<html>Bill Loader, an excellent biblical scholar from Australia <a href="http://wwwstaff.murdoch.edu.au/%7Eloader/MkPentecost12.htm">writes</a>:<br><br>"The
claim of the fourth gospel is that Israel?s religious heritage is not
to be abandoned but to be owned as metaphor which bears witness to the
truth."<br><br>Which is to say that what was so hard for Jews following
Jesus was that at some point he becomes something akin to a new Torah,
new Bible, new Law. Not another Torah, but an updated version. He has
'the words of eternal life.'<br><br>The Gospel of John is usually hard
for me. It seems gnostic sometimes--full of specialized secret
knowledge you have to be initiated into to understand (or appreciate!).
It's helpful to think of this section of John's gospel in Bill Loader's
terms--something we have truly to own as metaphor that bears witness to
the truth.<br><br>it's still challenging--even to understand. And as we
understand, we still have to deal with the realization that Jesus
doesn't make it easy. Like in Chapter 3--with Nicodemus--we are called
to be born again! And what does that mean for each of us? What crucial
life-passage does that bear witness to? And can we stand the persistent
discomfort and disorientation that comes to everybody who decides to
stay with Jesus to find out?<br><br>The above is also posted on <a href="http://homilyblog.blogspot.com/" mce_href="http://homilyblog.blogspot.com/">Homilyblog</a><br></html>