Issued by the Catholic Center for Studies and Media - Jordan. Editor-in-chief Fr. Rif'at Bader - موقع أبونا abouna.org

Published on Thursday, 15 January 2026
Meditation of Cardinal Pizzaballa, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem: II Sunday of ordinary time A

His Beatitude Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem :

Following is the text of the meditation by His Beatitude Cardinal Pizzaballa, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, for the second Sunday of ordinary time, dated January 18, 2026:

 

The Christmas season has led us to celebrate and contemplate a God who comes.

 

The Word of God comes in the flesh of our poverty, enters into history, and takes the initiative to be with us and like us. 

 

But God does not come only at Christmas, nor does He come only at the moment of the Incarnation. 

 

On the contrary! The incarnation of the Word inaugurates a new time for humanity, a time in which God comes, and continues to come. 

 

For this reason, it is very significant that among the first words we find in the Gospel of this first Sunday after the Baptism of the Lord (John 1:29–34) the verb “coming” (John 1:29): John the Baptist sees Jesus coming toward him.

 

“to come” is an active verb that reveals the identity of God: the One who comes. 

 

First of all, in the beginning, there is this movement of God toward us; there is His coming to us. 

 

There is no God who remains distant, a God who waits for us to go to Him. 

 

If God draws near, then we can encounter Him, and this is precisely what happens to John the Baptist: when Jesus draws near to him, he recognizes Him and therefore welcomes Him. 

 

If “coming” is God's verb, “seeing” is the verb of man, of humanity: John sees Jesus coming toward him. 

Both of these verbs are important; both are necessary for the encounter to take place.

 

If God does not come, Man, on his own, can do nothing. 

 

But if God comes and Man does not recognize Him, does not see Him, then even God’s coming bears no fruit, brings about no encounter. God can come in vain if He is not welcomed by the human person.

 

But what does it mean to see God? How does John see the Lord coming? 

 

In reality, the Baptist sees nothing out of the ordinary: he sees a man like any other, coming toward him as many others did at that time. 

 

The Evangelist John tells us that the Baptist, while seeing only a man, sees far beyond and much more. 

 

He sees the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. (John 1:29)

 

He sees someone who, though comes after him, in reality was before him, meaning, the Eternal One (John 1:30)

 

He sees someone on whom the Spirit descends and remains, someone who will baptize in the Holy Spirit (John 1:33)

 

How can John the Baptist see all this? 

 

The question is legitimate, especially since the Baptist himself states twice within a few verses that before that encounter he did not know Jesus. (John 1:31, 33)

 

John is able to see and recognize Jesus because he lives immersed in the Word: he sees because he has first listened. 

 

Two clues lead us to this conclusion.

 

The first is that his words are filled with Scripture: we find the lamb of Exodus chapter 12, a reference to the Wisdom of Proverbs chapter 8, and many prophetic promises that speak of the Spirit who descending and remaining. 

 

John does not see more because he possesses some special gift, but because when he sees Jesus coming, the Scriptures within him are ignited and illuminate his gaze. 

 

But John’s listening does not only concern the Scriptures.

 

Verse 33 helps us understand that the Baptist is attentive to a God who speaks to him in his heart, as happens to every prophet whom the Lord calls and sends: “the one who sent me to baptize with water told me…” (John 1:33)

 

John is first and foremost the man of listening, and because he listens, he is able to perceive the signs that God places to reveal Himself. 

 

And the decisive first sign of this revelation is not a prodigy, not a miracle, not a statement. It is something extremely discreet, like the Spirit who descends and who remains. (John 1:33)

 

Many times in the history of salvation, the Spirit had descended upon someone, investing that person with a special mission. The novelty that John perceives in Jesus is that this time the descent of the Spirit is definitive, one from which there is no turning back: The Spirit descends and remains upon Jesus. 

 

The gaze of the Baptist, enlightened by the Word, recognizes that this remaining is a sign. It is the sign that Jesus is the Son of God, the sign that the new covenant is fulfilled, the sign that God takes upon Himself the sin of the world. (John 1:29)

 

 +Pierbattista