Homily for May 28th, 2020 John 17:20-26.
Once again
Jesus lifts up his eyes to heaven, as he continues what has come to be called
his High Priestly prayer. If the theme in his prayer hitherto has been the
glory that Jesus shares with the Father and wishes to share with his friends,
here the theme is unity. Jesus and his Father are one, bound together by their
love for one another. And this love is
the Holy Spirit. Through the gift of the Spirit Jesus’ disciples are made one.
The unity
among his friends for which Jesus prays extends far beyond those who hear his
words. Jesus is looking toward the future, at what would become his Church. This
is clear from his opening words: “I pray not only for these [those present with
him in the Upper Room] but also for those who will believe in me through their
word, so that they may all be one, as you, Father, are in me and I in you, that
they also may be in us, that the world may believe that you sent me.”
Sadly, Christians are not all one;
and our divisions make it impossible for many in our world to believe that
Jesus is God’s divine Son, sent by him into the world in human form. That is
why ecumenism, which involves the search for Christian unity, is not an
optional extra for the Church but an essential duty. The Second Vatican Council
said: “The concern for restoring unity involves the whole Church, faithful and clergy
alike,” adding: “There can be no ecumenism worthy of the name without interior
conversion.” The search for the unity for which Christ prayed starts, in other
words, at home: with us, and the deepening of our faith. “Christ summons the
Church, as she goes her pilgrim way,” the Council said, “to that continual
purification of which she always has need.” [Decree on Ecumenism, Nos. 5-6]
Jesus concludes this moving prayer by
asking his Father “that the love with which you love me may be in them and I in
them.” To which we gladly say: Amen, so may it be.
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