John 17:20-26 · Jesus Prays for All Believers
Partners with the Divine
John 17:20-26
Sermon
by Schuyler Rhodes
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Today I am thinking about what it means to be partners. For me, the first person that comes to mind when I think about this is my spouse. I am beyond blessed to have someone who is, in every way, a partner in life. We share the joys and the sorrows, the struggles and the laughter, and we take responsibility for our own behavior while making sure we “have each other’s back.” This is a partnership where it’s possible to sit for hours in a room together, each with a book to read. No words are shared. No preferences uttered or requested. We are, simply, together. A partnership like that is a beautiful thing indeed. And while you remain distinct individuals there is a powerful way in which you connect because you are bound in trust and common purpose.

Maybe you know a partnership like this in your life? I once knew two guys who owned a hardware business in upstate New York. They worked together for years in this small town, dispensing hammers, nails and whatever the community needed. Sure, they were friends, but it was more than that. On slow mornings at the store you would see them in their chairs on the front porch of the building sharing coffee and watching the town go by. These guys didn’t actually talk much, but they communicated a lot. These guys didn’t have lengthy discussions about business philosophy or other things. They just came together as partners to run a business and serve their community. And after long years of doing this they sold the business and both retired. They continued their porch sitting, though, until they both passed away just days apart.

What does it mean to be a partner?

We could easily go the legal, business route and get that pretty quickly defined. However, the kind of partnership we are talking about here is not a limited liability company or a corporation. No, we are talking about something rooted here in relationship. We are looking at something that is rooted in trust and faith. In many ways trust and faith come very close to meaning the same thing, but without either, partnerships are hard to build.

Human partnerships, in and of themselves, require both work and intentionality. It’s hard to maintain a full partnership if you’re not focused and sharing the same purpose.

Whether it’s my spouse and me or my old friends who ran the hardware business, common purpose is important. This is not only true of human interaction, it’s also true of our partnership with God. I know. Some of you are saying, “What? Partnership? With God? How does that work?” Well, it works in much the same way that a human partnership does.

God yearns for a partnership with us and invites us to be so close that, as this passage from John indicates, we are in and of one another. Wow. I hear the cynic in me saying, “I’m not sure I want to be that close to anyone, even if it is God.” But that’s the cynic’s voice. The other voice that emanates from the heart is the one that seeks relationship and that searches for connection and finds fulfillment in mutuality. This voice comes from a seeker of the holy and welcomes God’s grace as it invites us into full relationship or partnership with God.

If we are doing this partnership with God in a good way it is a relationship where we participate in one another’s being. As Jesus prays in the garden he prays not only for unity for his followers but also for unity (or partnership) with God.

“As you, Father are in me, and I am in you, may they also be in us…”(John 17:21). Here is the outline for a partnership with the divine. It is not about one party or the other, so much as it is about the building of the kingdom. I know, for example, that my spouse and I are together, not only to fulfill one another, but to be a blessing to the world around us. I know that we are deeply linked in this common purpose, so much so that John’s language makes sense.

Partnership with the divine goes beyond our religiosity. It is deeper than our play-acting at church and it is more powerful than our own private agendas. Like all good partnerships, this one comes to fruition in common purpose. When we partner with God to care for creation by working against pollution and environmental degradation, we are in common purpose with God. When we work together to feed the hungry and heal the sick we are in common purpose with God. When we give ourselves fully to the work of building open and inclusive community we are in common purpose with God.

What do you think? Is partnership with the divine something we could pursue together? As a Christian community in this time and place, what are some of the ways that we might find common purpose with God to such an extent that we can feel ourselves connected — a part of each other? Might we think together about our neighbors around our church? Who are these people? What do they need? How might we step forward with God to build relationships and to be a healing presence? And how might we shape our spiritual journey so that this partnership is strengthened? How is it that we come together in prayer and discipline? How do we shape our lives so that we are in God and God is in us and we come together in witness and service for the whole world?

I believe that in this moment we are called to a deeper relationship with God. Maybe we are even called into a partnership with trust, love and common purpose. Maybe, just maybe, at the end of the day our partnership with the divine will bear the fruit of healing, hope, and salvation.

Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Shouting Joy to the Storm: Cycle C sermons for Lent and Easter based on the Gospel texts, by Schuyler Rhodes