John 5:17-30
Jesus said: My Father is still working even now, and so I
am working. 18For this cause the Jews had an even greater desire to put Jesus
to death, because not only did he not keep the Sabbath but he said God was his
Father, so making himself equal with God. 19So Jesus made answer and said,
Truly I say to you, The Son is not able to do anything himself; he is able to
do only what he sees the Father doing; whatever the Father does the Son does it
in the same way. 20For the Father has love for the Son and lets him see
everything which he does: and he will let him see greater works than these so
that you may be full of wonder. 21In the same way, as the Father gives life to
the dead, even so the Son gives life to those to whom he is pleased to give it.
22The Father is not the judge of men, but he has given all decisions into the
hands of the Son; 23So that all men may give honour to the Son even as they
give honour to the Father. He who gives no honour to the Son gives no honour to
the Father who
sent him. 24Truly I say to you, The man whose ears are open to my word and who
has faith in him who sent me, has eternal life; he will not be judged, but has
come from death into life. 25Truly I say to you, The time is coming, it has
even now come, when the voice of the Son of God will come to the ears of the
dead, and those hearing it will have life. 26For even as the Father has life in
himself, so he has given to the Son to have life in himself. 27And he has given
him authority to be judge because he is the Son of man. 28Do not be surprised
at this: for the time is coming when his voice will come to all who are in the
place of the dead, 29And they will come out; those who have done good, into the
new life; and those who have done evil, to be judged. 30Of myself I am unable
to do anything: as the voice comes to me so I give a decision: and my decision
is right because I have no desire to do what is pleasing to myself, but only
what is pleasing to him who sen t me.
Food for thought
"My Father is still working even now!" Jesus
said. It is true: We have a new pope. This is the Lord's making. We should all
be proud of the Lord and his Church. This pope turns Jesus present, reminds us
of the words and claims of Jesus. Today's Gospel is about Jesus' answer to the
Jews' charge that he was making himself equal to God. He lays down three things
about his relationship with God.
(i) He lays down his identity with God. The salient
truth about Jesus is that in him we see God. If we wish to see how God feels to
men, to women, to children, to the young, to the old, if we wish to see how God
reacts to sin, if we wish to see how God regards the human situation, we must
look at Jesus. The mind of Jesus is the mind of God; the words of Jesus are the
words of God; the actions of Jesus are the actions of God. Jesus is God in
human flesh; He is Emmanuel, God with us.
(ii) This identity is not so much based on equality
as on complete obedience. Jesus never did what he wanted to do but always what
God wanted him to do. It is because his will was completely submitted to God's
will that we see God in him. Jesus is to God as we must be to Jesus.
(iii) This obedience is not based on submission to
power; it is based on love. The unity between Jesus and God is a unity of love.
We speak of two minds having only a single thought and two hearts beating as
one. In human terms that is a perfect description of the relationship between
Jesus and God. There is such complete identity of mind and will and heart that
Father and Son are one.
But this passage has something still more to tell us
about Jesus.
(i) It tells us of his complete confidence. He
is quite sure that what men were seeing then was only a beginning. On purely
human grounds the one thing Jesus might reasonably expect was death. The forces
of Jewish orthodoxy were gathering against him and the end was already sure.
But Jesus was quite certain that the future was in the hands of God and that
men could not stop what God had sent him to do. That is what we must know: God
has a plan for each one of us; we do well to let him lead us where he wills.
(ii) It tells of his complete fearlessness. That he
would be misunderstood was certain. That his words would inflame the minds of
his hearers and endanger his own life was beyond argument. There was no human situation
in which Jesus would lower his claims or adulterate the truth. He would make
his claim and speak his truth no matter what men might threaten to do. To him
it was much more important to be true to God than to fear men. We need this
kind of confidence and determination Jesus had because many times we follow and
fear men than God; we sacrifice our God-given convictions and vocations because
we fear what men will say and do to us; we respect more the people than God!!
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