What it
takes to graduate from disciple to apostle
05-23-2026
John
21:20-25 Peter
turned and saw the disciple following whom Jesus loved, the one who had also
reclined upon his chest during the supper and had said, "Master, who is
the one who will betray you?" When Peter saw him, he said to Jesus,
"Lord, what about him?" Jesus said to him, "What if I want him
to remain until I come? What concern is it of yours? You follow me." So the word spread among
the brothers that that disciple would not die. But Jesus had not told him that
he would not die, just "What if I want him to remain until I come? What
concern is it of yours?" It is this disciple who testifies to these things
and has written them, and we know that his testimony is true. There are also
many other things that Jesus did, but if these were to be described individually,
I do not think the whole world would contain the books that would be written.
This
past Wednesday we celebrated our I.C. school graduation, and after Mass I
remarked to Dc. Christopher: “Graduation season is over!” Seeing the puzzled
look on his face, I explained: “Our non-Catholics have graduated at Easter and
become Catholic. Our 2nd graders graduated making their First Communion. Our
teenagers graduated making their Confirmation. And our elementary, middle
school, high schoolers, and college students have all graduated. Whew, we can
finally rest!”
But
Dc. Christopher corrected me adding: “Not yet! We still have the graduations to
the diaconate and priesthood!” And he was exactly right. Today Josh Osborne
will be ordained a deacon, the last step before priesthood. And 5 deacons,
including Dc. Christopher, will be ordained as priests next Saturday, May 30th.
In other words, “no rest for the weary”! Graduation season does not end until
the ordinations of our new priests for the diocese.
How
fitting, then, as we come to the penultimate day of Easter – tomorrow is the
last day, with the celebration of Pentecost – that we read from the end of the
gospel of John, chapter 21. Why is it so fitting? Earlier in this chapter Jesus
gives in effect his commencement speech to Peter about loving him "more
than these" and feeding his sheep. And now we hear how Peter and John
(always obliquely referred to as the beloved disciple) graduate from disciples
to apostles, and represent the two great Christians vocations: the active life
and the contemplative life.
Let’s
look a little closer at this intriguing, even if brief, dialogue between Peter
and Jesus, regarding John, the beloved disciple and their graduation. We read:
“When Peter saw him (meaning John), he said to Jesus, ‘Lord, what about him?’
Jesus said to him, ‘What if I want him to remain until I come? What concern is
that of yours? You follow me’.”
Now,
many interpreters take Jesus’ words “until I come” to refer to the end of the
world – maybe that’s what you were thinking – that is, when Jesus returns in
glory. But clearly Jesus has not returned in glory and John died 2,000 years
ago. So was Jesus mistaken, or worse, did he deceive his disciples?
By
the way, this is not some small difficulty or discrepancy in the gospel. Jesus
repeatedly states his intention to return rather soon. In fact, in Matthew,
Jesus states explicitly: “this generation will not pass away until all these
things have taken place” (Mt 24:34). As a result some Christians, unable to
square Jesus words with the historical record, have lost their faith in the
Lord and left the Church.
But
one way to square the circle is to understand Jesus’ words to mean not the end
of THE world, but the end of A world, meaning, the Jewish world, which occurred
in 70 A.D. with the destruction of Jerusalem. The Jewish world effectively
ended for all intents and purposes. In other words, we must learn to interpret
Jesus’ words and teachings in a more liturgical and supernatural way rather
than in a literal and scientific way.
In
a sense, this difference of interpretation is precisely the dividing line
between the Old and the New Testaments. How so? In the Old Testament, concepts
like king, kingdom, power, glory, temple, sacrifice all had earthly evidence:
King David, conquered territory, military muscle, a glorious temple, etc. You
could touch it and taste it, see it and feel it. There was no scientific doubt.
With
the dawn of the New Testament, however, Jesus inaugurates an even more glorious
kingdom, temple, priesthood, and sacrifice, but now you need the eyes of faith
to see it. There is no scientific proof. And I would suggest to you that this
new way of seeing, thinking, and living is the most important graduation
ceremony we have to go through.
In
other words, is our mindset one that requires everything to be proven
scientifically, like Thomas who demanded proof of Jesus’ resurrection by
inserting his hand into his side, or can we accept things on faith, and believe
in them sacramentally? Put even more pertinently, all the other graduation
ceremonies we celebrate – first Communions, Confirmations, becoming Catholic,
completing school – are all but precursors and predecessors.
Of
what? Of the only graduation ceremony
that ultimately matters, namely, graduating from the Old Testament to the New,
from a world built on facts to a world built on faith, from a universe where
the highest authority is science to a cosmos where the highest authority is
sacrament. And when you see, think, and live that way, you can graduate from
being a disciple to being an apostle. Because only then will graduation season
finally be over.
Praised be Jesus Christ!

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