7TH SUNDAY OF EASTER, YEAR A: REFLECTION BY FR JULIAN EKEH
(John 17:1-11a)
Today is the Seventh Sunday of Easter. We
are still in the joy of the resurrection. But the Ascension of the Lord into
heaven has triggered a mixed feeling in the hearts of the disciples of Jesus.
The appearances gave them joy and confidence but with the Ascension, they will
not see Jesus again. The cloud now covers Him from their view. But they are
left with an instruction to go back to
the upper room. There in the upper room, they will see Jesus in another form, they
will experience Him, they will enter into a romance with Him, they will
encounter Him in the spiritual form, a seeing that will be made possible
through prayers. Hence the responsorial psalm of today affirms: I believe I
shall see the Lord's goodness in the land of the living.
The Gospel of today presents Jesus praying
to the Father when His own hour came. Now is our own hour to pray. Here we saw
a deep spiritual communication between Jesus and His Father. They discussed
about His mission and activities. He renders account to God in thanksgiving for
those He gave Him. He asked to be glorified. The resurrection and Ascension of
Christ were answers to these powerful prayers; hence, they are enlisted as the
first two glorious mysteries we pray.
As the Church anticipates the third
glorious mystery, which is the Descent of the Holy Spirit we are called to
ponder on the prayer of Jesus and His wish for us.
All that Jesus did and prayed was just for
our sake. He came for us, lived for us, died for us, rose for us. He ascended
into heaven and from there prays for us. Thus, the prayer He makes for us
therefrom is a continuation of the prayer He started making here before His
death as recorded in the Gospel of today.
The romantic nature of our prayers is the
bond it carries, how it joins us to Christ in a miraculous and yet realistic
way. Through this we see ourselves praying to God through Jesus Christ, we
experience Jesus interceding for us, we listen to Him talk to our hearts, He
joins us in prayers, we feel His abiding presence and He grants what we pray.
Let us hear His words and wishes for us as
we unite in prayerful wait today:
I am praying for them
This is great! These are the words of Jesus
Christ. This offers us great confidence, to know that someone is there for us.
We are not alone. We cannot be knocked down. We have a saviour who prays on our
behalf.
Let us pay attention to what attracted these Divine prayers. It is 'belief'.
Jesus says that He prays for them because
they believed in Him as sent by God. Do you have strong faith in God and His
authority over you? What place have you given the word of God in your life?
Consider it.
That they may be safe in the world
Jesus made His point straight that He was
not praying for the world. The romance
is only for those who opened their arms to receive it. He prays for those who
have agreed to follow Him, those who have flied to His patronage, those who are
totally dependent on Him.
These are those Jesus sees as people
entrusted to Him. These are people who as well entrusted themselves to God. In
whose hands are you? In the disappointing hands of world or in the dependable
and reliable hands of the Almighty?
The invitation therefore is to move away
from the world, its attractions and distractions, its glories and its
frustrations. Be soaked in prayers, be more spiritually conscious, accept the
Union which Jesus initiates. Jesus wished that we be safe in the world as He
sits at the right hand of the Father. He knows the turbulent situations we
face, the disappointments and challenges here and there, the heartbreaks and
trials.
He is aware that we have all these and many
other forces to contend with in the world. So He takes us to the upper room of
prayer and encounter. He immerses us with the warmth of His embrace, that
through His romance with us in prayers, in communion, in devotion, in novena
and in Lectio Divina we may be empowered, fortified and charged to face the
world, the devil and the flesh squarely and conquer in all the battles they
wage.
May we feel the deep joy of remaining in
union with God. May the Holy Spirit keep us united in prayers. May our lives,
our families, our Church and our society receive the transformation that flows
from our prayers and may the prayers and blessings of Jesus Christ for us come
to pass in our lives in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen
Happy Sunday to you (7th Week of Easter)
Rev Fr Julian O Ekeh
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