Homily for March 23rd, 2018: John 10:31-42.
“The Jews
picked up rocks to stone Jesus,’ The gospel today starts where yesterday’s
gospel ended: with Jesus’ critics throwing stones at him. As we saw yesterday,
that was commanded in the book Leviticus as the punishment for blasphemy
(24:16).
Whenever critics
accuse him of blasphemy for making himself equal to God, Jesus responds by
saying, I have not made myself anything. It is God our Father who has made me
who I am. Jesus says in today’s gospel “that the Father is in me and I am in
the Father.”
John’s gospel
starts with that claim: “In the beginning was the Word; the Word was in God’s
presence, and the Word was God. He was present to God in the beginning” (John
1:1). Words are used to communicate. Since we cannot see God, he sends us his
Son, God clothed in human flesh, to show us what God is like.
When
we listen to Jesus, we hear God speaking to us. When we look at Jesus, we see
what God is like. What do we see when we look at Jesus? We see that he preferred
simple, ordinary people. He came to the world in a provincial village where
nothing interesting or important ever happened. Jesus moved not among wealthy
or sophisticated people, or among scholars and intellectuals, but among
ordinary people.
Jesus was of the earth,
earthy. In his youth he worked with his hands in the carpenter’s shop. His
teaching was full of references to simple things: the birds of the air, the
wind and the raging waves, the lilies of the field, the vine, the lost sheep,
the woman searching for her one lost coin, leavening dough with yeast, the
thief breaking in at night.
In
preferring simple people and simple things, Jesus was showing us what God is
like. He who is God’s word, God’s personal communication to us, is saying that
God loves humble people. In his earthiness Jesus shows us God’s love for this
world and everything in it.
Often we think of God and
religion as concerned only with some higher, spiritual realm. That is wrong!
God loves the earth and the things of
earth. He must love them, because he made them. And God does not make anything
that is not lovable. God made each of us, using our parents as his agents. And
he loves us with a love that will never let us go.
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