To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Jn 2:3-11; Jn 1:1-18
The prologue of the Gospel of John is an extremely
rich text. Unlike Matthew and Luke who begin their Gospels with stories of the
birth of Jesus, the Gospel of John begins with the pre-existent WORD and the
relationship of the word to the world. It is Word which is God and also an
incarnate word, a word made flesh. Thus the Prologue is concerned with the
sphere of God, the eternal sphere and the sphere of human beings the temporal.
Thus the prologue makes two main points.
The first of these is that the abstract, the incomprehensible,
the indecipherable, the unknowable, and the absolute mystery which is the Word
and God, have become concrete, comprehensible, decipherable, and knowable and a
mystery revealed because of the Word becoming flesh. However, this mystery is
not as easy to understand as it may seem. Many take offense at this. They want
something more spectacular; some divine figure, some hero or god-man, some
fascinating, mysterious being, able to impress everyone with the feats of might
and glory. But what they saw was only a man; a man of compassion, a man who
claimed to speak the truth. And they saw no glory here. But this is how God
decided to come. He wanted to be one of us in all our limitations. Thus no
longer can we say that our God could not understand what it is like to struggle
against the opposition, to have to flee to another country, to be betrayed by a
friend, to grieve the loss of a loved one, to fear suffering and death, to
experience a seeming absence of his father. No, our God has truly walked our walk;
God's Word of Love has truly taken flesh. Through this act of the Incarnation,
God and the Word have become Father and Son. God, the Father is revealed in the
Son, Jesus. Through this act, heaven has come down to earth and earth and
heaven are reconciled as never before. The incarnation means that human beings
can see, hear, and know God in ways never before possible. The relationship
between divine and human is transformed, because in the incarnation human
beings are given intimate, palpable, corporeal access to the cosmic reality of
God. The newness wrought by God in Jesus is so dramatic that a conventional
narrative of origins is good, but insufficient. That is because the story of
Jesus is not ultimately a story about Jesus; it is, in fact, the story of God.
When one sees Jesus, one sees God; when one hears Jesus, one hears God.
The second point that the prologue makes is the
response of humanity to the incarnate Word. Since the Word is not a Word that
is thrust on creation, but given freely and in total generosity, human beings
must respond to the Word in freedom. This response is either of acceptance or
rejection. One cannot ignore the potent power of the Word.
The rejection of the Word by Jesus’ own people while
being a historical fact is a rejection that continues even today. Darkness
continues to try to overcome the light. This becomes evident when we look at
our world which is a world in which corruption, selfishness, injustice,
intolerance, and communal disharmony, racial and caste discrimination continue to raise their ugly heads. It is seen when people still concern themselves with
only the desire to have more rather than be more. It is seen when the concern
to accumulate for oneself even to the detriment of not giving others their just
due overpowers us.
Yet, despite this rejection of the Word, there is a
note of hope and promise because there continue to be people who will choose
light over darkness and selflessness over selfishness. There will continue to
be people who fight for justice and will never give up this cause. There will
continue to be people who will generously give not only of their wealth but
also of themselves in imitation of the one who became human and gave all. Those
who opt for the light can continue to do so because their openness to the
Incarnate Word and all that he stands for makes them receive grace upon grace
from him. This abundance of grace continues to sustain through the most trying
times and gives them the courage never to give up or give in, but to continue and
carry on. God became what we are, so that we could understand better what God
is, and we could believe with all our hearts that God understands what we are.
Those who dare to accept the light and walk in its
ways begin to realize that God himself walks with them and ahead of them. They
know that God does not stay distant from them, remote and isolated; rather, in
Jesus, God chose to live with humanity in the midst of human weakness,
confusion, and pain. This bond holds true for all times and all places. To
become flesh is to know joy, pain, suffering, and loss. It is to love, to
grieve, and someday to die. The incarnation binds Jesus to the “everydayness”
of human experience. The Word lived among us, not simply in the world. The Word
became flesh and the Word’s name is Jesus Christ. This Jesus continues to be
born in our midst even today. When selflessness triumphs over selfishness; when
generosity triumphs over greed; when light overcomes darkness, then Jesus is
born again and again.
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