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Last Updated: Friday - 09/24/2010


Week of September 1, 2008


St. Paul believed all people need Christ – Benedict


By CINDY WOODEN
Catholic News Service
Vatican City


St. Paul's missionary travels, his writings and his perseverance despite suffering demonstrate the strength of his conviction that all people need the salvation of Christ, Pope Benedict said.

The pope said the fact that St. Paul was born a Jew, was raised speaking Greek and held Roman citizenship placed him on "the border of three different cultures."

Perhaps this is why he was open to proclaiming the Gospel to pagans as well as fellow Jews, the pope said during his Aug. 27 weekly general audience.

The pope dedicated his main talk to St. Paul as part of the celebration of the 2,000th anniversary of the apostle's birth.

"We see in him a commitment that can be explained only by a soul truly fascinated by the light of the Gospel, in love with Christ and having a deep conviction that it is necessary to give the world the light of Christ, to proclaim the Gospel to all," Pope Benedict said.

In St. Paul, he said, "we see the greatness, the beauty or, rather, the necessity of the Gospel for all of us."

Pope Benedict prayed "that our hearts, too, would be touched by Christ's words so that we, too, can give the light of the Gospel, of the truth, to the world that is thirsting for it."

The pope said St. Paul's speech at the Areopagus in Athens, reported in Chapter 17 of the Acts of the Apostles, was a model for demonstrating how the Gospel message responds to the yearnings and aspirations of all people.

The apostle helped "the Greeks understand that this God of the Christians and the Jews was not a God foreign to their culture, but is the 'unknown God' they had been expecting and the true response to the deepest questions of their culture," the pope said.

Pope Benedict also spoke about the dispute among early Christian leaders over the degree to which new Christians who were not Jews had to follow Jewish law in order to share in the promises God had made to the people of Israel.

The question, he said, was a "fundamental problem for the birth of the future Church" and would determine "whether or not a truly universal Church would be born."

The apostles and leaders in the early Church decided the only necessity was to be truly faithful to Christ, "to live with Christ and according to his words."


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