Anyone who has written the minutes of a committee meeting knows that
an account of the resolution of a major conflict will probably take
more than a page or two. It is a sign of Luke’s genius that he manages
to catch the essential dynamics of the early Church's resolution of
its first major crisis in twenty-nine lines.
Since the Lectionary edition of Luke’s account of the “Council
of Jerusalem” gives us only ten of Luke’s twenty-nine verses, it
will help to review the whole story. Imagine that you are a member of
the Jerusalem community of Jewish Christians. You have accepted Jesus
of Nazareth as the long-awaited Anointed One (Messiah) of Israel and,
of course, you continue to think of yourself as a Jew and to meet in
synagogue and to worship, when you can, in the Temple.
Quite naturally, you assume that any Gentile who joins your
“Jews-for-Jesus” group will follow the usual practice of
proselytes. The Gentile will take on the practices of Torah,
including, for males, circumcision. When you learn that Saul of
Tarsus, up in Antioch, is allowing Gentiles to join the Jesus group
without taking up such Jewish practices, you are understandably
concerned. You are naturally inclined to agree with the Jerusalem
leaders who say to the Antiochene Gentile converts, “Unless you
are circumcised according to the Mosaic practice, you cannot be
saved.”
This, in a nutshell, is the first major crisis of the early Church. It requires a conference of the leadership. Most scholars agree that the resolution of this crisis was a lengthy process that surely required more than a single, brief meeting. Luke’s account of the Church's resolution of this question, however, is not a matter of minutes for archives; it is an account meant to serve as a paradigm of ecclesial decision-making.
Note the dynamics of the process Luke outlines. First, the leaders
acknowledge that they have a problem for which no extant policy offers
a clear solution; so they decide to deal with this as a community by
calling a meeting of the leadership (“apostles and
presbyters”). Next, they review their experience. Peter
rehearses his experience of being drawn into the Gentile mission
through the remarkable conversion of Cornelius and his household. Then
Paul and Barnabas describe “the signs and wonders God had worked
among the Gentiles through them” (Acts 15:12).
The assembly then interprets their experience of God working through
them by looking to the longer experience of the community embodied in
its Scriptures. This is exemplified by James’ citing a passage from
the prophet Amos (Amos 9:11-12; the Greek version), which implies two stages in God's plan for
Israel: (1) the restoration of the people of Israel (“rebuild
the fallen hut of David”) and (2) the ingathering of the
Gentiles (“so that the rest of humanity may seek out the Lord,
even all the Gentiles”).
The upshot: the Jerusalem council determines that mission to the
Gentiles is the will of God, and that they ought to do all in their
power to cooperate with this divine initiative. They decide, then, on
a policy that both honors the tradition and adjusts to changing
circumstances; they ask of Gentile converts only that they keep the
minimal “rules for resident aliens” indicated in Leviticus
(regarding marriages to relatives, food associated with idolatry, and
improper slaughtering).
Finally, they boldly speak of this very human process (reflection on
experience and interpretation in the light of tradition) as “the
decision of the Holy Spirit and of us.” If we wonder at their
confidence, we can find its source reflected in this Sunday's
Gospel
reading, in which Jesus promises the presence of the Holy Spirit as an
Advocate who will teach and remind the community after the departure
of Jesus' physical presence.
These readings remind us that our Easter faith entails the remarkable
belief that the Spirit of God continues to work through the very human
processes of decision-making in our Church. Luke's paradigm urges us
to take seriously both our religious experience and our tradition, and
to trust that the Spirit of God works even (especially?) through
endless debate, exhausting meetings, and hesitant leadership.
The feast of the Ascension next week will further illustrate this
reality, when Luke shows the apostles gaping at the heavens, addressed
with the words, “Men of Galilee, why are you standing there
looking at the sky?” Easter, Pentecost, and Ascension thrust us
forward into the mission of the Spirit-led Church.