Tuesday, 11 March 2025

The Father, the Son, and us

Jesus speaks near theTreasury, JamesTissot1836–1902, Brooklyn Museum

 Reflection for Morning Worship with the Communion of Brendan the Navigator on Tuesday 11th March 2025

In the reading we’ve just heard (John5:19-29), Jesus gives us a profound description of his relationship with the God he calls his Father, and also with you and with me, his followers. I really can’t do justice to its depth and breadth in this brief reflection. So I shall confine myself to just a few points.

The background to the passage is this. Jesus has just healed a paralysed man on the Sabbath, which some perceived to be a breach of rigid Sabbath laws. When they protested, he told them, ‘My Father is still working, and I am still working’. They already hate him, but now they want ‘all the more to kill him, because he was not only breaking the Sabbath, but was also calling God his own Father, thereby making himself equal to God’ (John 5:17-18)

Jesus boldly says this to those who want to do away with him. The Father loves the Son, and the Son does only what the Father does. The Son gives life, just as the Father gives Life. And the Father does not judge, but gives that power to the Son. Notice that Jesus does not explicitly call himself the Son of God – that would have been a red rag to his persecutors. But he does so implicitly, when he says, ‘Very truly, I tell you, anyone who hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life, and does not come under judgement, but has passed from death to life.’ How comforting that is to those of us who follow Jesus!

Jesus goes on to say, ‘For just as the Father has life in himself, so he has granted the Son also to have life in himself; and he has given him authority to execute judgement, because he is the Son of Man.’ The implications of this for us, his followers, who hear his word and believe in God the Father who sent him, are breath-taking. We will be judged not by some remote and awesome God who exercises the power of life or death on us, but by the Son of Man, the Son of Man who has lived like us on this earth, and knows us and our human frailties from the inside out. It is the Son of Man who grants us eternal life, and will judge us mercifully.

But that does not absolve us from the consequences of our actions. When we hear Jesus’s voice on the day of judgement, when we come out from our graves, ‘those who have done good’ will rise ‘to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil, to the resurrection of condemnation.’

 

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