Tuesday, August 31, 2010

St. Bartholomew, Apostle (Remembrance Day August 24)

"And at the hands of the apostles many signs and wonders were taking place among the people; and they were all with one accord in Solomon's portico...and all the more believers in the Lord, multitudes of men and women, were constantly added to their number....." Acts 5:12-14

Christianity is a religion of power. If it were not so, then it could in no way contend with sin, Satan and death for dominion over the human soul. Truly the weapons of Christ's warfare are divinely powerful for the destruction of fortresses, as Paul says in II Corinthians 10:3-5. So true is this that Jesus proclaimed that the Church had been founded upon the rock, and the gates of hell would not prevail against her. But power of this sort can deceive the unregenerate heart. Thus we read of Simon Magus (known to the common people as the Great Power of God) , a practitioner of earth magic, who, when confronted with the true power of God the Holy Spirit, thought that such power was available for purchase and was pronounced by Peter to be "in the bondage of iniquity." (Acts 8:9-24) Even to the regenerate heart, such power is a temptation. For power focuses attention, and attention sows the seed of pride, and pride brings forth ambition, and ambition seeks to turn the things of God into that which can be bartered (we get the word "simony", the buying or selling of sacred things from Simon Magus). We can see such abuses in the circus atmosphere which sometimes surrounds charismatic-type gatherings. You almost feel as if you were watching a performer rather than a minister of Jesus Christ. And the popularity of so many television ministers that seem more intent on building up an earthly empire rather than the kingdom of God seems a perversion of the gospel. But the ministry of divine power does not always have to focus upon the one presuming to hold it. If a soul is transparent enough it is incapable of taking to itself any honor or benefit, and the divine power associated with the preaching of the gospel becomes only the glory of God shining forth unto salvation. We see that trait of transparency recorded of the apostles in our opening scripture. And in that circle of apostles was one man surnamed Bartholomew.

So transparent was this apostle that we can scarcely find anything recorded of his life in either the New Testament or Church tradition. We know simply that he is named in the lists of those called apostles by Jesus Christ in Matthew 10:1-5, Mark 3:16-19 and Luke 6:12-16 as Bartholomew, a surname which is literally Bar Tolmai, or son of Tolmai. His proper name is never clearly given, but many biblical commentators feel that he is one and the same with Nathanael whom we read about only in the gospel of John (John 1:43-51). The evidence for this is compelling, but not conclusive. Three main points can be made for this identification. First, the calling of Nathanael as recorded in John 1:43-51 is certainly of the type which is recorded of other of the apostles. Second, it was the apostle Philip who sought out Nathanael to bring him to Jesus, and in each of the three apostolic lists mentioned above, Philip and Bartholomew are always paired together. Finally, the second mention of Nathanael is at the end of the gospel of John (John 21:2) where he is present with other of the named apostles on the Sea of Galilee after the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

In the account of John 1 noted above, we get the impression of a man who studied the scriptures and earnestly sought for the manifestation of the Kingdom of God as promised within its pages. He was of the same genre as Simeon in the account of Luke 2:25, a man who was just and devout, waiting for the Consolation of Israel. To such a one came Philip with a startling declaration "We have found Him of whom Moses in the law, and also the prophets, wrote, Jesus of Nazareth...." It was not unbelief which tempered his response, but a knowledge of God's word. Could the Messiah come forth from Nazareth? The invitation of Philip laid aside any speculation at that point, "Come and see." And it is at this point that we hear the Lord's assessment of this man's heart. "Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom there is no guile." Here was a Jew indeed circumcised in the heart, as Paul teaches in Romans 2:28-29, whose praise is not from men, but from God. And hear what praise comes from the Son of God! Here is one in whom there is no guile, no hidden traps, no deception, no subtlety. In a word, here was one who was transparent. Nathanael Bar Tolmai's response is forthright "You are the Son of God, You are the King of Israel." Jesus acknowledges his response of faith and notes that it was based on the smallest of signs. Then He promises that he would see even greater signs than those, and He implies in such a promise that Bartholomew's faith will also thus be increased to the glory of the Son of Man.

Here the scriptural record stops, and we must turn to what little Church tradition we can gain from the historian Eusebius. In his History of the Church (Book 5, Chapter 10) it is recorded that Bartholomew preached in the barbarian east, traveling as far as India in his preaching (for in the third century another missionary traveled to India and found a copy of the gospel of Matthew in use in that region, supposedly having been carried there by Bartholomew in his evangelistic travels). He is credited with spreading the gospel in Mesopotamia, Persia, Egypt, Armenia, Lyaconia, Phrygia, and along the shores of the Black Sea. Tradition tells us that he died at Albanopolis in Armenia being flayed alive and crucified by a nobleman related to the king. His crime worthy of death?.... being persuasive enough in his witness for the Lord to bring the king of Armenia into the fold of Christ.

The gospel reading for St. Bartholomew's day in Luke 22:24-30 reminds us that even the apostles of the Lord were subject to wrongly place ambitions. They argued amongst themselves as to who was to be accounted the greatest. I believe it was one argument in which Bartholomew took no part, for his heart could hide no such inclinations in the presence of His Lord. He coveted no honor, he desired no titles save one, apostle, one sent out at the hand of and to the work of a greater Lord. He will always be to us an example of that man of God who has no veil over his heart, but beholds, as Paul says in II Corinthians 3:18 the glory of the Lord, and is thus transformed into the same image from glory to glory....in a word, he becomes transparent. May we also resolve to leave behind any false ambitions which we may have picked up concerning our own spiritual worth to the kingdom of God and pray only as the psalmist does in Psalm 51 "Create in me a clean heart, O God...", that is, a heart which can hold no guile. Once that is true of our life, then we, with Bartholomew can continue on in the declaration of that Psalm "then I will teach transgressors Your ways, and sinners shall be converted to You." (Psalm 51:10-13)

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