The Gospel of John celebrates the discipleship of the unnamed. The Samaritan woman by Jacob’s well, who runs to her people to share her experience with Jesus, is unnamed. The child who offers the five barley loaves and two fish so that Jesus can feed over five thousand people is also unnamed. The beloved disciple who plays a role bigger than Simon Peter in the story is also unnamed. But most important of all, the only disciple who we find at the beginning and at the end of Jesus’s life is also unnamed: Jesus’s mother.
As the number of confirmed deaths in Gaza pass 50,000, the world that stands with Palestine has begun putting together a list of heroes. From world leaders whose hearts are in the right place, to doctors, nurses, volunteers, and journalists who have offered their lives so that others may live. John’s Gospel reminds us that for every named hero that we should celebrate, there are ten or more unnamed ones we must never forget. In Gaza. In Myanmar. In the Philippines...
We find two unnamed people—Jesus’s mother and the beloved disciple—at the foot of the cross. Jesus says to them, “Woman behold your son; behold your mother.” Jesus asks that his two faithful disciples take care of each other.
Love is the key theme of the Gospel of John. God chose to become human because of love. The world is supposed to be blessed by our love for each other. Jesus in John leaves his followers only one commandment—for us to love one another as Jesus loved us. Mothers behold your sons; sons behold your mothers; parents behold your children; children behold your parents. We are all members of the household of God and our primary task is to live in love for each other: each one willing to offer one’s life for the other.
The word is Agape. It is love that is not based on emotion. It is love that is not based on relation. It is love based on decision. Right now, there are mothers who have lost sons and daughters. Let us choose to be their sons and daughters. Right now, there are children who have lost their parents. Let us choose to be their parents.
Then Jesus says, “I thirst.” Again, in the Johannine story, particularly in his conversation with the Samaritan woman, Jesus is the Living Water. Thus, many people find it puzzling that the one who says he is Living Water is suddenly thirsty. And he is given vinegar by his executioners. Like Matthew’s, Mark’s, and Luke’s quotations, John’s “I thirst” represents a quote from the Old Testament--Psalm 69.
Faith draws strength from the past. Like Daniel’s three friends who faced death yet believed in a God who will deliver them as God has delivered in the past, Jesus affirms the same unwavering faith in a deliverer God. And God did deliver Daniel’s three friends. And God delivered David (who wrote the Psalm). And Jesus believed God will deliver him, as well.
Then Jesus says, “It is finished.” The End. Jesus is dead. Remember the only commandment Jesus left his followers in the Gospel of John—greater love has no one than this, that one offers one’s life for another? Jesus does exactly that. His life was an offering. And we are challenged to do the same. At the beach Jesus asks Simon Peter three times if he loves Jesus… We are asked the same thing.
Can we choose to love as Jesus loved? Jesus was not alone when he faced the cross. And his last words on the cross affirmed his faith in God, in people, in the transforming power of love and life, and empowered him to face death.
Psalm 22 which Jesus quotes in Matthew and Mark, Psalm 69 which he quotes in John, and Psalm 31 which he quotes in Luke celebrate a God who delivers, a God who liberates, a God who will always take the side of the poor, the marginalized, and the oppressed, a God of widows, orphans, and strangers, a God who will not forsake us. And God did not forsake Jesus.
My friends, are we ready to choose to love as Jesus did? In life, in death, and in what awaits us beyond death, do we believe in the God who will never forsake us?
(Fifth of Five)
*Image of mother and son adopting each other, Microsoft 365 copilot generated.
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