To read the texts click on the texts: Acts13:26-33; Jn 14:1-6
Today’s Gospel reading
contains the first of the teachings of Jesus that speak about his departure and
what it means for his disciples.
At the
beginning of these teachings, Jesus commands his disciples to stand firm. They
are not to let the event of his departure overwhelm them. They are not to give
in to despair, give up, or lose hope. They must continue to trust and believe.
Even though it might seem, on the surface level, that evil is winning, the
disciples must realize that God is always in charge and in control of all
situations. They must place their trust
in God and in Jesus.
Since Jesus shares an intimate relationship with the
Father, and since the disciples can do so too, there will be as many rooms as
there are believers. God and Jesus will exclude no one who wants to share this
relationship with them. Jesus goes, but only to return and so, his going is not
permanent. It is a temporary act that must be done and completed. This going
and returning will be evidence of his power over everything, including death.
Nothing and no one will ever be able to separate the disciples from the love
that Jesus has for them. The purpose of Jesus’ returning is to take the
disciples to the place where he is: the bosom of the Father.
Even as Jesus
points to himself as the one who reveals the Father, Thomas misunderstands and
asks a question. He interprets the words “where I am going” only as a physical
destination and so, protests that, since he does not know the final destination
of Jesus, it is not possible to know how to get there. Jesus corrects this
misunderstanding with an “I am” saying. “The Way” is not a geographical term or
physical road, it is Jesus himself. Thus, to know Jesus is to know the way and,
to know the way is to know Jesus. In his being “the Way” Jesus is also “Truth”
and “Life”. Jesus is the “Truth’ because he has been sent by God to make God’s
word known. He became “flesh” and anyone who recognizes this and listens to his
voice, is of the truth. Recognition of the truth in Jesus leads to “life” in
abundance. Since the fullness of God’s life was revealed in Jesus, one can only
partake of this life through Jesus.
It is important not to be
too fundamental in interpreting the last verse of today’s reading. All too
often, insistence on the exclusiveness of the Christian way has been
responsible for problems in various parts of the world. The Gospels all agree
that the approach of Jesus was all inclusive and excluded no one who would want
to come to the truth. There is no doubt that Jesus revealed the Father in the
most unique of ways, as no one before had ever done. This is because, in the
incarnation, God took on “flesh” in all its weaknesses and limitations. Jesus
did not simply put on human nature but became like us in every single way and
thus, can understand every aspect of our lives. However, by the fact of the
incarnation, Jesus also gave us an insight into who God is and who we are
called to be. He made us aware of our own limitlessness. Though he limited
himself, we must realize that Jesus is much bigger than the narrow image of him
we often have. This narrow image is responsible for our restricting him and
making him as small as we are.
John was writing about his
community’s experience of seeing God in Jesus incarnate and was not concerned
with showing the superiority of this revelation over any other or with the fate
of believers of other religions. We must keep this in mind when interpreting
the last verse of today’s text. We must, however, rejoice because we are
privileged to receive such a unique revelation of God in Jesus Christ.
When one brackets out the
questions that contemporary Christians falsely import into these verses, there
is nothing outrageous or offensive about the claims made here. Rather, at the
heart of Christianity is this affirmation of the decisive revelation of God in
the incarnation. John 14:6 can thus be read as the core claim of Christian identity;
what distinguishes Christians from peoples of other faiths is the conviction
given expression in John 14:6. It is, indeed, through Jesus that Christians
have access to their God.
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