Monthly Bible
Commentaries
Where are You Staying?
John 1:35-39In the Gospel of John, John the Baptist bears witness. Fixing his gaze on Jesus as he passes by, he points him out to others: "Here is the Lamb of God." The two disciples listen, trust him, and start to follow Jesus.
(Together today for this Pilgrimage of Trust in Paris), we may be like them, ready to follow Jesus or at least intrigued by him. If we have come here from all over Europe to pray together, that is because we are seeking something, someone. This Jesus attracts us, uniting us across all borders. What began in Bethany beyond the Jordan continues here today. The Taizé brothers and many other witnesses on our journey point us to Jesus, who makes himself present in our midst.
"What are you seeking?" Jesus asks us this question just as he asked the disciples who approached him. He enters into dialogue with them, as he does with us today through his living Word. Let us take the time to let this existential question resonate within us: what are you seeking? What thirst truly drives us? Let us try to answer it for ourselves.
The disciples responded with another question: "Teacher, where are you staying?" In other words: "Who are you really? Can we experience something real with you?" It is an expression of a deep desire for an authentic relationship. By staying with Jesus, who replies to them, "Come and see," they will experience an encounter so striking that they even remember the exact hour, 4 p.m. "To stay," a key verb in the Gospel of John, goes far beyond mere physical presence. It is the language of deep communion, transformative relationship, love that takes root and endures.
By means of this question, "Where are you staying?" the disciples point us toward our inner search. We are all thirsting for relationships; we long for genuine encounters that allow us to be ourselves in truth and to welcome others as a gift. We aspire to peaceful relationships: with others, with ourselves, with God, with all Creation. We dream of peace and reconciliation because deep down we are relational beings created for friendship. We need to give and receive, to belong to a family, to a community, to a people.
Jesus simply answers, without long explanations: "Come and see." He invites us to enter into an experience of relationship with him and with others. He reveals to us his dwelling, which is his relationship with the Father. He offers us to spend time together, to journey while listening to one another, to weave bonds of peace and communion in order to be a sign and an instrument of the unity of the human family.
This meditation was written by Sister Nathalie Becquart for the European meeting in Paris.