Judas had just left the Upper Room of the Last Supper. When he left "it
was dark"; not only had night fallen, but it was also "the hour of the power
of darkness." With Judas’ departure the course of events had taken an
irreversible turn that would lead straight to Calvary — and beyond.
It is against this background that Jesus makes some comments after Judas’
departure: "Now is the Son of Man glorified, and God is glorified in him."
Jesus’ Passion and death are His glorification, not only because this is the
only way leading to the splendor of the resurrection, but also because it
was through His suffering that Jesus was constituted as the source of
salvation for all. The whole of humanity is and will be indebted to Him for
this salvation and gift of life bestowed on all mankind. This is how the Son
of Man has been glorified through Judas’ departure: His fate has been
sealed.
At the same moment, "now," God the Father is also glorified. The glory of
the Father consists in the fact that Jesus, the Son, through His loving
obedience in His passion and death, does the will of the Father and
expresses the great love God had for the world. Thus the Father was
glorified when Judas set in motion the emotional and legal machinery that
would put Jesus to death. The Father is glorified "in him," in the Son of
Man, because it is in Jesus’ surrender to His will that the Father’s saving
plan succeeds.
The commandment of love among the disciples of the Lord follows Jesus’
words referring to His death and resurrection. Christ tells His apostles
that He will be with them "only a little while longer." Until the moment He
returns, the Church, the new community of Christ’s followers, should be held
together by mutual love. Under pressure from the world around them, each
Christian should try to help his neighbor with the same interest, care and
love that Christ did. The supreme evidence of true love is, of course, dying
for the other if necessary. It is to that extent that Christ Jesus loved His
own, and He wants His own disciples to love others to the same extent.
In His infinite love, Christ has proven Himself to be the founder of a
new "school" in which He teaches the supremacy of love as He understood and
practiced it. If we are to be true followers of such a Master, then we must
show how this basic tenet of Christ’s school applies in our lives. The
identifying mark of a Christian for all to see is mutual love, that love
that goes as far as demanding self-denial and sacrifice, even of one’s own
life. True Christian love is not the conventional smile of a friendly face;
it is much more than that. It is a tremendous power, one that can indeed
change the face of the world — as long as we offer it and practice it
without keeping anything for ourselves, not even our own lives. Each of us
is called to glorify God every day, as the Lord Himself did, by putting into
effect the farewell words of Christ: "This is how all will know that you are
my disciples, if you have love for one another."
Fr. deLadurantaye is director of the Office of Sacred Liturgy, secretary
for diocesan religious education and a professor of theology at Notre Dame
Graduate School.