Today, the liturgy celebrates the festivity of Saint John, Apostle
and Evangelist. The first day after Christmas, the Church celebrates Saint
Stephen's day, the first martyr of the Christian faith. And the following day
is the feast of Saint John. Saint John is the one who better and most deeply
understood the mystery of the Word Incarnate. John was the very first
"theologian" and best example for any other true theologian. Today's proposed
fragment of his Gospel helps us to consider Christmas from the perspective of
the Lord's Resurrection. Indeed, when John arrived to the empty tomb, «he
saw and believed» (Jn 20:8). Trusting the Apostles’ testimony, every Christmas we are
stimulated to ‘see’ and ‘believe’, too.
We can also find these same words "see" and
"believe" in connection with Jesus' birth, the Verb incarnated. Pushed by his
heart's intuition -and we should add, by "grace"- John "sees" beyond what, at
that time, his eyes cannot yet see. In fact, he believes without "having yet
seen" the Christ; and receives the praise of those «who haven't seen me and believe
anyway» (Jn 20:29), that ends chapter twenty
of his Gospel.
Peter and John "run" together towards the
tomb, but the text says John «outran Peter and reached the tomb first» (Jn 20:4). It seems that the desire to be again by the side of the
One he loved -Christ- was stronger than that of physically being next to Peter,
with whom, however -by waiting for him and allowing him to be the first to
enter the tomb- he shows that it is Peter who holds the primacy of the
Apostolic College. Yet, it is his ardent heart, full of zeal, John's
impassionate love, which impels him to "run" and "outrun", in a clear
invitation for us to equally live our faith with such a fervent desire to see
the Resurrection.