Sunday
Gospel narratives during Eastertide come with a certain pattern. On
Cycle A, for the first three Sundays of Easter, the Gospel readings (John
20:1-9; John 20:12-31; Luke 24:13-35) address how the disciples struggled in
recognizing the Resurrection of Christ. Their joy kicked in later, as they
began the Resurrection Sunday with fear and confusion over the empty tomb.
Then, there is a shift from the Fourth Sunday on, with sole focus on
Christology. In the Gospel readings for the Fourth Sunday, Fifth
Sunday, and Sixth Sunday of Easter on Cycle A (John 10:1-10; John 14:1-12; John
14:15-21), the Christological insight is progressively leading to Trinity,
while being addressed in its relation to us.
In the
Gospel Reading for the Fourth Sunday of Easter on Cycle A, John 10:1-10, Jesus
reveals his Christological identity as the gateway, through which we are saved.
In this Gospel narrative, he also says that he came to this world to give us
life abundantly. Jesus is the gateway to salvation and the giver of abundant
life. In this Gospel narrative, neither the Father nor the Holy
Spirit is addressed. Its focus is Christ’s relation to us. Jesus first begins
to address his Christological identity in his relation to us. The fact that
this is how we begin our Eastertide Christological Gospel reading on Good
Shepherd Sunday reminds that Jesus is really reaching out to us.
The Gospel
Reading for the Fifth Sunday of Easter on Cycle A, John 14:1-12, describes how
Jesus mentions the Father in his relation to Him. First, Jesus
speaks of the Father as the owner of the House, in which he prepares τόπος/topos (place)
for us. Our place in the Father’s House (John 14:3) is indicative of
the New Eden, envisioned in Revelation 22. This vision of our
ultimate “home” in juxtaposition between the Father’s House (John 14:2) and New
Eden (Revelation 22) follows the Heavenly Wedding of the Lamb (Christ) and the
his bride (Church) in Revelation 21.
Now, Jesus
hints his departure, Ascension, to be with the Father in heaven. He indicates
his reason to depart as to prepare a heavenly place for us in Father’s House.
This is where Jesus begins to relate us to the Father through him. However,
in response to this, Thomas asks Jesus how we can know the way he is going as
we do not know where Jesus is going (John 14:5). To this inquiry of Thomas,
Jesus begins revealing more of his Christological identity as the way, the
truth, and the life, as well as the only gateway to the Father (John 14:6).
Christ as
the way (ὁδός/hodos), as well as the gateway, to the Father reflects
Jesus’ self-identification as the sheep gate in John 10:9. He is the
way, while he leads the way, as the Good Shepherd, to the verdant pastures, and
to the Father.
Christ’s
self-identification as the truth reflects that he is also the Word (λόγος
/logos -דָּבָר /dabar) because the Word is the truth (John 17:17 ; 2 Samuel 7:28). This
also echoes the Johannine Christological definition as “ὁ Λόγος σὰρξ ἐγένετο/
o Logos sarx egeneto”(John 1:14), which is rooted in John 1:1, “Λόγος- Θεὸς/Logos-Theos” homoousis.
Tertullian, in his “Adversus Praxean”, also addresses this Logos-Theos
homoousis, further in relation to Sophia, connecting John 1:1,
14 to Proverbs 8:22-31.
Christ’s
identity as the life (ζωή/zoe ) is reflected in the Living Bread of
Life, which leads to eternal life (John 6:51). This Christological identity as
life (zoe) is also echoed in John 10:28, which reflects John 10:10.
Jesus’ self-identification with ζωή/zoe is also associated
with the life-giving breath (נִשְׁמַת/nishmah), which God the Father poured into
the molded clay to turn it into Adam (Genesis 2:7). This life-giving
breath of God is also reflected in the risen Christ’s offer of his breath as
the Holy Spirit to the disciples on the evening of his Resurrection day (John
20:22). By linking Genesis 2:7 to John 20:22, we understand that the essence of
Jesus’ identity as the life (ζωή/zoe) is נִשְׁמַת/nishmah (life-giving breath). The zoe-nishmah juxtaposition
in Jesus’ Chiristological identity is associating him with the Holy Spirit , “ Πνεῦμα
Ἅγιον (pneuma hagion)”. Thus, the Gospel Reading for the Fifth
Sunday of Easter on Cycle A (John 14:1-12) also signals that Eastertide is
consummated with Pentecost Sunday, which is followed by Trinity Sunday.
Receiving
Christ as life, in addition to the way and the truth, we can assure that we are
not just flesh (σάρξ/sarx) to die but also not just as a spirit (πνεῦμα/pneuma).
Rather, we also have the kind of spirit God puts His life through His breath (נִשְׁמַת/nishmah) in Christ so that we can have life
as a living soul (נָ֫פֶשׁ/nephesh or ψυχή/pusuche, psyche). Furthermore, from
a Sacramental perspective, Jesus’ self-identification as the life ζωή/zoe -נִשְׁמַת/nishmah also reflects Christ as the
life-giving Bread (John 6:63).
Jesus is the
way leading to the Father, whose House in heaven, has a place for us. At the
same time, he is the truth, reflected in the Word, and the life, in
juxtaposition to the Bread of Life and the Holy Spirit. Following
this Christological self-identification, Jesus further tells more about him in
relation to the Father. In fact, this leads to the Father-Son consubstantiality
or homoousis, which is related to the hypostatic union among the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit in Holy Trinity.
Following
his self-identification as the way, the truth, and the life , while asserting
that he is the only way to the Father (John 14:6), Jesus now tells that knowing
him leads to knowing the Father (John 14:7). Furthermore, Jesus unfolds his
Christological identity in relation to the Father in these words, “I am in
the Father and the Father is in me” (John 14:10, 11). This echoes
these words of Jesus on his Christological identity in relation to the Father,
“I and the Father are one”(John 10:30). The nature of Father-Son
relation is understood as homoousis, as well as consubstantiality,
first officially recognized at the First Nicene Council (325 AD), as “οὐσίας
τοῦ Πατρος/homoousis to patros”(consubstantial with the Father) in the
Nicene Creed.
Following
this revelation of Christological identity, in the Gospel Reading for the Sixth
Sunday of Easter on Cycle A (John 14:15:21), all the Christological revelation
from the Fourth Sunday and Fifth Sunday of Easter now comes to its full circle
in the context of the Trinity. Because the Sixth Sunday of Easter is the
Sunday before the Ascension, which is followed by the Pentecost, all three
persons of the Trinity: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, are revealed
in their unique relationship in this Gospel narrative. This way, we are ready
for the Ascension, the Pentecost, and Trinity Sunday, which follows Pentecost
Sunday.
Through the
Johannine Gospel readings for the Fourth and the Fifth Sundays of Easter, the
Christological identity with the homoousis shared between the
Father and the Son is revealed. These Gospel narratives also implicate that
Jesus invites us to be on the way to the Father in juxtaposition to be with the
way, which is Jesus himself. Now, in the Gospel story for the Sixth
Sunday of Easter, Jesus introduces us to the Holy Spirit, as another Παράκλητος/parakletos (Advocate,
Counselor), in place of his physical presence. According to Jesus, this Holy
Spirit comes to us and to be with us, upon his departure from us to be with the
Father and to prepare a place for us in Father’s House in heaven. In
introducing the Holy Spirit to us this way, Jesus also assures that we will not
be left like orphans.
The Gospel
narrative for the Sixth Sunday (John 14:15-21) begins with Jesus’ statement on
a condition of our relation to him: love. According to him, our love for him
means observing his commandments (v.15). This means that our love for Christ is
backed by our obedience to him. On this condition, Jesus promises
that the Father will send us another Παράκλητος/parakletos to
be with us forever (v. 16), and he calls this Advocate as the Spirit of truth
(v. 17).
It is
important to note that John 14, from which the Gospel readings for the Fifth
Sunday (vv. 1-12) and the Sixth Sunday (vv. 15-21) are taken, follows the
narrative on the Mandatum Novum to love one another as Jesus
has done so to us upon indicating his departure (John 13:31-35). This entire
Christological discourse in these two Easter Sundays’ Gospel readings from John
14 are part of his Last Supper discourse, which start with the foot washing of
the disciples by Jesus (John 13:1-17) and ends with series of his prayers (John
17:1-26). With this background, we can see Jesus’ statement on loving him as
observing his commandments (John 14:15) echoes his Mandatum Novum to
love each other as his disciples (John 13:34-35). Relating ourselves to Jesus
as his disciples means to observe his commandments, in which loving is the most
important. Thus, there is a reciprocal love between Christ and us,
as we observe his commandments, including the Mandatum Novum.
Because
Jesus calls us to love as his Mandatum Novum for us upon
reminding of his nearing departure (John 13:31-35), his statement to link
loving him and observing his commandments in John 14:15 also implies his
imminent farewell. Jesus’ departure has a parallel meaning: his death on the
Cross, as this was told during the Last Supper, and his Ascension, as the world
cannot see him any more (v.19).
In addition
of John 13:18-35, Jesus’s departure is indicated in John 14:1-14, in which
Thomas asked Jesus the way he is going and Philip asked to show the Father, to
whom Jesus is going, as in the Gospel reading for the Fifth Sunday. The Gospel
story for the Sixth Sunday (John 14:15-21) follows this progressive revelation
of Jesus’ impending departure. With this increasing imminence, Jesus introduces
the Holy Spirit as another Παράκλητος/parakletos in John 14:16
and further in v. 26 to assure that we will not be left in the world like
orphans (v.18, echoes also in v. 27, given “ὀρφανός/orphan” means
not only as “orphan” but also “being desolate”). The way Jesus connects us to
the third person of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit, as another Παράκλητος/parakletos,
rather than Πνεύματος Ἁγίου/pneumatos hagiou, in John 14:16 is to
make Πνεύματος Ἁγίου/pneumatos hagiou personified for us so
that we will not feel abandoned like orphans in the world, where he is no
longer seen in his flesh. This shows his intimac toward us in the way he
relates himself to us. This intimacy is repeatedly echoes in his statements: He
is in us and we in him, in juxtaposition to his presence in the Father and
Father in him. Now, we understand that the third person of the Trinity, the
Holy Spirit, is not a mere invisible pneuma but parakletos,
who is just like Jesus the Son, the second person in the Trinity, himself. This
is why Jesus put “another” to parakletos in introducing him to
us.
In John
14:16, Jesus first brings up the Holy Spirit in a personified form with male
gender, as “ἄλλον Παράκλητον/allon Parakleton/s”( another
Advocate). In the following verse, he explains this another Advocate
as “τὸ Πνεῦμα τῆς ἀληθείας / to Pneuma tes aletheias” (the
Spirit of truth). Given Jesus’ self-identification in John 14:6, “I
am the way, the truth, and the life”(Ἐγώ εἰμι ἡ ὁδὸς καὶ ἡ ἀλήθεια καὶ ἡ
ζωή/Ego eimi he hodos kai he aletheia kai he zoe), another
Advocate (Palakletos) as the Spirit of truth is Jesus as the truth himself in
essence. Thefore, there is a hypostasis between Jesus, the
Son, and the Holy Spirit, whom Jesus promises to be sent out of the Father to
us on Pentecost.
Jesus has
introduced the Holy Spirit in his hypostatic relation to him, through truth, as
another Advocate and the Spirit of truth (John 14:16-17), on a condition that
we love him by observing his commands (John 14:15). Loving Jesus by observing
his commadments means being his sheep and loving him as our Good Shepherd,
because we, as his sheep, know him and listen to his voice (John 10:4, 14, 27).
Jesus promises the Holy Spirit as another Advocate as we remain with him and he
remains with us by loving him and following his commandments, even though he
leaves the world to be with the Father. Our Good Shepherd is not
going to leave us, his sheep, like orphans (John 14:18), and we continue to
hear his commandments in his voice and observe them. Our Advocate (Παράκλητος/parakletos)
is always with us, in flesh until Ascension and in spirit upon Pentecost. This
is why, in John 14:16, the Holy Spirit is “another” (ἄλλον /allos)
Palakletos rather than “different”( ἕτερος/heteros) Parakletos.
Though Jesus
as a being in human flesh, which came to this world through Mary’s Immaculate
body and sustained death as resurrected, is about to leave, we are assured of
his presence with us through his promise in John 14:18. The original
Greek word for “orphans” in this verse, is ὀρφανός,/ orphanos, and
it means more than being orphan. It also means being bereft, grieving, being
desolate due to having no father. Given this multitude of meaning of ὀρφανός,/
orphanos, Jesus is assuring us of comfort by not leaving us in a desolate
condition, bereft of the Good Shepherd, even though he is leaving, by his
promise of another Advocate, the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of truth. For this
reason, we can also see ἄλλον Παράκλητον/allon Parakleton (another
Advocate) in John 14:16 as another Comforter. In fact, the
Greek word, “parakletos” (παράκλητος) etymologically means to “I called
(myself) to be beside” (para – to be beside + kaleo – call”). Thus,
John 14:15-18 describe Jesus’ assurance of his “Immanuel” identity, reflecting
these words of him, “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit, and teaching them to obey all that I have commanded you. And surely I
am with you always, to the very end of the age” (Matthew 28:19-20). We
love Jesus, our Good Sherpherd and observe his commandment. Thus, we not only
love one another as he has loved us but also go out to serve him as “fishers of
people”, as he remains with us until he returns at the end of time.
By John
14:17, Jesus has fully disclosed his Christological identity in relation to the
hypostatic Trinitarian unity, first with the Father-Son homoousis, in
which he finds himself. By John 14:18, Jesus assures of his
perpetual presence with us as Παράκλητος./ Parakletos (Advocate,
Comforter, Counselor), which is the essence of him being our Good Shepherd. In
John 14:19, Jesus now reminds us that his presence as our Good Shepherd, our
accompanying Advocate and Comforter, is found in us, because he is in us, as we
are in him. Because of this unique reciprocal relationship with Christ, we can
still see him in the eyes of faith, while the world will no longer see him
after the Ascension. Because we can see Christ even he is in the
Holy Spirit, the Spirit of truth, Christ further tells that we can recognize (γινώσκω /ginosko) that
he is in the Father and we are in him and he is in us (John 14:20). This
links our reciprocal unity with Christ, our sheep-shepherd relationship, to the
Father through him and his homoousis with Him. Echoing
John 14:15, Jesus further reassures of our intimate relationship with the
Father through him in John 14:21. At the same time, he reminds us that loving
him by observing his commandments also means to love the Father. Because
of the homoousis between Jesus and the Father, we love the
Fatehr as we love Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son.
Now we see
how the Gospel readings for the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Sundays on Cycle A
progressively reveal Christological insights not only in relation to us but
also in the context of Trinity to prepare us for Ascension and Pentecost. First,
through the Gospel reading for the Fourth Sunday (John 10:1-10), Jesus tells
his relationship to us. Then, with the Gospel readings for the Fifth Sunday and
the Sixth Sunday (John 14:1-12; 15-21), Jesus gradually reveals his
Christological identity in relation to the Father and to the Holy Spirit, while
he continues to speak of his relation to us and now paralles it to his relation
to the Father.
Jesus said,
“I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes
to the Father except through me” (John 14:6), as read in the Gospel reading
for the Fifth Sunday of Easter on Cycle A. Now, we know that the
Father is in hypostasis with Jesus the Son (John 10:30; 14:10, 11, 20), our
first Parakletos, who was conceived in the Immaculate womb of Mary
by the Holy Spirit (Matthew 1:18), sent by the Father. Then, Jesus
the Son promises that the Father send another Parakletos to
assure of God’s perpetual presence with us (John 14:16) and calls him (Parakletos)
the Spirit of truth (John 14:17), alluding him to the Holy Spirit, who comes to
us on Pentecost (i.e. John 16:13). Thus, being with Jesus, the first Parakletos,
is being on the way of the truth and the life to the Father. To make
sure that we complet our journey to the Father, Jesus makes sure that Parakletos continues
to remain with us in the Holy Spirit (John 14:16-17), even though he needs to
return to the Father in heaven through the Ascension. He explains that his
Ascension is necessary for another Parakletos, who is the Holy
Spirit, the Third Person in Trinity, to come to us (John 16:7). Another
reason for him to Ascend to the Father in heaven is to prepare a place in the
Father’s House in heaven for us (John 14:2-3), namely to prepare to take us to
the “New Eden” at the eschaton, as envision in Revelation 21-22.
Thus, Jesus’ Christological identity to be the way to the Father in John 14:6
is to bring us to be grafeted to the hypostatic union of the Trunity, shared by
the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. This way of Jesus to bring
us to the Father in the Trinity’s hypostatic union with the Son and the Holy
Spirit is, indeed, reflected in these words of Jesus, “I am in my Father,
and you are in me, and I am in you”(John 14:20) and, furthermore, in John
15:1-5, where Jesus sees us as the branches connected to him, the vine, taken
care by the Father, the gardener.
Now, we are
ready for Ascension and Pentecost, because we know that these events are
absolutely necessary to bring us to the Father in the Trinity.
Below, you
will find summaries of all Easter Sunday Gospel narratives on Cycle A to see
thematic patterns: a shift from the recognizing the Resurrection mode to the
Christological mode leading to Trinity. This set of summaries is
taken from my slides, which I use for my scripture teaching sessions.
Resurrection
Sunday:
Anxiety-provoking discovery of the empty tomb (John 20:1-9).
Second
Sunday of Easter (Divine Mercy Sunday): The risen Christ appeared to the disciples in the
Upper Room, anxiety gave its way to joy of realizing the Resurrection, Thomas
came to believe (John 20:12-31).
Third
Sunday of Easter:
Joyful recognition of the risen Lord in the breaking of bread in Emmaus,
finding the heart burning with passion, as a grieving heart is enlightened by
the Word (Luke 24:13-35).
Fourth
Sunday of Easter:
Christ as the gateway to salvation, the giver of abundant life (John
10:1-10) cf. Christ as the Living Bread of Life, who gives eternal
life (John 6:32-58).
Fifth
Sunday of Easter:
Christ as the way, the truth, and the life; the Father is in Christ, and Christ
in the Father (The Father – the Son consubstantiality, homoousis….i.e.
John 10:30) (John 14:1-12).
Sixth
Sunday of Easter:
Christ as the Emmanuel: Christ being eternal parakletos (which
means to advocate and comfort by being “besides”(para)), extending
the essence of the Father-Son consubstantiality to us, as we obediently remain
with him and observe his commandments (John 14:15-21).
Ascension: Christ’s farewell
address and commissioning to us with his commandment to make disciples of all
nations (to go as los pescados de hombres en mundo) with his
promise to remain with us (junto a nos….con nostros) as Emmanuel till
the end of time (eschatos), reflecting, “Ite, Missa Est” (Matthew
28:16-20).
Seventh
Sunday of Easter:
Completion of Jesus’ Christological identity revelation, summed in eternal
life, as he is ready to return to the Father (John 17:1-11a).
Pentecost
Sunday: Juxtaposition
of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit from the Father in Heaven in Christ’s name
(parakletos) in the Upper Room (First Reading – Acts 2:1-11) to the
risen Christ’s impartation of his breath, as the Holy Spirit, to the frightened
disciples in the Upper Room on the evening of the Resurrection (John
20:19-23).
Sunday
Gospel narratives during Eastertide come with a certain pattern. On
Cycle A, for the first three Sundays of Easter, the Gospel readings (John
20:1-9; John 20:12-31; Luke 24:13-35) address how the disciples struggled in
recognizing the Resurrection of Christ. Their joy kicked in later, as they
began the Resurrection Sunday with fear and confusion over the empty tomb.
Then, there is a shift from the Fourth Sunday on, with sole focus on
Christology. In the Gospel readings for the Fourth Sunday, Fifth
Sunday, and Sixth Sunday of Easter on Cycle A (John 10:1-10; John 14:1-12; John
14:15-21), the Christological insight is progressively leading to Trinity,
while being addressed in its relation to us.
In the
Gospel Reading for the Fourth Sunday of Easter on Cycle A, John 10:1-10, Jesus
reveals his Christological identity as the gateway, through which we are saved.
In this Gospel narrative, he also says that he came to this world to give us
life abundantly. Jesus is the gateway to salvation and the giver of abundant
life. In this Gospel narrative, neither the Father nor the Holy
Spirit is addressed. Its focus is Christ’s relation to us. Jesus first begins
to address his Christological identity in his relation to us. The fact that
this is how we begin our Eastertide Christological Gospel reading on Good
Shepherd Sunday reminds that Jesus is really reaching out to us.
The Gospel
Reading for the Fifth Sunday of Easter on Cycle A, John 14:1-12, describes how
Jesus mentions the Father in his relation to Him. First, Jesus
speaks of the Father as the owner of the House, in which he prepares τόπος/topos (place)
for us. Our place in the Father’s House (John 14:3) is indicative of
the New Eden, envisioned in Revelation 22. This vision of our
ultimate “home” in juxtaposition between the Father’s House (John 14:2) and New
Eden (Revelation 22) follows the Heavenly Wedding of the Lamb (Christ) and the
his bride (Church) in Revelation 21.
Now, Jesus
hints his departure, Ascension, to be with the Father in heaven. He indicates
his reason to depart as to prepare a heavenly place for us in Father’s House.
This is where Jesus begins to relate us to the Father through him. However,
in response to this, Thomas asks Jesus how we can know the way he is going as
we do not know where Jesus is going (John 14:5). To this inquiry of Thomas,
Jesus begins revealing more of his Christological identity as the way, the
truth, and the life, as well as the only gateway to the Father (John 14:6).
Christ as
the way (ὁδός/hodos), as well as the gateway, to the Father reflects
Jesus’ self-identification as the sheep gate in John 10:9. He is the
way, while he leads the way, as the Good Shepherd, to the verdant pastures, and
to the Father.
Christ’s
self-identification as the truth reflects that he is also the Word (λόγος
/logos -דָּבָר /dabar) because the Word is the truth (John 17:17 ; 2 Samuel 7:28). This
also echoes the Johannine Christological definition as “ὁ Λόγος σὰρξ ἐγένετο/
o Logos sarx egeneto”(John 1:14), which is rooted in John 1:1, “Λόγος- Θεὸς/Logos-Theos” homoousis.
Tertullian, in his “Adversus Praxean”, also addresses this Logos-Theos
homoousis, further in relation to Sophia, connecting John 1:1,
14 to Proverbs 8:22-31.
Christ’s
identity as the life (ζωή/zoe ) is reflected in the Living Bread of
Life, which leads to eternal life (John 6:51). This Christological identity as
life (zoe) is also echoed in John 10:28, which reflects John 10:10.
Jesus’ self-identification with ζωή/zoe is also associated
with the life-giving breath (נִשְׁמַת/nishmah), which God the Father poured into
the molded clay to turn it into Adam (Genesis 2:7). This life-giving
breath of God is also reflected in the risen Christ’s offer of his breath as
the Holy Spirit to the disciples on the evening of his Resurrection day (John
20:22). By linking Genesis 2:7 to John 20:22, we understand that the essence of
Jesus’ identity as the life (ζωή/zoe) is נִשְׁמַת/nishmah (life-giving breath). The zoe-nishmah juxtaposition
in Jesus’ Chiristological identity is associating him with the Holy Spirit , “ Πνεῦμα
Ἅγιον (pneuma hagion)”. Thus, the Gospel Reading for the Fifth
Sunday of Easter on Cycle A (John 14:1-12) also signals that Eastertide is
consummated with Pentecost Sunday, which is followed by Trinity Sunday.
Receiving
Christ as life, in addition to the way and the truth, we can assure that we are
not just flesh (σάρξ/sarx) to die but also not just as a spirit (πνεῦμα/pneuma).
Rather, we also have the kind of spirit God puts His life through His breath (נִשְׁמַת/nishmah) in Christ so that we can have life
as a living soul (נָ֫פֶשׁ/nephesh or ψυχή/pusuche, psyche). Furthermore, from
a Sacramental perspective, Jesus’ self-identification as the life ζωή/zoe -נִשְׁמַת/nishmah also reflects Christ as the
life-giving Bread (John 6:63).
Jesus is the
way leading to the Father, whose House in heaven, has a place for us. At the
same time, he is the truth, reflected in the Word, and the life, in
juxtaposition to the Bread of Life and the Holy Spirit. Following
this Christological self-identification, Jesus further tells more about him in
relation to the Father. In fact, this leads to the Father-Son consubstantiality
or homoousis, which is related to the hypostatic union among the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit in Holy Trinity.
Following
his self-identification as the way, the truth, and the life , while asserting
that he is the only way to the Father (John 14:6), Jesus now tells that knowing
him leads to knowing the Father (John 14:7). Furthermore, Jesus unfolds his
Christological identity in relation to the Father in these words, “I am in
the Father and the Father is in me” (John 14:10, 11). This echoes
these words of Jesus on his Christological identity in relation to the Father,
“I and the Father are one”(John 10:30). The nature of Father-Son
relation is understood as homoousis, as well as consubstantiality,
first officially recognized at the First Nicene Council (325 AD), as “οὐσίας
τοῦ Πατρος/homoousis to patros”(consubstantial with the Father) in the
Nicene Creed.
Following
this revelation of Christological identity, in the Gospel Reading for the Sixth
Sunday of Easter on Cycle A (John 14:15:21), all the Christological revelation
from the Fourth Sunday and Fifth Sunday of Easter now comes to its full circle
in the context of the Trinity. Because the Sixth Sunday of Easter is the
Sunday before the Ascension, which is followed by the Pentecost, all three
persons of the Trinity: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, are revealed
in their unique relationship in this Gospel narrative. This way, we are ready
for the Ascension, the Pentecost, and Trinity Sunday, which follows Pentecost
Sunday.
Through the
Johannine Gospel readings for the Fourth and the Fifth Sundays of Easter, the
Christological identity with the homoousis shared between the
Father and the Son is revealed. These Gospel narratives also implicate that
Jesus invites us to be on the way to the Father in juxtaposition to be with the
way, which is Jesus himself. Now, in the Gospel story for the Sixth
Sunday of Easter, Jesus introduces us to the Holy Spirit, as another Παράκλητος/parakletos (Advocate,
Counselor), in place of his physical presence. According to Jesus, this Holy
Spirit comes to us and to be with us, upon his departure from us to be with the
Father and to prepare a place for us in Father’s House in heaven. In
introducing the Holy Spirit to us this way, Jesus also assures that we will not
be left like orphans.
The Gospel
narrative for the Sixth Sunday (John 14:15-21) begins with Jesus’ statement on
a condition of our relation to him: love. According to him, our love for him
means observing his commandments (v.15). This means that our love for Christ is
backed by our obedience to him. On this condition, Jesus promises that
the Father will send us another Παράκλητος/parakletos to be
with us forever (v. 16), and he calls this Advocate as the Spirit of truth (v.
17).
It is
important to note that John 14, from which the Gospel readings for the Fifth
Sunday (vv. 1-12) and the Sixth Sunday (vv. 15-21) are taken, follows the
narrative on the Mandatum Novum to love one another as Jesus
has done so to us upon indicating his departure (John 13:31-35). This entire
Christological discourse in these two Easter Sundays’ Gospel readings from John
14 are part of his Last Supper discourse, which start with the foot washing of
the disciples by Jesus (John 13:1-17) and ends with series of his prayers (John
17:1-26). With this background, we can see Jesus’ statement on loving him as
observing his commandments (John 14:15) echoes his Mandatum Novum to
love each other as his disciples (John 13:34-35). Relating ourselves to Jesus
as his disciples means to observe his commandments, in which loving is the most
important. Thus, there is a reciprocal love between Christ and us,
as we observe his commandments, including the Mandatum Novum.
Because
Jesus calls us to love as his Mandatum Novum for us upon
reminding of his nearing departure (John 13:31-35), his statement to link
loving him and observing his commandments in John 14:15 also implies his
imminent farewell. Jesus’ departure has a parallel meaning: his death on the
Cross, as this was told during the Last Supper, and his Ascension, as the world
cannot see him any more (v.19).
In addition
of John 13:18-35, Jesus’s departure is indicated in John 14:1-14, in which
Thomas asked Jesus the way he is going and Philip asked to show the Father, to
whom Jesus is going, as in the Gospel reading for the Fifth Sunday. The Gospel
story for the Sixth Sunday (John 14:15-21) follows this progressive revelation
of Jesus’ impending departure. With this increasing imminence, Jesus introduces
the Holy Spirit as another Παράκλητος/parakletos in John 14:16
and further in v. 26 to assure that we will not be left in the world like
orphans (v.18, echoes also in v. 27, given “ὀρφανός/orphan” means
not only as “orphan” but also “being desolate”). The way Jesus connects us to
the third person of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit, as another Παράκλητος/parakletos,
rather than Πνεύματος Ἁγίου/pneumatos hagiou, in John 14:16 is to
make Πνεύματος Ἁγίου/pneumatos hagiou personified for us so
that we will not feel abandoned like orphans in the world, where he is no
longer seen in his flesh. This shows his intimac toward us in the way he
relates himself to us. This intimacy is repeatedly echoes in his statements: He
is in us and we in him, in juxtaposition to his presence in the Father and
Father in him. Now, we understand that the third person of the Trinity, the
Holy Spirit, is not a mere invisible pneuma but parakletos,
who is just like Jesus the Son, the second person in the Trinity, himself. This
is why Jesus put “another” to parakletos in introducing him to
us.
In John
14:16, Jesus first brings up the Holy Spirit in a personified form with male
gender, as “ἄλλον Παράκλητον/allon Parakleton/s”( another
Advocate). In the following verse, he explains this another Advocate
as “τὸ Πνεῦμα τῆς ἀληθείας / to Pneuma tes aletheias” (the
Spirit of truth). Given Jesus’ self-identification in John 14:6, “I
am the way, the truth, and the life”(Ἐγώ εἰμι ἡ ὁδὸς καὶ ἡ ἀλήθεια καὶ ἡ
ζωή/Ego eimi he hodos kai he aletheia kai he zoe), another
Advocate (Palakletos) as the Spirit of truth is Jesus as the truth himself in
essence. Thefore, there is a hypostasis between Jesus, the
Son, and the Holy Spirit, whom Jesus promises to be sent out of the Father to
us on Pentecost.
Jesus has
introduced the Holy Spirit in his hypostatic relation to him, through truth, as
another Advocate and the Spirit of truth (John 14:16-17), on a condition that
we love him by observing his commands (John 14:15). Loving Jesus by observing
his commadments means being his sheep and loving him as our Good Shepherd,
because we, as his sheep, know him and listen to his voice (John 10:4, 14, 27).
Jesus promises the Holy Spirit as another Advocate as we remain with him and he
remains with us by loving him and following his commandments, even though he
leaves the world to be with the Father. Our Good Shepherd is not
going to leave us, his sheep, like orphans (John 14:18), and we continue to
hear his commandments in his voice and observe them. Our Advocate (Παράκλητος/parakletos)
is always with us, in flesh until Ascension and in spirit upon Pentecost. This
is why, in John 14:16, the Holy Spirit is “another” (ἄλλον /allos)
Palakletos rather than “different”( ἕτερος/heteros) Parakletos.
Though Jesus
as a being in human flesh, which came to this world through Mary’s Immaculate
body and sustained death as resurrected, is about to leave, we are assured of
his presence with us through his promise in John 14:18. The original
Greek word for “orphans” in this verse, is ὀρφανός,/ orphanos, and
it means more than being orphan. It also means being bereft, grieving, being
desolate due to having no father. Given this multitude of meaning of ὀρφανός,/
orphanos, Jesus is assuring us of comfort by not leaving us in a desolate
condition, bereft of the Good Shepherd, even though he is leaving, by his
promise of another Advocate, the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of truth. For this
reason, we can also see ἄλλον Παράκλητον/allon Parakleton (another
Advocate) in John 14:16 as another Comforter. In fact, the
Greek word, “parakletos” (παράκλητος) etymologically means to “I called
(myself) to be beside” (para – to be beside + kaleo – call”). Thus,
John 14:15-18 describe Jesus’ assurance of his “Immanuel” identity, reflecting
these words of him, “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit, and teaching them to obey all that I have commanded you. And surely I
am with you always, to the very end of the age” (Matthew 28:19-20). We
love Jesus, our Good Sherpherd and observe his commandment. Thus, we not only
love one another as he has loved us but also go out to serve him as “fishers of
people”, as he remains with us until he returns at the end of time.
By John
14:17, Jesus has fully disclosed his Christological identity in relation to the
hypostatic Trinitarian unity, first with the Father-Son homoousis, in
which he finds himself. By John 14:18, Jesus assures of his
perpetual presence with us as Παράκλητος./ Parakletos (Advocate,
Comforter, Counselor), which is the essence of him being our Good Shepherd. In
John 14:19, Jesus now reminds us that his presence as our Good Shepherd, our
accompanying Advocate and Comforter, is found in us, because he is in us, as we
are in him. Because of this unique reciprocal relationship with Christ, we can
still see him in the eyes of faith, while the world will no longer see him
after the Ascension. Because we can see Christ even he is in the
Holy Spirit, the Spirit of truth, Christ further tells that we can recognize (γινώσκω /ginosko) that
he is in the Father and we are in him and he is in us (John 14:20). This
links our reciprocal unity with Christ, our sheep-shepherd relationship, to the
Father through him and his homoousis with Him. Echoing
John 14:15, Jesus further reassures of our intimate relationship with the
Father through him in John 14:21. At the same time, he reminds us that loving
him by observing his commandments also means to love the Father. Because
of the homoousis between Jesus and the Father, we love the
Fatehr as we love Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son.
Now we see
how the Gospel readings for the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Sundays on Cycle A
progressively reveal Christological insights not only in relation to us but
also in the context of Trinity to prepare us for Ascension and Pentecost. First,
through the Gospel reading for the Fourth Sunday (John 10:1-10), Jesus tells
his relationship to us. Then, with the Gospel readings for the Fifth Sunday and
the Sixth Sunday (John 14:1-12; 15-21), Jesus gradually reveals his
Christological identity in relation to the Father and to the Holy Spirit, while
he continues to speak of his relation to us and now paralles it to his relation
to the Father.
Jesus said,
“I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes
to the Father except through me” (John 14:6), as read in the Gospel reading
for the Fifth Sunday of Easter on Cycle A. Now, we know that the
Father is in hypostasis with Jesus the Son (John 10:30; 14:10, 11, 20), our
first Parakletos, who was conceived in the Immaculate womb of Mary
by the Holy Spirit (Matthew 1:18), sent by the Father. Then, Jesus
the Son promises that the Father send another Parakletos to
assure of God’s perpetual presence with us (John 14:16) and calls him (Parakletos)
the Spirit of truth (John 14:17), alluding him to the Holy Spirit, who comes to
us on Pentecost (i.e. John 16:13). Thus, being with Jesus, the first Parakletos,
is being on the way of the truth and the life to the Father. To make
sure that we complet our journey to the Father, Jesus makes sure that Parakletos continues
to remain with us in the Holy Spirit (John 14:16-17), even though he needs to
return to the Father in heaven through the Ascension. He explains that his
Ascension is necessary for another Parakletos, who is the Holy
Spirit, the Third Person in Trinity, to come to us (John 16:7). Another
reason for him to Ascend to the Father in heaven is to prepare a place in the
Father’s House in heaven for us (John 14:2-3), namely to prepare to take us to
the “New Eden” at the eschaton, as envision in Revelation 21-22.
Thus, Jesus’ Christological identity to be the way to the Father in John 14:6
is to bring us to be grafeted to the hypostatic union of the Trunity, shared by
the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. This way of Jesus to bring
us to the Father in the Trinity’s hypostatic union with the Son and the Holy
Spirit is, indeed, reflected in these words of Jesus, “I am in my Father,
and you are in me, and I am in you”(John 14:20) and, furthermore, in John
15:1-5, where Jesus sees us as the branches connected to him, the vine, taken
care by the Father, the gardener.
Now, we are
ready for Ascension and Pentecost, because we know that these events are
absolutely necessary to bring us to the Father in the Trinity.
Below, you
will find summaries of all Easter Sunday Gospel narratives on Cycle A to see
thematic patterns: a shift from the recognizing the Resurrection mode to the
Christological mode leading to Trinity. This set of summaries is
taken from my slides, which I use for my scripture teaching sessions.
Resurrection
Sunday:
Anxiety-provoking discovery of the empty tomb (John 20:1-9).
Second
Sunday of Easter (Divine Mercy Sunday): The risen Christ appeared to the disciples in the
Upper Room, anxiety gave its way to joy of realizing the Resurrection, Thomas
came to believe (John 20:12-31).
Third
Sunday of Easter:
Joyful recognition of the risen Lord in the breaking of bread in Emmaus,
finding the heart burning with passion, as a grieving heart is enlightened by
the Word (Luke 24:13-35).
Fourth
Sunday of Easter:
Christ as the gateway to salvation, the giver of abundant life (John
10:1-10) cf. Christ as the Living Bread of Life, who gives eternal
life (John 6:32-58).
Fifth
Sunday of Easter:
Christ as the way, the truth, and the life; the Father is in Christ, and Christ
in the Father (The Father – the Son consubstantiality, homoousis….i.e.
John 10:30) (John 14:1-12).
Sixth
Sunday of Easter:
Christ as the Emmanuel: Christ being eternal parakletos (which
means to advocate and comfort by being “besides”(para)), extending
the essence of the Father-Son consubstantiality to us, as we obediently remain
with him and observe his commandments (John 14:15-21).
Ascension: Christ’s farewell
address and commissioning to us with his commandment to make disciples of all
nations (to go as los pescados de hombres en mundo) with his
promise to remain with us (junto a nos….con nostros) as Emmanuel till
the end of time (eschatos), reflecting, “Ite, Missa Est” (Matthew
28:16-20).
Seventh
Sunday of Easter:
Completion of Jesus’ Christological identity revelation, summed in eternal
life, as he is ready to return to the Father (John 17:1-11a).
Pentecost
Sunday: Juxtaposition
of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit from the Father in Heaven in Christ’s name
(parakletos) in the Upper Room (First Reading – Acts 2:1-11) to the
risen Christ’s impartation of his breath, as the Holy Spirit, to the frightened
disciples in the Upper Room on the evening of the Resurrection (John
20:19-23).
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