I have chosen this passage of Scripture for Sunday service
rather than the Lectionary I am the vine as that parable was so recently .posted
here.
I am the way, the truth, the life
The passage I have chosen to speak
to you about this morning, is one of the best known passages in the New
Testament, even to non- Church people, and contains
words which are so relevant to Christian living and
belief.
Jesus, was spending His last night with the Apostles in
what is known as the Upper Room, for the Last Supper. Judas was about to betray
Him, and when Judas had left, Jesus told the remaining Apostles that the time
for Him to be glorified had come.
What Jesus meant was, this was the last time He would speak
to them before He was to die. His glory
is that He is on His way to the Cross, His work on this earth is over, and the
crucifixion will also bring glory to the Father.
It is the end of a
close relationship of three years and time to say goodbye, and He was teaching
and giving guidance, and that same teaching is passed down for the benefit of
all Christians throughout the ages.
Jesus had told
them He was going to leave them, for He was going on a journey He had to take
alone. The Apostles were devastated at the thought. Perhaps you
can imagine their feelings, if you reflect on how people feel when a Minister
they are happy with, suddenly tells them that he is moving to another
Church. This invariably causes sadness, unless there is a poor
relationship. I have experienced this on three occasions in ministry,
and it is hard to disassociate oneself.
Jesus said, ‘do
not let your hearts be troubled’. The heart is the seat of all
our emotions, and when that is upset, it affects thoughts and actions and
causes personal disturbance. Jesus wanted to reassure them, He was not
forsaking them.
He told them
they were to believe in Him, as well as God. Most people believe in God,
but have less thought for Jesus. He was putting Himself alongside
God, and wanted them to trust Him and maintain a personal relationship.
He
said there were many rooms in His Father’s house, meaning heaven, and He was
going to prepare a place for them. This
meant there was the prospect of living for ever with Him there.
When Jesus said
He was going to prepare a place for them, this was referring to the fact H e
was going to the Cross, to die for the forgiveness of sins for all people, and
by that death He was making it possible for them to go there.
If you want to
go to stay at a hotel in some foreign country, you invariably go to a travel
agent who arranges everything for you, and when you arrive at the hotel, they
have a reservation waiting. You cannot just turn up because you think you are
entitled to stay there, without some preparation.
When Jesus said they knew the place where He was going,
Thomas asked Him how they could know, when they didn’t know the way. This brought forth from Jesus that profound
immortal statement, ‘I am the way, the truth and the life’
What exactly does Jesus mean when he says, ‘we can only
come to the Father through Him alone?.
Some time ago I went to Birmingham, a major city in England, and had to
find an address. I asked a man walking
on a road if he could tell me the way, and he answered, ‘it is pretty difficult
for you to get there on your own, but I am going that way and could take you’. He got into my car and we went directly
there.
That is what Jesus does for us. He says you can’t get there on your own, but
I will direct you, guide you, and take you myself. He is saying there is no other way. This is an exclusive offer.
This
is not generally liked, as it is seen as being too restrictive, too bigoted and
intolerant, and to be judgmental is not liked.
Consequently, some clergy will not quote it, whilst others just will not
accept it. Frankly, I think if any
man/woman does not accept this verse, then they should not be allowed to preach,
for they are betraying the Lord who said it, and the Church which they serve.
Jesus said He was the truth. This fulfils the teaching of
the Old Testament and reveals the true God.
A person is to teach moral truth, that person must have an impeccable
reputation and have no hidden misdoings.
Only Jesus can claim moral perfection, which is why He can say ‘I am the
truth’.
Thirdly
Jesus says ‘I am the life’, meaning the opposite of death. He is the source of life and gives life to
His own. Just as death means separation
,God gave Jesus life, and He Having life, can confer eternal life to all who
believe in Him.
This
passage is widely quoted in funeral services, when people assume that everyone
is automatically going to heaven. I have
taken hundreds of funerals over the years, and there has never been doubt in
anyone’s mind that the deceased is going to heaven, irrespective of the life
led. Nowhere in the Bible is this view
upheld. Jesus was very clear in His
teaching, that it was not so.
In
parable after parable, He spoke of two roads, of sheep and goats, of tares and
wheat, of heaven and hell.
Whilst
it may be comforting to believe that we can all get to heaven, regardless of
one’s beliefs, and we like to please our fellow men and women, it is quite
cruel to mislead if it is not true. It
is like telling a blind person standing on the foot walk of a major road, it is
safe for him to cross when ready. If we say to someone who has no Church
commitment, has only a tenuous belief in Jesus Christ, never reads a Bible or
prays, that they are going to heaven, we are leading them astray.
Others say if you just follow your
conscience you’ll be fine, but consciences become dulled and hardened. Taking the lead from politicians, people can
look you in the eye and lie without any qualm of conscience.
In this passage before us, Jesus is talking to His
followers, people who have made a personal commitment to accept Him as
Saviour. This is why it is so important
for each person to make his/her own decision, whether to follow Jesus in His
teaching, commands and demands He makes on us.
The Bible is all about
commitment. We are reminded of the superficiality of commitment in our
own time. Less than 10% of people think
God worthy of one hour per week to visit a Church. Yet if you were to ask people their religion,
the vast majority would reply C of E (meaning Church of England)and seriously
consider they were Christians. They
would be mortally offended if you suggested otherwise. Very few people seem bothered to think of Jesus, or do
anything about it. Jesus speaks firmly and rather profoundly, when
He says not all who think they are to enter the Kingdom of heaven will in fact
do so.
It is easy to say I am a Christian, 95% of the population
today believe, as long as you are honest, kind and helpful to others and do no
harm, you are a fully-fledged Christian. People of other faiths and none, have
all those qualities, but would object to be called Christians.
In every action of life we are confronted with a choice,
where we must make a decision to do one thing or another. Jesus confronted us with a hard or an easy
way. He makes uncompromising and tough
demands of commitment, which many people cannot take, and are not prepared to
commit. Then as now, some are ready
to listen and walk with Him, learning to depend on Him, whilst others are just
occasional supporters.
The
Church in general, in its desire to be nice and friendly to all, with a craving
to please society in general, has not always given sound
teaching on this; there is no blank promise. and if we do not follow Him our
end will not be in the rooms of His Father’s house.
It can be hard to be a Christian in this country at the
present time, and many find the going too hard and strenuous, and the
opposition oppressive. We have come to a
state in this country now, where a Christian person may not express a personal
view based on sincere religious belief, if it might offend someone Any open expression of our faith is likely
to lead to suspension or dismissal from work, and even the most innocuous
adverse comment upon human behaviour, will raise hysterical shouts of phobia or
bigotry. There is so much harassment of Christians which is not reported here,
and you have to listen to the American news channels to discover what is going
on in this country. This does not apply
to other faith speakers.
In Scotland, an oppressive government has passed a law
which virtually rules out any adverse comment, and if a parent prevents their
child from transitioning into an opposite gender to its biological gender,
there can be a penalty of up to seven years imprisonment. The irony is, we are
in the United ,Kingdom, supposed to support free speech and free belief.
I
cannot understand how we can share in multi-faith worship and maintain Biblical
integrity. Whilst I believe we should
respect other faiths and try to live amicably with them, in view of the unique
teaching of our Lord that He alone is the way to God, we cannot justify sharing
in multi faith services when our beliefs are so different, and it is matter of
recognising the unique authority of Jesus.
Only Christianity maintains that Jesus Christ as divine, and salvation
was earned by Jesus on the Cross. Jesus
is quite unequivocal.
It
is widely claimed, erroneously, that we all worship the same God and all
religions have the same way to heaven.
Islam worship ‘Allah’, and see Jesus as a good man in the social sense,
or a prophet at best. Indeed, the
Islamic faith states, ‘God has no son’, which is in direct contravention of
Jesus’ nature. We should each respect
the right of the other in their belief, and try to live peacefully together.
I do admire the devotion and loyalty of Islam. Muslims are
Muslims in the full sense of the word, and they find difficulty in
understanding how Christians reject
their faith so completely. Why, on the
Lord’s birthday so many get drunk and engage in orgies. They will fight and
defend their faith, and the men will not feel embarrassed or ashamed to be seen
going to worship. Put many Englishmen in a Church and they feel lost and
disorientated.
It is a common perception these days that religious
thoughts should not be expressed in public arena. Christians have gone along with this, and
divided their lives into two spheres, spiritual and secular.
No other group would accept such a deal. Try telling a Socialist they should keep
their thoughts to themselves; or telling an LGBT activist he shouldn’t call for
same sex marriage, then wait for the howls of outrage. BUT, let a Christian state he believes in
marriage as only being between a man and a woman. I was prevented from taking a
funeral because a member of the deceased family knew that was my belief, even
though it had nothing at all to do with the funeral. No one had the courage to
support me.
We are accused of being narrow minded and improper, for
bringing up our children as believers, and if we should commit the ultimate
crime of suggesting our faith influences how and what we teach them, and object
to them being asked if they thinking they are of the right gender, we are of
course a multiple of phobias.
We are allowed to visit the sick and care for the poor, as
long as don’t mention praying for them.
We are told by activists, that we must allow people to make
their own decision, but what they mean in effect is, as long as that fits in
within what activists decide. This is
the new definition of the word ‘tolerance’.
Jesus warns us that
there must be a clear acceptance of His teaching. and total obedience to
it. Just to recite a creed and attend
Church, is not enough. We honour Jesus by calling Him Lord, and sing hymns
expressive of our devotion to Him. The
lips that sing His praise should never be the lips that challenge Holy
Scripture.
The temptation for us, as Christians, is to
say what makes us popular. Too many
preachers have forgotten about being authentic; about being true to the Gospel
we have been entrusted with by our Lord; to be true to our values, and to
proclaim them without fear.
The Bible tells us we must contend for the faith once given
to Christians. The faith once given means the faith that
which was given by the Apostles, who had been taught by Jesus, and which was
blessed by God when the Church was first established.
Let this be the faith we adopt and believe, and not that
now being re-interpreted to suit modern culture. Our faith is not something someone made up,
it is historical and spiritual fact.
May God bless His Word to us and may His Holy
\name be glorified
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