Seventh Sunday of Easter Year C
The silence of the Upper Room where the Apostles gathered,
performing the first Novena ever to be observed in the Church as they awaited
the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, is interrupted only by sound of
their praying lips. This is the Sunday within that first Novena. This is the
Sunday which precedes the great feast of Pentecost when the Church was birthed.
This is the Sunday where our ears and attention are drawn, not only to prayers
of the disciples or even to our prayers, but to the prayer of Our Lord Jesus
Christ, our Great High Priest who now intercedes to the Father on our behalf,
“May they all be one.”
In a world that has grown skeptical to unity, today’s gospel reading
is certainly a welcome breath of fresh air. At last! Someone is truly serious
about the issue of reconciliation and unity. It’s none other than Jesus
himself. The gospel is an excerpt of a
longer prayer of Jesus found in Chapter 17 of the Gospel of John, which is
traditionally called the “High Priestly Prayer”. Its name is derived from the
action and words of Jesus who now intercedes with the Father in Heaven, as a
High Priest, on behalf of his friends on earth. This prayer is not a declaration of what is,
not a blueprint for oneness, but intercession for what shall be.
Jesus here prays for the whole world, asking that the love with
which the Father had lavished upon him might also be ours, and that through us
the Father’s love might be evident to the world. That is what Jesus died for.
This prayer is not just empty rhetoric. The prayer puts into words the very
mission of Jesus, the project of Jesus. “Holy Father, I pray
not only for these, but for those also who through their words will believe in
me. May they all be one.” Jesus prayed these words in the Upper Room on the night of his betrayal,
knowing that crucifixion would follow with the coming sunrise. The words are
part of his final words, and final words have a history of being intense,
focused and passionate. So it was with Jesus. You could
say that Jesus’ giving himself to die for us was the embodiment of these
intercessions; and his resurrection embodied the Father’s answer to that
prayer.
On the Day of Atonement, the holiest
day in the Jewish calendar, the Jewish High Priest, in office for that
particular year, would offer sacrifice and prayer, first for himself. Jesus’
prayer for himself in the first three verses is a clear parallel to the High
Priest’s prayer but, obviously, Jesus had no need to offer sacrifice for
personal sin as did his clerical counterpart. In the second section of the
prayer, the priest prayed for the community of priests and levites; Jesus’
prayer for his disciples is a corollary to that prayer. But here, the high
priesthood of Jesus is far superior and radically different from the high priesthood
of the Jewish people. This is the point asserted by the author of the letter to
the Hebrews and St Paul in his letter to the Romans (8:34). Here, we have the
perfect High Priest, who stands victorious over death and evil. Here is the
perfect High Priest who could accomplish a reconciliation between God and His
people in a manner that was unrivalled by anything that took place in the past
or could take place in the future.
And so the prayer of Jesus, that
“all be one,” transcends time and space. Concerned for the future of the
Church, the community of his faithful believers, Jesus prayed first for their
unity and secondly for the effect their union would have upon the world. This
unity is not meant to be sustained by a long history of human endeavour. In
fact, just like in the past, human endeavour to preserve unity had often proven
inadequate and the weak members of the Body of Christ had been responsible for
causing great divisions and injury to the unity intended by Christ.
We need to note here that Jesus asked God to give us unity as a
request. That means that unity is given and not achieved. The unity of God’s
people can never be fabricated by man. It must be generated by the Spirit of
God. Because this unity proceeds from grace, the life of God, it is therefore
patterned after the life of God, a pattern of unity unlike anything else on
earth. It is nothing less than the unity of the Father and Son. It is not
merely a unity of organisation, purpose, feeling, or affection. Neither is it a
unity that comes from commonality in terms of interest, nationality, ethnicity,
language or culture. Just as the Father is in the Son and the Son in the
Father, we are to be so united. Christians are drawn to one another because
they are drawn to a common center, Jesus Christ Himself. For that is the source
of the power of that unity.
According to Jesus’ prayer, the
union of believers with God and with one another makes them capable of and
ready for their mission to the world. After having looked within ourselves, we
must begin to look outwards, outside our petty little world. Too often we are
tempted to allow our Christian lives to remain in air-tight compartments,
limited only to Christian friends, in a sort of Christian hot-house, from the
womb to the tomb. Our Church is big enough to encompass everyone and yet we
often struggle with the temptation to make her smaller, forcing everyone into a
straight-jacket of conformity that was never part of God’s plan. That is why the
Catholicity of the Church is lived out in her missionary character. Our Holy
Father, Pope Francis, who strongly champions a Church who is more missionary in
its outlook, notes that “a Church that does not go out
of itself, sooner or later, sickens from the stale air of closed rooms”. If we
confine our discussion of unity within the ranks of the Church or just among ourselves,
we may suffer from the self-referentiality which the Pope condemns.
In a world that glorifies
independence and autonomy, Christ’s mission and his prayer for his followers
would effect a life of mutual interdependence for all peoples. Therefore, for
the sake of a confused and sinful world which is facing enormously complex
problems, Christians must not, dare not, isolate themselves from that world.
No, the church exists in order to reach the world. The church is here to be
God's instrument by which human life in every area and at every level is
penetrated by the transforming gospel of Jesus Christ, that men may see that in
Jesus Christ there is the authentic voice of God to men; that in him is the
ultimate issue of human destiny, and in him we come face to face with all that
is important in human affairs.
Christ prayed for a union based on
gratuitous love, a union that could forgive the worst in others while always
expecting the best of them. The realisation of his prayer remains the constant
challenge of His Church. The prayer of Jesus that “may they all be one” still
haunts as well as inspires. It is wearisome, deadly wearisome, to endure the
tension, the conflicts, the hate speech and demonising that continues to plague
our society. The blight of triumphalism, of power games, and the obsession with
always being right still throw up huge, offensive roadblocks against Jesus’
prayer. Such sin drags us back to the Upper Room, to dull disciples among whom
we now sit, to the grief of our Lord over our tearing apart the seamless robe
of unifying love in which he would wrap us. Yet he comes to us with Easter’s
treasure. Despite the sins which continue to splinter, to separate, and to
divide, we are comforted to know that there is One who is not only praying for
our unity, but who assures us that he is protecting “not only these, but also
those”, and he does so in the Father’s name. The outcome of the prayer, “May
they all be one”, will never be just left to us. It will always be in his
strong hands. Thank God for that!
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