To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 22:3-16; Mk 16:15-18
Paul’s entire life can be explained in terms of
one experience—his meeting with Jesus on the road to Damascus. In that instant
he saw what he could become through grace and not law. It was a revelation to
him that no matter how low a person may have fallen; God’s grace could always
lift him/her up. It was also a revelation of the heights of mysticism one could
reach if one opened oneself to God’s unlimited and unconditional grace.
The story of Paul’s conversion is narrated twice
in the Acts of the Apostles (Chapters 9 and 22) and Paul himself makes
reference to it in some of his letters (Gal 1:13-14; 1 Cor 9:1-2; 15:3-8).
The conversion of Saul to Paul was the conversion
and transformation of a person who lived out the letter of the law, but forgot
its spirit. However, once he allowed God’s grace to enter his heart, all that
mattered to him was Christ and through Christ divine, gratuitous love. From the
moment of his transformation, the focus of his preaching was that salvation was
FOR ALL and that no amount of merit could save, because salvation was a free
gift of God.
The first reading for the Feast speaks of his
conversion and the Gospel text is from the longer ending of Mark and is an apt
description of Paul’s power and actions after his transformation. He did indeed
proclaim the Gospel to all creation and today invites us to do the same.
His Gospel may be summarised in one sentence, “God
was in Christ reconciling the world to himself” (2 Cor 5:19)
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