For over 30 years, Ulf Ekman pastored
an evangelical congregation, the Word of Life in Uppsala, Sweden. Pastor Ekman founded Scandinavia’s largest
Bible school and helped to establish over 1,000 evangelical Christian
communities in the former Soviet Union. Last month, he announced to his congregation
that he was resigning his pastorate because he sensed the Lord was leading him and
his wife to join the Catholic Church. He
will be received into full communion sometime this Easter season.
This two –fold understanding of truth is of great importance as we walk with people as they make an intentional faith commitment. It often begins with the subjective and personal; “This is my truth, something I see as true.” In this first step, the locus of truth and its authority is my own self. I believe it to be true, I have come to see this as true.
But there is also a second step revealed in Pastor Ekman’s journey. The truth is not just personal, but is also a capital T truth that exists beyond me. It is a truth that extends beyond my opinions, feelings and sentiments.
This realization becomes a moment of decision.
Do I affirm the reality of this Truth? Do I accept a relationship with this Truth, regardless of what it will cost me? For Pastor Ekman and his wife, it meant walking away from his livelihood into a less certain future. In the end, they decided that it was the Lord who was calling them and in faith, trust and hope, they said, “Yes” to Him.
The journey of faith can begin with seeking the truth within oneself but it is meant to lead to the Truth outside of the self. The truth may begin personally but is meant to end relationally. Both Pope Benedict and Pope Francis have taught this. For Pope Benedict, the encounter of Truth is an encounter with a Person; Jesus Christ. It is both personal and relational. It is a subjective encounter with an objective reality that is beyond my own personal feelings. Pope Francis speaks frequently of a “Culture of Encounter” where people can meet Jesus Christ, who is the Way, the Truth and the Life. This is good for us to keep in mind as we walk with people on their journeys of faith.
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