Dignity and love

In the Gospels we see that even Jesus’ disciples tend to relate to him on the level of dignity. Get away from me that I am a sinner says Peter to Christ after the miraculous catch. And again Peter says to Jesus: you will not wash my feet. The Gospel of John manifests a sincere effort to fully present what Jesus truly lived and said. Perhaps it is no coincidence that the washing of the feet is told only in the fourth Gospel. Jesus rarely uses the word worthy but never in the sense as we see above for example used by Peter. Jesus relates on the level of love. Perhaps a parent relates in terms of dignity with a child that he makes a mistake? These are therefore interpretations that do not help to understand the heart of Jesus. On the contrary, they produce distorting effects such as, for example, that strange difference between the living Jesus who eats with sinners, who takes the lost sheep on his shoulders and the Eucharistic Jesus who sometimes can be presented as a condemner. But he doesn’t say: I didn’t come to condemn but to save?