Today's Reading: John 12:1-36 (37-43) Daily Lectionary: Exodus 9:1-28; Lamentations 1:1-22; Hebrews 2:1-18 “His disciples did not understand these things at first, but when Jesus was glorified, then they remembered that these things had been written about him and had been done to him.” (John 12:16) In the Name + of Jesus. Amen. The ministry of Jesus subverts expectations so often that it is almost a cliché. Throughout his ministry, those whom you expect him to condemn, he instead commends; those you expect him to reject, he instead joins for a meal. This happens so often that Jesus is directly criticized for it. It’s no wonder that this can all get a bit confusing, even for Jesus’s closest disciples. Judas Iscariot has been following Jesus for three years, and there are a lot of ways his response makes sense. He seems really concerned with the priorities of Jesus, so he asks him a fair question (John 12:4-5). It’s completely reasonable that wealth should be spent on the poor rather than vain annointings. How often do we have these very same types of questions in our own churches? Yet, Jesus tells us that in His Kingdom, the poor are rich, the weak are strong, the last are first, but it is still confusing when we encounter the realities of God’s economy. How often have we looked back and seen God’s merciful hand at work in our lives? Understood how He was with us through a difficult path we had to tread, when it looked and felt like we were all alone? Perspective is a valuable thing, and sometimes that perspective is gained through retrospection, that is, looking at the past and seeing it through the lens of a God who is busy making all things new. At other times, even with the benefit of hindsight, we cannot see how God is working, how it is good, or evidence of His mercy in our lives. It is okay; even then, we’re in good company, as the disciples did not understand many of the things of Jesus’ ministry, despite witnessing it with their own eyes and having Him there to explain it. But what gives them the key to understanding? The glorification of Jesus. What do they mean by the glorification of Jesus? Looking ahead to verses 27-36, we see that the Father is glorified in the crucifixion of Jesus. Our eyes can only behold the crucifixion as shame and condemnation, but with eyes of faith, in the light of the resurrection, we can see that in the cross, there is glory. In the cross is victory over sin, death, and the devil, reconciliation of the world to the Father, which is the ultimate outpouring of His fatherly divine goodness and mercy. In the Name + of Jesus. Amen. Ride on, ride on in majesty! In lowly pom ride on to die. O Christ, Thy triumphs now begin O’er captive death and conquered sin. (LSB 441:2)