Meditation on John 17:1-11
The Reverend Dr. Karen Crawford
First Presbyterian Church of Smithtown
May 17, 2026

I found out yesterday that May 6th through 12th was National Nurses Week. Maybe you knew that? It always corresponds with the birthday of Florence Nightingale—May 12, 1820. Do you know her amazing story?
She was born in Florence, Italy, to an affluent British family that moved in elite social circles. She was brought up in the family’s historic English country estates at Embley, Hampshire, and Lea Hurst, Derbyshire. She was provided with a classical education, studying math, German, French, and Italian. But she was awkward in social situations, and she and her mother didn’t get along. She said her mother was controlling! At an early age, Florence was involved in ministering to the poor and sick in the village neighboring her family’s estate. She eventually concluded that God was calling her to be a nurse, much to the horror of her family. Nursing was seen by the upper classes as lowly menial labor.
Florence further angered her mother when she turned down a gentleman’s offer of marriage and went to Germany to study nursing. She returned to London in the 1850s and began working first as a nurse in a hospital, caring for sick governesses, and then a supervisor of nurses.
The Crimean War broke out in October 1853. “Allied British and French forces were at war against the Russian Empire for control of Ottoman territory. Thousands of British soldiers were sent to the Black Sea, where supplies quickly dwindled. By 1854, no fewer than 18,000 soldiers had been admitted into military hospitals. At the time, there were no female nurses stationed at hospitals in the Crimea. … England was in an uproar about the neglect of sick and injured soldiers. They lacked not only sufficient medical attention due to hospitals being horribly understaffed but also languished in appallingly unsanitary conditions.”
The Secretary of War wrote Florence a letter, asking her to organize a corps of nurses to tend to the sick and fallen soldiers in the Crimea. She assembled a team of about three dozen nurses from a variety of religious orders and set sail to the Crimea. When they arrived, they discovered that the “hospital sat on top of a large cesspool, which contaminated the water and the building itself. Patients lay in their own excrement on stretchers strewn throughout the hallways. Rodents and bugs scurried past them. The most basic supplies, such as bandages and soap, grew increasingly scarce as the number of ill and wounded steadily increased. Even water needed to be rationed.”

Florence, who became noted for her statistician skills, kept careful records and observed that more soldiers were dying from infectious diseases, such as typhoid and cholera, than from injuries incurred in battle. She and her team got to work scrubbing the hospital from top to bottom, floor to ceiling. And she earned the nicknames of “the Lady with the Lamp” and the “Angel of Crimea” because she spent every waking moment caring for the patients, moving through the wards at night carrying a lamp. In 1858, she published a massive report based on her nursing experiences during the war. Her Notes on Matters Affecting the Health, Efficiency and Hospital Administration of the British Army would spark a total restructuring of the War Office’s administrative department, including the establishment of a Royal Commission for the Health of the Army.
(Link to her Notes… https://archive.org/details/b20387118/page/n7/mode/2up)
Her contributions to medicine are astounding for her time and gender. Radical changes came from a foundational understanding that good sanitation and cleanliness, such as the simple act of workers washing their hands, protects and promotes the health, healing, and well-being of patients.
As Christ’s followers, we have a foundational understanding of the need for prayer in our life. For without prayer, we cannot have a healthy, loving relationship with him. We cannot function as Christ’s disciples or his church without prayer. He provides an example for our prayer not just with The Lord’s Prayer but in his prayer for his disciples in this last discourse in John. Some say that that the whole of this prayer, which extends beyond our passage, is really a hymn, much like the psalms are both prayers and songs.
Of all the things for which Jesus could have been praying, he chooses three things as a final request to God. The first thing for which he prays is for our protection. The word translated “protect” is literally “keep.” He says, “O Father most holy, keep them.” This reminds me of the Aaronic blessing in Numbers 6, beginning at verse 24. May “The LORD bless you and keep you; the LORD make his face shine upon you and be gracious to you; the LORD lift up his countenance upon you and give you peace.” This “keeping” in 1 John 2:15-17 is keeping us safe “from the contamination of the world.” John will pray in 17:15-16, “I am not asking you to take them out of the world but to keep them safe from the Evil One. They do not belong to the world, any more than I belong to the world.” To keep them, Jesus’s followers will be marked with and protected by the divine name that God has given to him. He prays to the Father, “keep them in your name.”
The Evil One is the same as the petition in Matthew’s version of the Lord’s Prayer. When we say in Matthew 6:13, “Deliver us from evil,” a more accurate translation is “Free us from the Evil One.” The Evil One is “the prince of this world.” As 1 John 19 says, “The whole world is under the Evil One.” As Paul says in his letter to the Philippians (3:20-21), “But our citizenship is in heaven, and it is from there that we are expecting a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ.He will transform the body of our humiliation that it may be conformed to the body of his glory, by the power that also enables him to make all things subject to himself.”
The second thing for which Christ prays is for our unity—that we may be one as he is one with the Father. This unity is not our doing, but it is strengthened and revealed when we pray.
Jesus prays for a final thing for us in verse 13, as we look beyond where our passage ends. He prays for his joy to be ours. He says, “But now I am coming to you. Yet, while still in the world, I say all this that they may share my joy to the full.”
I want to thank you, again, for your prayers for Jim and me after his surgery. I still remember that Saturday night, when I couldn’t compress his wound long and hard enough to stop the bleeding. We ended up in Stony Brook ER, and it took two doctors and several hours before the bleeding was brought under control, and we could go home. His healing journey continues, and we find ourselves ever grateful for the wonderful medical care that he has received. The nurses are my heroes. They took the time to teach me, step by step, how to clean and dress the wound. Now I feel like I am really getting the hang of it. This is good because we probably have a few more weeks of dressing changes to go.
These prayers for one another—and there are more prayer requests today from our church family—is what keeps us always in God’s keeping. In Christ’s care. First Peter tells us the correct attitude for our prayer is one of humility, asking for God’s will, trusting the Lord who wants us to cast all our cares and anxieties on the God who cares for us. When we pray humbly with and for one another, we are no longer individuals attempting to follow Christ on our own. We are made one in Him and each other, as Christ is one with us and the Father.
When the Crimean conflict was resolved, Florence “returned to her childhood home at Lea Hurst. To her surprise she was met with a hero’s welcome, which the humble nurse did her best to avoid. The previous year, Queen Victoria rewarded her work by presenting her with an engraved brooch that came to be known as the ‘Nightingale Jewel’ and by granting her a prize of $250,000 from the British government. She used the money to fund the establishment of St. Thomas’ Hospital in 1860, and within it, the Nightingale Training School for Nurses. She became a figure of public admiration as she tirelessly devoted her life to preventing disease and ensuring safe and compassionate treatment for the poor and the suffering. Poems, songs and plays were written and dedicated in her honor. Young women aspired to be like her. Eager to follow her example, even women from the wealthy upper classes started enrolling at the training school. Thanks to Florence, nursing was no longer frowned upon by the upper classes; it had, in fact, come to be viewed as an honorable vocation, a worthy calling from God.”
Will you pray with me?
God our Healer, we come to you humbly, seeking to cast our cares on you who cares for us. Thank you for your Son, Jesus, who prayed for our protection, unity, and joy before he gave his life for us. Thank you that he continues to intercede for us with the Holy Spirit and helps us when we pray and when we struggle to pray. Thank you for the spirit of compassion that flows through our congregation—how we pray for and care for one another so tenderly. We ask that you continue to bless and keep us. Stir us to recognize the importance of prayer in our lives and that you strengthen us to pray more confidently, fervently, and faithfully. Make us one in Christ and fill us with his joy. In the name of our Triune God we pray. Amen.
For more about Florence Nightingale, go to:
Florence Nightingale (1820-1910): The Founder of Modern Nursing at the National Library of Medicine:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11373583
The Legacy of Florence Nightingale, the First Professional Nurse:
Florence Nightingale (National Women’s History Museum):
https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/florence-nightingale


















