John 17:6-11
Acts 1:6-14
May 21, 2023
Rev. Fa Lane
Acts 1:14 All these were constantly devoting themselves to prayer, together with certain women, including Mary the mother of Jesus, as well as his brothers.
One thing about the new community of Jesus’ followers, is that they tried to stick together. They had just seen Jesus’ bold ascension and were undoubtedly perplexed, but they knew they needed to be together. Paul was constantly teaching in the newly formed house churches and casual groups who gathered about the way to be the church – Christ’s body. In Ephesians 5:21 he admonishes those who would be the church to “submit to one another out of reverence for Christ.”
Jesus said in John 13:34-35 for us to love one another is to prove that we are Christ’s disciples. So, caring for one another, being in touch with one another, taking meals to families, helping with daily living activities for the frail or injured, praying for each other, are ways we show that we love one another.
In the Acts passage for today, Jesus has instructed the disciples to stay in Jerusalem until God had sent to them the promised advocate, the Holy Spirit. They were not to be bound to his physical being. They would soon know him a different way after they were baptized by the Holy Spirit. But, inquiring minds want to know and before long they asked questions.
They started asking him about the details of when God would restore the Kingdom of Israel. He explained that only God who set the timing would know. In the meantime, his followers would receive the Holy Spirit from God to help them bear witness to Christ’s ministry all over the earth. Then he ascended from their sight.
As they’re watching this perplexing event, some men in white clothing appeared assuring them that Jesus would come again in the same way. He ascended to leave this earthly life and to return to God trusting the disciples to remember and act with God’s love like he’d taught them. He promised the Holy Spirit, their advocate, would lead them.
With no more explanation than that, the disciples walked back to Jerusalem (as Jesus had told them to do) and into the Upper Room - where Jesus had instituted the communion sacrament; and they committed themselves to prayer, to be of one mind out of devotion to Jesus.
Jesus had taught them to value the importance of prayer. So, that is the first thing they turned to together. We collectively pray for one another in worship each week. Some of you have a vivid personal devotion prayer time. Some of us use devotional books, like the UCC’s Daily Devotional, which you can access online. You can sign up for an email that comes each day. There are probably thousands of devotional books on the market that you can buy to use at home and in a small group of friends.
So, what IS devotion? According to the Merriam Webster dictionary it means the act of prayer or a private time of worship. It’s an exercise (it says) or practice other than the regular corporate worship of a congregation. May I ask for a show of hands if you do some regular devotion time? You dedicate yourself to a cause or activity, Webster says. It’s the state of being ardently dedicated and loyal.
We have this word, that only shows up in Acts, koinonia, meaning to hold all things in common. It’s a sharing in life, interconnectedness, having unity, loyal to one another’s care. It’s a way of checks and balances when needed in the community. One way we do this is through our acts of prayer, to hold onto one another spiritually speaking, to ask for healing, for someone’s comfort, for their success, and well-being, to ask for and to offer forgiveness.
In the John passage, Jesus prays for the disciples, for all the ones whom God had given to Jesus to teach, to coach and to model God’s ways. Here in John, he prays for them (by extension for us) that God would continue to keep them in God’s presence so that they might be one just as Jesus was one with God. So, I suggest that when we pray for one another we are humbly keeping one another, holding on to each other, in God’s name; guarding them from harm, desiring for them full joy in Christ’s name.
And, so let us pray, right now, together. We pray with spoken words, with hymn singing, with the meditations of our hearts, with the acts of our hands. Let us join with the Holy Spirit right now, regardless of age or ability, our gender or social status, no matter whom you love, or where we are on life’s journey, all are welcome into this prayer circle.
We often use a format called the prayer of intercession, where we ask on behalf of others. It frequently uses a repeated phrase after the petition like “Lord, hear our prayer” or “Lord,, have mercy.” For example, the petition prayer might be like this, as we pray together now:
O Divine Healer who works through the hands of surgeons and nurses, dentists and physical therapists, be with all who spend their lives as channels of healing. Strengthen them to be sensitive to the needs of those whom they are treating: O Lord, Hear our prayer. When I say, “O Lord”, you say, “Hear our Prayer.”
Let us continue in prayer. O God of mercy and comfort, we bring before you our friends who have mending wounds, our loved ones recovering from surgery, those who have heart issues and those who are suffering from depression or dementia. We bring before you our loved one enduring chronic illness or neurological problems: O Lord, Hear our prayer.
Lord, please be with our loved ones and friends in the neighborhood who are having physical difficulties. We pray for newborn babies who are developing tongue and throat muscles to eat. We ask, O Lord, that you mend broken limbs and broken hearts, and that you cool burned skin and raging tempers. O Lord, hear our prayer.
O God of Justice and Truth, we pray for the people who have no one to stand with them as they live with mental illness, for individuals who are homeless, for people who seek immigrant status and are alone, also the people recently released from hospitals with nowhere to go, and for people in prison: O Lord, Hear our prayer.
Lord, we pray for those legal and social advocates who work for the ones who are in need, give them strength of voice, vision that is unclouded, determination that will not be dampened. O Lord, hear our prayer. Amen.
Another way to pray uses our ability to bring to mind a situation, a person with a specific injury. Visualization can help a great deal to power your prayer. I carry you in my heart while in prayer. I see you in my mind’s eye. Some people pray with the picture directory to help visualize for whom they’re praying or they hold a memento given to them.
Try this practice of healing prayer: close your eyes and bring to mind someone for whom you’d like to pray. Visualize their wound or place of illness. Now, zero in on the location of their hurt; maybe a left heel like for our friend Rich. Imagine your open hands just above that spot and that you are a channel for God’s spirit to bring about healing.
Just see it, ask God for healing energy, comfort, and peace of mind as you breathe softly with a loving heart focused on them.
Amen.
Singing has a palpable sense of togetherness. And, it’s one that you can carry with you even when you’re not with the group. I can still feel the intake of breath together as one, when I was singing in a professional choir. When someone’s voice was missing, I felt their absence and would look for them.
Singing has been spoken of as “praying twice.” You may know songs that initiate a time of prayer such as “In the Garden.” “I come to the garden alone while the due is still on the roses.// And, he walks with me and he talks with me.” You may like a song that reminds you that God is as close as your own breath: “This is the Air I breathe, Your holy presence living in me. This is my daily prayer Your very word spoken to me.”
Or when we want to affirm our identity in Christ who overcame death, we sing of him, “Fear is not my future; You Are. Sickness is not my story; You Are.”
Our hymns, as my friend Greg wrote, takes our theology from our heads to our hearts. You may not remember words of every sermon you’ve heard when you’re going through troubles, but you might find a hymn that helps. My mother’s choice was often “Rock of Ages”. “Rock of Ages, cleft for me, let me hide myself in thee.” Another is “Guide me now, Oh Great Redeemer, pilgrim through this barren land.”
When you’re amazed at how a bad situation turns out well, you might sing “O Lord My God, when I in awesome wonder consider all the worlds your hands have made, //Then sings my soul How Great Thou Art.”
We say prayers of thanks for the beauty of artisans, like Ray who has made us several beautiful and meaningful banners. He changed the anniversary from 275 to 280 for our upcoming celebration. You may see cairns as you walk in the woods, like what is on the worship table. It’s a place where someone has stopped to pray and built for themselves an altar of stone.
Let everything you do be an act of prayer. Walk in the forests taking in a sense of God’s healing spirit and say a prayer of thanks. When you are cleaning your house, let it be a time of prayer as you declutter your heart too. When you work in the garden or go grocery shopping, pray that food be provided for families with limited resources. When you see that car accident, pray for their well-being and for those who are first responders.
In these ways we devote ourselves to one another as an expression of God’s love. I ask that you continue to pray for one another. Pray for the Church at large, pray for our elected leaders, pray for people living in poor conditions, and those with illness. Lift up those who need better income, the ones who are suffering from oppression and invisibility, and the young ones cut off from family because of an argument.
Be devoted to one another in prayer, please. Let us pray together the prayer that Jesus taught us.
Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name.
Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors.
Lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.
For thine is the kingdom, the power and the glory forever.
Amen.
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