Posted on 04/27/2017 7:34:49 AM PDT by Salvation
After Christ rose from the dead, He appeared to His disciples at certain places and times, but did not seem to stay with them continuously. On the first Easter Sunday, He appeared six times in rather rapid succession: first to Mary Magdalene, then to the women at the tomb, third as the women left the tomb, fourth to Peter, fifth to the two disciples going to Emmaus, and sixth to the ten Apostles in Jerusalem (when Thomas was not present).
In His public ministry, Jesus seemed to be with His disciples nearly all the time. However, after His Resurrection he would appear, converse, and teach, but then be absent from them bodily. For example, John 20:26 says that after eight days Christ appeared to the disciples, suggesting that He was not otherwise present to them during that period.
While it is true that we do not have an exact calendar of His appearances and not every appearance is necessary recorded, it seems apparent that the Lord was not constantly with the disciples during the forty days prior to His ascension.
Why is this?
St. Thomas Aquinas reflected on this question and offers two basic reasons. In so doing he does not propose an absolute explanation, but rather demonstrates why it was fitting that Christ was not with them continuously during the forty days prior to the ascension. St. Thomas writes,
Concerning the Resurrection two things had to be manifested to the disciples, namely, the truth of the Resurrection, and the glory of Him who rose.
Now in order to manifest the truth of the Resurrection, it sufficed for Him to appear several times before them, to speak familiarly to them, to eat and drink, and let them touch Him. But in order to manifest the glory of the risen Christ, He was not desirous of living with them constantly as He had done before, lest it might seem that He rose unto the same life as before … [For as Bede says] He had then risen in the same flesh, but was not in the same state of mortality as they.
That Christ did not stay continually with the disciples was not because He deemed it more expedient to be elsewhere: but because He judged it to be more suitable for the apostles instruction that He should not abide continually with them, for the reason given above.
He appeared oftener on the first day, because the disciples were to be admonished by many proofs to accept the faith in His Resurrection from the very out set: but after they had once accepted it, they had no further need of being instructed by so many apparitions (Summa Theologiae, Part III, Q. 55, Art. 3).
While St. Thomas observes that there may well be appearances that were not recorded, he is inclined to hold that there were not a lot more of them. He writes,
One reads in the Gospel that after the first day He appeared again only five times. For, as Augustine says (De Consens. Evang. iii), after the first five apparitions He came again a sixth time when Thomas saw Him; a seventh time was by the sea of Tiberias at the capture of the fishes; the eighth was on the mountain of Galilee, according to Matthew; the ninth occasion is expressed by Mark, at length when they were at table, because no more were they going to eat with Him upon earth; the tenth was on the very day, when no longer upon the earth, but uplifted into the cloud, He was ascending into heaven. But, as John admits, not all things were written down. And He visited them frequently before He went up to heaven, in order to comfort them. Hence it is written (1 Corinthians 15:6-7) that He was seen by more than five hundred brethren at once after that He was seen by James; of which apparitions no mention is made in the Gospels (ibid).
St. Thomas strikes a balance between the Lords need to instruct them and summon them to faith in the resurrection, and the need for them to grasp His risen glory. Christ did not merely resume His former life. The disciples were not to cling to their former understandings of Him as Rabbi and teacher; now they were to grasp more fully that He is Lord.
Though Thomas does not mention it here, I would add another reason for the Lords action of not abiding with them continuously: It was fitting for Him to do this to accustom them to the fact that they would no longer see Him as they had with their physical eyes. Once He ascended, they would see Him mystically in the Sacraments and in His Body the Church. Thus, as the Lord broke the Bread and gave it them in Emmaus, they recognized Him the Eucharist (Luke 24). Thereupon He vanished from them. It was as if to say, You will no longer go on seeing me in the same manner. Now you will experience me mystically and in the Sacraments.
Monsignor Pope Ping!
I like to think of Christ’s presence during this time as I did when I was learning it.. while I was taking piano lessons as a kid.
I had a great piano teacher, but at some point (after a few years) I had to leave and move on. I went on to perfect the things I had learned and experiment with different styles and recognize challenges with the eye of an experienced and wiser player.
My instructor didn’t disappear. 2 or 3 times I would meet with him again and compare notes, play some piano and say thanks.
Monsignor Pope for Pope!
Christ didn’t feel that I should know his whereabouts at all times. I’m OK with that.
I hope I remember to ask him.
Jesus said He would always be with us, even to the end of the age, so the corollary is that He will never leave us without a true Pope.
Now that the Jesuits have installed the Black Pope as the White Pope, thus calling evil good and good evil, Jesus has given us Charles Pope to help us hold fast to what we were taught when we first believed.
I just finished writing a novel in which a man has a lengthy conversation with a ghost, who fills him in, to the best of her knowledge, on some of the workings of the other world. But when he tries to pump her for specific knowledge pertaining to some minor religious quibble she tells him, laughingly, “I’m not a theologian, I’m a ghost.”
Secondly, Jesus had a ministry to those in prison, as is noted in 1 Peter 3:19, He went and made proclamation to the spirits now in prison, almost certainly during the time before he was fully ascended to the Father.
He was busy where He could do the most Good.
To be honest..I don’t care why. And frankly, it is not within the scope of a believer to question his motives. As the incarnation of God the Father, isn’t that within his prerogative and not subject to questioning?
Jesus gave them all they needed to trust and have faith to believe just like he does us.
**And frankly, it is not within the scope of a believer to question his motives**
In saying this are you purposely dissing St. Thomas Aquinas?
He’s in heaven!
My immediate retort would be:
"Then please confer with some of your fellow ghosts with a degree and Theology and then get back to me on this! What you dismissively refer to as a 'quibble' is namely very important to me!"
Regards,
My immediate retort would be:
"Then please confer with some of your fellow ghosts with a degree in Theology and then get back to me on this! What you dismissively refer to as a 'quibble' is namely very important to me!"
Regards,
Only God knows. We are not blessed with the capacity. Everything we think is conjecture, not fact. Ever heard the phrase, the Lord works in strange ways?
red
Only God knows. We are not blessed with the capacity. Everything we think is conjecture, not fact. Ever heard the phrase, the Lord works in strange ways?
red
I could have gotten her to ask Jesus, but I don't think he was a theologian either.
Heavens, no! We want unambiguous answers, with absolutely no wiggle room!
Instruct her (the ghost) to confer with the spirits of several reputable deceased theologians, from all across the religious spectrum.
Regards,
AS a believer, it is not for me to question why Jesus did anything he did. As the incarnation of the Father, his purposes were divine, and and not open for me to question.
They just are, and must be taken as a matter of faith.
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