John 17:6-19 · Jesus Prays for His Disciples
Easter Consecration
John 17:6-19
Sermon
by Harry N. Huxhold
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A. E. Hotchner has written an autobiographical account of his experience of the Great Depression. He titled this touching account of his boyhood experience in St. Louis King of the Hill: A Memoir. Anyone who lived through that dreadful economic period can readily recognize the painful burdens young and old had to suffer which the author describes. Anyone who did not live through that period would benefit from reading how deeply affected people were by the economic distress that appeared so relentless. Hotchner relates how as a lad he was left virtually alone to fend for himself. His brother had to be farmed out to relatives. His mother was hospitalized in a public facility for the tubercular, and his father had to hit the road to sell Elgin watches. In addition, Aaron lost other friends who had to be removed from the broken-down hotel that he called home. If that were not enough, Aaron also suffered gross disappointment in his effort to earn all of twelve dollars for a completely new graduation outfit and have money besides for the graduation party.

The young man kept a stout heart, however, by losing himself in his studies and engaging in a form of reverie. He could tell himself that all that was happening was not the way it really was. His dad and mother had another home that was quite elegant, and at the right time they would find themselves there and everything would be all right. Probably most of us have played with that form of reverie ourselves and discovered that we can lift the gloom and find determination to carry on. However, one day Aaron was invited by a neighbor to pray with her in her sorrow for the loss of her son. He confesses that he had never prayed before. Now suddenly he found new strength as he prayed for his whole family in their desperate needs. It is in God that we find not just relief through reverie, but in the very power of God's being. We learn something about that in the High Priestly prayer of our Lord in the Gospel.

An Offer

We should recognize how desperately the world needs God's help. Yet people rely on their own strength rather than looking to God for help. We can all read the ups and downs of history. The ebb and flow of history is clear and plain to us. Yet the high and the mighty appear in defiance of what God says. But their collapse is as predictable as the noses on their faces. What is not so noticeable to those who want to flaunt power and majesty is the manner in which God repeatedly lifts up the lowly. In the prayer of Jesus we learn how God lifts up the lowly.

Luther reminded us that the best way to understand this is to think of God's people as the hidden church. By that he meant to say that when you expect the power and strength of the church to be most prominent, you probably will be disappointed. On the other hand, when you are least likely to think that the church is present at all, it will rise to the occasion. God was to bring down the mighty Babylon and raise the lowly family of Hebrew exiles. We see the contemporary examples of that in the manner in which the church has emerged in China, Russia, and Eastern Germany to help effect significant changes both for the church and the world. God has a way of always keeping us guessing. Most certainly, that is obvious in the unpredictability of the elements within the creation. It is equally true of how God manages the affairs of the world. Through both fair weather and foul and also through the peace and the disturbances of the world, we must recognize that God is King. God's judgment is working on the world at all times, and the offer of God's grace is always present. It is in prayer that we reach up for the strength that God offers. Jesus teaches us how available God's grace is.

The Prayer Of Jesus

The prayer which Jesus prayed for the disciples is of excellent composition. We are not told how the evangelist was informed of the prayer. However, the prayer is of the most noble and spiritual substance. Prayed in a moment when our Lord knew that the zero hour had come for him to face his enemies and ultimately the death they would impose upon him, Jesus prayed that the Heavenly Father would strengthen him for that hour. Jesus prayed that the Father would enable him to finish and complete the work of redeeming the world in precisely the manner in which the Father had given him in order that the world might know God as the only true God and Jesus Christ whom he had sent. In the third and final portion of the prayer, Jesus prayed for the church universal and that it might come to share in the glory of our Lord.

The second portion of the prayer, which is the appointed Gospel for the day, is the petition on behalf of the disciples which is also pertinent to us as followers of the Lord Jesus. First and foremost, Jesus prayed that they might enjoy the same unity with God that the Lord Jesus knew. He prayed that they would be and could be relied upon to continue the mission of love that our Lord Jesus represented to the world. The problem with the world is that when it strives for unity it does so in human terms. Jesus made it possible for us to enjoy a unity which God himself creates. That is a unity with the Creator and the creation. That was the central purpose for our Lord's coming into the world.

Protection

Jesus prayed, "Holy Father, protect them in your name that you have given me, so that they may be one as we are one. While I was with them, I protected them in your name that you have given me." The protection our Lord was praying about was the protection against the evil one. The devil is the one who constantly harasses us and does all within that presumed power to get us into difficulty with God and with one another. The devil aims to destroy our relationship with God by making us believe that God cannot be trusted. The devil does exactly the same thing with human relations.

All reports and statistics concerning family life in our day relate over and over again how difficult human relations are in every area of life. One reason for failure in human relations is due to the fact that people are put in opposition to one another by indifference and distrust. However, what is more fundamental is that we have lost the basis for human values and priorities, because we have lost the sense of responsibility to the One who alone is able to make us at one. It is in our Creator that we discover who we are in relationship both to him and to one another. It is for this reason that Jesus prayed that we be protected from the evil one who destroys such relationships both with our Heavenly Father and with one another.

Enjoy

In contrast to how the world lives under the stress of strained human relations in families, marriages, communities, and the work place, Jesus knew the fullness of joy in his life. Jesus could say that in spite of the manner in which people opposed him and eventually persecuted and crucified him. In his prayer Jesus said to the Heavenly Father, "Now I am coming to you, and I speak these things in the world so that they may have my joy made complete in themselves." The joy of which Jesus speaks, of course, is not the kind of joy of which the world speaks. The world would have you believe that joy comes when you win the state lottery or the Ed McMahon Sweepstakes. Joy on the world's terms is supposed to come to you with the new neighborhood, the new car, or the executive's million-dollar bonus. Or the world offers joys that come with the highs on drugs, alcohol, and sensual pleasures.

Yet the same world that lures people with these illusionary offers reports daily in its own headlines the tragedies that come to people who have flirted with or tasted of these passing pleasures. When Jesus prays for us to experience his joy, he wants us to have the joy of knowing that our lives are in the hands of a gracious and tenderhearted Father who rescues us as orphans in the storm of the world. It is the discovery that our lives find their meaning in God that gives us joy. Just as Jesus could rise above all the problems that confronted him, so we also can do the same. To be able to do that is to know and experience joy.

In The World

Jesus in no way intended to make life difficult for us in the world. On the contrary, Jesus did not deny life nor the world. Jesus embraced the world fully and meant for people to have the fullness of joy in the world. Jesus prayed to the Father, "I have given them your word, and the world has hated them because they do not belong to the world, just as I do not belong to the world. I am not asking you to take them out of the world, but I ask you to protect them from the evil one." This is not double talk. Jesus means that there is much out in the world that is antagonistic toward what God has in store for God's children.

In the Gospel of John, the world is always that host of people, demons, and forces that are opposed to the gracious will of God. Thus in our families, our marriages, our communities, and the workplace there are all kinds of worldly forces that would make life difficult for us. On the other hand, Jesus says we are not to be taken out of the world, because it is in this world, this creation of God, that we are to experience and taste of the goodness of God that God has built into the creation. But we do not belong to the world in the sense that we derive our joy from the things of the world, because they are things. Rather, we see them as the gifts of God. We do not permit the evil one to spoil our enjoyment of what God does for us in the world. Jesus is not a killjoy. Jesus inspires our joy and makes the joy complete, because he not only showed us how to live in joy, but is also the source of our joy.

Sanctified

For all that Jesus prayed for us, he also prayed that God would sanctify his disciples. He prayed, "Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth." Another word for "sanctify" is "consecrate." Either way the intention is that God should "make them holy." The children of God, who are rescued from being orphans in the world, are to be made holy even as our Lord Jesus Christ is made holy. God makes us holy as Christ is holy through what Christ has done for us. Jesus came into the world to be one of us by sharing his holiness with our humanity. By taking our flesh and identifying with us, he did us a great favor. However, that was not enough.

Jesus lived under our Law for us and died under that law that we might be declared holy in the court of God's justice. On top of all that, Jesus also rose from the dead to offer life and holiness to us. That is how we are sanctified through the word of God. Jesus is the Word himself, the word of God incarnate who shares holiness through the sacrament of Holy Baptism, the daily offer of the forgiveness of sins, and the sacrament of the Lord's supper. That means our God daily and richly sanctifies our lives in the families, in our marriages, in our communities, and in the workplace. We can carry on in spite of the onslaught of all kinds of problems, trials, temptations, and difficulties that the world poses for us, because God insulates us to the damage they can do to us through the manner in which he sanctifies us.

Sent

Jesus says to the Father that because God can and does sanctify us he sends us into the world. He prayed, "As you have sent me into the world, so I have sent them into the world. And for their sakes I sanctify myself, so that they may also be sanctified in truth." Jesus guaranteed what he was praying for by consecrating and offering himself as he did. Now then we can be sent into the world to share in the love and joy of which he prayed. Where is it better to start on this business of sharing love, grace, and forgiveness than in the home?

As we remember the special needs of dear ones and friends and the needs of all people, we pray together that all of us be consecrated as our Lord prayed. As our Lord sends us into the world, he does so in our homes first. There we experience the love of God through mothers and fathers. There we learn to socialize and carry love into the world and to share forgiveness and God's grace with the world. Our Lord himself experienced the love of family and experienced the joy of the Heavenly Father. Yet our Lord did much more for the world by achieving for us what he did. He put us into the position of being able to call upon the Heavenly Father in our prayers for one another in the same manner in which he prayed this high priestly prayer for us.

CSS Publishing Company, WHICH WAY TO JESUS?, by Harry N. Huxhold