Sunday, May 21, 2023

 Monday of the Seventh Week of Easter, May 22, 2023

John 16, 29-33


The disciples said to Jesus, “Now you are talking plainly, and not in any figure of speech. Now we realize that you know everything and that you do not need to have anyone question you. Because of this we believe that you came from God.” Jesus answered them, “Do you believe now? Behold, the hour is coming and has arrived when each of you will be scattered to his own home and you will leave me alone. But I am not alone, because the Father is with me. I have told you this so that you might have peace in me. In the world you will have trouble, but take courage, I have conquered the world.”


“Now you are talking plainly, and not in any figure of speech.”  It is not easy to discern to what exactly the disciples here responding.  If we read back a bit to their last point of confusion, we have only to see only verses earlier that they did not understand what Jesus meant when he said he was leaving them for a while and that he was going to the Father.  In the verses leading up to the first verse of today’s Gospel Reading, the Lord uses the figure of a woman in labor to help them understand what he meant, and he promises that the prayers of the Apostles would be answered.  And then the Apostles say, “Now you are talking plainly, etc.”  But the fact they do not understand that he is talking to them about his imminent Passion and Death is proven by the lack of alarm in their speech.  It is to them merely as if Jesus has unraveled one of his riddles or parables.  In this case, the Apostles seem to think that the Lord meant, by his talking about leaving them and going to the Father, that he was going off somewhere alone to pray. “Because of this we believe that you came from God.”  They believe that Jesus came from God on account of his devotion to prayer.  It is not a confession of faith that he is the Son of God.


“Do you believe now?”  The Lord knows how far from perfect is their knowledge of him and their belief in him.  He knew that they would flee from the scene of his arrest: “Behold, the hour is coming and has arrived when each of you will be scattered to his own home and you will leave me alone.”  If they truly believed he was the divine Son of God, they would not flee, but because they believed he was only a man, they did.  If he was only a man, his arrest by the Jewish authorities would mean that he could not bring about a new kingdom of Israel and there was no need to support or fight for him (though Peter, just before the arrest, does resist and cut off the ear of the high priest’s slave).  The Apostles saw and heard so much and yet they did not grasp the Lord’s divinity.  The Evangelists emphasize this rather than downplay it in order to show how it is through grace that we believe that Jesus is the only-begotten Son of God, that he is true God and true man.  This is why we can debate with someone all day long and bring forth the most persuasive proofs, but unless we are praying for the other person, our attempts to convince him of the truth will fail.


“You will leave me alone.”  The Lord suffered terribly from the hatred of the Pharisees and the tortured of the Romans, but his abandonment by his Apostles hurt him very deeply.


“But I am not alone, because the Father is with me.”  The Lord Jesus speaks here of the intimate and eternal union he has with the Father.  


“I have told you this so that you might have peace in me. In the world you will have trouble, but take courage, I have conquered the world.”  The Lord consoles the Apostles beforehand for their grief and remorse at having abandoned — and even denied — him.  “In the world you will have trouble”, pertains, first, to the time between their abandonment of him and the announcement of the Resurrection.  They will suffer.  But they are to take courage and to be of good hope because even now, he has “conquered” the world.  That is, he foresees his conquest of sin and death, and their defeat is so near st hand that it seems to have already taken place.  His words also pertain to their life after Pentecost when they will endure much in order to spread the Gospel.  Through his conquest of the world he invites them to share in his victory.  We can understand this as encouraging us, who, at times, struggle to do the will of God in our lives and to obey his commandments.  By his victory over sin and death he has opened the gates of heaven for us.  Our longing for heaven and the Lord’s sweet company are enough to carry us through the hardest of times.



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