I guess the only plausible answer to that question is that
Christ had all the right to do so, and the person called also had the
duty of respond accordingly, because in the final analysis, all of us
are actually meant to be an apostle. That is to say, to be some kind
of ambassador, a representative of Christ on earth.
At bottom, the answer is because we are supposed to be like
Christ, another Christ, if not Christ himself (“alter Christus,” and
even “ipse Christus”). All of us are patterned after Christ, and so we
cannot avoid being involved in the mission of Christ which is the
salvation of all mankind.
We are all meant to be apostles of Christ with the lifelong
concern for doing apostolate, taking advantage of all the occasions
and situations in life. Vatican II spells it out very clearly. “The
Christian vocation is by its very nature a vocation to the
apostolate.” (Apostolicam actuositatem, 2) So, anyone who wants to be
truly consistent to his Christian identity and calling should realize
ever deeply that he is called to help others get closer to God. This
is what apostolate is all about.
This duty actually springs first of all from our nature. We
are not only individual persons. We are also a social being. Our
sociability is not an optional feature. It is part of our essence,
violating which would be equivalent to violating our very own nature.
We can never live alone. We need to be with others. And
more, we need to care for one another. We have to be responsible for
one another. And while this caring and loving starts with the most
immediate material human needs like food, clothing, etc., it has to go
all the way to the spiritual and more important needs of ours.
That’s why we need to practice affection, compassion,
understanding, patience and mercy on everyone. We have to understand
though that all these can only take place if they spring and tend
towards God, “the source of all good things” for us.
We need to be familiar with this Christian duty. We have to
do apostolate, and we need to see to it that the zeal for it is always
nourished, stoked and fanned to its most intense degree.
Before ascending into heaven, Christ told his apostles: “All
power is given to me in heaven and in earth. Go, therefore, teach all
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and
of the Holy Spirit…” (Mt 28,18-19)
While addressed directly to his apostles, these words are
meant for all those who want to follow Christ. To do apostolate is
part of a Christian’s duty. It’s part of a Christian’s identity. A
Christian is always an apostle. No one is excused from it.
We have to understand that these parting words of Christ
represent his culminating and ultimate desire for our redemption. We
can say that all he did in his earthly life—his preaching, doing
miracles, his dying—get somehow summarized in this one great desire of
God—the salvation of men!
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