Gospel reflections: Fifth Sunday of Lent Year A

Reflection April 2014 Veronica Lawson RSM John 11:1-45 Today’s readings touch into the most profound of human mysteries, the mysteries of life and death. To hold a new born child…

Reflection

April 2014

Veronica Lawson RSM

John 11:1-45

Today’s readings touch into the most profound of human mysteries, the mysteries of life and death. To hold a new born child or to see a sick person restored to health is to experience the wonder of life.

On the other hand, the unexpected death of a loved one can bring unimagined grief and pain.

Death brings tears, even anger. Little wonder that ‘life’ becomes a metaphor for transformation and new beginnings or that ‘death’ so often signifies deprivation and loss.

The gospel reading is about the death and restoration to life of Lazarus, ‘the one whom Jesus loved’. It is the last of the seven ‘signs’ in John’s ‘book of signs’ that reveal the ‘glory’ of God. It is also the greatest of Jesus’ signs.

It functions as a catalyst for the events that lead to his death: ‘…from that day on they planned to put him to death’ (11:53). It provides the occasion for Jesus to assert ‘I am the resurrection and the life’ and to invite assent to that revelation of his identity. It reveals the compassion and tender heart of Jesus who weeps at the grief of Mary his friend and the death of her brother.

It also reveals the goodness in the hearts of those ‘Jews’ who share her grief and who come to faith in Jesus who raises the dead to life.

Though the story revolves around the plight of Lazarus, Martha and Mary are the characters who, with Jesus, occupy centre stage in the narrative and into whose faith journey we are invited to enter. The women are introduced before Lazarus.

Martha and Mary are identified as ‘sisters’ who live in Bethany. Are they blood ‘sisters’ or sisters in their love of Jesus, their faith commitment to him, or both? Lazarus is Mary’s sick ‘brother’. There is no mention at the outset of his relationship to Martha, though she later claims him as her ‘brother’. Might they all be part of a little faith community in Bethany rather than biological siblings?

A brief notice alerts the reader to the imminent death of Jesus: ‘Mary is the one who anointed Jesus with perfumed oil and wiped his feet with her tears’.

The details of that story are yet to be narrated. The reader will later discover that Mary’s anointing of Jesus is ‘for the day of [his] burial’.

As so often in John’s gospel, misunderstanding and irony function to bring the actors in the drama and us as actors in the theatre of Christian life to new levels of understanding and faith.