Glory is at the heart of John’s gospel. In the very opening lines, we read: “And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory. The glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth” (Jn 1:14). This “glory” can be understood as the visibly manifest, interpersonally mediated presence of God. It is something physical and available to our senses that opens us to God’s loving of Godself, the “godliness of God.” For us, Jesus Christ is the supreme mediator and embodiment of God’s glory.
At the Last Supper, Jesus mediates God’s glory in a very physical and interpersonal way as he breaks bread with his disciples and prays these words to the Father on our behalf: “The glory that you have given me I have given them, so that they may be one, as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may become completely one, so that the world may know that you have sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me” (Jn 17:22-23). This glorious, glorifying prayer demarks a crucial moment of pause and clarification before the passion, crucifixion, and resurrection of Jesus. (In John, these events form a single arc simply referred to as Jesus’ “glorification.”) Before his glorification, Jesus ensures that his disciples will know that God’s glory belongs to them as well.
Glory is present and available to us. The glorifying energy didn’t subside as Jesus’s final supper with his friends came to end, or even after his resurrection. The glory revealed through Jesus takes us even further into an identification with and participation in God, through Jesus. It is especially present when we pray with and for others, as Jesus did. The glory of God is always a glory shared. Our participation in a community of prayer makes the glory hidden in the work of Christ manifest to the world, so that all who are drawn to him through us may “see and believe.”
Recall for a moment what it feels like to stand in someone’s physical presence and offer prayer on their behalf, or to have someone pray for you in this way. It might be a memory of your grandmother saying grace, or the priest who performed your wedding. It could be the prayer you didn’t even know you had in you until it was tumbling from your lips at the death of your best friend or the birth of your only child. It could be a prayer whispered over the forehead of your beloved. In such moments we feel our heartbeats quicken and our hair stand on end. We feel the bounded wall of own skin gently merge with the warm currents of the Holy Spirit on all sides. This kind of very specific and intimate prayer for another person is an act of glorification of the earth. Every baptized Christian is empowered and commissioned to this ministry of glorification.
A Christian intent on sharing the glory of the Father made known in the Son might ask a person, “May I pray for you? May I pray with you?” We all experience moments when others pour out their hearts to us, in great joy or sorrow, or confide in us, or ask for our guidance. In addition to offering our simple, listening presence – an inestimable gift in itself – we can offer to pray with or pray for such a companion. This is a small but missional act with the power to glorify another’s experience of life and to glorify God at work in us.
Now this is undoubtedly risky. It can be a vulnerable experience, bringing what matters most to us into dialogue with the joy or sorrow of a fellow traveler. An e-mail or a card – “my thoughts and prayers are with you” – can feel so much safer than an offer to pray in the here and now, in the flesh, in the moment the tears are falling and all seems lost. But wasn’t that how Jesus lived, stepping boldly into one moment of open, exposed truth and courage after another, until he offered his pure vulnerability on the cross?
“We love because God first loved us,” the writer of the First Letter of John tells us (1 Jn 4:19). We might also day that we glorify God because God has first glorified us. Our capacity, our impulse, our irrepressible desire to give glory to God. We are moved to give back what God has given to us. We are called to share this glory with the world.
—Brother Keith Nelson, The Society of St John the Evangelist
Christ in Majesty, installed in 1886. On the east wall these mosaics were made by Messrs Powell in London, using their own glass tesserae. The central mosaic, Christ in Majesty Flanked by Mary and St. John, was installed in 1886 when the chapel was refurbished.