5th Sunday of Lent
By Fr. Chinnappan Pelavendran
Who are the important people in our world? Who are the great people in our country? It depends on what you mean by “important” and “great.” These are some of the people in our world who receive glory, fame, and publicity: such as pop stars, sports stars, successful businesspeople, and company directors. Other people are not famous—people caring for sick relatives, people suffering crosses without grumbling, those encouraging others, those who bring the love of God to others, those who witness to Jesus in small ways. Are they the greatest people in our world? I think they are.
What about Jesus? At the wedding in Cana Jesus said, his hour had not yet come but in today’s Gospel, he says his hour has come. Now the hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified. (John 12:23)
What is this hour of glory for Jesus? It is his passion and death. That is the hour of glory for Jesus in John’s Gospel, his passion and death. Why? The first reading, taken from the book of the Prophet Jeremiah, explains how God will replace the Old Covenant of Judgment with a New Covenant of Forgiveness of sins. This New or Renewed Covenant prophesied by Jeremiah has been fulfilled, through Jesus’ life, and death. (John 12:24) “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit. He who loves his life loses it, and he who hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life.” Here Jesus tells us that this is the price of eternal life. The grain, of course, does not die but is transformed into something completely new: roots, leaves, and fruit. Jesus here speaks about his own life, which he sacrificed to gain new life in the Kingdom. He invites us too to be ready to lose our life for the sake of Jesus to gain eternal life.
The hour of glory for Jesus is his passion and death because when he is lifted from the earth, he will draw all men to himself. (John 12:32) Jesus’ glory is not what the world thinks is glorious because the world does not see as God sees.
Today’s Gospel teaches us that new life and eternal life are made possible only by the death of the self through obedience, suffering, and service. Salt gives its taste by dissolving in water. A candle gives light by having its wick burned and its wax melted. Loving parents sacrifice themselves so that their children can enjoy a better life than they have had. Let us pray that we may acquire this self-sacrificing spirit, especially during Lent.
Only a life spent for others will be glorified, sometimes here in this world, but always in Heaven. We know that the world owes everything to people who have spent their time and talents for God and their fellow human beings. Mother Teresa, for instance, gave up her comfortable teaching career, and with just five rupees in her pocket began her challenging life for the “poorest of the poor” in the crowded slums of Calcutta. The people who spend their lives and talents for others are great and important.

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