Third Sunday of Easter, C, May 4, 2025
I have always admired
my wife’s ability
to remain calm in a debate
and guide her interlocutor
to her position by asking strategic questions
whose answers expose the weaknesses
in the other person’s arguments
while implying her own argument.
Her opponent usually ends up
arguing her points for her.
I’ve seen this
with many an obstinate retail associate,
child in her classroom,
even her own family.
And then it was really quite the show
when we went to seminary together.
Our classmates would turn a funny,
ghostly color
when in the course of classroom discussion
Jennifer would say,
“I have a question.”
It’s a good thing
that she and I already agree on so much;
or at least that’s what I’ve been led to believe.
Jesus asks a lot of questions in these passages.
“Why are you persecuting me?”
“You have no fish, have you?”
“Do you love me more than these?”
“Do you love me?”
“Do you love me?”
Now,
before you start humming
either The Contours
or Paula Abdul—
depending on your age,
I imagine—
stay with me,
because Jesus’ questions
beg their own question:
Why would Jesus ask questions
to which he already knows the answer?
Even in Peter’s third response
he begins,
“Lord you know everything...”
And as far as that goes,
if God knows everything,
and has the power to fix everything
why doesn’t God just fix everything?
Or further,
why doesn’t God just prevent all these problems
in the first place?
When Jennifer would ask these questions
of store clerks, defiant students,
and misguided classmates
she already knew what the answers would be.
She knew that the clerk could take the coupon
despite the expiration date;
the clerk just had to show a little grace.
She knew the student would be more compliant
if the behavior the classroom needed
seemed to the student
like the student’s idea.
And she knew that the misguided classmate
had not had to wrestle with God
the way she had
in order to keep her faith
as a woman called to ministry
in the patriarchal and misogynistic tradition
of her upbringing.
By asking the questions
to which she already knew the answer
she was providing our classmates
with the same opportunity to wrestle,
to contend, to take hold and refuse to let go
until it changed them
and the way they knew their God.
I think Jesus asks his questions
for the same reasons.
Jesus did not ask these questions
so that he will know
something he didn’t already know;
Jesus asked these questions
so that Peter and Saul
would know that they already knew the answers, too.
And when Peter knows that he knows
he is given charge of tending and feeding the flock.
Jesus’ question to Peter
precedes his question to Saul,
not just chronologically,
but logically as well.
Jesus knows everything.
Jesus knew of Saul’s love for God,
his blamelessness in keeping the letter of the law,
and even that his persecution of the followers of the Way
stemmed from his passion for God’s law.
But Saul didn’t know that.
Peter knew his guilt and his shame
at having denied and abandoned Jesus
before his crucifixion,
and in the intimacy of his relationship with Jesus
was forgiven and reconciled.
All Saul knew
was his anger and hatred.
Saul had no relationship with Jesus.
Both Saul and Peter needed to be freed,
so both had to be confronted
in love.
When Saul knows Jesus,
learns of his forgiveness
and his desire for reconciliation
through the witness of Ananias,
something like scales falls from Saul’s eyes
and his body and soul are restored
with food and drink.
What remains for us
is our questions.
If Jesus knows everything
and can fix everything,
why doesn’t he?
Well,
like a good rabbi,
I think Jesus would answer that question
with another question:
Do you love me?
Then why are you neglecting your neighbor?
We tend to be like those traveling with Saul
on that road to Damascus;
we hear the voice
but we see nothing.
We hear the word of God
about love and grace
and we remain willfully blind
to the charge to be witnesses,
to care for the flock,
to feed the flock.
And in this willful blindness,
we let others take us by the hand
and lead us where we do not want to go.
For some of us, this is the end.
And for a precious few,
who will humble ourselves
and listen to God
and our neighbors,
we will see that even though we were God’s enemy,
God loves us
and asks us to love our neighbors in return.
It is not that we don’t already know
why God knows everything and doesn’t act,
it is that God has asked us this very same question
and we do not like the answer.
Presuming we are innocent,
we would rather be rescued
than freed and empowered to change.
God loves you
and there is nothing you can do about it.
But there is plenty you can do because of it.
So,
Jesus’ questions remain:
Do you love me?
Then why don’t you act like it?
By asking these questions
to which Jesus and we already know the answer,
Jesus was providing us
with the opportunity to wrestle,
to contend, to take hold and refuse to let go
until it changes us
and the way we know our God.
When we know our God through Jesus,
learn of God’s forgiveness
and God’s desire for reconciliation with us
through the witness of the gospel,
through the promise of our baptism,
through the intimacy of relationship,
something like scales will fall from our eyes
and our bodies and souls are restored here
with this food and drink.
So, do you love Jesus?
Then why don’t you act like it?







