Nicodemus, who had first come
to Jesus by night, came carrying a mixture of myrrh and aloes weighing about
100 pounds.
Then, they took the body of
Jesus and bound it with linen and with the spices.
This is the burial custom of
the Jews.
There was in the place where
he was buried a garden
and in the garden a new tomb,
in which no-one had been placed.
There then, because it was the
day of preparation of the Jews, and because the tomb was near,
they placed Jesus.
~~
He had come at night to
see the Light of the World. Nicodemus
wanted to keep his interest in Jesus secret, so he went to see him at night to
ask his questions about how to enter the kingdom of God. Now the secret is out: a respected member of
the Sanhedrin, Nicodemus can’t have been a young man and must have struggled to
carry 100 pounds of ointment up a hill.
The sight must have seemed almost comic, almost pathetic as he tottered
along struggling with this heavy load. He
certainly can’t have been moving quickly, covertly or even
inconspicuously. Everyone would now know
that he was off to do something extravagant.
What
caused this change in him? We don’t
know. Some saints tell us about how God
has acted to turn their lives around or others tell us for them: St. Augustine,
St. Francis, St. Ignatius, St. Mary of Egypt, St. Paul. But not Nicodemus. And not most people I know. I remember that before I went to the
novitiate, Fr. Pat Neary told me, “The Novitiate is a very mysterious time. You’ve had a good year at Moreau, but you’re
not a religious yet. If you come back after
a year on the mountain, you’ll come back as a religious and I don’t really know
how that happens, except that it has a lot to do with grace.”
In today’s
reading Jesus is anointed for a royal burial by someone who first came at night
to ask how to gain access to the Kingdom.
It’s the latest in a succession of things happening to Jesus:
being crucified, being taken down from the cross, being passed around, being
anointed, being placed in a tomb. But at
the heart of the Gospel, at the heart of the Passion, is God acting. God often acts as secretly as Nicodemus’
first approach to Jesus. God always acts
as extravagantly as his last. How did
Nicodemus find his king? We don’t know, except
that it has a lot to do with grace. How
will that stone be rolled away? How will
we be made perfect in holiness? We don’t
know, except that it has a lot to do with grace.
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