|
The water that I shall give will turn into a spring of eternal life.
"Wearied by his journey, Jesus sat down beside
a well. It was about the sixth hour." Already divine
mysteries begin. Not for nothing is Jesus wearied; not for
nothing does the Power of God suffer fatigue. Not for nothing
does he who refreshes the weary endure weariness. Not for
nothing is he wearied, whose absence makes us weary, whose
presence gives us strength.
Jesus is tired, tired out by his journey. He sits down. On the edge of a well
he seats himself. It is midday, and he sits there exhausted. All these details
have meaning. They are meant to signify something. They capture our attention,
persuading us to knock and investigate further. We have Christ’s own exhortation
to do so, for he said: "Knock and it will be opened to you." May he,
then, open up the meaning of this text to us as well as to you.
It was for your sake that Jesus was wearied by his journey. In Jesus we encounter
divine power together with weakness. He is strong and weak at one and the same
time: strong, because "in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
God, and the Word was God. present with God from the beginning." Would
you know how strong the Son of God is? "All things were made through him,
and apart from him nothing came into being."
The whole universe was made
without effort. Could any greater power exist than the power of one who was
able effortlessly to construct the entire universe?
And would you know him in his weakness? "The Word was made flesh, and lived
among us." The power of Christ created you; the weakness of Christ recreated
you. Christ’s power caused what did not exist to come into being; Christ’s
weakness saved existing things from destruction. In his might he fashioned
us; in his weakness he came in search of us.
Jesus, then, is weak, tired out after his journey. Now that journey of his,
undertaken for our sake, was his incarnation. How could he otherwise journey
when he is present everywhere, and absent from nowhere? To what place or from
what place could he travel? In only one way could he come to us, and that was
by assuming our visible human flesh. Since then he condescended to come to
us in that way, and to appear in the condition of a servant by taking to himself
a human nature, that assumption of our nature was his journey.
The fatigue caused by his journey, therefore, was the weariness Jesus experienced
in our human nature. In his human body he was weak, but you must not be weak.
You must be strong in his weakness, for "there is more power in divine weakness
than in human strength."
(Homilies
on the Gospel of John 15, 6-7:
CCL 36,152-153)
Augustine (354-430)
was born at Thagaste in Africa and received a Christian education,
although he was not baptized until 387. In 391 he was ordained
priest and in 395 he became coadjutor bishop to Valerius
of Hippo, whom he succeeded in 396. Augustine’s theology
was formulated in the course of his struggle with three heresies:
Manichaeism, Donatism, and Pelagianism. His writings are
voluminous and his influence on subsequent theology immense.
He molded the thought of the Middle Ages down to the thirteenth
century. Yet he was above all a pastor and a great spiritual
writer.
|