Homily
for May 9th, 2017: John 10:22-30.
A careful reading of the gospels
shows us that Jesus was very guarded about revealing his true identity. Pressed
in today’s gospel to say whether he is God’s long awaited Messiah (“the Christ”
in English) he replies: “I did tell you and you do not believe. The works I do
in my Father’s name testify to me.” What works is Jesus referring to?
First on any list would be his
miracles: the healings he performed, the stilling of the storm on the lake, the
raising of the widow’s son at Naim and of Jesus’ friend Lazarus. Jesus also fed
the hungry: the vast crowd in the wilderness, his twelve apostles at the Last
Supper. After his resurrection Jesus prepared a lakeside breakfast for Peter,
James, and John , tired and hungry
from a night of fruitless fishing with the net coming back empty time after
time until a man on shore, still unrecognized, calls out, “Cast the net on the
right side” — and they feel the net heavy with fish, and “the disciple whom
Jesus loved” as he is always called in John’s gospel) cries out excitedly: “It
is the Lord.” Jesus’ works also include his beautiful stories — the parables — and all his teaching about the
love of God, his heavenly Father: the love that will never let us go.
These works say nothing to you, Jesus tells
his questioners, because “you do not believe, because you are not among my
sheep. My sheep hear my voice; I know them and they follow me.” What does it
take to be among Jesus’ sheep? The first requirement is openness: willingness to learn, not just once, but all our lives
long. People who think they know it all already, that they have nothing more to
learn after their formal education is finished, cannot be among Jesus’ sheep.
“My sheep hear my voice,” Jesus says. That requires listening, all our lives
long. Our education is never finished as long as life lasts.
To those who come to him not as
skeptics, saying ‘show me,’ but in a spirit of openness Jesus gives the
greatest of all gifts: eternal life. “No one can take them out of my hand. My
Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all, and no one can take them
out of the Father’s hand. The Father and I are one.”
That too is the gospel. That is the
Good News.
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