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I Have Overcome the World
Where We Are
Alleluia! Monday of the Seventh Week of Easter brings us to the final words of Jesus's farewell discourse before the High Priestly Prayer. Yesterday, we overheard Jesus pray for his disciples' unity. Today, we hear the disciples declare their belief and Jesus's sobering response: they will scatter and leave him alone. Yet the discourse ends not with abandonment but with the most triumphant statement in the Gospels. In Acts, Paul encounters disciples in Ephesus who have been baptized only with John's baptism and do not even know the Holy Spirit exists.
The Word
The disciples finally get it, or think they do. "Now we know that you know all things," they declare. "By this, we believe that you went forth from God." Jesus's response is startlingly honest: "Do you believe now? The hour is coming when you will be scattered, each one on his own, and you will leave me behind, alone" (John 16:32). He does not sugarcoat what is about to happen. But he adds: "And yet I am not alone, for the Father is with me." Then comes the crescendo: "In the world, you will have difficulties. But have confidence: I have overcome the world."
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Reflect
This is one of the most honest exchanges in Scripture. The disciples are finally confident in their faith. They believe. They understand. And Jesus tells them, gently but clearly, that their faith is about to fail. Within hours, they will abandon him. Peter will deny him three times. Judas will betray him. The rest will flee into the darkness.
And yet Jesus does not reject them for their coming failure. Instead, he gives them the antidote in advance: "I have overcome the world." Notice the tense. He has already overcome it, even before the cross. The victory is certain before the battle is fought, because the outcome does not depend on the disciples' faithfulness but on the Father's.
In Ephesus, Paul meets believers who are missing a crucial piece. They have John's baptism of repentance but have never heard of the Holy Spirit. When Paul lays hands on them, the Spirit comes, and they speak in tongues and prophesy. Incomplete faith is not rejected; it is completed. God meets us where we are and fills in what is missing.
The phrase "have confidence" is sometimes translated "take courage." It is not a suggestion; it is a command. Courage in the face of difficulty is not optional for the Christian; it is the natural response to knowing that Christ has already won. We do not fight for victory; we fight from victory.
Living It
If your faith feels fragile today, take comfort in this: Jesus knew his disciples would fail, and he loved them anyway. He gives the same grace to you. Your weakness does not disqualify you from his love.
Carry Jesus's words with you today: "I have overcome the world." When difficulty comes, whether at work, in relationships, or in your inner life, remind yourself that the outcome has already been decided in your favor.
Ask the Holy Spirit to fill in whatever is missing in your faith. Like the Ephesian disciples, you may not know what you are lacking until the Spirit reveals it.
Prayer
Lord Jesus, you have overcome the world. When our faith falters and our courage fails, steady us with this truth. We do not face the world's difficulties alone; you are with us, and the Father is with you. Fill what is incomplete in our faith, and give us confidence to live as people who belong to the Victor. Amen.
Today's reflection draws from John 16:29-33 and Acts 19:1-8 (CPDV), per the Ordo Lectionum Missae.
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