles, a ritual that was always performed by a woman, the mother of the house. In the case of Jesus, it is very likely that it was His mother, the Virgin Mary, who lit the candles.

Some, still justifying Leonardo da Vinci's painting of the Last Supper, say that there were women there but they were serving. Certainly there would be the Marthas serving, but there would also have been the Marys in the attitude of disciples (Luke 10:38-42). There would have been women serving, but I doubt that the mother of the Lord and Mary Magdalene were serving: they would have been sitting at the table instead. In any case, serving as a service, Jesus also served at the Last Supper when he washed the feet of the apostles.

Symbolism of the number 12
The Church perverted the symbolism of the number 12 by giving sense and meaning to each one of the 12. The number 12 certainly comes from Jacob's 12 sons: each one is the father of a tribe. During later centuries, the number 12 meant the people of Israel. Jesus wants to create a new people, so he draws on the symbolism of the number 12 and randomly calls 12 people, not one from each tribe.

The gospel gives us the name of each of them, but with the exception of Peter, it confers no symbolism or meaning to any one of them as individuals. In fact, when Judas left, Peter's concern is to restore the symbolism of the number 12, nothing more.

This proves that there is no meaning inherent to each of the 12 on their own; the fact is that St. Paul is not one of the 12 and he calls himself an apostle, and none of the original 11 and Matthias deny him that title. On the other hand, Paul himself calls many of his female and male collaborators apostles (Romans 16:7).

To better understand the symbolism of the number 12, let us take as an example the Flag of the European Union with its 12 stars. They do not represent the member states because the member states are 27. One or each of the stars on this flag lacks meaning on its own; it only makes sense in the set it forms with the others. The same is true of the Christian community, "unus christianus nullus christianus", said St. Augustine.

St. Paul is therefore right to consider an apostle every member of the body of Christ, which originally counted 12. For this reason, it makes no sense for bishops to consider only themselves as successors of the apostles. All, not only bishops, are successors of the apostles, as all Jews are successors of Jacob's 12 sons.

Because Jesus addresses his disciples in their entirety, women as well as men, by saying "do this in memory of me", we easily deduce the common priesthood of the faithful from his mandate. Deducing from here too the ministerial priesthood, it seems to me to stretch the text too far, especially the way it is today, a counter-clerical priesthood, which in the Middle Ages came to constitute a social class alongside the nobility and the people.

Since it is the Eucharist that makes the priest and not the priest the Eucharist, whether the Eucharist is celebrated by a holy priest or by a depraved priest, it is still worthy. The Eucharist, not the ministerial priesthood, is the value to preserve. Judaism has survived without temples, priests and sacrifices for 2,000 years; these proved not to be essential to the life of the people and the survival of their faith. Christianity was to "resurrect" a type of priest, a caste that Jesus, as a layman, always rejected. He himself and all his apostles, especially Paul, never presented themselves as priests.

There are more and more Christian communities without the Eucharist because the ministerial priests are an endangered species. In Europe, priests are elderly and many have between 3 to 5 parishes; how long can we go on like this? Should we continue to ask God for vocations to this kind of priesthood? What if He in fact never really intended to have this type of priests?

Isn't this the time when the ministerial priesthood, the priest, should be born from the community, in the community, and for the community? This was the case with the first presbyters, elected among the elders, in the communities that Paul was founding.

Just like the presbyters of old days, who were the elders born and raised in the community and elected by the community to preside over the Eucharist, so the ministerial priesthood must arise from the common priesthood of the faithful. We are all called to intercede for one another, to celebrate the Eucharist and to mediate between people in conflict. One of the beatitudes is precisely that of being peacemakers.

PROPHET
Today, the term "prophecy" suggests a variety of meanings. We speak of "prophets of doom", who see the world and its future in a negative way. There were individuals with sometimes radical social visions who were called "prophets of our age" or "prophets of their own time."

There are also those "prophets" who really should be called "fortune-tellers", who claim to foresee the future. Even when there is some reference to "biblical prophecy", the popular understanding is often distorted by preachers who give the impression that biblical prophets looked at God's crystal ball and predicted what was to come.

The word prophet comes from the Greek word "profetas", which literally means the one who speaks for another, especially for the gods. And this Greek word, in turn, is a rather accurate way of mentioning the Hebrew Nabi, which refers to those who communicate the divine will.

The figure of the prophet in the Old Testament
The prophets understood themselves as being sent. They received their mandate from God, "Go and tell my people”. In fact, prophetic messages almost always begin with the formula "Thus says the Lord" and concludes with "the oracle of the Lord" or "says the Lord" (Amos 1:3-5; Jeremiah 2:1-3).

In the Old Testament tradition, the prophet is the right man for the right time; he is the one who knows how to interpret the present moment of the people’s life in the light of God’s will, the one who feels he is a messenger, sometimes also intermediary between God and men. He is always a natural leader and a charismatic person; he criticizes behaviours that are not pleasing to God's eyes, as well as comforts and infuses hope during bitter hours, like the exile in Babylon. He sees the extraordinary in the ordinary, he knows how to see the signs of the times and sees in them a future that is to come, and then communicates his vision to the people so that they can prepare themselves.

I am no prophet, nor a prophet’s son; but I am a herdsman, and a dresser of sycamore trees… (Amos 7:14). In contrast to priests of Jerusalem and doctors of the law, prophets did not come from an establishment, they had no pedigree. It was the Spirit who, here and there, at times when it was needed, was raising guides for his people.

In our day we have no ruler, or prophet, or leader, no burnt-offering, or sacrifice, or oblation, or incense, no place to make an offering before you and to find mercy (Daniel 3:38). As noted in the text, the prophet was an important figure for the people. Without him, the people felt disoriented, confused, abandoned, alone, insecure...

Symbolic acts of the prophets of Israel
The behaviors of the Old Testament prophets were so bizarre that compared to current secular measures of sanity, they would end up institutionalized or at least in some form of intensive therapy.

These prophets were not only spokespersons of the word, they incarnated it in their lives, in their talents, in their behavior and deeds; everything in them was part of the message; their choice of clothing and even their bodies and body language. Therefore in their own flesh, they witnessed how transformative and disconcerting the Word of God can be. "Words carried by the wind," the symbolic and dramatic acts of the prophets spoke much louder and were harder to forget or ignore.

•    Isaiah, took off all his clothes and wandered around naked (Isaiah 20).
•    Jeremiah hid his underwear under a rock, and after a long time came looking for it (Jeremiah 13).
•    Hosea deliberately married a prostitute and named their daughter Lo-ruhamah or the unloved one (Hosea 1).

The function of prophecy
So Jonah set out and went to Nineveh, according to the word of the Lord. Now Nineveh was an exceedingly large city, a three days’ walk across. Jonah began to go into the city, going a day’s walk. And he cried out, ‘Forty days more and Nineveh shall be overthrown!’  Jonas 3:3-4

In the Bible, a prophecy was never intended to be a prediction, but rather an admonition or a warning: "if you continue to live in this way, this or that catastrophe will happen." The inhabitants of Nineveh, as we know, were converted and what the prophet Jonah announced was to come did not happen.

Many of the prophets of our time embodied a movement, a tendency, a change: Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela, and Oscar Romero to name some. They all had words of admonition against an unfair situation, they all embodied and led a movement, and they all suffered or were murdered for their daring to shake the status quo.

Isaiah is, from the point of view of Christianity, the most significant prophet of the Old Testament. Unlike Elijah, the greatest prophet from the Jewish perspective, Isaiah was not a nationalist, but a universalist. He dreamed of a banquet for all peoples in Israel’s capital, Jerusalem; of reconciliation between visceral enemies, the wolf and the lamb; of the conversion of weapons of war into instruments of peace; of the coming of the Messiah and of his passion and death and the meaning of these.

The ideal prophet is to come
I will raise up for them a prophet like you from among their own people; I will put my words in the mouth of the prophet, who shall speak to them everything that I command.  Deuteronomy 18:18

Christ incarnated the word, the message, much more than any other prophets, in such a way that he never said that God commanded him to say this or that, he spoke in his own name, and even contradicted what has been said until then by modifying the form repeatedly used in the Sermon on the Mount, "You have heard that it was said... But I say to you..."

Jesus, prophet mighty in words and deeds
With the coming of Christ we can look back and see these prophets as harbingers, not only through their prophecies, which spoke of his coming, but also through their prophetic actions. Christ is, after all, the word made flesh, in the richest and most complete way possible. And just like that of the prophets, Christ's behavior was utterly bizarre, disconcerting, and confusing when compared to the social and conventional standards at the time.

He was, after all, someone who guaranteed that he would rebuild the temple in three days, ate with prostitutes and tax collectors, cast demons into a herd of pigs, healed a blind man by rubbing his eyes with mud mixed with his spittle, and he walked on water.

The most shocking dramatic action was undoubtedly washing the feet to his disciples. He wanted to perform the most servile act so that they would never forget what he had already said in words: For the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many. Mark 10:45

Jesus was, in the words of the disciples of Emmaus, a prophet mighty in words and deeds. They even hoped that he would be something more, they had faith that he was something more: the Messiah himself. The people of his time saw in him a prophet, just like how the apostles answered the question about his identity.

Jesus, who was never taken for a priest nor was he one, seems to have accepted that they saw him as a prophet (Matthew 21:11; Luke 7:16; John 4:19). He called himself a prophet when he said, "no prophet is accepted in the prophet’s home town" (Luke 4:24–27). He interpreted his death as the death of a prophet when he programmed his agenda to die in Jerusalem where all prophets before him had died (Luke 13:33).

Muhammad, the last prophet, Jesus, the Son of God
Islam accepts as valid the Jewish religious tradition described in the Old Testament which they also consider their own. Muhammad is therefore the last of the prophets that God sent into the world, Jesus being the second last.

If humanity lives another 10,000 or 20,000 years, what is the meaning of the last one that came in the year 524? The world and humanity have undergone more changes since the year 524 than in all the millions of years earlier; why did the prophets succeed each other so frequently, and after the year 524 suddenly they were no longer needed?

Long ago God spoke to our ancestors in many and various ways by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son, whom he appointed heir of all things, through whom he also created the worlds.  Hebrews 1:1-2

In the case of Christianity, even if humanity lives to the year 20 000, it makes sense that the revelation took place in year zero. As the author of the letter to the Hebrews explains, the one sent is no longer a prophet, but rather God himself who comes to live among us.

There is a qualitative leap here; prophets bring messages for a time, the word of God is eternal for all times and all places, because God does not need to speak twice. On the other hand, Christ is not only the spoken word, he is the lived word and one who lives only once.

What is the meaning of the last prophet? Is it because Islam has a more refined doctrine and, on an ascending path, it has already reached the top? But the top would seem to resemble Christianity with a much more humane and humanizing narrative, such as love of enemies; Islam in its practice and doctrine would seem to resemble the Old Testament more than the New, when we think that even today in Islamic countries, women are stoned to death and Christ was already against this in his day.

Islam is in itself violent by nature, for it is not about loving God who loved us first, it is not about love is paid with love; God in Islam is the Lord of the Old Testament who commands submission; in fact, Islam means submission, the person submits to God, he does not love the God who no longer calls us servants, but friends. In addition, the historical way Islam expanded was not through mission or catechesis, but through force and armed submission or commerce.

Called to be prophets
Where are the prophets, who in other times gave us hope and strength to move on? In the cities, in the fields, among us they areRicardo Cantalapiedra

The disciples of Emmaus are the perfect image of today’s man who is searching for meaning; a man who lacks a reason, an idea or ideal that explains everything, and who lacks a worldview that gives meaning to everything. Also lacking in a fundamental option that organizes his disorganized life made up of shreds that do not harmonize with each other; a fragmented life that leaves him confused and lost.

Man wants to discover the meaning of this seemingly meaningless life; the prophet of the modern world is the one who imitates Jesus and explains the meaning of things by reorganizing the pebbles of each one's experience, in a way that they form a harmonious mosaic where every act, every thought, makes sense in a harmonious whole.

The prophet is the one who gives reasons for his faith and hope (1 Peter 3:15). He is the one who has an X-ray vision that sees the essence of things, beyond appearances, who knows how to interpret the signs of the times, who sees the world pregnant with something that is about to be born and warns the people to prepare themselves. He is a leader, a guide to get out of a situation that seems to have no solution, but which the prophet is able to see the solution hidden inside the problem.

The prophet is an antenna that catches the will of God and broadcasts it to men, he is the catalyst of God's will, at every moment in the life of the people. He is the one who is not afraid to face the status quo even with his life on the line, when the status quo does not follow God's plan.

When Jesus told his followers "you are the salt of the earth, you are the light of the world", he was calling us to be prophets. Salt prevents corruption, melts ice, that is, the schemes of evildoers to make others trip, gives meaning to life and fixes water the source of life in our body which is made up of 75% water. The prophet is the light of the world that exposes the lie and reveals the truth.

KING
In a democracy according to Greek tradition, or republic according to Roman tradition, the monarchy is in itself an unfair system from the start, because as the word itself implies, it is the government of one person over the people. "I am the law," said the Sun King of France – this premise establishes arbitrariness as a system of government.

The king belongs to a social class, the nobility, which is said to have a blood different from the blood of the commoners. This system which establishes that at birth one’s life is already determined, as one is born either within the commoner or within the nobility class, is an archaic and barbaric system in the light of Greek democracy and the Roman republic. In the time of the Greeks and the Romans, only the barbarians were singly ruled by a king, in other words, by a dictator.

If it were today, the title of president or prime minister would be applied to Jesus and not that of king. However, Jesus is a different kind of king, a king who lives to serve and not to be served, a king without privileges who is the shepherd of his people, for whom he lays down his life. We too are by baptism called to be this type of king at all times when life places some power into our hands.

The King in the Old Testament
From Moses to Samuel there were 14 judges. In a theocratic system such as Israel's, God raised judges to defend the people from the surrounding enemies. In the same way that he raised up prophets to guide the people morally and religiously, he raised up political leaders, the judges, to defend and guide his people socially and politically. Samuel is the last of these Judges, since neither the sons of the priest Eli nor the children of Samuel himself were worthy to replace their fathers in their offices.

The people asked for a king like that of other nations, and God granted it to them, first in Saul, then in David and Solomon. Each of them ruled for 40 years, and after them the kingdom was divided into North and South. In the minds of the people, David was the ideal king, so the messiah who was to come would be his descendant.

When your days are fulfilled and you lie down with your ancestors, I will raise up your offspring after you, who shall come forth from your body, and I will establish his kingdom. He shall build a house for my name, and I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever. 2 Samuel 7:12-13

It is the prophet Samuel who addresses King David in these terms. Although as a king he was just, magnanimous, God-fearing and a lover and shepherd of his people, he also had his flaws. After him would come the idyllic king, the messiah, the one who would rule his people, all peoples by way of truth and justice forever and ever.

Christ and the Kingdom of God
From the beginning to the end of his preaching, Jesus spoke of the coming of the Kingdom of God and he clearly said that it had begun with his coming into the world (Matthew 12:27). Therefore, implicitly, Jesus was saying that he was a King, although he used this title little for its more political than social significance. He certainly presented himself as a leader, and for this he preferred to use the metaphorical title of Shepherd, to avoid misunderstandings.

Jesus is not the kind of leader who sends his troops to the frontline, while He stays at the rear. On the contrary, Jesus goes to the frontline, he commands and demands nothing from others that He himself has not done. It was said of Mussolini who told his henchmen, "Let us arm ourselves but only you go", Jesus leaves with his own and goes to the front. In fact, he was the first to fall at the frontline of the battle against evil and injustice.

Jesus is the King, but he does not have the privileges of such a position; he is not a king with blue blood, but is the servant of Yahweh who came to serve and not to be served (Matthew 20:28). He is among us as one who serves and not as one who is served (Luke 22:27).

You call me Teacher and Lord – and you are right, for that is what I am. So if I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feetJohn 13:13-14

Here is another title that Jesus did not accept in life because it was in direct contradiction to his idea of the messiah. The people of Israel expected a warrior Messiah, another David; in fact, some of those who were healed by Jesus addressed Him by saying, "Jesus son of David, have mercy on me.” After the multiplication of loaves, the people wanted to make Him a King, but Jesus fled from them. At the end of his life when he was about to up to the gallows, which would be his throne, he recognized that he was a king when Pilate asked him directly if he was King, but added that his kingdom was not like those of this world.  

To his disciples who dreamed of sitting on his right and on his left of his reign, he said, "You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones are tyrants over them. It will not be so among you; but whoever wishes to be great among you must be your servant…” Matthew 20:25-26

Called to be kings
(…) whoever wishes to be first among you must be your slave Matthew 20:27

The great ones in our lives are the ones who have served us, while the insignificant and offensive ones in our lives are the ones who have made use of us. Among the former are our parents who gave their lives for us in dedication and service, always seeking our good, sometimes sacrificing themselves so that we would be well and lacking in nothing; after them, our older siblings, our teachers, catechists, etc.

The same happens in the history of humanity which is composed of heroes, those who served a human cause, and villains, those who made use of their fellow men. In human relationships there is no middle ground: either you serve others or you make use of others. Authority that is not service is manipulation and authoritative submission of others.

We all want to be great, to be popular, to have fame, and that everyone likes us. The way to these goals is by way of service. The only thing that dictators get is the hatred of the people and, as such, they are always afraid that the people will take revenge, they always live insecure and paranoid. They are great only in their own eyes, for in the eyes of the people they are a disgrace, a shame, an ignominy.

During our lives, we all have some power, as parents, priests, leaders in this or that organization; let us exercise our power as a service to the institution, to others, and we will be great not only according to the gospel, but according to the history of men.

Conclusion – Every baptized person is a priest to mediate in conflicts, prophet to read the signs of the times, denouncing corruption and injustices, and king to lead by way of service.  

Fr. Jorge Amaro IMC