The Feast of St. Bartholomew
The
Gospel reading at Mass today is the story of the conversion of Nathanael in
John 1:45-51. It may at first seem odd to us that, on the feast of the apostle
Bartholomew, we would read of the conversion of Nathanael. Why not hear the conversion
of the apostle?
In
fact, St. Bartholomew is Nathanael! Bartholomew is his last name, while
Nathanael is his first name. Thus, the conversion of Nathanael is indeed the
conversion of Bartholomew. Don’t be too disappointed if you didn’t realize
this, however, because even the great St. Augustine had difficulty in understanding
this point!
The
greatest work of theology, after the Summa
Theologiae of St. Thomas Aquinas, is often considered to be the Tractates on the Gospel of St. John by
St. Augustine. In this collection of sermons, St. Augustine comments on the
whole of the fourth Gospel in great detail – sometimes even considering the sacred
text word for word. However, as brilliant as St. Augustine was, he occasionally
misses important aspects of the Gospel account. Nevertheless, as we will soon
see, even when the Doctor of Grace is wrong about some particular point, he is ingeniously
right in interpretation of the passage as a whole – in this respect he
foreshadows St. Thomas Aquinas who is more brilliant in his error than all the
other doctors have ever been in their best moments (consider, for example, his
teaching on the Immaculate Conception; though he denies the doctrine, he
provides the Church with nearly all the theoretical framework that she would
eventually use in the proclamation of the dogma).
Tractate 7 on John 1:35-51
In
his seventh tractate on St. John’s Gospel, St. Augustine approaches the story
of the conversion of Nathanael with two false pre-conceptions:
1)
St. Augustine does not believe Nathanael to be St. Bartholomew, and thus, he is
forced to explain why Nathanael’s conversion story is given if he is not an
apostle.
2)
Nathanael’s words in John 1:46 “Can anything good come from Nazareth?” are
ambiguous in the Latin, and so, St. Augustine understands this to be an
affirmative statement rather than a suspicious question: “Something good can
come from Nazareth!” Thus, St. Augustine thinks that Nathanael is a brilliant scholar
of the Law who had ingeniously discerned that the Messiah would come from
Nazareth (no-one else had figured this out).
Now,
we consider St. Augustine’s commentary. St. Augustine sees Nathanael as a brilliant
scholar of the Law and as an Israelite “in whom there is no guile (duplicity)”.
First, St. Augustine affirms that Nathanael was certainly conceived in original
sin and had committed at least some actual sin. What then does our Savior mean
when he says that Nathanael is without guile? This means that Nathanael did not
try to present himself as something other than he truly was – he was a sinner,
but he admitted his sin to the Lord and, in his heart, awaited the coming of
the Messiah to wash him clean of all sin. Nathanael is contrite and humble
before God, therefore he is a true Israelite without any duplicity or guile.
The Fig Tree
“Before
Philip called you, I saw you sitting under the fig tree.” These words of Christ
elicit a response of faith from Nathanael. But what is their meaning? They are
shrouded in mystery to us, for we cannot easily perceive the deeper sense of
this passage.
St.
Augustine points out that the fig tree is closely associated with sin. After
the fall, Adam and Eve clothed themselves with fig leaves (conscious of their
sin). In the Gospel, Christ curses the fig tree, for not producing fruit – a sign
of the sinful nation of Israel. Here too, the fig tree is a sign of sin and of
the consciousness of man’s fallen nature. Thus, our Lord is telling Nathanael,
before Phillip called you to me, you were in sin and under the shadow of death.
Nathanael
is amazed, because Jesus has showed him that he can read hearts and that he
knows of Nathanael’s honesty and openness to God – that he admits his
sinfulness and is looking forward to the redemption which would come through
the Messiah. Thus, Nathanael is amazed and believes that Christ is truly the
Messiah and the Son of God.
You will see greater things
When
Nathanael makes this proclamation of faith in Christ, our Savior only tells him,
“you shall see greater things than these.” The Lord responds in this way because
Nathanael had only recognized Christ as a human Messiah, but had not yet come
to see his divinity. This would be revealed upon the Cross when the angels of
God would ascend and descend upon the Son of Man. It is also through the Cross
that the forgiveness of all sins would come – Nathanael would finally fully
rise up from beneath the fig tree and would stand in the light of the sons of
God!
St. Augustine is right,
even when he is wrong
Throughout
his interpretation of this passage, St. Augustine attempts to account for the
fact that Nathanael is not an apostle (St. Augustine does not realize that
Nathanael is Bartholomew). First, he points out that Nathanael is a brilliant
scholar of the Law, since he was able to discern that the Messiah would come
from Nazareth. But the Lord chose not the wise and learned, but the simple to
be his apostles (most of them were fishermen). However, if we recall that St.
Augustine had misunderstood the sacred text (reading “Something good can come
from Nazareth!” instead of “Can anything good come from Nazareth?”), it becomes
clear that Nathanael was probably just as humble and lowly and uneducated as
the other apostles. If we read his comment as a suspicious question, there is
no reason to presume that Nathanael was a great scholar. Rather, he is, much
like the other apostles, slow to learn and very simple.
Therefore,
even though St. Augustine works very hard to show why Nathanael is not an
apostle; he actually ends up showing us precisely why Nathanael Bartholomew was
a good candidate for being an apostle!
1)
The apostles are lowly and generally uneducated. Nathanael too was lowly and
had not perceived the secret truths hidden in the Old Testament regarding the city
of the Messiah.
2)
The apostles are humble sinners in need of the Lord’s mercy. Nathanael too was
humble before God and, without duplicity, admitted his sin before the Lord
awaiting the forgiveness of sins which was to come through the Messiah.
3)
St. Augustine stands out from among all the others Fathers, being the only one
to have understood the mystical signification of the fig tree. While all the
others are perplexed as to what the proper interpretation might be, St.
Augustine recognizes the symbolism of sin and the need for redemption.
Even
in his error, St. Augustine is the most brilliant of the Fathers of the Church!
St.
Bartholomew and St. Augustine, Pray for us!
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