In one of those especially poignant passages that so frequently
and powerfully mark the gospels and charge them with the character
of Christ, we encounter Jesus and His twelve in a moment of deep
sorrow followed by a great flash of glory. (And does glory ever
come except on the heels of sorrow?)
Jesus has just alienated many of His disciples by telling them
that they must "eat (His) body" and "drink (His) blood." This
directive must have been even more startling to its original
audience than to us. They did not hear it through the filter of
some 1900 of systematizing theology contrived to intellectualize
and cushion us against the blow of His outrageous command. They it
head on and felt the full force of it and they were repulsed.
Here, Jesus, who was habitually pushing the margin of reason
into the realms of faith, crossed the line. Here, He ventured too
deeply into the uncharted territory of the kingdom of God,
articulated too clearly the good, yet disturbing news of that
kingdom, and called for an obedience too radically opposite the
reasonable sensibilities of many disciples at that time. He called
them to follow too far outside their well-defined comfort
lines...and they ran away in disgust or stood paralyzed in terror
as Jesus walked on - walked on into the blinding light of the
liberating truth He had just spoken.
The twelve stayed with Him - maybe reluctantly, maybe for
reasons that they didn't know. But when Jesus asked that
heartbreaking question, "Will you also leave Me?" it is Peter -
the impetuous apostle - who gives us the secret to the hidden
heart of discipleship: