Homily for Dec. 27th, 2013L 1 John 1:1-4; John
20:1a, 2-8.
“The other
disciple ran faster than Peter and arrived at the tomb first.” Why? There are
two possible answers to that question. Both are probably true. First,
he was younger than Peter. That is what most Bible scholars believe. This is
the man we celebrate today: St. John, author of
our fourth gospel, written, Scripture scholars believe, between 90 and 100 A.D.,
well after Peter had been crucified in Rome.
In the gospel which bears his name he
is identified throughout as “the disciple whom Jesus loved.” Known therefore as
“the Beloved Disciple,” he alone of all the twelve apostles returned to
stand beside the Lord’s cross, along with Jesus’ mother Mary and the other
faithful women disciples, after the men
“all deserted him and fled” at Jesus’ arrest the night before in the garden of
Gethsemane (Mk. 14:50).
And it is this special love which gives
us the second reason for John’s earlier arrival at the tomb. His love for the
Lord was more intense than Peter’s. Once he heard that the tomb was empty, the
Beloved Disciple had to get there, to
see with his own eyes what had been reported. And it was precisely this special
bond of love between him and the Lord which explains the closing verse of our
gospel today: “”Then the other disciple also went in … And he saw and
believed.” John is the only one of the Lord’s apostles who came to belief in
the resurrection on basis of the empty tomb alone. The others assumed that the
Lord’s body had been stolen. They came to belief only when they saw risen Lord
– and then only after overcoming their initial skepticism.
The American biblical scholar Fr.
Raymond Brown, who died in 1998 at age 70, writes that John “was the disciple
who was bound closest to Jesus in love [and hence] the quickest to look for him
and the first to believe in him.” The Beloved Disciple was also the first to
recognize the risen Lord standing on the shore after a night of fruitless
fishing on the lake, and to tell Peter, “It is the Lord” (Jn. 21:7).
“Faith is possible for the Beloved
Disciple,” Fr. Brown writes, “because he has become very sensitive to Jesus
through love. … Love for Jesus gives one insight into his presence.” On this
feast of the Beloved Disciple what better gift could we ask of the Lord than an
abundant measure of the love that he has for us?
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The quotes from Raymond Brown are taken from his Gospel According to John vol. 2 (New York: Doubleday, 1970) pages 1005ff.
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The quotes from Raymond Brown are taken from his Gospel According to John vol. 2 (New York: Doubleday, 1970) pages 1005ff.
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