Pope Benedict XVI held his weekly General Audience on Wednesday in the Paul VI Hall,
reflecting on the desire for unity that Christ expressed in his priestly prayer at
the Last Supper, as recounted in the 17th chapter of St. John’s Gospel:
Against
the backdrop of the Jewish feast of expiation Yom Kippur, Jesus, priest and victim,
prays that the Father will glorify him in this, the hour of his sacrifice of reconciliation.
He asks the Father to consecrate his disciples, setting them apart and sending them
forth to continue his mission in the world. Christ also implores the gift of unity
for all those who will believe in him through the preaching of the apostles.
Thus,
said Pope Benedict, Chris’t priestly prayer can be seen as instituting the Church,
the community of the disciples who, through faith in him, are made one and share in
his saving mission:
In meditating upon the Lord’s priestly prayer, let us
ask the Father for the grace to grow in our baptismal consecration and to open our
own prayers to the needs of our neighbours and the whole world. Let us also pray,
as we have just done in the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, for the gift of the
visible unity of all Christ’s followers, so that the world may believe in the Son
and in the Father who sent him.
Following the main catechesis, the Holy
Father had greetings for pilgrims in many languages, including English:
I
offer a warm welcome to the students of the Bossey Graduate School of Ecumenical Studies
in Switzerland, and I offer prayerful good wishes for their work. Upon all the English-speaking
pilgrims and visitors present at today’s Audience I cordially invoke God’s blessings
of joy and peace!
This Wednesday’s was the last General Audience of the
Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, and came ahead of an ecumenical Vespers service
at the Papal Basilica of St. Paul outside the Walls. Listen: