What is a Christian?

3rd Sunday Ordinary Time, year A | 1 Cor 12:12-30; Lk 1:1-4; 4:14-21

At the start of this school year at UBC, I spent some time standing in front of the booth for the Catholic group during Clubs Day. This is a day for students to check out the various clubs that are active on campus in order to see if they would like to join any of them. At a certain point, one student walked over to me from the stream passing by the booths, pointed at my clerical collar and said, “what are you?” “A Catholic priest”, I answered. “What’s a Catholic?”, he asked. “A Christian”, I said. Still genuinely confused he said, “and what is a Christian?” The student’s question is a good one. What is a Christian?

In the first reading (1 Cor 12:12-30), St. Paul explains that the central aspect of our identity as Christians is that together we make up the body of Christ. Paul wrote this letter to a community that was deeply fractured. One cause of division was a sort of tribalism in which people grouped into rival factions, aligning themselves with different figures important to the community: Paul, Cephas and Apollos (1 Cor 1). There were also estrangements in the community between rich and poor, especially when they celebrated the Eucharist (1 Cor 11). Further discord arose because people with various gifts such as wisdom, healing or tongues, were vying to be seen as the most important members of the community (1 Cor 12). In order to help the Christians at Corinth overcome their disunity, Paul called them to remember their core identity. Because of their baptism (12:13), Paul explained, they are all a part of Christ’s body (12:27). No one individual is Christ’s body. Rather, as a whole they make up the body of Christ. Just as in the human body each part plays its own unique and important role, so each baptized individual contributes in an indispensable way to the community. What is a Christian? Paul would respond to the student from UBC that a Christian is someone who, together with other baptized people, make up the body of Christ. In other words, together Christians are the enduring presence of Jesus in the world. Christians continue Jesus’ mission here and now. As good as this answer sounds, I can imagine that the curious student might not yet be satisfied. I can imagine him asking, “but what is the mission of Jesus?”
James Tissot [Public domain]
Fortunately, in the Gospel today taken from Luke (1:1-4; 4:14-21), Jesus directly answers this question as he publicly declares his mission. Jesus’ actions in the Gospel resemble a politician who announces that they are running for president. If you follow US politics, you will know that in recent days a number of candidates from the Democratic party have stepped forward to announce their intention to run for president. These announcements follow a similar pattern. In some public setting the candidate declares their intention to become president and then gives a list of compelling action items that they plan to accomplish if they are elected. In launching their campaign, the candidate reveals the mission that they would work towards as president. In the Gospel, we find Jesus at the start of his public ministry announcing his mission in a public space, namely the synagogue in his hometown of Nazareth. There, on the Sabbath, he stood up to read from the scroll of the prophet Isaiah that was handed to him. It was Jesus himself who decided which part of this scroll to read from. The text Jesus chose to declare to the people (Isa 61), outlined the various aspects of the mission he was about to begin. Jesus announced that he would bring glad tiding to the poor, proclaim liberty to captives, recovery of sight to the blind, let the oppressed go free and proclaim a year acceptable to the Lord (Lk 4:18-19). Unlike many politician who fail to deliver on their campaign promises, Jesus immediately follows through. In the rest of the chapter (Lk 4), Jesus makes good on what he promised in the synagogue. He liberated people from demons, cured Simon’s mother-in-law and numerous others and called people to conversion. In the Gospel today, Jesus announces his mission. This mission of healing, overcoming evil and injustice and leading people to God is what we Christians, the body of Christ, are called to continue in the world.

The Eucharist is central to our identity and mission as Christians. The teaching of the Church makes this clear. Lumen Gentium explains that the Eucharist is “the source and summit of the Christian life” (LG 11). This is echoed by the wonderful way in which you as a parish have chosen to articulate your identity. You are a community “with the Eucharist at the center”. Recently, I have been following coverage of the World Youth Day (WYD) happening in Panama, wishing I was there! At the WYD, there have been powerful expressions of the centrality of the Eucharist in our lives as Christians. Hundreds of thousands of young people from diverse cultures and backgrounds gathered with our Holy Father Pope Francis to celebrate the Eucharist and to adore together the Blessed Sacrament. This is a powerful expression of how we - diverse as we are - form one body of Christ. During this WYD, Pope Francis has inspired and encouraged the young people, sending them out to continue the mission of Jesus in their home countries. The Eucharist is central to our identity and mission. The Eucharist, which is truly the Body of Christ, helps transform us into the body of Christ, sent out to continue his mission in the world.

As we celebrate the Eucharist this Sunday, it might be worth considering how the Eucharist is having an impact on your life. Does attending Mass and receiving the Eucharist help you grow in unity with other people? Further, do you feel more committed to continue Jesus’ mission and to be his presence in the world?

Understanding Jesus' Baptism and our own

The Baptism of the Lord | LK 3:15-16, 21-22


“Christ”. We hear this name so often used in relation to Jesus that it can seem like his last name. Christ comes from the Latin word Christus, which itself translates the Hebrew word Messiah, meaning anointed one. Jesus Christ. Jesus the anointed one. Throughout the Old Testament, kings, prophets and priests are often anointed with oil. These individuals could be considered messiahs in a certain sense. After their anointing, they received a new identity and mission. When did Jesus, the anointed one, receive this anointing where he received his mission and identity?
Andrea Verrocchio [Public domain]
In his Gospel, Luke makes the argument that Jesus’ baptism, which we have just heard narrated, was in fact when Jesus was anointed. Now, I know what you are thinking, “there was no oil at Jesus’ baptism!” You are of course correct. Still, Luke makes it clear that Jesus’ baptism should be interpreted as the moment of his anointing. Here are two pieces of evidence.
  1. Soon after his baptism, Jesus returned from the Jordan river to his hometown in Nazareth and entered a synagogue. After receiving the scroll of the prophet Isaiah, Jesus himself choose the first words that he would read: “the Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me” (Isa 61:1). At his baptism, the Spirit came upon Jesus. It was then, therefore, that he was anointed.
  2. In the second reading today from Acts of the Apostles, also written by Luke, this fact is made more directly. There we find Peter’s speech in which he makes it clear that God anointed Jesus with the Spirit at his Baptism (Acts 10:37-38).


At this baptism/anointing Jesus’ identity is manifested and his mission gets launched. In the first Harry Potter book (or movie if you prefer), there is a famous scene in which Harry first gets his letter inviting him to attend Hogwarts. Up until this point, Harry lived a reclusive life. Although Harry had some inklings regarding his identity, it was not clear to him - and certainly not to the reader - who he really was. Once Harry received that letter, his life went off in an entirely different direction. We learn that Harry is a wizard and slowly but surely his mission plays out in the following books. This is analogous to what happens at Jesus baptism. Up until this moment, Jesus has been living his “hidden life”. His identity was known only to those closest to him. His mission of preaching and healing had not yet began. At Jesus’ baptism, his identity is revealed in a very public way. The heavens open and the voice of God announces that Jesus is his beloved Son. In the Old Testament, the kings of Israel, were understood to be a “son” of God (Ps 2:7; 2 Sam 7:14). At his baptism, Jesus, the son of a carpenter and no earthly king, is claimed by God himself to be his son. Jesus is God’s son in a new and different way than kings were since his anointing is different. Whereas kings were anointed with oil, Jesus was anointed with the Spirit. Whereas kings could fall out of favour with God, Jesus is the “beloved son, in whom I am well-pleased”. This statement is a clear reference to the book of Isaiah (Isa 42:1) which we heard in the first reading. There God confirms his love for his Servant, who has been given an important mission. As we read in the Gospel of Luke, immediately after his baptism/anointing Jesus, the beloved Son/Servant, leaves his hidden life behind and begins his public ministry.


In a way similar to Jesus, at our baptism, we receive our own truest identity and mission. Do you remember the day you were baptized? It was a day that forever change your life. At our baptism, we become forever linked to Jesus. As Paul says in Galatians, when we are baptized, we “clothe” ourselves with Christ (Gal 3:27). When we “put on” Jesus in this way, his identity and mission become our own. At our baptism, each of us becomes a beloved son or daughter of God in whom God is well pleased. Let that sink in for a moment. We receive a title that was reserved at one time for kings. It was a title given to Jesus and is now a title we get to go by. We are sons and daughters of God. In addition, at our baptism, the mission of Jesus becomes our own. We have been given a mission to spread the kingdom of God. Wherever we find ourselves, in whatever job, in whatever state of life, we are called to bring about the kind of world that God wants. One that is more just and loving. Since we have been clothed with Christ at our baptism, we become God’s sons and daughters and are given the mission to be the very presence of Jesus in the world.


Our baptism is extraordinary day in our lives. For this reason, Pope Francis has often encouraged us to remember and celebrate the day on which we were baptized. Do you remember the day you were baptized? If not, find out. Write it in your calendar or put it in your phone. Celebrate that day on which you were given a new and amazing identity and remarkable mission.