
RVC’s
Weekly Spiritual Essay
May 8,
2005: SEVENTH SUNDAY OF EASTER
Readings
Acts
1:12-14
I Peter
4:13-16
John
17:1-11a
The
authors of the Christian Scriptures believe those who imitate Jesus are not
only unique individuals, they should also be conscious of what makes them
differ from others.
Rarely is
this concept conveyed more forcibly than in today’s gospel pericope. The night before Jesus dies, he prays
for those whom God has “given” him.
They’re a special lot. They
have both kept God’s word and committed themselves to deliver to others the
message God gave Jesus to deliver to them. No wonder John’s Jesus tells those gathered with him for his
last supper, “I pray for them – not for the world but for these you have given
me, for they are really yours . . . It is in them that I have been glorified. I
am in the world no more, but these are in the world as I come to you.”
In John’s
theology, it’s a gift of the Spirit to be “in” the world but not “part of” the
world; to be surrounded by people who either refuse to share in, or know
nothing about the faith of Jesus.
John believes such individuals will never experience the same kind of
eternal life which God bestows on those who carry on Jesus’ ministry.
It’s
important to note that God gave us to Jesus “out of the world.” Though we’re not a part of the world,
neither are we expected to leave the world. There’s no concept in the Christian
Scriptures of formal religious life as we know it – no cloistered convents or
monasteries. Jesus’ followers
daily are expected to experience something they’re not a part of. A strange position to be in, but Jesus
assures us that we’re not here by accident. He actually tells his supper companions why they’re so
chosen. “They belonged to you
(God), and you gave them to me, and they have kept your word.
Though
Scripture scholars don’t agree on whether John read Luke/Acts before he
composed his own gospel, his emphasis on “the word” dovetails with Luke’s
belief about what makes a good disciple.
Most of
us perk up when we hear the list of those who go into the Jerusalem upper room
to prayerfully await the Spirit’s Pentecost arrival. These are the chosen followers of Jesus who will be present
for the birth of the church. The
names of the eleven are familiar.
But Luke adds a few extra people: “some women and Mary the mother of
Jesus and his brothers.”
Though
Luke mentions nothing about Jesus’ mother being present on Golgatha, he makes a
point of her being in the upper room for Pentecost. It’s easy to see why he does this. Throughout Luke’s first volume, he depicts Mary as the
perfect disciple, the ideal Christian.
He accomplishes this by habitually referring to her as someone who
“hears God’s word and carries it out.”
That’s the one action which Luke’s Jesus demands of his followers.
Ironically,
as we’ve just heard, John’s Jesus expects the same from those who are in the
world but not part of the world.
There’s something essential in early Christianity about making God’s
word the center of our lives and the basis for our actions. No matter the writer, God’s word and
our reaction to it constantly come up.
Even the author of I Peter implicitly tells his community to hear God’s
word in the midst of the sufferings which permeate their everyday lives. “Insults for the name of Christ” are to
be expected. “But,” the author
continues, “let no one among you be made to suffer as a thief, an evildoer, or
an intriguer.”
Like
Jesus, imitators of Jesus encounter their “hour.” Such an experience is an integral part of faith. Yet as painful as that hour is, our
sacred authors are convinced it’s the only way we can participate in the risen
Jesus’ glory. And we do so right
smack dab in the middle of this world.
No wonder
we’re so different from people around us.
We hear and carry out a word which almost no one else even notices. It doesn’t make us better than those
others; it simply gives us different responsibilities.