  
   
  Peter (d. 64?). St. Mark ends the first half of his 
Gospel with a triumphant climax. He has recorded doubt, misunderstanding
 and the opposition of many to Jesus. Now Peter makes his great 
confession of faith: "You are the Messiah" (Mark 8:29b). It was one of 
the many glorious moments in Peter's life, beginning with the day he was
 called from his nets along the Sea of Galilee to become a fisher of men
 for Jesus. 
 
The New Testament clearly shows Peter as the leader of the 
apostles, chosen by Jesus to have a special relationship with him. With 
James and John he was privileged to witness the Transfiguration, the 
raising of a dead child to life and the agony in Gethsemane. His 
mother-in-law was cured by Jesus. He was sent with John to prepare for 
the last Passover before Jesus' death. His name is first on every list 
of apostles.  
And to Peter only did Jesus say, "Blessed are you, 
Simon son of Jonah. For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, 
but my heavenly Father. And so I say to you, you are Peter, and upon 
this rock I will build my church, and the gates of the netherworld shall
 not prevail against it. I will give you the keys to the kingdom of 
heaven. Whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven; and 
whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven" (Matthew 
16:17b-19).  
But the Gospels prove their own trustworthiness by 
the unflattering details they include about Peter. He clearly had no 
public relations person. It is a great comfort for ordinary mortals to 
know that Peter also has his human weakness, even in the presence of 
Jesus.  
He generously gave up all things, yet he can ask in 
childish self-regard, "What are we going to get for all this?" (see 
Matthew 19:27). He receives the full force of Christ's anger when he 
objects to the idea of a suffering Messiah: "Get behind me, Satan! You 
are an obstacle to me. You are thinking not as God does, but as human 
beings do" (Matthew 16:23b).  
Peter is willing to accept Jesus' 
doctrine of forgiveness, but suggests a limit of seven times. He walks 
on the water in faith, but sinks in doubt. He refuses to let Jesus wash 
his feet, then wants his whole body cleansed. He swears at the Last 
Supper that he will never deny Jesus, and then swears to a servant maid 
that he has never known the man. He loyally resists the first attempt to
 arrest Jesus by cutting off Malchus's ear, but in the end he runs away 
with the others. In the depth of his sorrow, Jesus looks on him and 
forgives him, and he goes out and sheds bitter tears. The Risen Jesus 
told Peter to feed his lambs and his sheep (John 21:15-17).  
Paul (d. 64?). If
 the most well-known preacher today suddenly began preaching that the 
United States should adopt Marxism and not rely on the Constitution, the
 angry reaction would help us understand Paul's life when he started 
preaching that Christ alone can save us. He had been the most Pharisaic 
of Pharisees, the most legalistic of Mosaic lawyers. Now he suddenly 
appears to other Jews as a heretical welcomer of Gentiles, a traitor and
 apostate.  
Paul's central conviction was simple and absolute: 
Only God can save humanity. No human effort—even the most scrupulous 
observance of law—can create a human good which we can bring to God as 
reparation for sin and payment for grace. To be saved from itself, from 
sin, from the devil and from death, humanity must open itself completely
 to the saving power of Jesus.  
Paul never lost his love for his 
Jewish family, though he carried on a lifelong debate with them about 
the uselessness of the Law without Christ. He reminded the Gentiles that
 they were grafted on the parent stock of the Jews, who were still God's
 chosen people, the children of the promise.  
In light of his preaching and teaching skills, Paul's name has surfaced (among others) as a possible patron of the Internet. 
   Comment:  We would probably go to confession to Peter sooner 
than to any of the other apostles. He is perhaps a more striking example
 of the simple fact of holiness. Jesus says to us as he said, in effect,
 to Peter: "It is not you who have chosen me, but I who have chosen you.
 Peter, it is not human wisdom that makes it possible for you to 
believe, but my Father's revelation. I, not you, build my Church." 
Paul's experience of the risen Jesus on the road to Damascus was the 
driving force that made him one of the most zealous, dynamic and 
courageous ambassadors of Christ the Church has ever had. But 
persecution, humiliation and weakness became his day-by-day carrying of 
the cross, material for further transformation. The dying Christ was in 
him; the living Christ was his life. 
            
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