James Tissot, "The Last Supper" ca. 1890, Brooklyn Museum
A night of the full moon in the South of France. Awake at 4
a.m., I do not hear but am filled with a group of words, a phrase of a great
intensity.
I AM THE WAY, THE TRUTH, AND THE LIFE.
I know this, of course: John 14:6. Yet I have never before thought it, meditated it, pondered it,
let it echo, and pursue it to its reverberating depths. This time, it presents
itself in the context of Benedict XVI’s saying, in his Jesus of Nazareth, that Jesus does not give or proclaim or write or
promulgate a new Torah, but that Jesus is
himself the new Torah. This is a concept of almost frightening density,
rather like a Black Hole that swallows up all light and matter around it. Jesus
is fully man; Jesus is fully God; and Jesus is
the new Law, the new Torah for mankind. How does one respond to this? A simple
WWJD (WhatWouldJesusDo?) in every circumstance is not enough.
I have written recently about the prayer of adoration as a
form of energy. If Jesus is the new Torah, our proper response would be one of
a focused intensity of which that prayer is only the faint beginning. To a
devout Jew, the Law must not only be obeyed but it must be internalised: it must become part of you.
How I love your Torah!
I meditate on it all day.
I am wiser than my foes,
because your mitzvot are mine
forever.
I have more understanding than all my
teachers,
because I meditate on your instruction.
I understand more than my elders,
because I keep your precepts.
I keep my feet from every evil way,
in order to observe your word.
I don’t turn away from your rulings,
because you have instructed me.
How sweet to my tongue is your promise,
truly sweeter than honey in my mouth! (Ps. 119:97-103)
If Jesus is the new Torah, all the laws, the precepts, the
ruling, the mitzvot, are all gathered
into one – not one sentence but one human figure, just large enough to fill a
cross. If we are to meditate on this, keep to it, observe it, not turn away
from it, and eventually know it as sweeter than honey in our souls, we need to
find a way of condensing all the energy of our spirit into a beam that circles
until it suddenly, or finally, meets the opposing beam that is circling seeking
us, and the two fuse into one along which angels rise and descend.
So here I was with John 14:6 echoing in my moonlit
head. I AM THE WAY. Whither? He explains
it: no one comes to the Father save through me. The way to God the Father. But
what this time struck me utterly was the verb. I do not tell you the way, as a
philosopher or a theologian might. I do not show you the way, as a spiritual
guide, a Christian Vergil, might. I do not even accompany you upon the way, as
if you were Clopas trudging to Emmaus. I
AM the way. And the verb is the Name of God. Your mind is kicked smartly and
completely off its normal path. If you ARE the way, how do I walk you?
I AM THE TRUTH. I do not tell you, show you, or guide you to
the truth: I AM the truth. (And the verb is the Name of God.) One of the great
philosophical problems of our age – and perhaps the great one – is that we no longer believe that if A
(unproveable) is true, then B (the opposite of A but equally unproveable) must
be false. Yet at the same time we have no
philosophical theory for reconciling incompatible factors as both “true”.
In the normal sense, for instance, Christian theology of the afterlife is
incompatible with Buddhist reincarnation; so if one is true, the other is
false. Since we now tend to count respect for others human beings as more
crucial than being right about metaphysics, we have learnt to fudge such
questions and treat them as irrelevant. But if Jesus Christ IS the truth, the
whole question is yanked out of its tired ruts and reconfigured as a spiritual
laser beam. I AM the truth then means: there is no truth outside me. And when
we think about it, we realise that there is no logical opposite to the
statement, at least beyond the childish tu
quoque “No you’re not.” The apt
response to this saying is Thomas Didymus’ falling to his knees and breathing
“My Lord and my God!”
I AM THE LIFE. Again, this stills arguments, not only among
theologians but within ourselves. What is the proper Christian life? we worry.
Is it active or contemplative? Helping the helpless or praying in a Carmel? Is
it compatible with – divorce, abortion, homosexuality, serving in a war, being
a banker? What is eternal life? Pie in the sky when you die? The timeless,
endless presence of God’s love? Or simply an extra dimension to this life on
earth? These are arguments we have with ourselves as much as with others. Yet
they are stunned into silence when Jesus says I AM the Life. (And the verb is
the Name of God.) No, we are not to live like
him. We are to live him. What
does that mean? Rationally, we do not know. But there are things that pull us
out of rationality: the recent Feast of the Transfiguration was such an
occasion. So if we know we are to live
him but we cannot get our minds around that, the message is perhaps quite
simply that we had better start trying to do so, with all the urgency and
focusing we are capable of.
It is all a little beyond us; yet he himself said it clearly
and unambiguously to eleven not terribly sophisticated men (and to Thomas
in particular). Two codas help. In the first place: “And I will pray the
Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may abide with you for
ever; even the Spirit of truth; whom the world cannot
receive, because it seeth him not, neither knoweth him: but ye know him; for he
dwelleth with you, and shall be in you. I will not leave you
comfortless: I will come to you.” And finally: “If a man love me, he will keep
my words: and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make our
abode with him.” That last passage I have always found utterly moving.
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