Friar Wisdom, Fifth Sunday of Lent

Rembrandt, Christ Preaching, c. 1652

On Sunday, March 17, 2024, on their Godsplaining podcast, Fathers Gregory Pine, O.P., Patrick Briscoe, O.P., and Joseph-Anthony Kress, O.P., discussed in Lectio format the readings for the Fifth Sunday of Lent. The following is a transcript of Father Kress’s comments regarding the Gospel reading from John 12:20-33. (The full episode appears below.) Here Father inspiringly discusses how God not only reveals the Paschal Mystery to us in the life and Passion of Jesus, but how we are called to participate in this Mystery as well. By uniting ourselves with Christ’s suffering, we enter into an ever-deepening relationship with Jesus and the Father–one that is continually nourished and renewed by the outpouring and receiving of love that can only come from God.

The Lord’s gives Himself totally in His willingness to enter into this mystery—[the Paschal Mystery]. Our lives need to have elements of [this], if not totally imitate [this] full union of sacrifice with the Lord. Using the image of the seed falling to the ground in order to die to bring forth that new life, the Lord is [saying] destruction isn’t the final answer. It [death] doesn’t have the final word. Destruction and death aren’t terminal. There is going to be new life from this. It seems poetic and romanticized, but He says, “No, no. Look around you in nature. This has always been my plan. Always. New life comes from death. It doesn’t have the final word.” 

I go back to the words, “Then a voice came from heaven” (Jn 12:28). “The crowd heard it and said it was thunder” (Jn 12:29), then others called it an angel. It was the voice of the Father, who said, “I have glorified it and will glorify it again” (Jn 12:28). I’ve done it. And I’ll do it again. That phrase, “I will glorify it again.” How is the Father’s name repeatedly glorified? It’s by each and every one of us uniting in our sufferings and our deaths in this life to the death of His son. He has glorified His name by revealing His Son to us and allowing His Son to redeem us. That did happen. He did that. He has glorified His name in His Son, Jesus Christ. And He will do it again and continues to be glorified with each and every one of us, uniting us—our lives, our sufferings—to the Cross of Jesus Christ. [God] ultimately unites our deaths to [Jesus’s] death in order to bring forth resurrection. So that promise, that is a promise from the voice of the Father that [He] will glorify again. It’s our repeated glorification of the Father in His name by our union with Jesus in His life, death, and resurrection into the Paschal Mysteries. 

We All Have Crosses

“You can take the cross out of your room, but you can’t take the cross out of your life.” Fr. Mike Schmitz

For all of those who have relegated religion and faith to the sidelines or trash cans of their lives, here is something that is true. Yes, there actually is objective truth.

We will all bear crossed in our lives. Suffering is part of being human. Whether we choose to call them crosses or just difficulties, injustices, or tragedies, we will all experience them.

Why are so many of us, especially young people, desperately unhappy? First, they don’t know that to suffer, to bear the cross, is normal. Not easy, normal.

More importantly, though, if we don’t know about the ubiquity of life’s crosses, we won’t know how to carry them. We won’t know how to sit at their feet, acknowledge our hardship, and with open hearts and minds, reorder ourselves to goodness and hope.

Darkness without hope is despair. Pain without transcendence leads to perpetual misery. It is in acknowledging the cross that we discover meaning and can begin to move through pain and toward the good. Even towards happiness and joy.

No, we can’t remove crosses from our lives. But actually, we wouldn’t really want to. For it is on the cross that our fears are vanquished and our hopes are resurrected. It is there that we actually experience a rebirth.

The cross isn’t the end. It’s actually just the beginning.

Doesn’t that change everything?