Christ’s relationship with his disciples
His Holiness Pope Shenouda III speaks about Christ’s relationship with His disciples during the Holy Forty period and after the Resurrection, explaining that this relationship is a model of God’s special and apostolic love that is transmitted from generation to generation.
Main Idea
The main idea is that Christ loved His disciples “to the end” (a complete and devoted love), and that this love is the source of the spiritual authority and apostolic teaching He entrusted to the apostles to preserve and transmit faithfully.
Particularity of Love and the Choosing
Christ did not only love everyone generally, but He specifically favored His own — the apostles and disciples — with a special love, and He chose among them different kinds of people (fishermen, literates, impulsive ones, doubters, even a traitor) to show that the power of faith does not depend on human wisdom but on God’s grace.
Apostolic Transmission and Teaching
The teaching Christ gave to the disciples was oral and practical (life, examples, private sessions, miracles), and the command was: “teach them all that I commanded you” — namely to pass on the teaching as they received it, not adding personal thoughts removed from apostolic tradition.
Weakness as Divine Wisdom
God’s choosing of the weak and the foolish shows that divine power works in fragile vessels so that no one may boast, and so that the glory may be to God and not to men.
Preparation for Trials and Divine Strength
Christ was frank with them about persecutions and troubles but promised them the Holy Spirit as comforter and giver of strength to be witnesses even in affliction, and He prepared them in heart and mind to endure trials.
Steadfast Discipleship and Fidelity
The disciples left everything and followed Him into the unknown, and their lives were completed by witness and patience — most of them were martyred, some endured severe sufferings, yet they remained carriers of the message faithfully.
Coptic Orthodox Spiritual Dimension
From a Coptic Orthodox faith perspective, we deduce an emphasis on pastoral love and apostolic transmission as the preserving power of ecclesial tradition and the conduct of the servant: the servant’s humility, the believer’s reliance on the grace of the Holy Spirit, and keeping Christ’s command as the heart of the Church’s life and sacraments.
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