
FIFTH SUNDAY OF LENT – YEAR B
(Jeremiah 31:31-34; Hebrews 5:7-9; John 12: 20-33)
Theme: Let us journey inwards – into our hearts – a look into our spiritual attitude
Reflection:
Building the bridge
- Today, the fifth Sunday of Lent, the Church makes us reflect over our Lenten travel, not anymore outward, but inwards. We are asked to enter deep into our heart to see what we are and how we are in front the mystery of the passion and death of Jesus.
- We are asked to make a different gear of our life’s vehicle. We have gone forward enough and more looking at the cross of Jesus in the Sundays passed. Today we have to look into ourselves – with the deeper examination of the conscience – and measure our spiritual status. Let us make a journey neither forwards nor backwards but inwards. We need to guide our life’s vehicle not forward with the top gear nor backward with the reverse gear but with a different gear. Our Lenten life today and from today is to be a travel in the tunnel. Tunnel in which we see dim and the tunnel in which we slow down our vehicle. This dimness and slowness, yet, do not make us to stop our journey but to make it with lot of care and with profound look. This is what we are asked to do: a profound look into the tunnel of our Lenten life.
- We have arrived to this tunnel not just jumping here and there in the void. We have arrived here always preparing ourselves to this type of tunnel journey. For this we have prepared in the period of four weeks gradually and step by step. To recall how we have come here and standing in front the tunnel we have to make small retrieval of the past. To start this retrieval: we have made our journey on the first Sunday of lent, from the desert of desperation to the garden of resurrection of hope. On the second Sunday our journey was from the mount of transfiguration to the mount of glorification. On the third our passage is from the Law of the Lord on the Mount Zion to the indwelling of the Spirit. And finally, in the fourth Sunday, our journey was from the Cross of the Lord on which Jesus was lifted up to the bosom of God’s love for whole humanity, thus participating in the love of God through the daily cross we carry.
- This retrieval seems to have the character of repetition but all the more it has the character of building the bridge. By recalling the reflection of the previous Sunday we make a bridge between the last Sunday and present Sunday so that our travel is not a ‘jump’ but a true passing from what was before to what is now. In turn, this bridge will help to make our journey flexible either to go back into recollection of what we have done or to go forward with the experience of the past into the hope of future. What happens if this bridge is not built with continuations of meditations? We jump wherever we want, finally losing the ‘chain’ or ‘the steps’ of the laden. It will make the Christian reflection of life difficult because we fail to connect our present to the past in backward direction and to the future in the forward direction.
- Christian life has to be always in these both directions: backward into the memorial of Jesus life for us and forward into the participation of our in that of Jesus’. Otherwise we miss the real content of our existence. Only when these two directions are given due importance our present life will take journey inwards. Journey towards these two directions, firstly, provide the necessity of building the bridge for the present life and secondly, give the possibility of entering into profundity of our life. This is what we are asked to make. A journey inwards. A passage into the tunnel. A deeper examination of our spiritual life.
The Law of the New Covenant is written inside and on the Hearts
- The question we face here is: Why should we journey inwards? An answer would be in two movements/or two moments.
- First movement: to participate in the death and burial of Jesus Christ: we are approaching very fast to the important day of passion, death and the burial of Jesus. Until today, with our Lenten preparations, we have looked up with the open eyes to see the suffering Jesus on the cross in our past reflections. We have looked around with the open minds to see the needs of others. We have looked straight with the open heart to see follow Jesus with prayer, fasting and charity. This looking “upwards”, “around”, and “straight” have made us participate in the passion of Jesus. But our journey should not stop here. It has to continue not only to death but to the burial. Our Lenten travel is not only to the cross of Christ but to the Tomb of Christ. With the Good Friday we fully participate in the death and the burial of Jesus. We have to be buried with Jesus. This is the final point of the passion of Jesus. Only after this death-burial, follows the resurrection. We are not stopped with the death but we have to go forward till the burial in the tomb. This aspect of “inward journey” reminds us, first, our participation in the death and burial of Jesus. Therefore, our journey is from the suffering and passion to the death and burial of Jesus. This reality of the tomb has the character of “entering into” and thus a journey deeper and inward.
- Second movement: to see the inscription of God’s love in our hearts. This is the fruit of the first reading of today. God promises a New Covenant that He would make in the future. God announces this though the prophet Jeremiah. By the arrival of this prophecy, people are in the slavery of Babylon. They have been punished with the deportation into Babylon just because they have ‘neglected’ and ‘destroyed’ the Covenant that God has made with them through Moses. God has already made an alliance between him and his people by giving them the Law in the form of two tablets of Ten Commandments. He assured to his people his continuous fatherly presence if only they are faithful to this covenant. But soon people have given up their fidelity to Him. They have transgressed his ways. They have travelled a long way away from Him. They have ‘Broken’ the bridge of the communion with God by ‘becoming unfaithful’ to the promise they made to Him. With this the Covenant of the Law is broken. But God is never unfaithful. His fidelity towards his people is for ages and forever. He wanted to bring these people back from the cries of slavery. He wanted to lead them out from the bondage with the promise of another covenant which will last long. With the failure of the Covenant of the Law, God has decided to make a Covenant of the Spirit. That’s what God promises through the prophet Jeremiah. He promises that the day/days will come (in those days – v.33) when He would stabilize and conclude forever the relationship with his people with the ‘New Alliance’ (this is the alliance – v. 33). In this alliance there is no place anymore for the Law that passes away, but for the Spirit that lives forever. With this alliance the law will not be anymore “outside” but “within”/ “inside”: “I will place my law inside them, I will write it on their heart” (v. 33). There is a need, thus, for us to make our journey inwards: to lean down to read and to live the law that is written in our hearts. There is no more law outside. We find, however, the outside ‘prescriptions’ of the predications, outside meditations of the Word of God (scriptures), and outside law that appears in the church and in the community of faithful. But all these ‘outer’ – ‘outward’ – expressions will help us and they only act as pointers for our ‘inward journey’. The authentic life always starts from within the heart and with the following of the spirit’s will inside us. That is the reason why the church asks us to ‘make our journey inwards’ – to examine our spiritual attitude in the confrontation with the passion-death-burial of Jesus.
Grain of wheat in the earth – gain of life in heaven
- Our inward journey, as we have already meditated, leads us to the profound and full participation in the death-burial reality of Jesus. This truth is explicitly explained by Jesus in the gospel passage of today. Jesus brings here an analogy that takes us deeper into the comprehension of not only Jesus’ death, but also its meaning for us today.
- We can, without dealing much with the exegesis, immediately enter into the most touching verse of today’s gospel: “Very truly I tell you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains just a single grain; but if it dies, it bears much fruit” (v. 24). Its context is that Jesus has already entered into Jerusalem and it is his final entry into it before dying. In fact, it is with the view of “facing the death” that he has come to Jerusalem. This passage falls within this immediate context of Jesus’ entry (John 12:12-19). As soon as he entered some Greeks wishes to see him (vv. 20-21). But the truth of his death is not directly revealed to the Greeks who came to see him but to the disciples who mediated them (v.22).
- Jesus explains “his hour of glory” (v.23) and at the same time “his hour of losing his life” (v.25). His hour of glorification has just started with his entry into Jerusalem “symbolically” and “prophetically” with the braches of palm trees and with the recalling of the prophecy (John 12:13-14). And after a while He would go forward to “lose his life” (“those who love their life lose it, and those who hate their life in this world will keep it for eternal life” – v.25), by inviting the death by giving himself up to the soldiers.
- Between these two “hours” which his in reality “the same hour” of glorification and death, there is a discourse about the grain of wheat which falls into the earth and dies. Jesus comes the way round: in the usual understanding, there should be first falling, dying and then glorification; but here, Jesus starts with hour of glorification (v.23) and bearing fruit (v.24) and only after this, the loosing of life (death – v.25). We may understanding two aspects from this:
o First, that these three elements – glory-fruit-death – are not the three different realities which stand opposing each other but they are of the same one reality of Jesus passion-death-resurrection;
o Second, that it is in the view of glory that Jesus is going to bear much fruit by his death. Though his glory comes first in the discourse it is actually the motivating (which gives courage and hope) element that makes him to face the passion and death. Apart from this, we find in every word and deed of Jesus on earth, ‘glorification’ has been given the priority.
- Jesus himself has made his journey “inwards” – into the tunnel of tomb: Like a grain of wheat which has fallen and has produced much fruit, Jesus also entered into the tomb – under the earth – and has produced a fruit of life for all and life in abundance. He has remained in the womb of the earth for three days. He has sprouted again from there breaking forth the hard earth – the power of darkness. His final victory over the death and evil has come only with his entrance into tomb and with his ‘stay’ in the earth for three days. We understand two things here: first, it was necessary to enter into the womb of the earth in order to rise up again; and second, this period of darkness is temporary.
- This entrance of Jesus “inwards” or into the earth is a spark of hope for all to face similar situations. As the seed ‘break open’ in order to sprout, even before he breaks open the earth, the power of darkness, Jesus ‘splits’ the death itself. The split of the seed or the split of death finds its pre-figuration in the OT. Out of the ‘split of the waters of the red sea’ God has paved the way to his people into the New Land of milk and honey. So also out of the split of the seed of death Jesus has prepared a sure way to all those who believe in him to enter into new life of resurrection. Two splits at the same time of the seed that falls into the ground: it breaks open itself first and it also breaks the earth. The first split is the victory over death and the second split is the victory over the powers of the earth. It is for this purpose Jesus already proclaims that “When I am lifted up from the earth… I will attract everyone to me” (v.32). The seed is buried and the death is buried, not to remain there forever, but only to ‘sprout’ into new life. This is the mystery of the passion-death-burial-resurrection of Jesus. We are called here to participate in this mystery and for this we are preparing ourselves. All will be possible for us if only we become the seed buried in the ground.
‘Soiled seed’ has the character of transformation – we are the seed fallen in the ground
- For the seed there is no death. What seems to be death is not a real death. It is only transformation. Seed does not die. It only ‘breaks open’. The seed that is soiled takes another form. In other words, the grounded seed becomes transformed into the plant. Therefore, the ground in which the seed is soiled is a place of transformation and the time that the seed needs to split is the time for maturity. It seems to be having all negative shades: seed that is small/ devalued, ground that is dark and hard, its growth is uncertain since it is invisible. But on the contrast and in reality, it has only positive angle: to transform itself and to get matured.
- When we are in the suffering or difficulty or loneliness or in any kind of problem which leads us to darkness of desperation, it is, in reality, a time/place for our transformation. It is no more time for crying but a time for preparing ourselves to be strong. It is no more a time for pain but a time for change.
- It is a time for the spiritual purification: A seed enters into the soil in order to be there for some time until it gets its time to sprout. In the Christian faith we can mean that when we are in this kind of situation, we also set out for the spiritual growth. We have to consider it as the ‘time offered’ for our personal assessment, examination of our attitude, correction of our behavior, above all, to become strong in spirit.
- Here we have Christian meaning for the suffering: It is the time for our journey inwards – journey deeper into our hearts. It is a chance to measure our strengths and weaknesses. It is an opportunity to put full stop for the weakness that we have acknowledged and to develop our possible strengths. It is time to be in the ground of spiritual preparation. It is a possibility given to us so that we become spirit empowered. And we know that this burial in the ground (like the seed) of suffering is only for bearing much spiritual fruit.
- For this reason, we should never worry about inviting these sufferings or to confront them with faith when we find them on our way. Jesus has done exactly this way. He has invited the cross and he went to face the death without fear. Christian attitude should be exactly opposite to that of the world. The world does not understand this. The people who cling on this world and its goods do not have any sense for this kind of reality. They just consider this as the fate or as the untimely happening or devil’s work. They either cry over it or shout at it. They either blame God for doing this or they condemn themselves. They either lose their personal and emotional balance or they become arrogant and play over others. For us, who believe in Christ who has allowed this reality to take place in his life, it is a participation in the same footsteps of Jesus that we also arrive to the reception of the crown of life.
- The only thing that the Church is exalting us to do is: to make our journey inwards – into the inner life. There we find solution for our problems. There we find resolutions for our further life. There we find consolation for our present life. Because, it is there we find the law of the spirit written; because, it is there the word of God cuts through and enters as the double edged sword; because, it is there we find the starting point for our sprouting to new and transformed life. Let us therefore, as the Lenten task and preparation, journey inwards – into tunnel of our hearts – and it is a look into our spiritual growth that will enable us to fully participate in the death-burial-resurrection of Jesus.



