Friday, 14 April 2017

Jesus had no death wish - Easter 2017



During the Scripture readings in the liturgy in the immediate preparation for Holy Week and the Easter Triduum, you have a sense of the drama of Jesus’ final days unfolding.  What has struck me about them is that Jesus had no death wish.  Often in the Johannine texts, as in the Synoptic gospels, Jesus moves on after a confrontation with the ruling authorities.  He simply goes to another place and carries on his ministry.

In one account, the bystanders gather stones to stone him to death for blasphemy.  In another, Jesus’ raising of Lazarus evokes either faith or wary hostility in the Jews. In response, the high priest sees Jesus as a threat to political stability.  Jesus moves on.

However, at some point, avoidance became impossible for Jesus.  There is a line fidelity to God that cannot be crossed where compromise is impossible no matter what the consequences will be.  The gathering hostility towards Jesus gave him a sense of the inevitability of his imminent death.  In that moment, he faced the outcome of his unwavering commitment to the God of Israel.  His life-giving actions, his inclusivity and his teachings threatened religious and political stability.

Stability brings comfort to people but too often comfort comes at the cost of blindness to those who are excluded, who suffer who are ‘not one of us’.  Jesus stands in the line of Israel’s prophets when he exposes this blindness which is to compromise the Covenant of the Holy One with Israel. 

Jesus did not, could not simply throw his life away.  He, who in the words of the Fourth Gospel could say, ‘I have come that they may have life and have it to the full’ and whose every action affirmed human life, could not count his own life as of no value.  However, fidelity to the Giver of that life and to his sisters and brothers in God’s image and likeness could not be compromised because this would be to deny what the gift of life was about.

The Fourth Gospel depicts Jesus in his last days and hours as majestic and calm – he is God enfleshed who is in control of events.  The Synoptic Gospels show Jesus at different moments in his life being confronted by events that shape him and how he understands him ministry.  We see Jesus taking the human journey of experience and insight that leads to new understanding.  

In the Synoptic passion narratives, we see him painfully and humanly coming to terms with his death.  His struggles in Gethsemane to accept the outcome of his ministry bring him, once again to surrender in fidelity to the Holy One of Israel and his mission.

In the darkness of this surrender, Jesus held on to the history of his people Israel, a history that spoke so clearly of God’s saving power in weakness and failure and adversity.  He knew, in the deepest fibre of his humanity, the promises of God.  Somewhere in apparent failure and death God would bring new life as had happened so often in this sacred history.

To think of Jesus going to death knowing the outcome is to trivialise his humanness and God’s way of working.  In human life we don’t know what a new thing will be until it happens.  We can only see intimations and it is on to these hints that we place our hope, trust and fidelity to the Holy One who gives life because God IS life.  

The text of the psalm quoted by Jesus on the cross begins with the very human experience of dark fidelity, “My God, My God why have you abandoned me”, it laments with great vigour, continues with a reflection on God’s mercy and ends in the great proclamation of God’s fidelity and salvation (Ps. 22).  Rabbi Jesus knew his Scriptures. 

This was at the heart of Jesus’ life.

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