In today’s Gospel, John 13: 21-22, 36-38, Jesus is “reclining
at table with his disciples.” He is “deeply
troubled” and says: “Amen, amen, I say to you, one of you will betray me.” Imagine Jesus’ sorrow. My mind goes to situations in which a
criminal is fearful of being betrayed. Jesus is no criminal yet one of His own
is about to hand him over to those who are plotting to crucify him. I think of
King David being pursued by his son Absalom, who, also, is seeking to put his father to death. Jesus,
our King, is, in a sense, pursued by His Father to reveal the depth of their
love for you and me. Each person of the Trinity is eager to reveal the
willingness of the Son of God to die in our place. Out of their love for us,
the Trinity gives one of their own to sacrifice his life for the exoneration of
each human being from the claws of death, which we call sin.
When the apostles heard Jesus’ message that one of them was
about to betray Him, they frantically begged to know which of them would do
such a thing. “It is the one to whom I hand the morsel after I have dipped it.”
He gives the consecrated bread to Judas. At that moment “Satan entered him.”
Jesus says to him: “What you are going to do, do quickly.” Judas leaves. “It is
night.” Darkness seems to have triumphed. So even more urgent is the act of
redemption, Jesus, the second person of the Blessed Trinity, giving His life to
save us from the kind of night that engulfed Judas.
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