In today’s Gospel, we are entering upon very holy ground. Throughout the Gospel of John, we see the compassionate heart of Jesus as He brings healing to sick people and food to the hungry. We meet His power in raising the dead. There is no more heartening book in all scripture that this Gospel. Every chapter is given for our benefit. In this book we find the love of God demonstrated and explained as nowhere else. Then In John’s 17
th chapter, we are allowed to glimpse into Jesus’ very soul.
Perhaps we never get any closer to someone else than when we know about their prayer life. As we eavesdrop on the prayer of Jesus in today’s Gospel, we are indeed entering holy ground.
The setting for this prayer of Jesus is the upper room on the eve of Jesus’s passion and death. Jesus had just celebrated the Last Supper with his disciples and had washed their feet to give them an example of how they were to continue the mission of Jesus in the life of the Church.
Jesus’s impending death is not a disruption of God’s plan but part of God’s mysterious providence. Jesus had accomplished His work, revealing the love of the Father for us. Now it is the time to teach the meaning of that love by His willingness to lay down even His own life. His dying is his greatest act of giving.
The Lord prayed for his disciples gathered around Him. At the same time, he looked ahead to the community of disciples of all centuries. In His prayer for disciples of all time, he saw us too, and he prayed for us. He prayed that we be consecrated in truth.
“Jesus raised his eyes to heaven and said, “Father, the hour has come. Give glorify to your Son, so that your Son may glorify you…I have glorified you on earth by finishing the work you gave me to do…I have made your name known to those you have given me…They were yours and you gave them to me…Consecrate them in truth…I have made your name known to them so that the love with which you loved may be in them, and so that I may be in them.”
The prayer of Jesus to his heavenly Father was a prayer of gratitude that Jesus had finished the work that the Father had given Him to do. He had made the Lord’s name known to His followers.
Jesus then prayed for us His disciples. Jesus prayed that we would let God love us and live in us. To do that, we need, first of all, to trust that God truly does love us. As John says, we need to know and to believe in the love God has for us. When we let the reality of God’s love for us sink deeply into who we are and what we believe, something dramatic happens. We begin to love one another. We become witnesses to God’s love by letting everyone else see what that love looks like when it is alive in a person’s life. By being loved so deeply, we become lovers. We become witnesses to the God whose love brings eternal live – witnesses to the resurrection.
Of course, it would be naïve to think that this is a simple process. The first followers of Jesus knew all about the resistance to the extraordinary good news about God’s love Jesus had brought to them. They knew about the betrayal of Judas, about their own abandonment of Jesus, and about Jesus’ death on Calvary. God created the world and everything in it good. But in ways that are hard to understand, there is sometimes abandonment and betrayal of this goodness. There is hostility and resistance in our world to the message of God’s love for us – in the bombing in Manchester, England, in the political warfare that takes place in the halls of our Congress, in the Church itself there can be hypocrisy and disillusionment, and in our personal and family relationships there can be too much brokenness. We know all too well the demons we have within ourselves that keep us from witnessing to the forgiving love of God in all circumstances of life.
Being a witness to the resurrection is not just telling people what they can hope for after death. Yes, such hope is so very important. God will raise us from death to live with God forever. God’s love is stronger than death. But being a witness to the resurrection begins in the here and the now. Being a witness to the resurrection means letting people see in our lives what it looks like when we live in the God who is love. It means making visible what happens when the God who is love lives in us.
This past Thursday, I had the privilege of celebrating the Ascension Thursday Mass with the students of St Joseph’s School. It is inspiring for me to be immersed in the music of the school choir and to experience the beautiful prayerfulness and faith of our students. I have the same feeling in giving First Communion to our second graders. Indeed these students and First Communicants are consecrated in the mystery of God’s love. Their lives are so very, very precious.
It is our awesome responsibility as a parish community to be witnesses to these young parishioners of how the love of God sustains us in all the challenging moments of life. Can we in the community of St. Joseph’s and in the town of Penfield live our lives in such a way that these young students are surrounded by people who are willing to serve and give and sacrifice so that these precious young students will know God’s love by the witness of our lives?
For Jesus his dying is his greatest act of giving. How to our lives characterize what gospel living is all about?
John’s Gospel tells us that Jesus prayed for His followers. He prays that His Father consecrate them in truth. The truth he refers to is the truth of God’s love. To be consecrated in the truth means being consecrated or made holy in God’s love. It is like being immersed in God’s love like a swimmer immersed in the sea or a surfer riding the waves. God’s love is like the air we breathe – all around us, giving us life, sustaining us. Jesus’ prayer for his disciples and for us is that we keep swimming in this love, keep breathing it in. When we do this, we may experience some of the resistance and hostility that Jesus experienced, but Jesus has promised that God’s Spirit will be with us and will never abandon us. This will enable us to be witnesses to God’s love even in a sometimes hostile world. Let’s trust in that love as we come to the Table of the Lord.