23 March 2023

Thursday of the Fourth Week of Lent

 

JESUS MEDIATOR

From today on and in the Holy Week, the opposition between the Jewish leaders and Jesus is growing.

People always tend to adore their own god – a god or gods made in their own image and likeness, rather than accepting in humility, conscious of our limitations, that we are made in the image and likeness of God.

But we are fortunate enough to have Christ – as the Hebrews had Moses – a mediator who pleads for us, whom we can easily accept and identify with because in him, we can recognize one of us, who opts for people, who defends us, who is involved with us in spite of our failures.

Reading 1: Exodus 32:7-14

 And God did think twice. He decided not to do the evil he had threatened against his people.

 

Gospel: John 5:31-47

 

Prayer

Lord, our God, we know,
perhaps more in theory than in practice,
that you are with us,
that you are our God and we your people.
Forgive us Lord, when we fashion
our own gods made in our own image –
honor, power, prestige,
things to which we are attached and enslaved.
Remind us again and again,
that you are our loyal God,
who made us in your own indelible image
and who shows us your perfect likeness
in Jesus Christ, your Son and our Lord.

Reflection:

23 March 2023

Jn 5:31-47

Re-read the Scriptures to deepen our faith

Today we are ten days away from the beginning of Holy Week. It is a good time to renew the commitments we have taken up on Ash Wednesday. We began with prayers and fasting. Because it is the Lenten season, we are probably a bit more spiritual than at some other times of the year; we are probably a bit more patient and humble. This is good – and worth DOING more consistently.

John, the evangelist, uses a literary style in his Gospel to make it look like a trial that Jesus conducts, where the religious leaders are exposed. The Gospel presents a kind of courtroom investigation where Jesus would conduct his own defence. In Jewish law, the truth was to be ascertained by the testimony of two or more witnesses. From conducting his own defence, Jesus would assume the role of prosecutor, with the Jews becoming the defendants.

Jesus brings in four witnesses in his defence: God the Father, John the Baptist, his own life and signs he performed, and the Hebrew Scriptures – The Thora and the Prophets.

But no matter what the arguments of Jesus were, the Jews would not accept him. Decades later, while writing the Gospel, John presents those four witness of Jesus in an attempt to encourage the members of the early Church. The Church was facing severe persecution, and John brought up these witnesses to tell the disciples why they should continue to believe in Jesus. 

The profound experience of the risen Jesus gave the Christians of the early Church the strength to face persecution courageously. Now John wants his community to meditate on this living presence of Jesus amidst them. John wants them to meditate on the life, teachings and signs of Jesus and also to re-read their Scriptures in the light of Jesus’ life, death and resurrection. 

As we draw closer to the Holy Week and Easter, the Church invites us to meditate on why many people continue to close their minds and hearts to Jesus. The Jewish leadership of Jesus’ time refused to accept him because of their faulty understanding of the scripture and traditions. They feared accepting Jesus would jeopardise their social status and authority. Today, the Church invites us to re-read the scriptures in light of various happenings in the world, where Christ is still rejected by many and wars and violence threaten the life of our universe. 

What are the concerns that trouble us as Christians and that threaten our life in faith?

 

Re-read the Scriptures to deepen our faith – Youtube