The Self-Donation of God. Jack D. Kilcrease

The Self-Donation of God - Jack D. Kilcrease


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and water represent John’s final identification of Jesus with the temple and its cult. Hahn notes that we are told in Ezekiel 47:1–11 that living water would flow out of the eschatological temple. Read in light of this passage, it would appear that John is suggesting, yet again, that Jesus’s body is the eschatological temple. The same author has also pointed to the rabbinic tradition that two streams, one of water and the other of blood (i.e., from the sacrifices), flowed out of the Second Temple.337 As we observed earlier, the temple was the locus of God’s glory in the Old Testament. From it he mediated his holiness to his people. Read from this perspective, John asserts that as the glory of God, Jesus now mediates that same holiness to the Church by his death and through the sacraments.

      This scene also evokes more Edenic imagery as well. Christ lying dead on the cross is reminiscent of Adam asleep giving birth to Eve out of his side. This parallel has been frequently noticed throughout the history of exegesis.338 In support of this reading, it should be observed that the crucifixion occurs on the sixth day of the week (the day of the creation of humanity) and that (as Wright noted above) Jesus has been identified as the true man (ecco homo, actually “human,” “anthrōpos” John 19:5). Read in this light, John appears to be asserting that Jesus is the second Adam and does for the Church through Word and sacrament what Adam did for Eve. This interpretation is bolstered by J. Ramsey Michaels’s observation that John possesses no description of ripping the veil of the temple.339 If Jesus is the true Temple, then the piercing of his heart is the actual ripping of the veil. Therefore, much like the preincarnate Christ gave himself over to ancient Israel by his presence in the cult, he now gives himself to the Church through Word and sacrament. In contrast to the Israelite cult though, he now ceases to be segregated from them, but instead directly gives himself over to them in the means of grace.

      By rising from the dead in a garden on the first day of the week, Jesus reveals himself as the new Adam and the divine agent of new creation. In the garden Mary mistakes him for the gardener (20:15), the vocation held by Adam prior to the Fall. In effect, Adam has returned to the garden and creation has begun anew. By faith (3:16), one enters into this new creation and is “born again” (3:3), this time of “water and the Spirit” (3:5), that is, through baptism. In this passage, we are reminded again of the original creation in which the Spirit hovered over the waters (Gen 1:2) and recognized the new act of creation that Jesus brings to us, mediated through Word and sacrament.


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