Monday, August 23, 2010

John #11

Find below the next Bible Study summary - a reminder that older summaries can now be found using the Present Study tab on the home page. - Linda

As well as the Gospel and letters of John this Bible study uses the book “Written That You May Believe: Encountering Jesus In The Fourth Gospel” by Sandra M. Schneiders (2003) Crossroad Publishing Co. New York, NY.

Background reading to study # 11- Written that you may believe chapter 10.

The Gospel of John #10 – The Community of Eternal Life (Part 2) 07/29/10

In John’s gospel the raising of Lazarus is the event that precipitates the arrest of Jesus. In the Synoptics this event is the clearing of the Temple (Mk 11:15-33). Jesus has just entered Jerusalem in triumph, enters the sacred space, drives out the money changers and stops the sacrifices. He demonstrates his charismatic and political power. He holds the people spellbound.

In Mk 11: 25-26 Jesus says “Whenever you stand praying, forgive, if you have anything against anyone, so that your Father in heaven may also forgive you your trespasses”. He says this in the context of the temple – the place where people go to make themselves right with God. It becomes his rationale for shutting the temple down. There is no need for sacrifice or offerings – it is in forgiving your enemies that your offences against God will be forgiven.

In John this same event is placed at the beginning of the Gospel. (Jn 2:13-23). In v. 18 the authorities ask him for a sign that proves his right to clear the temple. Jesus replies, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up”. John is signaling that the key sign of the Gospel is going to be the resurrection. From the very start of his ministry John indicates that the new life that Jesus brings replaces the need for the temple and sacrifice.

The raising of Lazarus is the last act of Jesus’ ministry in John’s Gospel. It holds the same place as the clearing of the temple in the Synoptics and is linked in the gospel of John to the clearing of the temple passage in chapter 2. Both take place at the time of Passover. In both cases (2:23 and 11: 45) many come to believe in Jesus because of his signs/what had been seen. Both passages are concerned with resurrection and life.

In Jn 11:25 Jesus says “I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die”. Jesus substitutes himself for the temple because he offers the endless life of forgiveness. When in chapter 2 he talks of destroying this temple and the comment says he is talking of his body– he does not mean the temple of his body in the modern moral sense of this phrase. He means that in his person he has replaced the temple, through forgiveness. The sign that he gives for this will be resurrection – endless life.

Forgiveness makes you vulnerable. To forgive means to open oneself to violence. Humanly speaking it is almost impossible to overcome our instinct for survival. If someone is really threatening my life I cannot let them do it unless I am convinced that my life is somehow secure. Jesus combines forgiveness and life through the promise of resurrection. We are set free to forgive and live.

Jesus is the resurrection and the life because of forgiveness. Fundamentalists, zealots and extremists are OK with dying for their cause, without having to forgive. They are looking to escape this life for a martyr’s paradise. Resurrection is about a belief in renewed life here in this life. Lazarus is the sign of this resurrection. Resurrection implies forgiveness and vice versa. Unless Jesus had forgiven he would not have risen. And without his trust in the Father and his hope in resurrection, he could not have forgiven so completely. Without the resurrection, Jesus’ project would have failed.

Jesus also changes our relationship with God through forgiveness. There is no more need for sacrifice. Temples are human constructs where negotiation takes the place of forgiveness. It is a place where the holy can be contained and controlled. In abolishing the temple we no longer have control.
Lazarus was dead for four days, Jesus was raised after three. The early Christians associated themselves with Lazarus – like him we will follow Jesus’ resurrection and be raised on “the fourth day”. Resurrection allows Christians to see death differently. It is no longer the definitive end of life. Nor is it the separation of spirit to another realm. Rather it is like a long exhale – while we wait to inhale again. It is like we do not actually die - “everyone who lives and believes in me will never die”. It is a negation of death. A Christian doesn’t expect to die. Forgiveness brings us fullness of life. Resurrection is therefore not a reward, but the natural consequence of forgiveness.

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