John17
It is the night before the Crucifixion. Jesus is with His Apostles at the Last
Supper and is spending His last hours before going to the Cross.
In a few hours He will be dead so He is telling them He is going to leave them
and they will be left to face life without Him. He then concludes with a
prayer, which makes this one of the outstanding passages in the New Testament, telling
His followers then, and by extension to those who follow Him through the ages,
what they will have to face as Christians.
For Jesus, life was life with a climax and that was the Cross. When He
spoke of the Cross as His glorification it had a deep significance. It is one
of the facts of history again and again, that it was in death that some
people’s greatness was recognised and they would never ever know how they
influenced others.
I once took a funeral of a young man who virtually gave up his life by the way
he lived, suffering from acute depression and a feeling of achieving nothing.
Tributes were paid in the most sincere and outstanding words by men of his
profession who went to considerable effort to do so, and it was sad to realise
the young man never knew how much he was valued. We see this in the life of
religious figures and in the world of music and art.
The Cross was the glory of Jesus because it was the completion of the work God
had sent Him to do. God had given Him authority over every man and woman on
earth; He had come to show the love of God and what He was prepared to suffer
for mankind. In His glory He brings glory to God, and if He had not gone to the
Cross, it would have meant His work was not completed; to stop short would have
suggested there was a limit to that love. Jesus showed there was nothing the
love of God was not prepared to do and suffer for us.
The Bible makes it clear that Jesus could have escaped the Cross by never going
near Jerusalem. The Cross was proof that men could do their worst yet He could
rise above their worst, and the Cross would not be the end, for the
resurrection was to follow.
In verse 6, Jesus says ‘I have revealed you to those whom you have given me’.
Jesus is here thinking of particularly of the Apostles with Him in the Upper
Room; those who turned and followed Him in His ministry; those ‘kept the Word’,
meaning they were obedient to the faith. But this also equates to all who would
one day follow Him.
Then Jesus goes on to say He was not praying for the world, but for those who
God had given Him. Jesus is teaching us that we are rescued from the world. The
world means all who are opposed to God’s standards and way of life; those who
live without reference to God.
This means there are two types of people in the world, which the gospel makes
clear over and over again, those who are loyal and obedient to God and those
who are not Jesus was always quite unequivocal, that we are either for Him or
against Him, there is no neutrality or sitting on the fence. Jesus is firmly
black or white in how you respond to Him
It is like being on a mountain top; you can keep to the laid down path and be
safe, or make your own way which will likely end in disaster. Jesus spoke of
two roads, one leading to eternal life, the other to destruction, so we have to
decide our course in life. Sometimes we feel buffeted by the storms of life, the stresses and strains, the
problems of work and family, and personal relationships. We ask will I be
strong enough to do the work God wants me to do. Jesus is praying here for all
who believe in Him, and particularly for the difficulties to be faced.
In the Bible names mean not only how we are addressed, but also refer to
people’s character. When Jesus says that God will protect us by the power of
His Name, He means the power associated with God’s character that He will keep
us and watch over us and guard us spiritually from falling from Him. The Bible
makes it clear we need to obey the Word of God
In verse 11 Jesus prays that God will leave His disciples in the world and will
protect them from the evil one, because like Him, they do not act to the
world’s standards. He wants His disciples to be active in the world. God will
rescue us from people who in rebellion are opposed to Him, but that does not
mean we should gather in holy huddles out of contact from others, who need to
hear about Jesus from us.
There are of course, religious orders that lock themselves away from the
outside world. They are truly dedicated men and women who sincerely believe
they are serving God. The kind of Christianity however, which shuts itself off
in a monastery or convent, would not have seemed to Jesus to be Christianity at
all. The kind of Christianity which finds the essence of the Christian life in
prayer and meditation in a life secluded from the world, would have seemed to
Jesus to be a sad version of the faith He died to bring to people.
It was Jesus insistence to be in the hurly burly of life that we must live out
our faith. Christianity was never meant to withdraw men and women from ordinary
people. It does not release us from problems, but equips us to deal with them.
It offers not always peace, but triumph.
Jesus is saying He wants His people to be in the midst of the world, mixing
with non believers. Just as a lifeboat is of no use set permanently polished in
a station, but is needed to go out and rescue people trapped in stormy seas, so
we need to be rescuing those dear to us, trapped in the perils of life in this
world. Jesus was saying His people are not meant to be little ships which stay
in harbour, although it is much safer, that is not what ships are for, they are
meant to be on the high seas.
Jesus prayed for the unity of His disciples, and that they would be one as He
and His Father were one. There can be no divisions between Christians. If there
are, the cause of Christianity is harmed and the prayer of Jesus is rejected.
Jesus never considered different denominations which would be criticising one
another, or considered one denomination could claim exclusive access. Jesus
prayed we would be one, and there is no prayer of Jesus which has been so
hindered from being answered by Christians
Jesus warned us of the hostility we face from a hostile world which hates
Christians. If you find that hard to accept, just consider the violence, even
murder, of Christians in Pakistan, Nigeria, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and
Indonesia. On a more subtle scale, in Australia and Canada; where Bible
preaching is under threat, and proposals have been made to ban parts of
Scripture.
You may say well this is England it can’t happen here. Consider scientists,
intellectuals, to whom the Bible is a form of hate literature, arty types, who
have shown their dislike and contempt for the Christian faith. Activists are
calling for law to be enacted which would criminalise quoting some Bible
verses. Indeed, efforts were made in Scotland this year to have all
sermons examined before being preached, and have removed any reference to
Biblical teaching which opposed modern morality.(immorality?)
We have people showing quite manic attitude to Christianity. Now we have our
faith under threat from politicians and public servants who want to ignore
Christian festivals, ban Biblical teaching. ‘Christian Concern’, the
organisation which legally represents Christians suffering from secular
repression, has undertaken many cases.
The world hates biblical truth, and if you take a stand publicly for the truth
of the gospel, you will not be popular and are likely to be called narrow minded
at best, and a bigot at worst.
The Church must take to heart the words of
Jude; contend for the one true faith once for all delivered to the
saints. And people must persevere to the ends resisting false teachers and
following the truth.
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