Sunday Gospel Reflections
May 11, 2025 Cycle CJN 10:27-30 
Eternal Life

by Fr. Joseph M. Rampino


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“The Father and I are one.” While these words might not be the first that draw our attention in this weekend’s Gospel — the image of sheep and shepherd might feel far more relatable and practical for our spiritual lives — they nevertheless represent the heart of the text and teach us precisely what lies at stake for us in the Scriptures. Far from being a simple expression of closeness between Jesus and his heavenly Father, they reveal to us the mystery behind everything we believe and do in our Christian faith, and are thus more “practical” than any concrete advice or resolution we might receive or make._So then, what is Christ telling us here? First, that he has come from the eternal Father, and is the expression of his nature, will, and way of being toward us. Elsewhere, Christ will say, “I only do what I see the Father doing,” and “he who has seen me has seen the Father.” This does not mean that Christ the Son is simply the avatar of the Father or the Father appearing under the name of Son — the Father and Son are different persons even as one God. This does mean that we must never oppose Father and Son, imagining that one is different from the other in will or love for us.

It can sometimes happen that Christians see in Jesus the loving and merciful God of the New Testament, and in the Father the strict and demanding God of the Old Testament. Such a characterization distorts both Father and Son, as well as both Testaments. There is one God only, who acts in both the Old and New Testaments, and the love expressed in the words, deeds, and suffering of Jesus is the same as the love for us in the heart of the Father.

Similarly, Christians can sometimes see the Father as demanding that sin be punished, the Son wishing to have mercy, and the Father decreeing that the Son must therefore die on the cross for our sake, though the Son does not wish to do this. Christ’s own words forbid us to think this way. He and the Father have one will toward our salvation, one desire together in the Holy Spirit to restore us to life from our death in sin. In the face of Jesus, we see the eternal love of the Father himself, both just and merciful, overflowing and conquering, forgiving and healing.

Of course, there is even more to this brief passage. The truth that the Father and Son are one does not just teach us how to see and understand Jesus, but also tells us what we receive from him through our faith and life in the sacraments.

Jesus says in this Gospel, “I give them,” that is, us who are his sheep, “eternal life.” He is not just talking about giving us a pleasant and unending time of rest after our earthly deaths, but something far greater. Later in the Gospel of John, Jesus will pray to the Father saying, “this is eternal life, that they know you, the one true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent.”

He will also pray “that all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us.” The eternal life that Christ gives us is a share in his own relationship to the Father as Son in the Holy Spirit. Christ is not just giving us a beautiful second life in heaven, an upgraded and perfected version of our life on earth but actually lets us participate in his own life as the eternal Son, in the life of God in himself.

This offer, as much as it exceeds our expectations or our ability to imagine, determines everything for us as Christians. We are not called simply to better lives here in time, but to new lives, where everything earthly that was ours is transfigured, and we begin to live as the Son lives, with the Father in the Holy Spirit. If we take even one step further toward desiring this gift, it will have been a fruitful Easter.

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