Sunday 29th May 2022

Our baptism makes us members of the community of God’s children in fellowship with one another because of the conviction that the unity of the Trinity is the foundation upon which our Christian unity is established, which makes us appreciate our own union as God’s children. Through ritual celebration and storytelling. Eastertide offers us an opportunity to reflect deeply on our union with the Trinity. This celebration fills and prepares us in hope of an eternal glory in God’s presence.
In the gospel, Jesus’ prayer for unity between God and humankind reveals the main features of the story of our salvation - namely, God becoming human so that God will renew humanity from within, from participation in human life in order to elevate humanity to the status that we share with God at the time of creation because we bare God’s image. Our union with God is certainly not far removed from our relationship with one another. For this reason, Jesus recognises the importance of our union with one another and prays that it will be the same as the union that he shares with God. Our fellowship with one another testifies to our siblinghood as God’s children. It shows that we belong to God and Jesus Christ, and that we are disposed to reflect in our lives the same elements of unity that bind God and Jesus Christ together. Just as God and Jesus Christ are working together for the benefit of humankind, likewise we must approach our fellowship with one another with a spirit of benevolence and goodwill, which is the intention of Jesus’ prayer to God on our behalf.
Another important intention in Jesus’ prayer for us is that the love of God, which Jesus Christ experienced in his life and death on the cross, may also be experienced by believers. Jesus is among us as God made flesh manifesting the love of God in his ministry of calling our attention to the presence of God in the world. Christian love originates in God loving us first, and God’s love for us is manifested in the self-giving of Jesus Christ on the cross. The love of God toward Jesus Christ is displayed in Christ’s love for us by accepting to die on the cross (Gal. 2:20). It is in this context that Jesus’ prayer to love one another as I have loved you (John 13:34) finds its invitation to replicate in believers’ relationships with one another the love with which we have been divinely loved by God through Christ, and to make whatever sacrifices are necessary to respect and honour the dignity of each other.
Jesus expresses his greatest desire for humanity, for whose sake he took human nature and for the fulfilment of the saving plan of God in us, when he says, “I wish that where I am they also may be with me.” The unity of the Trinity with believers comes to fulfilment at the heavenly habitation. The ministry of Jesus Christ for our sake carries within it the invitation to live on earth with the same mind that is in Jesus Christ (Phil. 2:5) in order for believers to prepare for life in the heavenly kingdom. The ultimate end of our earthly life is to be with God and share eternity with Jesus Christ. The Easter season invites us to prepare for this life through acts of love, humility, and compassion toward one another, which are the virtues of our Christian life and holiness







