If John’s Gospel is any indication, Jesus does not want worshipers but followers, or better, participants: I am the vine, you are the branches; live on in me; my body is real food and my blood real drink. The one who feeds on my flesh and drinks my blood remains in me and I in him.
The beautifully organic images that John presents are meant to communicate the life-changing power of the Incarnation: the Logos became flesh, our flesh, so that we might allow the divine energy to come to birth in us.
Much of this is summed up in the oft-repeated patristic adage that God became human that humans might become God, sharing in the symbiosis that is the Incarnation, as the proper goal of human life.
--Bishop Robert Barron, Gospel Reflection, May 13, 2020
Image source: The Word Became Flesh, St. John’s Bible, https://www.saintjameslancaster.org/urban-well/urban-well-events/the-saint-johns-bible-series/
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