A
hymn to Christ—High Priest
[A reflection on John
17]
by Grant Thorpe
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| We did
not ask you to pray for us, or pray for ourselves to be
strong. |
| Nor sought
our strength in your actions, nor longed for the life
of your heaven. |
| We longed
for a union of spirits and a love that would cover the
earth, |
| But saw
not the need for your passion to sanctify us in the truth. |
| |
| You came
and prayed in our hearing, a prayer to the Father of love |
| A prayer—in
union with actions—to establish a people of God. |
| All power
was yours to deliver—to those whom your Father made yours— |
| A life
of knowing the Father and yourself: the Son of his love. |
| |
| You asked
that joy of your victory, a joy that was natively yours |
| Would
be given to us who were broken—whose hopes were tawdry
and worn. |
| You prayed
that we’d be the Father’s, not Satan’s—though still in
this world, |
| And asked
for the oneness to come to us, which you had known from
of old. |
| |
| But who
could come to the Father, if the prayer was only in words? |
| And where
be the merit in speaking if the cry of your flesh were
not heard? |
| Your life
would be totally given, abandoned to God and his will |
| And a
truth fresh and new be established, to sanctify those
whom you willed. |
| |
| The place
of this prayer was a rough cross, and the darkness fearfully
sent, |
| A horror
of darkness upon you who bore our misdeeds in your flesh. |
| You cried
the prayer of the lostness, the vain-ness and anguish
and shame |
| Of a sinner
abandoned, uncared for: ‘My God! You’ve left me alone.’ |
| |
| In giving
yourself to the Father, you’d given yourself for us all. |
| You’d
approached your Father in our name and felt the curse
on our fall. |
| You knew
it was finished and said so, and spent, but noble and
tall |
| Commended
yourself to your Father, awaiting the raising of all. |
| |
| In rising
you rose to the Father. You live to this God who is ours. |
| We’re
in you, and in the Father, and are one in the love you’ve
revealed. |
| The truth
of this great intercession is more than the fact of our
fall |
| And the
world has before it a people whose living from heaven
is called. |
| |
| This is
the prayer that you now pray, our High Priest at right
hand of God, |
| Living
to make intercession until all the nations have heard |
| No battle
or trying temptation, no care or weakness or need |
| Can part
us from you and the Father, or from each other who heed. |
| |
| ©
Grant Thorpe, March 1994 |
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