To read the texts click on the texts: Jer31:31-34; Heb5:7-9; Jn 12:20-33
‘Anticipation’
is the word that best describes what the readings of today convey. The first
reading, from Jeremiah, begins with the words, “The days are surely coming”,
and in the Gospel passage, Jesus responds to the arrival of the Greeks with the
words “the hour has come”. What are these days? What is that hour? What must we
anticipate? What must we expect?
Jeremiah
explains that the expectation is of a “new covenant”. This covenant is new, not
because it will be made again or made anew with the people but primarily
because it is a covenant unlike the earlier ones. It is a covenant that will be
written, not on stone tablets but on the hearts of all.
The effects
of this covenant will be unlike the earlier ones. This covenant will be kept by
the people and not broken. The reason for this is that people will be convinced
of it and know that it is a covenant for their good and for God’s glory. They
will know that it is in their best interest to keep it. Instead of being like
children, who only keep their parent’s rules because of the promise of reward
or the threat of punishment, the people will keep God’s law and live God’s
commandments because their own consciences direct them to. They will be convinced
of the law in their hearts. Instead of a purely external conformity, God’s law
would now be internalized and people would pursue the right path because it
would be part of their basic character and identity. This is what Jeremiah
means when he talks about God’s Law being planted deep within his people and
written on their hearts. God takes the initiative in making this new covenant
and shows this in his action of forgiving all sin. He is a gracious God, a God
who wants all to be saved.
This new covenant
was made in the most perfect of ways when God made it in Jesus. In Jesus, sin
was forgiven and love took centre stage. This is confirmed directly at the end
of the Gospel reading, in what is termed as the final passion, resurrection,
and ascension prediction in the Gospel of John. In that reading – he will draw
all people to himself. The effect of the “lifting up” of Jesus will be – not
condemnation – but acceptance of people. Even when on the cross, Jesus will continue
to save and to redeem.
That Jesus
could draw all to himself, only in and through the cross, is affirmed in his
words about the whet grain. Speaking of himself and his impending passion, he
directs attention to a grain of wheat which can only give life when it dies to
itself. If the grain of wheat will not die, it remains what it is and will be
unable give new life.
The letter
to the Hebrews picks up this theme and narrates the incident of the prayer of
Jesus at Gethsemane. On one level, Jesus would have preferred to save without
the cross, and this was the content of the first part of his prayer when he
asked the Father to take the cup away. However, on the deeper level, he knew
that the cross was not just one way, but the only way, and that is why he adds
“not my will but yours be done”. Hebrews thus confirms that Jesus willingly
chose to become like the grain of wheat which would fall, and die, in order to
give life and save. This was Jesus’ ‘hour’, the hour when he would go to his
death, but also, without doubt, the hour when he would be glorified, the hour
in which all would be drawn to him. It was the hour when self-centeredness was
driven out by self-sacrifice. It was the hour when new life conquered death,
and eternal, unconditional love conquered sin.
This is,
therefore, a cause for great joy and optimism. Though we know how often wed
have failed to live up to the promises we have made in the past, God continues
to say to us at every moment: “See, I am making a new covenant”. Though we keep
choosing sin over love, and self-centeredness over selflessness, God keeps
inviting us to the ‘hour’ of his son. This is the hour in which he will make all
things new.
This
newness, however, can never come about unless we, like Jesus, make a conscious
decision to collaborate and co-operate with God. We have to dare, like Jesus,
to become like that grain of wheat which will fall to the ground and die. We
have to understand, like Jesus, that unless we die to our selfish ambitions and
our selfish desires to have more, that unless we die to our petty dreams of
personal advancement at the expense of the majority, God cannot make all things
new. The newness that God brings in Jesus is a newness that needs our active
co-operation and collaboration. It needs us to keep saying “Yes”.
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