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TroparionO foremost in the ranks of apostles, and teachers of the world, intercede with the Master of All to grant safety to the world and to our souls the great mercy. KontakionO Lord, You have taken up to their eternal rest, and to the enjoyment of Your good things the two infallible preachers of divine truths and leaders of the apostles, for You have accepted their struggles and their death as being better than any holocaust, O You who alone know the secrets of hearts. |
The
The Church celebrates the Apostles Sts.
Peter and Paul both on the same day, first of all because they are living
symbols of two ways different ways of apprehending God and had two different
visions of the Apostolate.
Peter demonstrates the full power of faith
of which the sincere and guileless heart of a simple Galilean fisherman may be
capable. His Epistles have been
preserved in the New Testament, and there is every reason to believe that the
Gospel according to Mark, the second of the four Gospels, is a record of the
Apostle Peter's preaching. That
Gospel, comprised of fewer chapters than the other three, is the digest of an
eyewitness account. In the Epistles
of St. Peter, we sense the Apostle's mature religious experience and wisdom, but
his Epistles are not marked by the subtle ideation or the crafted argument that
characterize the Epistles of St. Paul.
While Peter was a simple fisherman, Saul
– as the Apostle Paul was known before his conversion – stood at the
pinnacle of the culture of his time, and was schooled not only in Jewish
religious tradition, but also in the areas of Greek philosophy and literature.
In jointly honoring these two Apostles and
in calling them "Pre-eminent," the Church shows its reverence both for
the simplicity of a believing heart, and for an intellect grounded in God.
Typically, faithful who since childhood
have been accustomed to reading the Gospels almost never turn to the Epistles
– including those of
Sometimes it is difficult to follow the
stream of the Apostle Paul's thought, but whoever takes on the task of reading
all of the Epistles in his native language, and supplements that reading with
the commentaries of the Holy Fathers on the Epistles, will learn many new things
that will be of use in his spiritual life and in his coming to know God.
A serious reader who reflects upon what he has read will come to see that
in a mystical manner, the writings of the Apostle Paul are contemporary: it
would be more accurate to state that their wisdom and lofty inspiration have not
been subject to the times and have not become dated.
Everything that the Apostle Paul says to us about sin and holiness, about
the Law and grace, about the spiritual struggle of prayer, and about many other
things, is truly relevant today and unto the ages.
Archpriest Victor Potapov