Homily for March 18th, 2018: Fifth Sunday in Lent, Year B.
Hebrews 5:7-9; John 12:20-33.
AIM: To proclaim the power of the cross.
“In the days when Christ Jesus was in
the flesh,” we heard in our second reading, “he offered prayers and supplications
with loud cries and tears to the one who was able to save him from death.” The
words refer to Jesus’ anguished prayer in the garden of Gethsemane
the night before he died. John’s
gospel, from which today’s gospel reading is taken, contains no record of this
prayer. Instead John records Jesus’
prayer at the Last Supper in the upper room. We heard part of it a few moments
ago: “I am troubled now. Yet what should I say? ‘Father, save me from this
hour’? But it was for this that I came
to this hour. Father, glorify your name.”
Jesus’ humanity was not a mask. It was
real. He really experienced what we experience. He suffered as we suffer.
Before his encounter with the Samaritan woman at the well, Jesus was tired from
a long journey on foot, and thirsty (cf. Jn 4:6). At the death of his dear
friend Lazarus “Jesus wept” (Jn 11:35). Facing the agony of crucifixion, Jesus
felt the intense anguish that anyone of us would feel in such a desperate
situation.
And so, with all the fervor of which
he was capable, Jesus prays for deliverance from death. Immediately, however,
he goes beyond this prayer to ask that he not
be delivered from death, should acceptance of death be the means of glorifying
his heavenly Father’s name. That petition is part of the “prayers with loud
supplications and tears” referred to in our second reading. That reading goes
on to say: “And he was heard because of his reverence.”
Was
Jesus’ prayer heard? Isn’t the cross the proof that his prayer was not heard — or at least not granted? So
it would seem. In reality, however, the cross is not the
place of Jesus’ defeat, but of his ultimate triumph. Jesus confessed his faith
in this triumph when he said in today’s gospel: “Now the ruler of this world
will be driven out.” It was “the ruler of this world” — Satan, the
personification of evil — who brought Jesus to the cross. In this passage,
however, Jesus professes his faith that Satan’s triumph would be an illusion.
The empty tomb of Easter shows that the victor in that cosmic conflict between
good and evil was not “the ruler of this world”, but Jesus Christ.
The price of that victory, however,
was Jesus’ death. Why? Jesus answers this question with a lesson from nature.
“Unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains just a grain
of wheat; but if it dies, it produces much fruit.” We are part of that fruit —
a portion of that great harvest which Jesus sowed when, on Calvary, he cast the
precious seed of his own life into the soil of that earth for love of which he
had been born at Bethlehem
some three decades before. That we are
Catholic Christians more than twenty centuries later in a land and continent
undreamed of in Jesus’ day, is proof that Jesus spoke true when he said, at the
conclusion of today’s gospel: “When I am lifted up from the earth, I will draw
everyone to myself.” Jesus voluntarily laid down his life that we might live.
And he summons us to live as he lived: “Whoever serves me must follow me, and
where I am, there also will my servant be.”
Where is Jesus Christ today? He is in
every place of human need and suffering. He is in prison cells on death row. He
is with the victims of poverty, oppression, and war. He is with all those who
are suffering: in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan,
and Gaza; in Somalia,
Sudan, and the Congo. And he
is also with those who sacrifice their own interests, safety, and lives to help
others.
Here is the story of one such
sacrifice. In July 1941 the Polish priest Maximilian Kolbe was a prisoner in
the notorious Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland, when a prisoner escaped. In
reprisal the Nazi commandant ordered ten men from the missing prisoner’s
barrack to be starved to death in an underground bunker. One of the men
selected cried out: “My wife! My children!” Fr. Kolbe immediately asked to take
the man’s place. In the starvation bunker he celebrated Mass daily, as long as
he was able to do so, and gave Communion to his fellow prisoners. Sympathetic
guards brought him unleavened bread and small quantities of wine. After three
weeks without food or water, only Kolbe and three other prisoners were still
alive. When he alone remained, he was killed by a lethal injection. The man
whose life Fr. Kolbe had saved was present at Kolbe’s canonization as a martyr
by Pope John Paul II forty-one years
later, on October 10th, 1982.
Would any of us have the courage to
make a sacrifice comparable to that made by the man whom we may now call St.
Maximilian Kolbe? We cannot say. What we can say is that there is a direct line
between the words of Jesus about the seed falling into the earth and dying, so
that it can become fruitful, and the willingness of this Polish priest to
sacrifice his life, so that a brother human being with responsibility for wife
and children might live.
“When I am lifted up from the earth,”
Jesus says in the gospel – and he is speaking about being lifted up on the
cross – “I will draw everyone to myself.” To learn the deepest meaning of our
Christian faith we must take our stand beneath Jesus’ cross and contemplate in
silent awe and reverent love the One who hangs there. All the great lessons of
life are learned at the foot of the cross.