Homily for March 20th, 2018: John 8:21-30.
“Many came to
believe in him,” we just heard. Others, however, did not. As he nears his arrest,
trial, and crucifixion, Jesus speaks with increasing urgency. “If you do not
believe that I AM, you will die in your sins.” That sentence makes sense only
if we know the story of God calling Moses, already an old man, to return to Egypt and
deliver his people from slavery to the Egyptians. Moses asks what he is to say
to his people when they ask who has sent him. And God responds: ‘Tell them that
I AM has sent you.’ So what Jesus is saying in the gospel we just heard is that
only those who believe he is the divine Son of God will have their sins
forgiven.
The gospel
readings for the previous Lenten Sundays have been giving reasons to believe in
Jesus as God’s divine son. In the story of Jesus’ Transfiguration four weeks
ago we saw the divine light of his divinity momentarily breaking through the
veil of his humanity. Three weeks ago we heard about Jesus cleansing of the Temple and saying: “Destroy this Temple
and I will raise it up” – words which the hearers assumed referred to the Temple building. In
reality, Jesus was speaking about the Temple
of his body, and hence about the resurrection. Two Sundays ago we heard Jesus
saying: “God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever
believes in him may not die, but may have eternal life.”
“Because he
spoke this way,” today’s gospel tells us, “many came to believe in him.” In his
book Jesus of Nazareth Emeritus Pope
Benedict XVI writes that those who welcomed Jesus as he entered Jerusalem riding on a
donkey on the first Palm Sunday “were not the same crowd that later
demanded his crucifixion” (p.8). That crowd consisted, Pope Benedict writes, of
“the Temple
aristocracy,” a small ruling clique who felt their power threatened by Jesus’
teaching and claims – and not even all of them, as we see in the case of
Nicodemus, a member of the ruling caste, but secretly Jesus’ disciple (cf. op.cit. 185f).
“Just
as the Lord entered the Holy
City that day on a
donkey,” Pope Benedict writes, “so the Church [sees] him coming again and again
in the humble form of bread and wine.” Greeting him, we are encountering the
One who made us; the One who upholds us at every moment of our lives; who is
always close to us, even when we stray far from him; who loves us more than we
can ever imagine; who is waiting for us at the end of life’s road, to welcome
us into the place he has gone ahead to prepare for us; where we shall
experience not just joy but ecstasy – for we shall see God face to face.
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