Today used to be called Passion Sunday. Well, the latest
lectionary – which tells us all the recommended readings for any given day –
only calls it the 5th Sunday of Lent. Then it adds the words
“Passiontide begins”. Well then, let’s call it Passion Sunday.
The Gospel for today (John 12.20-33) tells how some Greek
people came to the one of the disciples, Philip, presumably having heard about
him and his teaching about God or his miracles, asking “Sir, we wish to see
Jesus”. My sermon this morning, at 10.00 on zoom and remaining available, looks
at what image they might have had or wanted. We can all use Passiontide to look
at what image of Jesus we have acquired and whether it truly embraces his love
and his passionate sacrifice so that we see a clearer picture of Jesus to
inspire our lives.
However, it’s not entirely clear whether the Greeks ever
met Jesus – if they did they certainly got more than they might ever have
expected. For this is the time when Jesus exclaims, with passion, that “The
hour has come”. The hour, Lord? Jesus speaks of how a grain of wheat needs to
die in the earth in order to bear fruit. Is this a parable Lord? What does it
mean for us? Jesus goes deeper – if you love your life you will lose it, but
hate your worldly life and you will gain true eternal life. Hard words, yet it
is about gaining a different perspective on life, that holding onto the ways of
this world is no way of gaining the richness of eternal fellowship with God. Hard
talk indeed.
Jesus’ passion to bring people into God’s Kingdom, to
offer true newness of life, is going to be costly. The grain must indeed die.
His feelings are clear in his words “Now my soul is troubled”. The pain of the
situation causes God’s own Son to feel anguish and uncertainty. And yet, Jesus
points to the necessity of the cross, knowing how painful and challenging it is
likely to be. And yet he accepts the cross, for us. “When I am lifted up from
the earth, I will draw all people to myself”. What a glorious vision; what a
sacrifice. Will we allow ourselves to be drawn closer to Jesus, to God, this
Passiontide? For we too can ask of the Lord “I wish to see Jesus”.
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