Sunday, May 17, 2026

Easter 7 (The Sunday after Ascension Day), Year A (2026)

Acts 1: 6–14 / Psalm 68: 1–10, 32–35 / I Peter 4: 12–14; 5: 6–11 / John 17: 1–11

 

This is the written version of the homily given at Flohr’s Evangelical Lutheran Church (ELCA) in McKnightstown, Pennsylvania on Sunday, May 17, 2026, by Fr. Gene Tucker, Interim Pastor.

                  

“INVITED AND DRAWN INTO THE INNER LIFE OF GOD”

(Homily text: John 17: 1-11)

Life has the ability to offer many blessings. One of the most wonderful things that can bless and support us in our earthly journey is a close and deeply personal relationship with someone. That “someone” might be our marriage partner. Or that “someone” could be a close friend, or perhaps a parent or a grandparent, or perhaps a schoolmate.

Such persons are ones we can share our innermost thoughts, concerns, struggles and desires with. We are able, with such persons, to share anything and everything, all in confidence.

It is just this sort of a relationship that our Lord Jesus Christ describes in this morning’s Gospel reading, which is a portion of what has come to be known as the Lord’s “High Priestly Prayer”. This prayer occupies all of chapter seventeen of John’s Gospel account. We hear just the beginning portion of it this morning.

The prayer concludes John’s extensive account of what happened as Jesus and His disciples celebrated and observed the feast of Passover. In John’s account, chapters thirteen through seventeen tell us about the events that took place on that night before our Lord suffered and died on Good Friday.

John’s unique writing style is evident as the prayer unfolds. In verses one through eleven, Jesus prays for Himself, and for the original band of disciples, as He is about to leave them. Then, in verses twelve through nineteen, John advances the narrative, as Jesus prays for that original band of disciples who will soon become Apostles, as they are sent out into the world carrying the Good News of God, made known in the sending of Jesus Christ. Finally, verses twenty through the end of the chapter, at verse twenty-six, Jesus prays for those who will come to faith through the work of the Apostles. (Yes, that includes you and me!)

John’s writing style has been compared to a series of loops, by which an idea is introduced. Then the idea is advanced a little at a time as the narrative unfolds.

Now then, let’s return to the theme with which we began: The blessing that is ours by virtue of a close and deeply personal relationship with someone.

That “someone”, in the case of the Lord’s High Priestly Prayer, is the Lord Himself. In Jesus’ prayer, we are invited into a close, personal, and a deep love relationship with the fulness of God, as Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

For, you see, Jesus Christ’s coming sheds light on the nature of the Father. His coming also sheds light on the nature of the Spirit.

And we are invited into the inner life of God, into the fulness of God’s identity as the Three-in-One, the Holy Trinity. We are invited into a place where we can share our innermost longings, desires, concerns, challenges, shortcomings and disappointments. At the same time, God, as our trusted companion in the walk of faith, is also that One we can share our celebrations and the high points of our lives with.

What a blessed state, to find ourselves drawn into the inner life of the God of all, that One who – in the final analysis – will be the One whose will and whose love will endure, and will conquer all things.

AMEN.