April 21, 2020
by Larry Gillick, S.J.
Creighton University's Deglman Center for Ignatian Sprituality
click here for photo and information about the writer

Tuesday of the Second Week in Easter
Lectionary: 268

Acts 4:32-37
Psalms:1AB, 1CD-2, 5
John 3:7B-15

Celebrating Easter

Finding Hope in the Easter Season

Weekly Guide for Daily Prayer

Feeling Our Hearts Burning with Hope


Nicodemus has come to Jesus, obviously, seeking something new. He is a teacher of Israel whose laws and traditions are ancient. He seems to be attempting to fit Jesus’ new with the Jewish old. He wants to fuse the religious two into one and Jesus will con-fuse him in these verses from today’s Gospel reading.

Being born from above is new. To be born of the Spirit is new and then Jesus hits Nicodemus with the old. Jesus bends Nicodemus back to his old reliable book of Numbers, chapter 21: 6-9, picturing the Bronze Serpent which saved the Israelites from death. Jesus is presenting Himself as the new revelation of Gods eternal salvific love. Only later do we hear that Nicodemus bought into the new eventually.

We often say, upon meeting someone, “What’s new?”  We love learning the new, especially about ourselves, if it doesn’t hurt to much. We have a variety of expressions, upon hearing the new, which indicate our difficulty in accepting the new. We say, “You got to be kidding. Are you pulling my leg? Get out of here with that! Nonsense! As my father often would say, “You’re talking through your hat!” Believing the new is an old problem.

This past Sunday’s Gospel presented Thomas being confronted with the news and his reaction was quite understandable. He needed proof so as not to be spoofed. He got it first hand, as it were. Thomas could not believe the new not even from the words of his old friends.

The whole Easter message is about the invitation to struggle with what we have been told in the Scriptures by those who have seen. There are a number of invitations by Jesus personally to persons whom we will visit and with whom, we are invited to pray. The history of the Church’s growth, especially in the Acts of the Apostles, is the history of believing, not what we have seen with our own eyes, but of our relying on hearing what those before us had seen.

Believing is much harder for us, as we rely so much on the immediate data from computers and electronic social media. Just stop and count all the various devices you have by which you can obtain the security of information. It is amazing how quickly we can find things out and rest assured in it. I have my friend Alexa right here and she is most willing to fill me in on the old and the new. Believing for us is not an easy habit or practice.

We have the Nicodemus drive to know the old and the new. What Jesus tells Nicodemus is that there is a new way of knowing, called Spirit, not flesh. The flesh will never be satisfied, always the juvenile demanding “why!” We are given the gifts of mind and heart. Both can never be satisfied! The new is kind of a trick becoming old as soon as it is digested. The heart longs, not so much for satisfaction, but for completion which it can never have. To be born of the Spirit is to be born into the land and life of longing. Jesus is offering this way of being born and living to his hearer here and to all whom He is meeting these Easter Days, including to ourselves. Alexa can not figure Jesus out either, at least not yet.  

Click on the link below to send an e-mail response
to the writer of this reflection.
lgillick@creighton.edu

Sharing this reflection with others by Email, on Facebook or Twitter:

Email this pageFacebookTwitter

Print Friendly

See all the Resources we offer on our Online Ministries Home Page

Daily Reflection Home

Collaborative Ministry Office Guestbook