Sunday Gospel
              Reflections
        May 4,
              2025 Cycle C
        JN  21:1 - 19
              Both Familiar and New
            by Fr. Steven G. Oetjen
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After encountering the
        Risen Lord twice
        in Jerusalem, the apostles now wait to meet him again in
        Galilee. It must have
        been strange for them to wait there, alone. When would he visit
        them again? How
        long would they have to wait? What should they do with
        themselves in the
        meantime?
Simon Peter’s reaction
        is
        understandable: “I am going fishing.” One has to eat, after all.
        And it would
        be unbearable to wait around anxiously with nothing to do. Peter
        returns to
        what he knows best, and the other apostles are happy to join
        him.
The scene depicted in
        the Gospel has a
        great familiarity to it. It seems like things are back to the
        way they were
        before: fishing on the Sea of Galilee, a miraculous catch of
        fish after a whole
        night of catching nothing. Haven’t we been here before? Are we
        having déjà vu?
The apostles even eat
        with Our Lord,
        something they presumably did daily for the last three years
        they were with
        him. There is a calmness, a serenity in the whole account:
        “Come, have
        breakfast,” the Lord says to them.
And yet, there is also a
        strange
        newness. They are in the same place, and they are doing the same
        things, but
        everything is different. How could it be the same? Jesus of
        Nazareth suffered a
        cruel death. And he was indeed dead — there is no question. John
        was there to
        see him breathe his last, to see the soldier pierce his Most
        Sacred Heart with
        a lance, to see the blood and water pour out from his side. He
        had died, he had
        descended to Sheol, and now he has returned from the dead. He
        lives a new and
        glorious life, never to die again. He walks through locked doors
        and shows his
        disciples his wounds. Everything is different. How could things
        ever be the
        same?
Perhaps this is why the
        Lord wanted to
        meet them again in Galilee. He wanted them to go back to where
        it all began, to
        go back to the familiar, but to experience it all again in a
        totally new light.
        They begin again, but now everything is different. Their old
        misconceptions
        about the Messiah’s mission are shattered, and they learn
        everything anew
        during these 40 days before Jesus ascends into heaven.
The Lord also singles
        out Peter and
        gives him an experience at once familiar and new: There is a
        charcoal fire. It
        was by a charcoal fire that Peter warmed himself on the night
        before the
        crucifixion, as he denied Jesus three times. (Jn 18:18) Now
        Jesus makes a
        charcoal fire to cook breakfast on the shore and asks him three
        times, “Simon,
        son of John, do you love me?” The warmth of the fire is a
        familiar setting, but
        this time his response can be totally new. He professes his love
        for Jesus
        three times, to make up for his previous three denials.
There is also a newfound
        humility in
        Peter’s response. Earlier, after boldly proclaiming his loyalty
        (in John 13:37,
        Peter says, “I will lay down my life for you”), Peter ended up
        denying Jesus
        three times. This was not a surprise to Jesus. It was a surprise
        to Peter
        himself. Now, Peter is humbled. He truly loves Jesus, but he is
        also more aware
        of his own weakness and the limitations of his own love.
Jesus asks him, “Do you
        love (‘agapas’)
        me?” That is, “Do you love me with a divine, self-sacrificial
        love?” Peter
        responds modestly, “Yes, Lord, you know that I love (‘philo’)
        you.” That is,
        “You know that I love you with the affection of human
        friendship, like a
        brother.” The Lord asks him the same question a second time, and
        Peter gives
        the same answer. But the third time, Jesus adjusts his language,
        as if to lower
        himself to Peter’s level: “Simon, son of John, do you love
        (‘phileis’) me?” Do
        you love me like a brother?
Peter is now distressed.
        Has the Lord
        given up on calling him to a higher, self-sacrificial love? No,
        the Lord has
        not given up on him, and he is still calling him to a higher
        love. But he is
        also meeting Peter where he is now, willing to accept what
        little he has to
        offer. Peter’s love will be transformed and elevated, and he
        will end up dying
        a death like Jesus. But he had to start somewhere. Jesus takes
        the familiar,
        human love that Peter is capable of giving and he makes it
        something new.