Passion Sunday
Hebrews 9:11-15 * John
8:46-59
The
Church, in her wisdom guided by the Holy Spirit, chose today's Gospel reading
for the beginning of Passiontide, the climactic final weeks of Lent that carry
us right through the betrayal and crucifixion of our Lord on Good Friday. Now,
the emphasis is on the cross in a special way, for we must fix our gaze on it
and what it means. Before we begin to consider any other aspect of this time of
the year, and of our Scripture readings as appointed, and what they teach us,
we ought to bear in mind that Jesus foretold his death and resurrection many
times long before entering Jerusalem .
He meant to go
there; he saw the cross as his mission; he insisted on giving his enemies the
opportunity to do quite literally, their worst, with such words as:
"And [you] say, If we had been
in the days of our fathers, we would not have been partakers with them in the
blood of the prophets. Wherefore ye be witnesses unto yourselves, that ye are
the children of them which killed the prophets. Fill ye up then the measure of
your fathers."1
In
short, not only did he refuse to avoid the cross; he ran toward it.
And
so it is with his words in what we read today:
"Jesus said unto them, Verily,
verily, I say unto you, Before Abraham was, I AM. Then took they up
stones to cast at him: but Jesus hid himself, and went out of the temple."
I
will provide an explanation of why this statement is a picture of Jesus
running, figuratively speaking, to the cross. But, first, we should clear up one
possible objection. It may appear otherwise, inasmuch as at this point in the
story He, as it says "hid himself." Frankly, the reply to that
objection is obvious: As He had once said to His blessed virgin mother:
"mine hour is not yet come." 2 His disciples had not yet been
prepared; all things had not yet been accomplished. 3 But, in this passage we
see that he gives his enemies a cause for pursuing him, hounding him unto
death.
I
could say this in my own words, but it was said so well already by Fr. Laurence
Wells that I will simply quote from his Passion Sunday bulletin insert:
"God
revealed His name...telling Moses, 'I AM WHO I AM.' That mysterious and awesome
Name was abbreviated with the one word all devout Israelites past and present
feel is too sacred to be uttered aloud, the Divine Name YHWH. When Jesus began to make
statements, 'I am ....' it surely sounded as if He were claiming for Himself
the very Name of God, the Name too holy to be spoken above a whisper. But in
John 8:58, He left no room for doubt, when He stated firmly to His opponents,
'Before Abraham was, I AM.' Not only did He claim to be older than Abraham, He
claimed to be God. If the words are obscure to us, the meaning was perfectly
plain to the Jews. It is no wonder that they attempted to stone Him on the
spot."
I
do not know how important each of you considers the doctrine of the Incarnation
and the doctrine of the Trinity to be; but, understand, that it was Jesus
Christ's open revelation of these two doctrines, the eternal truth about Himself
as God the Word (λo’γος), with God and in
the beginning with God, 4 though clearly visible as a man with flesh and blood,
that led to his death. He confessed and revealed that he was one with the
Father, and it was this that made his enemies mad with hatred, and that caused
the opposition and hostility that became present throughout the time of his
public ministry among the people. If Eusebius was correct, these things were
spoken before most of the events we read about in the other Gospels, even
before the Sermon on the Mount where he also spoke of himself as one with God:
"Not every one that saith unto me, Lord,
Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth
the will of my Father which is in heaven. Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord..." 5
However, whether he spoke them very early or near the time of his entry into Jerusalem , the effect of
the words, "before Abraham was, I AM," is obvious: They picked up
stones meaning to stone him to death.
In
chapter 10 of the same Gospel, we see a strikingly similar passage:
"My sheep hear my voice, and I know them,
and they follow me: And I give unto them eternal life; and they shall never
perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand. My Father, which gave
them me, is greater than all; and no man is able to pluck them out of my
Father's hand. I and my
Father are one. Then the Jews took up stones again to stone
him." 6
The
Incarnation and the Trinity are the double theme that sounds clearly in each of
the four Gospels, and especially so in the Gospel According to John; it is even
more clear in this, the fourth Gospel. And, here, in these passages from that
Gospel, we see the strong connection binding together this double theme of
Christ the Son of the Everlasting Father, one with the Father and the Holy
Spirit, and the theme of the cross. That Jesus is fully God and fully man, that
he has revealed His uniqueness as One with the Father, led directly to the
enmity that culminated in his cross and death. So, in her wisdom, the Church
opens Passiontide with an explicit public statement Jesus made about his
divinity: "Before Abraham was, I AM." He revealed this to a hostile
world, and he did so because his mission to die for the sins of the world was,
as the Scriptures call it, His passion.
7
We
see what his cross does for you and for me by hearing the Epistle appointed for
this day:
"By his own blood he entered in once
into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for us. For if the
blood of bulls and of goats, and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean,
sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh: how much more shall the blood of
Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God,
purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God?"
Saving
the human race from sin and death, most especially those who believe in him,
was his passion. For that cause He embraced the cross as His passion. Nothing
could keep Him from it. The revelation that He, as He stood before them in
creaturely flesh and blood as a man, is One with the Father, was both worth
dying for, and was the motive that He handed them to go ahead, in their madness
and fury, to seek His execution.
It
also tells us that terrible truth we do not want to know. Throughout the history
of Christianity many preachers, even some of the brightest, have made a habit
of using these passages to speak of the Jews as especially evil, as the ones
who hated God. But, if we understand clearly the words of John, we see a double
lament in his first chapter, in the eleventh verse: "He came unto his own,
and his own received him not." The fact, however, is that John was also
one of "his own," that is, His own chosen covenant people. So were
all the disciples, So was the Lord's blessed virgin mother. So, also, was God
the Son Himself, the incarnate Word. He was flesh in the general sense, fully
human. Specifically, as every human being who lives in the world comes from a
specific people, He was a Jew; He chose the Jews, and He came into the world as
a Jew, born the son of a Jewish virgin, raised in a Jewish home, affirming
always the truth of Jewish religion and Scripture as God's own revelation to
His one and only chosen, beloved covenant people.
When
John specifies "the Jews" he merely relates, on one hand, a fact of
history: that is, it was Jewish people to whom, he spoke. But, in emphasizing
their Jewish identity (which they shared with Jesus, and his mother and all his
disciples), He was not saying they, as Jews, were especially evil. He was saying
that even the best
people, the people of God who were born into His covenant and who knew His
revelation, were lost in sin and death. How much more so, then, were we who were once Gentiles born
into a hopeless condition of sin and death, born into the world as children of
the devil, needing adoption and new birth to become children of God. We stand
in total dependence on, and in need of, God's grace. That is why, in his love
for fallen mankind, for you and for me, it was his passion to embrace the
cross.
After
all, that eleventh verse from John's first chapter follows the tenth verse,
which is why I said it is a double
lament: "He was in the world, and the world was made by him, and the world
knew him not." The evil of those who "knew him not" as children
of the devil is not some special designation of Jewish unbelievers; it is the
terrible truth about the whole human race - the world that does not know
Christ; for not knowing Christ is what defines "the world." And, but
for His grace given to you through baptism and through your faith, it would be
the truth about you. You were born a child of the devil, subject to the full
wrath of Divine justice. That is, in fact, why the cross was Christ's passion.
When
Jesus was betrayed , He called his betrayer "friend.”
"Now he that betrayed him gave
them a sign, saying, Whomsoever I shall kiss, that same is he: hold him fast.
And forthwith he came to Jesus, and said, Hail, master; and kissed him. And
Jesus said unto him, Friend, wherefore art thou come?
Then came they, and laid hands on Jesus, and took him." 8
Judas
Iscariot was no friend, was he? But, Jesus was not saying that Judas loved Him;
rather he meant that Judas was still the object of His, that is Christ's, love;
of Divine love. Christ still loved His betrayer, calling him
"friend." And, as everyone can quote, he said about all his persecutors among
both the Jews and the Romans, "Father, forgive them; for they know not
what they do."9 This is consistent with his words,
"And if any man hear my words, and believe not, I judge him not: for I
came not to judge the world, but to save the world."10 Saving the whole world was His passion, whether Jews or
Gentiles, that is, the people of all nations. He went to His cross
willingly; indeed, no one could have kept Him from it. It was His passion to
save all the children of the devil, and make them into the children of God
through Himself; as Possessing the infinite power of Divine love, He calls his
enemies and betrayers, and you and me, "friend."
1.
Matt. 23: 30-32
2.
John 2:4
3.
John 17: 1, 4
4.
John 1: 1-14
5.
Matt. 7:21, 22
6.
John 10:27-31
7.
Acts 1:3
8.
Matt. 26:48-50
9.
Luke 23:34
10.
John 10: 47
Abraham understood the eternal Son to be one with the Father. This was one of the beliefs held by his ancestors, his Horim. The Jews of Jesus' day knew this claim was Messianic. In rejecting Jesus, they also rejected the Faith of their father Abraham.
ReplyDeleteThis was very edifying reading. Again, the Church in her wisdom...
Thank you, Father.