Scripture
Isaiah 11:6-13, The wolf shall live with the lamb.
Psalms 122, Peace be within your walls.
1 Thessalonians 5:12a, 13b-18, Be at peace among yourselves.
John 17:6-24, That they all may be one.
Meditation
God's desire for human beings is that we live in peace with one another. Not
only an absence of war or conflict; the shalom desired by God is that
which arises from a reconciled humanity, a human family which participates in
and embodies the peace which God alone can give. Isaiah's image of the wolf
living with the lamb, the leopard lying down with the kid, offers a glimpse of
the future God desires for us. While we cannot create this shalom on
our own, we are called to be instruments of the Lord's peace, artisans of God's
reconciling work. Peace, like unity, is a gift and a calling.
Jesus' plea for the unity took the form of a prayer. It is a prayer which rises from the depths of his heart and of his mission, as he prepares his disciples for all that is to come: Father, may they all be one.
As we mark the 100th anniversary of the Octave/Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, celebrating it within the context of the yearnings, prayers and initiatives for the unity of Christians through the centuries, we do well to take stock of where we are on this Spirit-led journey. It is a time to give thanks for the many fruits of prayer for unity. In many places, animosity and misunderstanding have given way to respect and friendship between Christians and Christian communities. Christians who have gathered together to pray for unity have often joined together in acts of common witness to the gospel, and worked side by side in serving those in great need. Dialogue has assisted in building bridges of understanding, and has led to the resolution of some of the doctrinal differences which have separated us.
Yet it is also a time to repent, for in our divisions we continue to stand under the judgement of Jesus' prayer for unity and Paul's imperative that we be at peace among ourselves. In the present day, Christians are publicly divided on many issues. Internally divided and in conflict with each other, we fall short of the lofty calling to be signs and instruments of the unity and peace willed by God.
What then shall we say? There is reason to rejoice, and cause for sorrow. It is a moment to give thanks for those of past generations who have spent themselves generously at the service of reconciliation, and a time to recommit ourselves to be artisans of the unity and peace which Christ desires.
Prayer
Lord, make us one: one in our words; one in our yearning and pursuit of justice;
one in love, serving you by serving the least of our sisters and brothers; one
in longing for your face. Lord, make us one in you. Amen.