Monday, May 22, 2023

 Tuesday in the Seventh Week of Easter, May 23, 2023

John 17, 1-11


Jesus raised his eyes to heaven and said, “Father, the hour has come. Give glory to your son, so that your son may glorify you, just as you gave him authority over all people, so that your son may give eternal life to all you gave him. Now this is eternal life, that they should know you, the only true God, and the one whom you sent, Jesus Christ. I glorified you on earth by accomplishing the work that you gave me to do. Now glorify me, Father, with you, with the glory that I had with you before the world began.  I revealed your name to those whom you gave me out of the world. They belonged to you, and you gave them to me, and they have kept your word. Now they know that everything you gave me is from you, because the words you gave to me I have given to them, and they accepted them and truly understood that I came from you, and they have believed that you sent me. I pray for them. I do not pray for the world but for the ones you have given me, because they are yours, and everything of mine is yours and everything of yours is mine, and I have been glorified in them. And now I will no longer be in the world, but they are in the world, while I am coming to you.”


We are living within a culture that prizes an individuality in which the needs or aspirations of the individual come before those of the community, and because this idea has become so pervasive, even written into our laws and constitutions, we may think that not only has the idea always existed, but that there is no alternative to it.  Yet, this is not so.  For much of human history, a human person was seen as part of an organic collective.  For instance, the people living in the ancient Near East, such as the Israelites, understood that a given human person’s ancestors and descendants were contained in him such that this was understood as his identity.  With only shadowy notions of an afterlife, the emphasis in living on after one’s death was in living in one’s children and their children.  The ancients understood from this that a person could be held responsible for his ancestors’ actions.  We see this in the Gospels on an occasion when Jesus confronted the scribes and Pharisees: “Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites, that build the tombs of the prophets and adorn the monuments of the just, and say: If we had been in the days of our fathers, we would not have been partakers with them in the blood of the prophets. Wherefore you are witnesses against yourselves, that you are the sons of them that killed the prophets. Fill ye up then the measure of your fathers” (Matthew 23, 29-32).  It also helps us to understand the terrible cry of the people at the time of the Passion, “His Blood be upon us and upon our children” (Matthew 27, 25).

Here, Jesus prays for the unity of his followers with him and, through him, with each other.  This doctrine builds on the then current idea of solidarity with one’s ancestors and descendants to include people to whom one is not related at all, and this unity is not a physical one but one of grace.  St. Paul famously explains, speaking of the human body, “And if one member suffer any thing, all the members suffer with it: or if one member glory, all the members rejoice with it. Now you are the body of Christ and members of it” (1 Corinthians 12, 27).  The human body itself is a figure for the reality of the Body of Christ.


We have set before us two very different ways of thinking: that of the supremacy of the individual, and that of unity.  Another way to put it is the idea of autonomy and the idea of solidarity.  A lady I knew some years ago and who has since died, once became angry at a sermon in which it was asserted that we Christians need to be helped by one another in order to be saved.  She asserted back that she did not need anyone’s help, but that she could save herself.  Not long afterwards, she was struck by cancer and she learned the truth the hard way.  The ideas of individuality and autonomy are rooted in nothing more than pride.  The individualist shouts to the world, “I am an island!  Everyone is an island!”  Even though with a little reflection on human experience, we know that this is clearly not true.


Our Lord prays for our unity in him, and the Holy Spirit makes it so.  We who are members of the Lord’s Body must help one another get to heaven, subduing our pride and adopting the humility of a good servant.  

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