Bible reading
I ask … on behalf of those who will believe in me through
their word, that they may all be one. As you, Father, are in me and I am in
you, may they also be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent
me. The glory that you have given me I have given them, so that they may be
one, as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may become completely
one, so that the world may know that you have sent me and have loved them even
as you have loved me. Father, I desire that those also, whom you have given me,
may be with me where I am, to see my glory, which you have given me because you
loved me before the foundation of the world. (John 17. 20 - 24)
Meditation
Geoff Mulgan, when Director of the Young Foundation, wrote
that “seeing the connectedness of things is the starting point for
understanding a world that otherwise appears baffling” and “the growing
connectedness of the world is the most important social and economic fact of
our times.” Mulgan saw connectedness manifested “in the growth of physical
links like telecom networks; in rising flows of goods, money, ideas and people;
in the interconnectedness of culture and the environment; and in new forms of
social organisation.”
While he has been in America, Sadiq Khan has been arguing
that “there is a huge amount political leaders can do to ensure people of
different ethnicities, faiths, cultures, age groups, sexualities and incomes
don’t just tolerate each other, but live truly interconnected lives as
neighbours, citizens and friends.” He has been talking about building bridges
rather than walls because “the world has been busy building separation barriers
at a rate perhaps unequalled in history: at least 6,000 miles of wire,
concrete, steel, sand, stone, mesh; anything to keep peoples out – or in.” Jon
Henley has written that: “What is odd is that this building is happening at a
time when less-physical walls appear to be crumbling. This is the age of the
global economy, multinationals, vanishing trade barriers; of "the free
movement of goods, capital, services and people", unprecedented mobility
and instantaneous communication.” (
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2013/nov/19/walls-barrier-belfast-west-b-ank)
We can see connectedness manifested in the relations within
the Godhead as they are revealed to us through this prayer of Jesus which is
recorded in John 17 - “you are in me and I am in you.” We are then drawn into this
interconnectivity found at the heart of the Godhead - “may they also be in us”
– in order that we participate in an exchange of love which precedes the
creation of the world. When Jesus prayed that his followers might all be one,
he prayed this on the basis that his followers might be in God as he is in the
Father and the Father is in him. He was praying that we, who follow in his
footsteps, would experience the same oneness with God and each other that he
enjoys with God, his Father. In essence, his prayer is that we will experience
unity, because unity is what is at the very heart of God.
John’s Gospel shows us two different patterns of society,
each with a different centre or ruling power. In the first, “the ruling
principle is the dictator ME, my ego-centric ego, and the pattern of society is
people competing with, manipulating and trying to control each other.” In the
second, “the ruling principle is the Spirit of Love, and the pattern of society
is one of compassion – people giving to each other what they really are, and
accepting what others are, recognising their differences, and sharing their
vulnerability.”
Jesus’ focus on unity on unity among his followers because
of the unity that exists within the Trinity suggests that, as his followers, we
should favour collaboration, coalition, alliances and unions over independence.
The unity found in the Godhead is the source of the connectedness of things
found within the world and is also the starting point for understanding a world
that otherwise appears baffling.
Prayer
Holy Trinity, Father, Son and Spirit, may we know love as
you know love, may we exchange love as you exchange love, may we live love as
you live love, may we know unity as you know unity.
May we share connectedness as you share connectedness, you in us and ourselves in you.
God of connectedness, teach us that churches, communities
and businesses thrive when the gifts of all their members are released and they
build one another’s assets. Thus is deficit turned to plenitude, threat turned
to companionship, and fear turned to joy. This is the life of the kingdom, may
it be our experience too.
May we share connectedness as you share connectedness, you in us and ourselves in you.
God of love, may your words inform our speech as we discuss how
to build bridges rather than walls. May your love influence our behaviour
towards those with whom we work and enable us to live truly interconnected
lives as neighbours, citizens and friends. May your actions impact our
activities inspiring new initiatives characterized by service of others and
creative understandings of the common good.
May we share connectedness as you share connectedness, you in us and ourselves in you.
Blessing
Releasing the gifts of all, building one another’s assets,
deficit turned to plenitude, threat turned to companionship, fear turned to
joy. May all those blessings of almighty God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, rest
upon you and remain with you always. Amen.