Today,
we read the end of St. John's Gospel. Actually, it is the end of the
appendix St. John's community added to the original text. In this
particular case, it is a willingly significant fragment. The
Resurrected Lord appears before his disciples and confirms they are
to follow him, particularly as regards Peter. Next, comes the text we
proclaim today in the liturgy.
The figure of the
beloved disciple is central in this fragment and even in the totality
of St. John's Gospel. It may refer to a concrete person —the
disciple John— or, it can be a figure, behind which, any
disciple loved by the Master can be placed. Whatever its meaning, the
text helps to give an element of continuity to the Apostles'
experience. The Resurrected Lord assures us of his presence amongst
those who want to follow him.
«Suppose
I want him to remain until I come» (Jn 21:22), may
perhaps refer to this continuity rather than to a chronological
space-time element. The beloved disciple becomes a testimony of all
that, to the extent he realizes the Lord will always remain beside
him. This is why he can write and his words are worth believing,
because he glosses with his pen the continuous experiences of those
living their mission in the midst of the world, while experiencing
the presence of Jesus Christ. This beloved disciple can be each one
of us provided we let be guided by the Holy Spirit, He who helps
discovering this presence.
This text, already
prepares us to celebrate, tomorrow, the Solemnity of Pentecost, the
Gift of the Spirit: «And the Paraclete came down from Heaven:
the Church's custodian and sanctifier, the souls' administrator, the
castaways' pilot, the wanderers' lighthouse, the fighting ones'
arbitrator and he who crowns the winners» (St. Cyril of
Jerusalem).