Homily for May 25th, 2020: John 16:29-33.
“Take courage,”
Jesus says. “I have overcome the world.” To understand these words, we must
know that in John’s gospel the word “world” is used in two senses: good and
bad. When Jesus says, earlier in the gospel, “God so loved the world that he
gave his only Son,” [3:16] he is using the word in a good sense. He is speaking
of the world as it comes from the hand of God, the world of God’s making. God
must love that world, for he does not make anything that is not lovable.
When he tells
his friends to take courage because he has “overcome the world,” he is speaking
not about the world of God’s making, but the world of human marring: the world
deformed by human sin, centered not on God but on our own selfish desires, the
world not of giving, but of getting.
“In the world
you will have trouble,” Jesus says. Other translations say not trouble but
“suffering” or “tribulation.” Can we Catholic Christians in this comfortable
and rich country of the United States honestly claim to have trouble, suffering,
and tribulation? If we refuse to abbreviate the gospel, yes, we do. When we
call the killing of unborn babies a grave crime, equivalent to murder, we are
accused of “waging a war on women.” When we insist that marriage is only
possible between one man and one woman; and that, once established, it can be
terminated only by death, we are accused of “hate speech,” and vilified as
homophobes and opponents of human equality.
The trouble and suffering of
Christians worldwide is far greater. In his richly documented book, The Global War on Christians, journalist
John Allen writes: “We’re not talking about a metaphorical ‘war on religion’ in
Europe and the United States fought over issues like whether it’s okay to erect
a nativity set on the courthouse steps. We’re talking about a rising tide of
legal oppression, social harassment and direct physical violence, with
Christians as its leading victims. Christians today form the most persecuted
religious body on the planet, and too often its new martyrs suffer in silence.”
Jesus speaks to us today the same
words he spoke to the apostles at the Last Supper two thousand years ago: “In
the world you will have suffering, but take courage. I have overcome the
world.”
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