I'm
sure you have sometimes experienced those uncomfortable occasions
when the person leading intercessions at the Eucharist uses the
opportunity of public prayer to let the congregation know exactly
what he thinks they should be doing – and is pretty directive with
God too. Sometimes it can be hard not to feel distinctly “Got At”
and I'm pretty clear that prayer as political lobbying or as social
commentary is really NOT
what
it's all about.
But
the prayer that we have heard in this morning's gospel...that is
something very very different.
We
know that Jesus prayed all the time...Early in the morning on his
own, aloud in the midst of the crowds, and of course he provided a
pattern for us, those words that we know as the Lord's Prayer.
This,
though, is prayer of a different order.
At
a point of stillness between the signs and wonders of his ministry
and before the action of the Passion, Jesus pauses – and we are
privileged beyond measure to hear what he has to say as he pours out
his heart to his heavenly Father. You might almost describe it as the
“real Lord's Prayer” , and each year on this Sunday after the
Ascension the lectionary invites us to reflect on a different part of
it. It stands as a hinge point in John's gospel, the great High
Priestly Prayer that
is, in essence, the ultimate Eucharistic Prayer, for here Jesus
consecrates not bread and wine but his very self. John,
of course, does not include the institution of Holy Communion as part
of the Last Supper before the Passion, but this prayer has equal
force, as it gives us an amazing insight into Christ's heart for us.
Incredibly, you see, the subject of this great prayer is, at least in
part, you and me!
One
of the most powerful prayer exercises I've even undertaken was during
my pre-priesting retreat, when I was invited to spend time with this
17th
chapter of John's gospel, substituting my own name whenever Jesus
prayed for his followers.
Go
home and try it, please! I promise that it will be an enriching
experience, a journey into the heart of Christ's loving purpose for
you, his precious child.
In
his commentary John for Everyone, Tom Wright points out that this
prayer is both a celebration and a petition – a reminder to us that
we shouldn't always use prayer as a series of demands! Jesus rejoices
that he has completed his work – it really IS finished – and then
asks that God will indeed bring in the Kingdom, as Jesus is exalted
as Messiah...and that each one of his followers should grasp and
enter into that Kingdom, on the way that leads to everlasting life.
“This
is eternal life, that they may know you, the only true God – and
Jesus Christ, whom you have sent”
There
we have it...
When
Jesus is praying for us, at the heart of his prayer is the longing
that we would know him and know his Father...
That
is all we need for ourselves...a deep heart-knowledge of God.
But,
even in this passage, there is more.
Eternal
life is never a private gift to be squirrelled away but something to
share.
As
Luke's account of the Ascension makes clear, we are not simply to be
witnesses who stand by and do nothing. We are to take what we have
seen and experienced, that message of eternal life, and share it with
the world...and our witness will stand or fall on our unity
Holy
Father, protect them in your name that you have given me, so that
they may be one, as we are one.
Hearing
those words in this place of reconciliation, they strike me with a
new force.
Ut
unum sint.
That
they may be one.
People
united by the knowledge and love of God, and of his Son Jesus Christ
– and empowered by that knowledge to share God's love so that all
people may share that gift of eternal life.
What a fantastic sermon.
ReplyDeletePreached on this too but my sermon does not hold a candle to yours.
Love your sermons.