Jesus said to him, "I am the Way, and the Truth, and the Life; no one comes to the Father, but by Me. If you had known Me, you would have known My Father also; henceforth you know Him and have seen Him."

Phillip said to him, "Lord, show us the Father, and we shall be satisfied."

Jesus said to him, "Have I been with you so long, and yet you do not know Me, Phillip? He who has seen Me has seen the Father; how can you say, 'Show us the Father'?"

"Do you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father in Me? The words that I say to you I do not speak on My own authority; but the Father who dwells in Me does His works."

"Believe Me that I am in the Father and the Father in Me; or else believe Me for the sake of the works themselves." (John 14:6-11)

Thursday, December 29, 2011

THE HUMANITY OF CHRIST: Contributions to a Psychology of Jesus by Romano Guardini - Chapter II, Section 5

5. JESUS AND MEN




What was the attitude of Jesus towards men and women?



The New Testament shows him in various relationships: as a child to his

parents; as an adult to his widowed mother; as a kinsman to his relations.

He was the one awaited by his precursor, and the Master to his disciples.

The band of Twelve are marked off from the other disciples and live on

terms of special intimacy with him. Within the Twelve, the three who were

present at the raising of Jairus' daughter, the Transfiguration, and in

Gethsemane, are even closer to him than the rest. These are Peter, James

and John. The last of these is "the disciple whom Jesus loved" (John 13.

23; 21. 7).



He was bound by a special tie of friendship to the family at Bethany, and

within that family he was particularly attracted to Mary (Luke 10. 38 ff.).

He had another equally close attachment with Mary of Magdalen, who is found

beside his grave at Easter (John 20. 11 ff.).



Then there is the crowd: the people with their needs, their longing for

salvation, unreliable and changeable. A whole series of individuals can be

singled out from among them: those whom he had helped, such as the deaf-

mute, the cripple, the blind man, the grateful leper, the centurion and his

servant, and the woman with an issue of blood.



And there were many enemies, among whom, again, were such individuals as

the inhospitable Pharisee. There were people who wanted to embarrass or

hinder him, the disciple who betrayed him, and the individuals who took

part in the events of his last two days.



That is to say, there were human relationships of all kinds, which gave

scope to all kinds of different feelings of sympathy, attachment, animosity

and strife. Can we find some characteristic attitude of Jesus in all this?



He approached men with an open heart. He was almost always to be found in

the company of people. He had no house of his own where he could be alone:

he was a guest wherever he lived. We might almost say that he had no

"private life" at all. He was sensitive to men's needs and full of an

inexhaustible readiness to help them. We recall words like these: "Come to

me, all you that labor and are burdened; and I will refresh you" (Mat. 11.

28), or: "And seeing the multitudes, he had compassion on them; because

they were distressed and scattered abroad like sheep that have no shepherd"

(Mat. 9. 36); or the parable of the shepherd who had lost one animal from

his flock.



On the other hand, he was reserved towards men, even towards his closest

friends. He always remained peculiarly detached. John says: "Jesus would

not give them his confidence; he had knowledge of them all, and did not

need assurances about any man, because he could read men's hearts" (John 2.

24-5). He wanted nothing from men. Between him and men there was no

community of mutual interests, not even one of common work. We never find

him portrayed attempting to clarify an issue in common with his companions,

or seeking with them a way to become master of some situation. We do not

even find him working together with them. Apart from occasions devoted to

common worship, like the Paschal meal, he is never even seen praying with

them. And the only time he did look for comfort of human companionship, he

did not find it: "Could you not watch one hour with me?" (Mat. 26. 40).



And so a continual solitude enveloped Jesus. There were always men about

him, but among them he was alone.



His solitude arises because no one understands him. His enemies do not

understand, the multitude does not, but neither do his disciples. The depth

of this lack of understanding is revealed by a series of incidents. For

example, there is the shattering experience described in Mark 8. 14 ff.

They are together in a boat on the lake. He had been speaking about the

leaven of the Pharisees and they assume that he is talking about the

provisions they had forgotten to bring with them. So he says plainly: "Why

do you discuss the fact that you have no bread? Do you not yet know or

understand? Have you still your heart blinded? Having eyes, see you not?

And having ears, hear you not?" Then he reminds them of the recent miracle

of feeding the multitude. "How do you yet not understand?" Or, we can

recall the scenes when he was arrested and put to death; or the sense in

which they understood his message about the coming of the kingdom of God

right up to and including the time after Easter (Acts 1. 6).



This lack of understanding constitutes to a decisive degree Jesus' fate. To

see how deep that misunderstanding was, we have only to note the radical

change which took place in the attitude of the disciples after Pentecost.

Thus, the life of Jesus is lacking in every presupposition for being

understood. It is well to be quite clear in our minds just how much this

meant.



We gain the impression of a rigid isolation; a muteness in spite of much

speaking. For life only begins to unfold before us from the heart of the

other; and the word we speak is only perfected in the ear of one who

understands. It is this isolation of Jesus which St. John tries to express

in his Prologue in terms of the barrier which is raised up between him and

the world: "And the darkness did not comprehend it (the light). . . He

came unto his own and his own received him not" (John 1. 5, 11). Connected

with this is the impression we get of the futility, in the ordinary sense,

of the activity of Jesus. With most religious leaders in history, their new

message usually began to be felt, after a period of struggle, within their

own lifetime. By contrast, Jesus was to see no return at all; we are

reminded of the picture of the grain of wheat which must die before it can

bring forth fruit (John 12. 24); even in his disciples. This

misunderstanding did not arise merely because his message was too lofty,

but because it came from a God whom no one knew, and because between his

message and mankind there lay the indispensable revolution in values which

the Gospel calls "metanoia" (repentance). For this reason understanding

could only come through the Holy Spirit who was to be sent by that selfsame

God.



It might now be asked why this Spirit had not come sooner, in Jesus' own

lifetime; or why he who supported Jesus' being--see the account of the

baptism--and accomplished his words, had not been transmitted to his

audience. This is a circle which we are unable to break. People do not

understand because the Holy Spirit has not come to them. He does not come,

because they are not ready for him. Yet this very preparedness is itself a

gift of the Holy Spirit. Thus, normal thinking can find a way neither in

nor out. This is the mystery of the new beginning in God himself, and as

such it is inscrutable. But this much is certain: Jesus' message fell on

deaf ears.



It was his existence, even more than what he said, that remained

misunderstood, for it and his message were one. What his message was if we

consider it as doctrine and proclaimed potentiality is that he himself was

as an existent being. Let us take the concept of the focal point of

existence. This is the spiritual fulcrum on which men balance their lives,

the point of departure from which they approach both men and things and to

which they return from them again. The greater and more exalted the

personality, the deeper lies this focal point. Whether or not a man

understands other men depends upon his capacity for observation and

sympathy, upon his power to see things as a whole, and penetrate them; but

most of all it depends upon the extent to which his own depth of existence

is equal to or greater than that of others. We will have more to say about

the nature of Jesus' existence later; but we may say here that the

starting-point from which he looked upon, judged and confronted men,

rejoiced and suffered, are obviously unfathomably deeper than that of his

environment. For Jesus there was no such thing as a "we" in the sense of a

direct community of existence, but only in the sense of a sovereign love

which loves before others are capable of loving, and without their being

capable of reciprocating the love shown them. Scarcely a single act of

genuine communal existence is recorded in the Gospels; scarcely one true

"we" in the strict sense of the term. Not even in prayer is it ever

expressed. The resume of his message from the Father, and the basis of the

proper relationship to him, were given by Jesus in the prayer, Our Father.

The subject of the Our Father is the "we" of the Christian: but Jesus never

repeated this prayer with his disciples, never included himself with this

"we". There is no place, as far as I can see, where he took the lead in

joining together with his disciples in prayer. Where he himself is seen to

pray, as for example at the end of the Last Supper, and still more

strikingly, in the Garden of Olives, he speaks and adopts an attitude which

no other man can imitate.