Monthly Bible
Commentaries
The Mystery of the Passover
John 12:20-28The texts for Holy Week and Easter are rather numerous and speak of it in a more or less open fashion. To read and meditate the parable of the wheat grain, it is good to view it in its context: to understand the curiosity and the interest of the people, even non-Jews, to what Jesus could offer as a teaching. But what were they expecting? And then Jesus comes up with this parable about the need to die in order to bear fruit.... In other words, do not be attached to your own life! Not very attractive. A scandal or a bewilderment for many, even for his disciples who say to him through Peter: "May that not happen to you!" (Matt 16:22). A scandal but also a question, or even a challenge, yes, a great occasion to doubt for Jesus himself! He is troubled! Perhaps by the desire to get out of what lies before him! We can think of the words he spoke at Gethsemane, "Remove this cup from me" (Luke 22:42).
But we have to read the passage to the end: what is the road of life? For at the end there is not just an ending and the abyss, but fruit and life! The mystery of the Passover: to die in order to live. And not to separate the two. In our language and our logic we may think in dualities and oppositions, but are we able to think--or stil more to live--both together? In John's gospel we find on several occasions an expression that puts these two realities together: glory. God manifests his glory in Jesus, in the gift of his life, in his life as the Risen Lord!