Study on the Gospel of John
By
Tony Smith
A Bond Servant of the Lord
Introduction
It
is thought John was younger than the other disciples when he became a disciple
of Jesus. Some think he was in his mid to late teens. While this cannot be
proven it is not unlikely. Many boys started working (especially with their
fathers) when they were young. It was often an economic necessity. John and James
were cousins to Jesus as their mother Salome was the sister of Jesus’ mother
Mary (Matthew 27:56; Mark 15:40).
John
was known as the beloved. At the last Passover supper before
Jesus’ crucifixion, it was John who had his head on Jesus’ breast.
(John 13:23-26) Jesus told John who was going to betray, He did not necessarily
tell the rest of the disciples.
John
19:26-27 tells us that on the cross Jesus tells His mother to behold her son,
John. He then tells John to behold his mother. John then takes Mary into his
household, family. Jesus was the oldest son of Mary and was responsible for
her and the family. As He was dying, He transferred that responsibly
and privilege to the apostle John.
In
John 18:15-16 we are told “15Simon Peter was following Jesus, and so
was another disciple. Now that disciple was known to the high priest and
entered with Jesus into the court of the high priest, 16but Peter
was standing at the door outside. The other disciple, who was known to the
high priest, went out and spoke to the doorkeeper, and brought Peter
in.” That other disciple was John.
John’s Gospel was written in Hebrew, not Greek.
This makes a difference when translating the Gospel into English or another
language. Another important thing to keep in mind is that John considers
Judea, not Galilee, to be Jesus’ home. While
Jesus was brought up in Galilee he was born in Bethlehem of Judea and lived
there for about the first two years of his life. (Which tells us why
Herod killed all boys in the area who were 2 years old and under.) In the
culture of that time and place where a person was born makes that their home.
Therefore, Judea was considered Jesus' home, a fact many, even at that time,
missed. (They did not do their required research into His birth.)
John establishes his
narrative in the foundational verses of the Torah – “In the beginning God ...”
(Genesis 1:1) and “God said” Therefore, the notion that the Gospel of John is a
Christian document, set in opposition to Judaism, makes no sense in the light
of John’s own priorities.” (The Jewish Gospel of John). For John
everything begins with and is based on the Torah. John was Jewish, he was
brought up as and lived as a Jew. Being Jewish was important to John and thus,
from the scriptures, he could see and understand that Jesus was/Alexa jaune on
is the Messiah. John lived, walked, ate, listened to, and conversed
with Jesus. He saw the works of Jesus and saw Jesus fulfill the prophesies
written of Him. John KNEW without doubt Jesus is the Messiah,
The
purpose of John’s Gospel is to show unequivocally that Jesus is the Messiah,
the Son of God, as prophesied in the Torah and prophets, come to save mankind.
John is interested in presenting facts, events, and people. Jaune is detailed
as to geography, he is not as interested in presenting strict
chronologies. That John did not concern
himself with chronologies has caused a problem for many scholars who want the
timelines of the four gospels to align. Given that the gospels were written by
four quite different men with four different ways of approaching the
same end point, that will not happen. An example of this is John and Luke. Both
had the end goal to show beyond any doubt that Jesus is the Messiah, the
Savior. As noted, John is interested in presenting facts, events, and
people. Luke is more a journalist and provides chronologies. Both conclude
Jesus is the Messiah.
John
was probably the last gospel written. The first three gospels center on
Jesus’ ministry in Galilee. John centers his gospel on what Jesus said and did
in Jerusalem. Each of the gospels emphasizes a different origin of
Jesus. John shows Jesus came from heaven, demonstrating that Jesus is
God. Matthew, Mark, and Luke are known as the three synoptic gospels. Synoptic means “see-together”
and the first three gospels present Jesus’ life in pretty much the same format.
The first three gospels focused more on what Jesus taught and did; John focuses
more on who Jesus is.
The Scriptures have a flow that we can miss due to the division to
chapters and verses. We do well to remember that chapters and verses are
artificial, put in well after (13th century for chapters and 16th
century for verses) the original writings. Reading the Bible without chapters
and verses can give a bit of a different feel to the writings.
Definitions:
Passover - The Feast of Passover is celebrated
to commemorate the liberation of the Children of Israel, as commanded by God in
Exodus 13. https://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/judaism/holydays/passover_1.shtml
Passover is when Christ
was crucified to save us (liberate us) from sin. As Christians we should
be celebrating Passover, not easter which is a pagan holiday
(Ashtoreth).
Sabbath – The seventh day, a day to rest and to worship God. It is a Holy Day. In
the Julian calendar it starts at sundown on Friday and ends sundown Saturday
(Genesis 1:31b; Genesis 2:1-2) We think of day and night, but
God said night and day. One reason would be moving from dark, chaos,
to light, holiness in God’s creation.
Torah - “Though traditionally the Hebrew
word torah has been Translated into English as “law” because of its translation in the Septuagint (the Greek translations
of the Hebrew Bible) as nomos (law), it is better understood and translated as
“teaching” or “instruction.”’ (https://www.ancient.eu/Torah/ ) God's revealed teaching or guidance for humankind. (www.britannica.com)
Gospel of John
(New American Standard Bible
Version)
John
Chapter 1
vs. 1-5
John
the Apostle starts his writing by introducing Jesus (Messiah Yeshua), who He
is, where He came from, His relationship to God and His relationship to us and
the world. John is unequivocal about the fact that Jesus is the Word of God,
that is, Jesus is God.
Jesus
is with God in the beginning. John does not tell us what “beginning” means. Is
it the beginning of the earth or from a beginning we cannot start to
comprehend? Jesus, as the Word of God, created all we know and all beyond
our knowing. Genesis tells us God spoke,
and whatever He spoke was created. That is, the Word of God, Yeshua, created.
John also says in Jesus is life and that life is the light and hope of all
mankind. Without Messiah Yeshua there is no hope, no faith, no wisdom, no true
knowledge. The darkness that can surround mankind, Satan, is overcome by Jesus.
Light always drives away darkness. The darkness that is Satan cannot understand
nor overcome the light that is Messiah Yeshua. In his light and life is the entire hope for mankind
vs. 6-13
John
now introduces John the Baptizer. John the Apostle has addressed neither the
lineage nor the early years of Jesus’ life. He starts with the beginning of
Jesus’ ministry. This is not to say John did not know these things, but
rather he felt it was more important to relate what happened in the ministry of
Jesus and how He fulfilled prophesy. [John was considered the theologian of the
early church.]
John
introduces John the Baptizer by stating, again unequivocally, that John the
Baptizer was sent by God. He was not sent by men nor did he send
himself, he was sent by God, in God’s time, and for God’s
purpose. That purpose was to fulfill prophesy (Isaiah 40:3) be a
witness to testify about Jesus, the light of God. The purpose of his witness
and testimony was to identify the Messiah so all mankind might believe in Jesus
as the savior. God did not surprise the world with Yeshua but made it clear
through the Torah and prophecy he was coming. God had him clearly identified by
John the baptizer before Jesus’ ministry began. John the Baptizer was not, did
not claim to be, that light. He was simply a witness to that light, the Light
of the world, the Son of God, had arrived and would soon be seen.
John
now seems to change his perspective to after-the-fact. John returns to Jesus
being the Light of and from God. Jesus is the true light . Jesus is true.
Jesus came into His creation, the world, but His creation did not recognize
Him. The world had become so blinded they did not recognize their creator, the
one who gives them life and sustains them. This is a great sadness. [Nothing
has changed for most of the world.] Jesus came to His chosen people,
the Israelites, and they were so blinded they also did not recognize Him,
perhaps an even greater sadness. Here are the people God took from nothing,
made them into a nation and protected them throughout the years, yet they did
not recognize the Son of God. Before we throw the Jews into the dustbin of
history as God’s people, we must remember all peoples have done the
same. All peoples have refused to recognize Christ as Messiah. All
peoples, certainly, have refused to live their lives in a way that is
consistent with believing Jesus is Messiah.
Despite
all this, Jesus gave the right to become children of God to all who did
believe on His name, those who believe Jesus is the Son of God and accept Him
as Savior. These are children not born through the physical, natural, process
but born by God through belief and faith in Jesus the Christ. This message of
being a child of God only through Christ is repeated throughout the Gospel of
John. (See John 3:1-16)
vs. 14-18
The Word of God, a very part of God, became flesh and blood and lived
among us, His creation. John did not say Jesus was made from flesh but rather
became flesh. There was no force that could make, form, the Word into flesh but
rather the Word became flesh through the Word’s own power.
As through YHWH the Word created the world, so the Word became
flesh.
John,
the writer of the Gospel, testifies that he and others saw the glory of Jesus
[see Luke 9:28-35; Mark 9:2-7; Matthew 17:1-5]. John also points to John
the Baptizer’s testimony concerning Jesus and His glory and that Jesus came
from God. The Law of Moses required testimony to come from the mouth of two or
three witnesses (Deut. 9:15; Numbers 35:30). Here we have John the
Baptizer, John the Apostle, Peter the Apostle and James the Apostle, not
counting the prophets and many other disciples. Most important we have God as a
witness when He sent the dove as the Holy Spirit to rest on Jesus. This is many
more than the two or three witnesses required.
John
the Baptizer’s testimony about Jesus goes back to the word he received about
Jesus from the Father. It should be noted that John’s testimony makes it quite
clear that God the Father told him who Jesus is. Anyone denying Jesus as the
Son of God and Messiah was also denying John’s testimony about Jesus and
denying God spoke to John and us. As we will see later this is something the
Jewish leadership was not willing to do for fear of the people. They did not
fear John the Baptizer or God, just the people.
John’s
next comments are critical. Out of the fullness of Christ we have received
grace that replaces and continues the grace already given. This could be
confusing or misunderstood so John clarifies. The interpretation in most bibles
read, as does this one, the law. Perhaps a better reading is the Torah, that is
the instructions were given through Moses.
Often people set the law against grace as if the opposite of law is
grace and the opposite of grace is law. This is not the case. The opposite of
law is lawlessness, and the opposite of grace is disgrace.
God is not the author of either lawlessness or disgrace therefore, both the law
and grace, being from God, are good and are equal.
The
law, the first grace, was given by Moses. It was given by God through Moses to
instruct the people how to live. Jesus came bringing grace and truth. Jesus
came bringing forgiveness of sins. He also came bringing the truth about God,
the world, ourselves, creation, Satan, etc. All true grace, truth and wisdom
are in Christ and an integral part of Christ.
John
closes this section by stating with no equivocation, that Jesus is the Son of
God. He is in fact of the very substance of God and has absolutely the closest
relationship possible with God the Father. Jesus has made God known and because
Jesus is the Son of God, is God and is in God, only Jesus can make God known.
This allows no argument about who Jesus is or His authority. Much as men may
try to disagree, Jesus was, is, and will be, the Son of God. Jesus is
I AM!
vs. 18-28
Around
the time of Christ there were about sixty men who claimed to be the
Messiah, Josephus makes this clear in his writing. Because there were others
who claimed to be the Messiah. These people came with the idea of
freeing Israel from Roman rule. They were not the Son of God and came to save
people from Rome, not from sin. In all cases they were, obviously, not
successful. Because of this the Jewish leaders sent people to question John the
baptizer and Jesus.
John
the Apostle returns to the Baptizer’s testimony of Jesus as the Christ, the
Messiah. John the Baptizer maintained his testimony about Jesus to those sent
from the Jewish leaders and priests. All four gospels state that
representatives came to John (and later Jesus) questioning them. I often wonder
what pressures were brought on John for him to deny his testimony about Jesus.
I would think he was badgered, threatened, and pressured to go back on his
testimony. John refused to deny what God told him and his testimony about
Jesus. He refused to deny that God told him Jesus is the Messiah.
John’s
response to his questioners needs examination. John gave specific answers
to the questions put to Him. He adamantly said he was not the Messiah. They
then asked John if he was Elijah and he clearly stated he was not. Finally,
they asked if he was the Prophet and again, he stated he was not. The prophet
they were referring to was probably Jeremiah.
Two
questions stand out here: Are you Elijah and, are you the Prophet? The leaders
supposed that it would be the actual, physical, Elijah that would return from
heaven (Malachi 4:5). In this sense John denied that he was Elijah; but he
did not deny that he was the Elias or Elijah which the prophesies
intended (Matt 3:3), for he immediately proceeds to state (John
1:23) that he was sent, as it was prophesied that Elijah would be, to
prepare the way of the Lord. So, while he corrected their false notions about
Elijah, he also clearly stated his true character so that they might understand
that he was really the one predicted to come as Elijah just as
prophesied. (Luke 1:12-17)
The
Pharisees continued their questioning and, by their questions, showed their lack
of understanding of Scripture and prophesies about the Messiah. John has just
told them he came as “the voice of one calling in the wilderness, ‘Make
straight the way for the Lord.’” This is a direct quote from
Isaiah (Isaiah 40:3) concerning what would happen immediately before
the coming of the Messiah. The Pharisees then question John’s actions and
motives. If he is not the Messiah, Elijah or the Prophet why is he baptizing.
John’s answer agrees with his quote from Isaiah, he tells them he
only baptizes with water, but one is there, who they do not recognize, that
will do much more than baptize with water.
John
says he is not worthy to untie the sandals of the one for whom he is preparing
the way. Sandals were untied or loosened by the lowest slaves in a household.
John is saying he is not worthy to be the lowest slave to the Messiah. Because the
leaders have head knowledge but not understanding or wisdom of the scriptures,
they cannot recognize their salvation. They were focused on the physical and
temporal, not the spiritual and eternal.
An
important point to note is John did not feel he needed the approval of the
Jewish leadership. His authority came from God and his witnesses from the
scriptures.
vs. 29-34
John
the baptizer continues his testimony about Jesus (Yeshua). We are not told who
was with John at this time, but it stands to reason the Pharisees and perhaps
Sadducees were there as well as representatives of the Jewish political
leadership. John sees Jesus and immediately refers to his comments from the day
before, leading us to think many of the same people, perhaps also the
questioners, were in attendance again. John is clear that the man he was
speaking about the previous day, the man who sandals he was not worthy to
untie, is Jesus
John
refers to Jesus as the Lamb of God. He is saying Jesus is the perfect Passover
Lamb that was killed for the saving of the people in Egypt and during each
Passover. The Passover Lamb was a perfect lamb from the flock, one without
blemish. At the Passover, the lamb was killed, and its blood put on the door
posts and above the door. The people had to walk through the blood on the door
and go inside to be saved from death. John’s comments tell the listeners Jesus
is that Passover lamb for the world. They would not have missed his point but
chose to not to understand.
John
also makes it clears his job was to prepare the way for the Messiah. John did
his job, now his importance must grow less while that of Jesus grows
greater. This is also a message to John’s followers that Jesus now has the
primary message. John’s statement “A man who comes after me has surpassed me
because He was before me.’” makes it clear Jesus existed before John, in fact,
before the world. John was to prepare the way for the Messiah just as people
prepare the way for a visit from an earthly dignitary.
After
saying this John again testifies about Jesus and the fact God sent Jesus.
John’s testimony is that he saw the Holy Spirit, in the form of a dove, descend
and remain on Jesus. The fact the dove remained on Jesus indicates this was not
an accident or a coincidence, it was a direct sign from God that Jesus is the
Messiah, God’s Chosen One. John the baptizer was seen by the people as a
prophet. They recognized God’s call on his life and listened to him. John said
the One who sent him to baptize with water also told him the one he saw the
Holy Spirit come down and remain on, will baptize with the Holy Spirit. Until
the sign from God, John the Baptist was not aware that his cousin Jesus was the
promised Messiah.
There
is more to the dove than just a bird landing on Jesus. It is generally accepted
the dove was a symbol of the Holy Spirit. The dove is also a symbol of peace
and safety. Noah released a dove from the ark, and it came back with a freshly
picked olive leaf. This let Noah know the water had receded from the earth and
there was peace, safety, and a future. This is what we have in Christ.
vs. 35-42
Jesus
begins to gather His disciples. The first two disciples were originally disciples
of John the Baptist. Jesus would not have been unknown to them. Having been
disciples of John, they would have been familiar with John’s
teachings concerning the coming of the Messiah. Jesus would have been seen
talking with John, possibly had been teaching in the area and certainly had the
testimony and witness of John that He is the Messiah.
These
two disciples, and perhaps others, were with John when he pointed out Jesus and
said “Look, the Lamb of God.” This was a very a very well understood descriptive
title of the Messiah. During the Exodus Passover, a lamb without blemish was
killed and its blood put on the sides and top of the door frame. The Israelites
passed through the blood to go inside the house where they ate of the lamb that
had been sacrificed. The lamb was totally innocent and was killed solely for
the salvation of the Israelites from the Death Angel. (Note that the people ate
the lamb, they made the lamb part of themselves, the same thing Jesus said.
Most people missed the reference and its importance.) John was saying Jesus is
this same lamb. In Jesus’ case, He was sent from God to be that innocent and
without blemish lamb, to be the sacrifice for the people, their salvation from
Satan. The two men immediately followed Jesus.
As
they followed Jesus He turned and asked them what they wanted. They replied by
asking Him where He was staying. Jesus said for them to come and see. This was
a request by the men to join Him and a subsequent invitation from Jesus to join
Him. It would have been about 4pm when the men went with Jesus and stayed with
Him the rest of the day.
One
of the men, Andrew, left, found his brother Simon, and told Simon they had
found the Messiah. Simon went with Andrew to Jesus. Jesus looked at Simon and
immediately changed his name to Cephas, Peter, meaning the rock. The
description of the calling of these first three disciples is very brief. We are
not told what the two men talked about with Jesus during that first meeting. We
are not told much about Andrew’s conversation with Peter. I would guess there
was a great deal of excitement among the men. This would also be the beginning
of an intensive learning experience.
There are
few interesting things to note here. Andrew told Peter they had
found the Messiah. This is the first instance of a person recognizing Jesus as
the Messiah, the son of God. The men Jesus called were already receptive
to the Word of God. Their hearts were turned and tuned to God.
Jesus
immediately saw the heart of Simon. Jesus saw he would be rock solid in his
faith and work for the Lord. Jesus saw beyond the exterior and looked at the
hearts of all three men. They genuinely wanted to follow God, do God’s will,
and they had teachable spirits. They were fit for the work of the
Lord. We see the same later with Paul, Barnabas and hopefully, each of
us.
Vs. 43-46
After
calling the three men Jesus leaves for Galilee. Along the way, Jesus sees
Philip and calls Him to be a disciple. Here Philip refers to Moses, the Law, and
the prophets. This establishes the credentials of Jesus from the Hebraic
Scriptures, what is to us the Old Testament. This comment of Philip’s can be
linked to John saying “Look, the Lamb of God.” Philip then found Nathanael and
told him about Jesus.
Nathanael’s
immediate response is to ask if anything good can come from Nazareth. Evidently
Nazareth did not have the best reputation. Philip’s reply is simple, “Come
and see.” Phillip’s replied demands action from Nathaniel, either he will go
with Phillip to meet and be with Christ or he will not. There is no middle
ground. The same is true for us. Action is demanded, either we meet and be with
Jesus or we will not. There is no Gray area.
Accepting
and following Jesus always demands action. Following Christ is not passive, it
is always active.
vs. 47-51
Jesus
sees Nathanael and states he is an Israelite in whom there is no deceit, some
translations say guile. There was nothing false about Nathanael. When you see Nathanael
what you see is truly what you get.
Nathanael
had never seen or met Jesus before and therefore asked how Jesus knew Him. How
did Jesus know he was without deceit or guile? How did Jesus know his
personality or what was in his heart? Jesus answered in a way that showed His
power and abilities. He stated He saw Nathanael when he was under the fig tree
before Philip called to him. Jesus knew everything about Nathanael. This
knowledge could only come from God and Nathanael immediately recognized Jesus
as the Son of God, the Messiah. Jesus tells Nathanael and the others they will
see much greater things than what they had seen. Jesus tells them they will see
the angels of God ascending and descending on the Son of Man. Jesus (Messiah
Yeshua) was referring to Himself. He is the Son of Man. (This would take their
minds to Jacobs ladder where Jacob saw a ladder to Heaven and angels ascending
and descending on it. He also heard the Lord promise the land he was in, to
Jacob and his descendants [Genesis 28:10-17]. A repeat of the promise God
made to Abraham.)
John 2
vs. 1-5
Here
we have the first public miracle of Jesus. Jesus, His mother, and His disciples
are at a wedding. At the wedding, a problem happened, they ran out of
wine. This is a serious embarrassment to the wedding party. Mary
immediately looks to Jesus for help. She knows He can solve the problem. When
Mary tells Jesus, they have no wine He immediately responds in what seems to be
a harsh manner. This bears some explanation.
“The phrase, "What
have I to do with thee?" was a common conversational phrase. When it was
uttered angrily and sharply it did indicate complete disagreement and reproach,
but when it was spoken gently it indicated not so much reproach but
misunderstanding. It means: "Don't worry; you don't quite understand what
is going on; leave things to me, and I will settle them in my own way."
Jesus was simply telling Mary to leave things to him, that he would have his
own way of dealing with the situation. The word woman (gunai) is
also misleading. It sounds to us very rough and abrupt. But it is the same word
as Jesus used on the Cross to address Mary as he left her to the care of John (John_19:26).
In Homer it is the title by which Odysseus addresses Penelope, his well-loved
wife. It is the title by which Augustus, the Roman Emperor, addressed
Cleopatra, the famous Egyptian queen. So far from being a rough and
discourteous way of address, it was a title of respect. We have no way of
speaking in English which exactly renders it; but it is better to translate it
Lady which gives at least the courtesy in it.” Daily Study Bible https://www.studylight.org/commentaries/dsb/john.html
Jesus’
mother evidently had some authority at the wedding since she
instructed the servants to do as Jesus said.
vs.
6-12
This
passage has more than one message for us. First is the apparent message that
Mary knew Jesus could and would take care of the problem. This is also the
start of Jesus’ ministry and the first of His miracles. It is important to note
that this miracle occurred in a home at a wedding feast and not in a large
public gathering. Jesus cares about the little things in our lives that are
important to us, not just the big things.
A
second message lies in the number of jars of water and the amount of wine
resulting. There were six jars filled to the brim with water. The fact the jars
were filled to the brim is not just a minor detail. The fact they were filled
to the brim allows no possibility of any other wine being introduced. All the
wine was from Jesus, not man or any old, leftover, wine. Being filled to the
brim may indicate God’s Word, Jesus, can fill us up completely. The fact there
were six jars is also a message. Seven was considered the number of perfection
and six was considered imperfection. Christ took what was imperfect in the
Jewish laws and replaced them with the perfection of His grace and truth. What
God does is not imperfect, what man adds often is. Based on the size of the
jars there would have been about 120 to 180 gallons of wine, far more
than enough for everyone who was there or might come. The grace of Jesus is
always more than sufficient for all who come to Him.
Finally, the fact the new wine was so much better than the old wine
points out that the new covenant of grace with Christ is much better than the
covenant of the law from Moses. People were/are not able to keep the law given
to Moses and constantly violated it. God knew this and provided Jesus to pay
the price for us of not obeying the law. The covenant with Abraham was one
based on faith and was not superseded but rather brought into perfection by
Christ.
The
final comment here is that Jesus’ disciples believed in Him. Jesus, His
mother, brothers, and disciples then went to Capernaum and
stayed there for a time. We are told Jesus’ disciples believed in Him, but
John does not say Jesus’ brothers believed in Him. I am guessing there was
quite a bit of discussion about what happened at the wedding.
vs. 13-17
Here
we have what appears to be a disagreement between John’s gospel and the gospels
of Matthew, Mark, and Luke. The disagreement is a matter of
chronology and an assumption this happened only once. When did
Jesus whip the people out of the Temple? John places the event at the beginning
of his gospel and the others place toward the end of theirs. This is not so
much a disagreement about the facts as it is a difference in purpose and focus
for each gospel. As mentioned in the introduction John was not as interested in
in the chronology of events as he was the events themselves and their
meaning.
It
is also possible, perhaps probable, Jesus did this more than once. In this case
the juxtaposition of Jesus whipping the moneychangers out of the Temple with
turning the water into wine reinforces His purpose to bring grace and truth to
people and eliminate the dross of man’s laws and traditions. With the wine,
Jesus shows He is bringing a new covenant. With the moneychangers Jesus shows
He will not allow God’s Word, worship, and Temple to be profaned.
This event would be at the beginning of His ministry.
*9]\
|}-9
“Zeal
for your house will consume me” refers to Psalm 69:9. Psalm 69:7-12 is a
prophesy of the Messiah and a small part of what will occur in His life. The
act of Jesus driving out the moneychangers, especially His motive for doing so,
fulfilled the prophesy. The moneychangers were going well beyond just changing
everyday money into money that could be used in the temple, they were charging
high fees for doing the transaction. In addition, those people selling doves
for sacrifice were also charging exceedingly high prices for the
doves. A percentage of the monies earned was kicked back to the temple authorities
and eventually to the high priest. Neither of these two, or other business
activities, should have taken place in any part of the temple.
Aside
from the business happening there, the high prices charged meant the “sellers”
were robbing the people. It was a very profitable but also very profane
practice. Christ had a serious problem with these practices. His
greatest concern was and is for Godliness, Holiness, and Purity
within the Temple anywhere, including the home, where God is worshipped.
It was His passion and commitment to purify Israel’s religion, return it to
God’s original purpose, that caused Him to take this action.
The moneychangers and sacrifice sellers had made God’s place of worship
and holiness into a den of thieves. This could not be allowed to
continue.
An
especially important message is believers MUST protest and bring to light
those who profane,/*9******************////////////////////////////////\
4
diminish, or degrade the worship of God. (1 Corinthians 6:9-11; Galatians
1:6-10; 0/R12639583-evelation2-3)
vs.
18-22
The
Jewish leaders were not at all happy about Jesus’ actions. There are at least
three reasons for their negative reaction: 1) they were losing profits; 2) it
disrupted their orderly worship service; 3) Jesus was showing He, not the
Jewish leaders, had true power and He was jealous of worshipping God in Spirit
and Truth.
We
will see that quite often the Jewish leaders wanted Jesus to justify His action
to them. Note that the leaders said, “What sign do You show us as
your authority for doing these things?” The emphasis here should be on the
“us.” Their thinking was that they oversaw Israel’s religious life
and anyone claiming to be the Messiah needed their approval. Jesus
rejected this notion. His authority came from God, not man.
The
Jewish leaders wanted Jesus to show them a sign, proof, evidence, that He had
the authority to cleanse the Temple. The Jews always wanted a sign as
verification of a prophets calling from God and as authority for their words
and actions. Jesus’ authority as the Messiah was verified by YHWH, John,
the law, and prophets, as well as by His birth and actions. He was
fulfilling what the law and prophets wrote about Him. The Jewish leaders chose
not to see these signs. In answer Jesus tells them that when they “destroy this
temple” He will “raise it up.” Jesus was talking about His body, but they
thought He was referring to the physical Temple. We see Jesus saying this again
in John 10:17-18. Here and later in John 10 the point is clear that
Jesus is in control, not Satan, and not the Jewish leaders. Jesus chose to lay
down His life and Jesus also chose, and had the power, to take it up
again. To be clear Satan
did not take the life of Jesus, Satan did not have that power or authority,
Jesus gave it up and took it back.
vs. 23-25
Now
we see something amazing, the people saw the signs Jesus performed and believed
but the leaders asked for a sign because they were blind to the reality of
Christ. The people had eyes to see while the leaders did not. Despite the
people believing on Him Jesus did not trust Himself to their belief. He knew
not all truly believed or had the proper motives for following Him.
Having formed man from the dust of the earth (Genesis 2:7), Jesus knew what was
in man, how man thinks, and how unreliable man can be.
John 3
vs. 1-4
Now
Nicodemus comes to Jesus at night to speak with Him. Nicodemus was a Pharisee,
a scholar, a ruler, and a leader of the Jews. It is probable that Nicodemus was
a member of the Sanhedrin, the Jewish ruling council. Nicodemus did not want
others to see him with Jesus. The leaders were already
rejecting negatively to Jesus and His ministry and were suspicious of
anyone in any position who were seriously listening to
Him.
It
is interesting that John places this incident immediately after his
comment about Jesus knowing what is in the heart
of everyone. When Nicodemus comes to Jesus,
he states that Jesus comes from God since no one could do what
Jesus has done unless God is with him. Jesus does not reply to Nicodemus’
comment directly but rather answers what is in Nicodemus’ heart. Jesus answers
his unspoken question. He tells Nicodemus, and us, what a person must do to be
a part of the Kingdom of God.
When
Jesus says a person must be born again Nicodemus is confused. How can a person
be born a second time? He asks if a grown person can enter back into their
mother to be born a second time. Baptism by immersion had been practiced
for centuries and Nicodemus understood the idea of baptism and that
it was a death-burial-resurrection experience. The pool with the water where
the baptism happened was called a mikveh. The person being baptized was
immersed in their “new” life and were done with their old. “The disconnect
Nicodemus experienced was not with the imagery of being ‘born again’ in the
waters of the mikveh but with how Jesus spiritually applied that principle to
entry into the kingdom of God.” (Life From The Dead, pg. 161, John D.
Garr Ph.D.)
It
made no sense to him. Nicodemus was thinking from a purely physical, material
perspective. Nicodemus did not realize just as immersion in the mikveh is a
statement to the world that the person has had a change in their life so water
immersion when a person becomes a believer in Christ makes a statement to the
world, an outward demonstration that of their inward transformation from a life
of sin to a life of following and faithfulness to Christ.
vs. 5-8
Jesus
now explains what being born again means. A person must first be born
physically, that is a water birth, before they can be born again, spiritually.
With a physical birth comes water, amniotic fluid. Jesus is telling Nicodemus a
person does not enter back into their mother for a second physical birth. The
second birth is a spiritual birth, not a physical (water) birth. Although we
cannot see this spiritual birth, as we can physical birth, we can see
its effects in a person’s life. (Proverbs 8:10; Proverbs 11:30; Luke 6:34; John
12:24; Romans 6:21-22) After the spiritual birth a person grows
and learns, increasing in spiritual wisdom and stature. Like a physical birth,
being born again is a start, not an end.
The
last statement here is particularly important. It is not a matter of what
we can see it is a matter of what we cannot see, a matter of faith. When a
child is born, we see the physical birth and from a physical perspective there
is no doubting. When the spiritual birth happens, it is not physical so we do
not SEE a physical change, but we can see a change in how the person acts,
their priorities, motives, perspective, actions, etc. Non-believers can blind
themselves to the changes, but they are evident none-the-less.
vs. 9-15
Nicodemus
is still confused. Jesus asks how Nicodemus can be a teacher of Israel, God’s
people, and not know these things that were taught throughout the Torah and
Tanach? Some of the references would be Deut. 10:16; Deut. 30:6; 1 Samuel 10:9;
Psalms 51:9-10; Jeremiah 4:4; Jeremiah 31:33; Ezekiel 11:19-20; Ezekiel 36:26.
As a scholar, teacher and leader Nicodemus should have known these Scriptures
and therefore understood what Jesus was telling him.
Jesus
had made clear that He was speaking of a fleshly birth and after that
a spiritual birth. Yet Nicodemus still did not understand. Christ now says “we”
speak of what we know. Who is the “we” Christ mentions here? Jesus had just
given Nicodemus a reproof for being a teacher but not knowing the scriptures.
Jesus had referred him back to the Torah and Tanach, the law and the prophets
that testified of Him. The “we” could refer to them and/or God the Father and
the Holy Spirit which also testified of Him. Despite knowing the words of
the Torah and Tanach the leaders did not understand the earthly,
simple things. How could they begin to understand the things of heaven, the
deep things of God?
Jesus
continues by pointing out that no one has ascended to heaven except the One who
descended from heaven. From a purely human perspective this is interesting
since Christ had not yet ascended to Heaven. From the perspective of
Christ His ascension was already accomplished. Christ could see it this
way since His ascension was/is God’s Will and God’s Will shall always be
accomplished.
Now
Jesus gets a bit more specific about how people can be saved, have that new
birth. Jesus uses the event of the plague of snakes in Exodus. The people once
again rebelled against God and God sent snakes among them to bite them and kill
them. To stop the plague God instructed Moses to fashion a brass snake, fix it
to a pole and raise it so everyone could see it. Anyone bitten could look on
the snake, believe in what God has Moses do, and be healed, they would not die.
Christ is showing that He would be raised up as was the brass snake, those who
looked upon and believed in Him and His death and resurrection would be saved
from spiritual, eternal death.
vs. 16-18
This
is a passage is a continuation of what was just said. This gives the reason
Christ will be lifted up, crucified. This is a passage of scripture that
people often quote but, unfortunately, usually only the first part is quoted.
God shows His love for us by sending His Son so we can inherit eternal life. Through
Christ we inherit eternal life; we
do nothing and can do nothing to earn eternal life. Just as a child inherits
something from their father through no works or acts of the child, so we
inherit eternal life solely through Christ the Son of God.
A
second important fact is that God did not send Christ into the world that we
may be condemned but rather that we might be saved through His work by His life
and on the cross. (Isaiah 61:1-2a; Luke 4:18-19) God sent Christ to preach the
acceptable time of the Lord, the time when God accepts us because of Christ.
(Isaiah 61:2, Luke 4:19)
Now
we come to the part of the passage that people tend to omit; “whoever does not
believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the
only Son of God.” Because of His love for us God provided Jesus the
Messiah as a way of escape from the condemnation of sin. Jesus is the only way
to escape the condemnation of sin. Those who do not believe in Jesus as our
Savior from sin are already condemned because they refuse to accept the
salvation God provided.
As
noted above Jesus quoted Isaiah 61:1-2a but not Isaiah 2b; “and the day of
vengeance of our God.” Many scriptures tell us of the day of God’s
vengeance. Certainly, Ezekiel, Jeremiah, Matthew, and Revelation
do. God does not want to see anyone suffer His vengeance, thus He sent Christ.
By rejecting Christ, we are rejecting God and telling God we want to be
condemned. It is our choice. God gives us what we choose.
vs. 19-21
John
now takes us back to the beginning of his gospel. Jesus is the Light. This is a
theme John often repeats in his gospel. Christ is the Light. What happens in
the dark very often cannot be seen or discovered, at least while the darkness
lasts. Light always drives out darkness so those who
love that darkness is hiding their works hate the light.
Those who do the works of Satan hate the light Christ shines on those works.
Conversely, those who carry out God’s work have no fear of the Light of Christ.
The light Christ shines clearly reveals their works are carried out in God’s
Will and according to God’s plan. Even in total darkness the light of a single
candle can be seen a long way away. Just as the light of a candle can be
seen from far off, so the light of Christ in a believer can be see a long
way in the darkness of sin and unbelief.
vs. 22-24
Now
we have a geographic and chronological setting for what is about to happen. The
geographic reference is the Judean country probably close to Aenon. The time
frame is before John was imprisoned. Most likely it was not long before John
was imprisoned. We must note that Jesus did not do the baptizing but rather His
disciples did the baptizing (John 4:2) The geographic setting is Aenon, close
to Salim. Aenon is on the west bank of the Jordan and had a great amount of
water close by.
https://bibleatlas.org/aenon.htm
vs. 25-30
John
the Baptist’s disciples had a discussion with a Jew about purification. We are
not given any details about the discussion but, since they went to John about
it, the discussion must have been a bit heated. Given their comments to
John the Baptist we can also guess the discussion involved Jesus and His work.
There appears to be a bit of jealousy among John’s disciples about Jesus’
growing popularity with the people. Many more are now going to Jesus than are
going to John the Baptist.
(The
purification ritual represented people’s confession of sin and their
recognition of the need for the cleansing power of God’s forgiveness. The
person going through the ritual would confess their sins and be totally
immersed showing they were totally and completely cleansed.)
When
John the Baptist’s disciples come to him complaining about everyone going to
Jesus instead of him, John’s immediate response is to remind them that all
things come from God. This is especially true when it comes to working for God
and doing God’s will. John the Baptist also reminds them that they were
witnesses that he was not the Christ but was sent before Him. He uses a
familiar example to clarify. The person who marries the bride is the
bridegroom, no one else. The friends of the bridegroom can
be happy for him. They wait for his arrival and rejoice, are
thrilled, to hear the bridegroom’s voice. They know he has come for his bride.
John the Baptist is like the friends of the bridegroom, he rejoices to hear the
bridegroom’s voice. He knows the marriage will soon be complete. There is no
reason to be upset but rather all should be rejoicing the bridegroom is
here.
vs. 31-36
John
the Baptist now goes further in describing the position and work of Jesus the
Messiah. Jesus comes from God and as creator is above all of creation. John the
Baptist is of the earth, belongs to the earth and speaks of what he knows,
earthly things. This takes us back to John’s gospel and his repeated theme that
Jesus is the light, and all life has its meaning in Him. We also can
read a reference here to Genesis 2:7 “then the Lord God formed the man of dust from the ground and
breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living
creature.”
We
can see the huge difference between the Messiah and His creation, us. Jesus
tells us what He has received and seen from God the Father, yet no one receives
(hears, understands, and does) what He says and teaches. The person
who does receive His testimony, that He comes to save people from their sin,
sets his seal, verifies by his life, that God is true, what God says will
happen and His love is more than proved through Christ. The Messiah who God
sent speaks the words of God. The Father has given everything to the Son. The
Son, Messiah, controls all.
Whoever
believes in the Son, recognizes, accepts, and believes in Him as
Savior, has eternal life. That person shall live forever with the Messiah. Conversely,
the person who does not believe shall not see eternal life with the Messiah.
Because of sin the wrath of God is on everyone, only through the death and
resurrection of Christ can that wrath be removed. Those
who choose not obey Christ and believe He is Savior choose to remain
under God’s wrath.
(A
word about seals. In ancient times kings and others had seals made of stone or
metal. To verify, they wrote or did something the king would melt wax and
press their seal into the wax. The wax would dry with the image of the
seal noticeably clear indicating the thing had the authority of the
person doing the sealing and could not be changed.)
JOHN 4
vs. 1-6
We
start this section with the Lord knowing the Pharisees heard He was baptizing
more disciples than was John. This was bound to make the Pharisees irritated.
There is an important note here, Jesus did not baptize anyone, His disciples
did the baptizing. Why didn’t Jesus baptize? We can find the answer in 1
Corinthians 3:5-6. In Corinth people were setting up cliques based on who
baptized them. Some felt they were better because Apollos baptized them, and
others felt the same because Paul baptized them. Can you imagine what people
would say and think if Jesus had baptized them? There would have been a group
that held themselves higher than all others because they were baptized by the
Son of God. We must also recognize the person who does the baptizing is not
important, the confession of believing Christ is the Savior is what is
important.
In
this section we see both the humanness and Divinity of Christ. Jesus leaves
Judea and travels to Galilee. This is possibly to avoid a confrontation at the
time with the Pharisees. We often see Jesus choosing the times He enters
discussions or disputes with the Jewish leaders. He is quite aware of the
importance of timing, especially when teaching.
To
get to Galilee Jesus travels through Samaria. The direct route between Galilee
and Jerusalem was through Samaria and was a three-day journey. The indirect route,
going around Samaria, was a six-day journey. John tells us Jesus “had to pass
through Samaria.” The Samaritans were from the northern Hebrew tribes and
non-Jews who lived in the area. Although they did not accept David as their
king and separated from Judah and Benjamin, they were Jewish and part of God’s
chosen people. The message of salvation Jesus brought was also for them.
We
are not told why He “had to pass through Samaria.” but there has been a lot of
conjecture about it. I think the answer is twofold and can be seen in John
4:1-3 and John 5:19. In John 4:1-3 Jesus knows the Pharisees learned His
disciples were baptizing more people than did John and his disciples. This
would make the Pharisees genuinely concerned. In John 5:19 Jesus said “Truly, truly, I say to you, the Son can do nothing of His own accord,
but only what He sees the Father doing. For whatever the Father does, that the Son
does likewise.”
Jesus did what the Father instructed.
Jesus knew it was time that He must take His message to the Samaritans.
There
has also been conjecture that Jesus wanted to save time and get to Galilee
quickly. John 4;43 states after two days in Samaria Jesus left and continued
His journey to Galilee. This means He would have arrived at Galilee at the same
time as He would have if He took the long way around Samaria. The conjecture
that Jesus wanted to save time is not consistent with the facts of what
happened.
Once
again John gives us a geographic and time reference. This time he also provides
a historical reference. The geographic reference is the town Sychar (possibly
Shechem). The historical reference is the field Jacob gave his son Joseph and
Jacob’s well. According to Joshua 24:32 this is also where Joseph’s bones were
buried. By defining the area where this encounter took place as Jacob’s well
and where Joseph’s bones were buried Christ is providing two events and people
from the Hebraic scriptures as witnesses to the truth of what He is telling the
woman. While this might not resonate with us in this time, to the Jews and
Samaritans it would be especially important.
Jesus
was weary from the travel, so He sat down at the well to rest. It was about
noon (the sixth hour of the day) and not only was Jesus tired, but He was also
thirsty. We see the human side of Jesus
here, He was tired, thirsty, and probably hot. All the things we would be after
a long walk in the heat.
vs. 7-15
We
are not told why the woman came to the well in the heat of the day. Usually,
water was drawn in the cooler hours. The woman may have been ostracized by the
other women in the village, she may have had a problem and could not come
earlier, she may have wanted to avoid other people in the village, we are not
told why came at noon nor does it matter to us. What we need to know, the
important information, is in the story.
A
Samaritan woman comes to the well and Jesus asks her for a drink. This is very
unusual for several reasons: 1) Jesus and the
Samaritan woman were from two different and adversarial people, each of whom
considered the other to have deviated from the ancient faith of Israel. (2) Jewish men did
not normally directly talk with women, especially when the man and woman were
alone (John mentions that Jesus’ disciples had gone to the city to buy food),
3) the woman was a Samaritan and there was a great deal of antipathy and
tension between Jews and Samaritans and 4) Jesus asked her for a drink, another
no-no for Jewish men.
The
woman was apparently somewhat taken aback and asked Jesus why He, a Jew, would
ask her, a woman, and a Samaritan for a drink, since the Jews and Samaritans
had no dealings with each His request was very, very unusual. Jesus’ answer is
somewhat indirect but goes to the heart of her need and His reason for coming
to the world and specifically for going to Samaria.
Jesus
tells her if she knew the gift God has given and who was talking with her, she
would ask for and He would give living water. The gift God has given is
salvation and eternal life and that comes from and through the Messiah. Jesus
is telling her He is the Messiah. The woman did not quite get what He was
saying and questioned Him about the living water. It seems she was thinking of
physical water while Jesus was referring to spiritual water. She asks Jesus
where the water was and how He would get this water. He did not have a bucket
and the well was quite deep. She now asks the important question: “12Are you greater than our father Jacob? He gave us the well and
drank from it himself…” This goes to the tension between the Jews and
Samaritans. The Jews said the place to worship was Jerusalem. The
Samaritans said the Jews had it all wrong and Mt. Gerizim, not Jerusalem, was
the true place of worship. The woman’s question about being greater than Jacob
goes directly to this disagreement. The woman is asking who is correct, the
Jews or the Samaritans.
Jesus
now makes clear what He is saying. Jacob’s well has physical, natural water
which only takes care of thirst for a short time. Anyone who drinks from
Jacob’s well will soon be thirsty again and must return to drink. This is true
of any of life’s physical wells, power, wealth, pride, possessions, lust, etc.
Regardless how deeply we drink of that well, we will be thirsty again. Only the
living water Jesus gives is eternal, the person who drinks it will never be
thirsty again. Jesus now makes an interesting comment “The water that I will give him will become in him a spring of water
welling up to eternal life.” This makes clear that the living water Jesus gives
is spiritual, eternal, and springs from inside the person. We see this same
thinking in the story about Nicodemus.
vs. 16-26
This short
section carries some important lessons for the woman and us. The first lesson
is Jesus truly KNOWS us, completely.
There is nothing that is hidden from Him. We also see Jesus did not condemn
the woman. He treated her with compassion and love. We do not know why the
woman had five husbands. Perhaps they died, perhaps they divorced her or
perhaps she left them. We also are not given any particulars about the man she
was living with now. Perhaps he was a relative or perhaps she was cohabiting
with the man. We are not told the particulars,
but they do not matter to the point made and lesson to be learned.
The
woman’s next statement goes to the heart of the disagreement between the Jews
and the Samaritans. She first states she can see Jesus is a prophet and
continues to state her ancestors worshipped in the mountain where they were at
that time, but the Jews say Jerusalem is the only place to truly worship YHWH.
Jesus makes it plain that the
geographic “place” is not nearly as important as worshipping YHWH in spirit and
in truth. Worshipping God wherever you are from the heart. Why and how are
we worshipping God? If we are simply going through the motions without the
worship being truly from the heart and led by the Holy Spirit we might as well
save our time and breath, it is not worship in Spirit and Truth.
One
embedded comment is particularly important. “You worship what you do not know; we
worship what we know, for salvation is from the Jews.” The Samaritans set up a
golden calf to worship instead of worshipping YHWH at Jerusalem. The Samaritans did not all realize that they
were truly worshipping Satan. The Jews KNEW they worshipped YHWH. The phrase
“for salvation is from the Jews” says a great deal which the woman would have
understood, perhaps much more than we do.
Jesus was referring
to YHWH choosing Abraham and his family to be His messengers to the world,
proclaiming Him as the only true God. The law and prophets all testify to the
Messiah, Jesus. These all were Hebrews, and no other nation or people had the
Word or were commissioned to disseminate it. We, as Gentiles tend to forget or
ignore this and act as if the Jews are passé’ and replaced by Gentile
believers. Nowhere\\does YHWH say this is the case and it is pejorative for us
the think it is.
When Jesus
said true worship is to worship God in spirit and truth the woman
replies that she knows the Messiah is coming.nm9 and He will tell people the
Word of God. The woman had a good understanding of God’s Word and promises. She
was ready for Jesus to reveal Himself as the Messiah to her.
vs. 27-30
When the
disciples returned, we are once again thrown into the culture of the time. The
comment “they were amazed that He had been speaking with a woman, yet no one
said, “What do You seek?” or, “Why do You speak with her?”” tells us a great
deal about the culture and expected norms. Men did not usually speak directly
with women who were alone and Jewish men especially did not talk with Samaritan
women. What Jesus did here was highly unusual and, for the time and culture not
religiously, politically, or culturally correct. Although Jesus’ actions were
not at all what the disciples expected they did not question Him about them.
Perhaps they were a bit afraid to ask or perhaps, hopefully, they were learning
to trust Him and wait for the explanation.
When the
disciples came the woman left Jesus and the disciples and went and told others
in the town about Him. She was in such a hurry she left her water pot. She was
so anxious to share with others the great news about the Messiah she abandoned
the water pot that was essential to her physical life and well-being. Her
message to the townspeople was so urgent, persuasive powerful that they
immediately went out to meet Jesus.
vs. 31-38
The
disciples brought food to Jesus. Since they went for the food and, as far as
they knew Jesus had not eaten for quite a while, they urged Him to eat. His
response surprised them. Jesus told them He had food they did not know about.
This confused them and they started ask each other if someone had brought Him
food. Not knowing what had just
transpired with the woman and Jesus, and in the process of learning about the
Messiah, they were thinking in the physical, not in the spiritual.`
Jesus now
explains that the food He had is spiritual, it is to do the will of the Father,
to accomplish the work He was sent to do. His interaction with the woman was
part of that work. Jesus now stresses that “doing now” is important. A tenant
of the Jewish is to LEARN, DO, TEACH. Jesus is telling us that we cannot put
off doing His work. We cannot say there is time later to do the work. We must
“do” Now. There are people waiting to hear about Jesus so they can accept His
salvation. Every minute we procrastinate means another person is lost and goes
to hell. Nothing we think we need to do or must do is more important than
telling people about Christ.
Christ
also made clear we all have different jobs, but all jobs are important, and it
is always God who brings our work to fruition. “One sows, and another reaps.’ 38I
sent you to reap that for which you have not labored; others have labored, and
you have entered into their labor.” We are a team with members in the past,
present, and future. We work together and God gives the increase. All team
members are important as Paul makes clear in 1 Corinthians 12:15.
vs. 39-42
Something
was different in the woman and it made a great impression on the people in the
town. She went from being an (apparent) outcast to everyone listening to her.
She was the reason they listened to Jesus. After they heard Him, they believed
in Him as the Messiah. The lesson here is that there is no one who cannot have
their life changed through Jesus. They are so totally changed that the
difference is impossible not to see and impossible not to tell others about
Him.
43After the two days He went forth from there into
Galilee. 44For Jesus Himself testified that a prophet has
no honor in his own country. 45So when He came to Galilee, the
Galileans received Him, having seen all the things that He did in
Jerusalem at the feast; for they also were there.
While
Jesus grew up in Galilee His “home,” birthplace, was Bethlehem in Judea. The
comment “For Jesus Himself testified that a prophet has no honor in his
own country.” This could well be why He did not return to Judea but went to
Galilee. Samaria and Galilee seemed to be more willing to listen to and believe
in Jesus than were the Judeans.
John
Chapter 5
vs. 1-18
Christ
performed many miracles on the Sabbath. This did not make the Jewish leaders
happy. They had made all kinds of rules about the Sabbath, what they felt could
and could not be done. They had so many rules it made the Sabbath onerous.
It seems they took God’s day of rest and made it a day of
work, the work of making sure none of their (not YHWH’s)
rules were broken.
“This
devotion to the rabbis’ interpretation of the Sabbath law still goes on today.
An April 1992 news item states: Tenants let three apartments in an
Orthodox neighborhood in Israel burn to the ground while they asked a rabbi
whether a telephone call to the fire department on the Sabbath would violate
Jewish law. Observant Jews are forbidden to use the phone on the Sabbath,
because doing so would break an electrical current, which is considered a form
of work. In the half-hour it took the rabbi to decide “yes,” the fire spread to
two neighboring apartments.” David Guzik Commentary, e-Sword.com. This makes me
wonder what rules we make that we expect others to follow if they are “good
Bible believing Christians?”
Given
the leaders probably were not there when the paralyzed man was healed, given
their mindset, their question was reasonable. Why are you carrying your
mattress on the Sabbath? To the leaders the man was working, which
was not allowed by their rules defining “work.” The man answers by telling them
the person who healed him told him to pick up his pallet and walk. What
transpires next tells us a lot about the leadership. They asked who told him to
pick up his pallet and walk. They did not ask about the miracle healing. They
did not ask how long he had been sick. They did not rejoice that the
man was made whole. They were only concerned with who told the man to break
their Sabbath rules.
The
man did not know who it was who healed him so he could not answer at that time.
Later Jesus met the man again, this time in the Temple. Jesus told the
man “Behold, you have become well; do not sin anymore, so that nothing
worse happens to you.” This raises some questions. Had the man done
anything to cause his illness? If he did, when? If not, what did Jesus mean?
This is certainly a strong warning to the man from God. We must note that
whatever the man might have done Jesus knew and forgave him. This
is similar to the woman caught in adultery (John
8:11b) where Jesus told her to go and sin no more. In both cases past
sins were forgiven but a new life of not sinning was to start. A
lesson for all those seeking forgiveness. God forgives but a new life (born
again) is to start.
The
man returns to the leaders to tell them it was Jesus who healed him. There are
many possible reasons he did this. Perhaps he thought they would
rejoice with him for the healing. Perhaps he thought if he did not
tell them he would be thrown out of the synagogue. Given the fact he
stood up for Jesus and was thrown out of the temple as a result leads
me to think his motives were good. Whatever the reason what is important
here is the leadership’s reaction to Jesus. They were not interested in
the miracle that had taken place. They were not interested in YHWH working
in their midst. They were not interested in promoting God’s work and Word.
They were only interested that THEIR Sabbath rules had been broken. They were
only interested in persecuting the person breaking their rules in order
to force Him to stop. The response to them really upset
them. “My Father is working until now, and I Myself am
working.” With this response Jesus served notice that the
Father worked for man’s benefit every day and so did He. In effect He
was telling them YHWH is His Father He was equal with God.
The
Sabbath was not truly the reason for persecuting Jesus. It
was His miracles and prophetic words, not only in distant Galilee, but
especially the miracle in the nearby pool of Bethesda in Judea. This
miracle took place right next to the Jerusalem Temple
and thereby threatened the Jewish leaders to the core.
vs. 19-30
We
will look at verses 19-30, they should first be primarily read as a unit.
The reason is that the verses are a literary unit. The structure
points the reader to the key concept within the passage. That is: Eternal life
is founded on a person’s response to Jesus and His words. The
individual must believe Jesus IS the
Son of God, the one the Father sent to bring salvation and victory over
sin and death.
The
structure of the passage shows Jesus is totally dependent on the
Father and acts in accordance with the Father. Second, both the Father and Son
give live to the dead, the spiritually and physically dead. Third, the Father
has given full power to the Son to rule and judge in His place. This is first
stated in that order and then restated in reverse order adding emphasis to the
point being made.
vs 31
Once again, we have Jesus
complying with the Torah. Deuteronomy 19:15 states “at the mouth of two
witnesses, or at the mouth of three witnesses, shall the matter be
established.” Jesus then proceeds to provide the witnesses.
vs. 33-47
Jesus now provides three witnesses
to Him being the Son of God. First was John the Baptizer. John
witnessed Jesus is the Son of God, the Christ, the Messiah. John came
fulfilling the prophesy written of Him. The fact the leaders did not accept
John’s message does not invalidate the message or messenger. Second
is the works He did throughout His ministry. Turning the water into wine,
healing people, and raising the dead, Jesus’
works witnessed who He is. The third witness is YHWH. God witnessed
to Jesus being His Son through prophesy, through His speaking at Jesus’
baptism, through visual and auditory to the three disciples on the mountain,
and through His works and the Law and Prophets. Jesus now makes clear the
scriptures testify of Him, that includes Moses who they claimed they revered.
They may revere Moses, but they ignored his prophesies.
John
Chapter 6
vs. 1-11
We need to remember that chapter and verse
divisions came well after the original documents were written. The original documents
were intended to be read to the congregations/synagogues. If we keep this
in mind, we can see reading chapters five and six without chapters
and verses makes the story more cohesive. The conversation that started at
Bethesda with the man being healed continues to the Sea of Galilee.
Jesus now goes to the other side of the Sea of
Galilee (Tiberius) and a large crowd of about 5000 men follow
Him. Taking into consideration that in ancient times only men were
counted, the total number was probably much higher. Given the
addition of women and children, the total could well have been over
10,000. Since, according to archeological data, Nazareth had a population
of no more than 200 people, we can see that a minimum 5000 people was an
exceptionally large number. The fact there were so many people following
Jesus indicates He was at the least a regional influence. That the Jewish
leadership in Jerusalem was worried about Jesus’ message and influence, this
indicated He was a national influence.
There is a lesson in the numbers here. The lad
had 5 barley loaves and two fish. In Ephesians we see there are five gifts of
the ministry and any one of them can slay sin. We see the same in 1 Samuel
17:40 where David chose five smooth stones and used one of them the kill
Goliath. The two fish represent two peoples, Hebrew, and Gentile. The
people were fed with bread representing the bread of life who is
Christ.
The number of people fed were 5,000 men plus
women and children. As the manna in Exodus fed the people and saved them
from death so Christ id the bread of life and saves people from spiritual
death. The bread of life is Christ and comes from through the five gifts of the
ministry gives life to ALL people, Jew, and Gentile. It is not
specific to one or the other. (A Gentile is one belonging to any nation or people group other than the Jewish
people group. https://www.christianity.com/wiki/christian-terms Therefore
Biblically there are two peoples on the Earth, Hebrews, and everyone
else. Those born-again through Jesus are considered Hebrews [Jews].)
Jesus’
teaching was the Torah. Not a new Torah to replace the old, but the same Torah
to continue what the Torah had already set forth. The Pharisees,
Sadducees, and Jewish leadership recognized He did not bring a “new” Torah
message but rather a Torah message that was restoring what YHWH said to begin
with through Moses and the prophets.
The
setting is interesting. Jesus goes up on a mountain to teach with His
disciples. Jesus, seeing all the people coming asked Philip where they
would get enough bread to feed everyone. There are two things to notice here;
1) the crowds were following because of the miracles and 2) Jesus knew what He
planned to do before He asked Philip the question.
Jesus
did not ask where they were to get bread to feed everyone to make the
point that nothing is impossible to God. Philip’s answer showed he was thinking
physically, not spiritually. He was seeing and understanding with physical
eyes, not spiritual eyes. Andrew came with presenting a boy with a
bit of food, but what was that among so many people. Andrew was
closer to faith, but he was also seeing physically.
Jesus
had the people sit down, blessed the food, and distributed it to
the people. “Jesus blessed God for the food. He did not bless the food
because it did not need to be blessed. It was already good. Jews never bless
things. They bless God for the things he has given and provided, including
food. On another note, Jews bless God for the food after they have eaten,
because the Torah says, “When you have eaten and are full, then bless the Lord
. . . “’ (John D. Garr Ph.D. Th.D.)
The
people not only had a bit of food each but ate their fill. After the people
finished eating Christ instructed that the leftovers be saved so nothing would
be wasted. They filled twelve baskets with fragments from the five barley
loaves that fed the people.
Vs. 12-13
There
are several lessons in this passage. One lesson is the five barley
loaves. Bread is to feed the people and keep them from starving. God’s Word
feeds His people and saves them from spiritual death. The number five
is important. In 1 Samuel 17:40-51 we read the story of David killing
Goliath.
Goliath
was a huge warrior who was challenging Israel to combat. David was led to
fight Goliath. To prepare he put his faith in God and chose five smooth stones
from a brook and, with these, his sling and, most important, his faith killed
Goliath. Most theologians agree Goliath represents sin trying to destroy God’s
people. What is very often missed is the five stones. We find a reason for them
in Ephesians 4:8-12.
In Ephesians, we
see Christ gave gifts to men, apostles, prophets, evangelists,
pastors, and teachers for the perfecting of the saints and ministry. Each
of these gifts of the ministry are for perfecting of the saints, bring the
saints to a more perfect knowledge of Christ and unity. Each is for slaying
sin, just as any of the five stones David collected could slay
Goliath.
Now
we look at the twelve baskets filled with the fragments of bread Jesus blessed.
There were twelve tribes of Israel, twelve heads of the
tribes, and Jesus had twelve apostles. The twelve heads of the twelve
tribes were to take care of the twelve tribes, make sure they had food, were
protected, moved when and where YHWH directed, etc. The twelve apostles are to
do the same for believers. They are to dispense the word of God and help the
people, with the five gifted ministries, to become perfected in the
Lord.
vs. 14
When
the people saw the sign, they immediately recognized Jesus as
something special. They saw Him as the Prophet who was to come into the world.
It is unclear if their term “the Prophet” was meaning the Messiah,
Jeremiah, or someone else, but they saw someone who was truly filled
and led by YHWH. Deut 18:15 is a prophesy from Moses “The Lord your God
will raise up for you a Prophet like me from your midst, from your brethren.
Him you shall hear.” The people saw Jesus as the fulfillment of this
prophesy. This seems to have been missed by the Jewish leadership.
vs. 15
The people, recognizing Jesus came from
YHWH, wanted to make Him king of Israel. They recognized Jesus as
coming from God but misunderstood His purpose for coming. The leadership did
not recognize who Jesus was and, far from making Him king wanted to murder Him.
They also did not understand Jesus’ purpose for coming. Neither
group understood the prophesies written of Him.
Jesus, perceiving the people wanted to
make Him king left and went back to the mountain. Jesus did not do this through
humility, or fear, or some other emotion, but because He knew it was not yet
time for Him to be declared king. That will take place at His return. Returning
to the mountain gave Him a chance to talk with His Father and be renewed in His
spirit.
vs. 15-21
Jesus teaches, feeds the people, and
then retires into mountain. When He goes to the mountain alone His disciples
went down to the Sea of Galilee, board a boat and start sailing to
Capernaum. We are not told why they started their trip
without Jesus, but I would guess they were instructed to do so by
Jesus.
We now have an interesting scene. It
became dark and Jesus had not yet joined them. This seems to indicate they
expected or at least anticipated Jesus joining them, perhaps in another boat. A
strong storm came on the sea, strong enough to swamp their boat. As they are
being tossed about in the storm, they saw Jesus walking to them, on
the sea, in the storm. This truly frightened them. This is something they
had never seen before, or even imagined.
Jesus immediately calmed their fears by
identifying Himself. The disciples were willing to allow Jesus into the boat.
(Were they reluctant to allow Him in the boat until He identified
Himself?) When Jesus entered the boat and, as soon as they did, they were at
their destination, their safe landing.
This scene makes clear Jesus
is the sole Lord of everything including the weather, time, and
space. When we think about what happened here. The disciples were in the boat
without Jesus, tossed about on the storm and very frightened. They see Jesus
and think it is an apparition. As soon as Jesus identifies Himself, they
allow Him in the boat, and they are immediately at their safe
destination. The same happens spiritually. We are in the boat of our life
being tossed about by the storm of living and frightened about what will
happen. The fright is partly due to our being unsure where we will land. We see
Jesus walking toward us. Is he real, an apparition, a trick of the senses?
Once Jesus identifies Himself and we let Him into our boat (our lives) the
storm disappears, and we are in our safe port. We are sure of
our destination and sure that with Jesus we will land there.
vs. 22-25
The next day the people had a surprise, no
Jesus. They knew He had not gone in the boat with the disciples and there were
no other boats in which He could have gone. As they looked for Jesus and talked
about what happened other boats came from Tiberius and the people
boarded them to look for Jesus. They sailed to the other side of the
sea and found Jesus there when they landed. Their immediate question to
Jesus was ‘how did you get here?’. What did we miss?
vs. 26
The people crossed the sea and arrived
where Jesus was with His disciples. They asked Jesus when (and how)
He got there. Jesus did not answer their question but did address why they were
looking for Him. They were wanting to find Him because of the miracle of
the loaves and fishes not because of His words that pointed to, YHWH.
There is a huge difference between seeking Jesus because of the miracle of
being fed and because of the signs He gave showing the way to be saved from
hell, and serve, and worship, YHWH. This something we need to
keep in mind in our lives and when communicating with others. The emphasis
should always be on salvation MUCH MORE than miracles.
vs. 27-34
Christ continues talking about the
people’s motive for following Him. As He has in the past, Jesus emphasizes what is truly important. The crowd
was emphasizing physical food but neglecting the spiritual food. Physical food
is temporary, it only fills us for a short time. What is needed is
the food that endures eternally, God’s Word. Christ supplied them with
the former, but they ignored the latter which He was trying to give
them.
The people asked what
they needed to do to do God’s work. Jesus replied with a
clear, direct, and seemingly simple answer: Believe in Him who God
has sent. Jesus was referring to Himself and some of the people recognized this. The people
immediately asked what sign Jesus would show to prove who He was. After all
these signs and miracles, they refer to Moses and the Hebrews in the
wilderness being given manna, the bread from heaven. Jesus corrects them and
makes clear the manna came from YHWH, not Moses and bread that comes from YHWH,
Him, is not temporary but gives eternal life.
vs. 35-40
The people ask Jesus to always give
them the food that gives eternal life. They had seen the signs and
miracles and perhaps expected Jesus to give them actual physical
bread. Jesus immediately takes them and us from the physical to
the spiritual, from physical food to spiritual food. Jesus makes clear
that He is the bread that gives life. The person who comes to Jesus
will never hunger and the person who believes in Him will never
thirst.
The people may well have been trying
to understand what Jesus was saying, He explains. First, He
tells them they have seen Him but not believed in Him. They
have heard His words and seen His signs and miracles yet do not
believe. There are those who will believe, and Christ will keep
them as His own. Christ is clear He comes from the Father to do the
Father’s will. The will of the Father is that everyone who believes
in Jesus will have eternal life and be raised up at the last day to spend
eternity with God.
None of this should have been a surprise
to the Jews, their prophets and the Torah have been saying this same thing
for thousands of years. What the people were told to expect, Jesus said
was now here, in front of them, in Him. They, as usual, expected a physical
salvation but their scriptures noted it would be a spiritual
salvation.
A note: in verse 35 Christ states “I
am the bread of life.” This is the first of seven occurrences in John
where Jesus says “I AM.” Each occurrence emphasizes an important
aspect of Christ’s ministry. This first makes clear true life is only
found in Christ. Without Christ there cannot be true life. Just as the
manna gave life to the Jews in the wilderness so Christ gives life to
everyone who believes. Notice the Jewish leaders objected to Jesus saying
He is the bread that comes down from heaven (vs 38), the did not object to
His saying “I will raise him up on the last day.” There” is not much
difference between the two statements. If one is true, so is the other. Jesus
being the bread of life, sustaining life by coming from heaven, is
the same Jesus who is the source of life, giving life to the dead.” (The
Jewish Gospel of John, p. 136)
vs. 41-45
Now comes the fallout from what Jesus
said. Those listening to Him, the Jews, started grumbling, complaining, about
Jesus because of His words. They were asking who He thought He was,
they knew His (earthly) father and
mother. How can He say He came from heaven, from YHWH? Again, they
looked at the physical, temporal, and not the spiritual. They looked at the
outside. They did not look at the spiritual. They ignored the proof of who
Jesus is and only looked at what they chose to see. Jesus had both
the Word and actions that proved who He is.
Jesus answers their grumblings and
complaints by telling them no one can come to Him unless the Father (YHWH)
draws that person to Him. This lets those who refuse to believe know
that they are not drawn by the Father; they are not following the
Father’s will. The Jews thought that they were all chosen by God by virtue
of their physical birth. Jesus makes it clear that God must draw them before
they can come to God. Everyone who responds to the Father will respond to the
Son.
Jesus repeats His earlier comment “I
will raise him up on the last day.” (vs. 44) He now quotes the
prophets "And they shall all be taught of God” (Isaiah
54:13) Jesus then makes the point that those who have been taught by God
and learned (and perhaps learned [understood and put into practice] is the
important word here) would come to Him. The clear message, especially
to the leaders is they did not hear God or LEARN from what God spoke
(through the law and prophets). (Jer. 31:31-33) It is useful to
remember the Jewish way of thinking is Learn, Do, Teach. The leaders would not
Learn therefore they could not proceed and Do or Teach.
vs. 46-54
Now Jesus switches subjects just a bit and
explains more about Him being the bread of life and how that relates to
the manna Moses distributed in the wilderness. He starts by reminding them
that no one has seen the Father, including Moses, except the One who is
from God. Jesus spoke in a figure of speech here. The metaphor of eating
and drinking was common in Jesus’ day, and pointed to a taking
within one’s innermost being. What
we eat and drink becomes a part of us, it becomes a part of our body. Jesus
is clear that those who believe in Him have eternal life because He is the
bread of life from the Father.
Jesus now makes a comparison between
Him as the bread of life and the manna in the wilderness. The comparison is
simple and clear: those who ate the manna died, those who believe
in Him will never die. Now He says something that takes
most of the listeners aback, Jesus says the bread He gives is His flesh.
Remember He just said those who eat the bread He gives will have eternal
life and now says the bread He is speaking of is His flesh.
The listeners would immediately think He
was telling them to be cannibals, to literally eat His flesh. Jesus
was saying no such thing. He is saying, in a different way, they must totally
believe in Him. They, and we must take His word and life into
us, we must have Him, and His word become a part of us, who we are.
Just as the food we eat becomes a part of us so Christ must become even
more a part of us, who we are, what me are made of.
vs. 52-58
The Jews tried
to understand what Jesus was saying. Did He really want to give them
His flesh to eat? Again, they are looking at the fleshly only and not
the spiritual. They did not understand what the law and prophets said. Their
eyes were closed, and their hearing stopped, by their choice.
They read the law and the prophets, they knew the words but did not understand
or learn from them. They had head knowledge but little to
no understanding or wisdom.
Christ continues to try to instruct them.
He tells them they who eat His flesh and drink His blood live in
Christ and Christ lives in that person. YHWH sent Christ, and Christ
lives because of the Father. Just
as Christ lives because of the Father so those who believe in Christ
as the Savior will live eternally because of Him. Christ repeats that
the bread the Father sent, Jesus, is much better than the manna. Those who ate
the manna died. Those who take Christ into them will never
die.
A note here: the Torah
makes clear that the life of a living thing is in the
blood. Therefore, the Torah
forbids eating any blood. (Lev. 17:10-12) A
person can have many parts of their body go wrong and still live
but if they lose all their blood, they die. A second thing to
remember is the Jewish Middle Eastern society was a very physical one. The
human body was fully associated with the person to whom the
body belonged. When Jesus said they must eat His flesh and drink His blood they
should have understood He was saying to totally believe in Him, His entire
self, as the Son of God. This bears out
in His crucifixion and resurrection. His complete self was resurrected, not
just His body or soul or spirit.
vs. 58-65
Now come the results of seeing
only by the flesh. (Remember, at this point Jesus had many disciples, not
just the twelve.) This is a watershed moment. It will separate those
who truly have faith and believe Jesus is the Son of God,
and those who do not. Those who do not are like seed that falls
on a stony place. (Matthew 13:3-6)
Many of the disciples just did not
understand what Jesus was saying. They were thinking He was talking about
eating His physical flesh and drinking His physical blood. They were
not seeing with spiritual eyes or hearing with spiritual ears. They did
not understand about the manna and the bread from heaven. Perhaps
many of His disciples understood exactly what Jesus was saying and meaning, but
had an exceedingly difficult time accepting His words.
Jesus now hints at what is going to
happen by asking a question: “What then
if you see the Son of Man ascending to where He was before?” What will you
think? What will you do? Will you believe then? Will you still stumble and
find excuses to not believe? (We can see this actually
happened at Christ’s resurrection. The Jewish leadership found, and still
find, excuses not to believe.)
The Holy Spirit gives
eternal life, and the flesh means little. The words of Jesus are both
spirit and life. They are important. “Jesus’ statement about His body and
blood is true and no other picture could have made it clearer. His flesh and
His blood, meaning Jesus Himself – the whole Jesus, is the only thing that can
sustain a human being to life everlasting. (Jn. 1:1, 14)” (The Jewish
Gospel of John, p. 144)
Verses 64 and 65 make clear that
Jesus discerned the spirit of each of His followers and knew who would remain
and who would betray Him. (We see the same in those who have the gift
of the discerning of spirits in 1 Corinthians 12:10)
vs. 66-71
Now
many of the disciples quit following Jesus. Whether or not
they understood what He said they
were just not willing to accept Him totally. After many of
the disciples walked out on Jesus, He asked the twelve if they were
also going to leave. Peter answered for all of them, no, to whom could
they go? No one else could be the Holy One sent by God. The twelve
all agreed and said they believed. Jesus picked the twelve and knew what was
in their hearts, including the one who would betray Him. Jesus even said
that one of them was a devil. Jesus knew from the start who would allow Satan
in their heart and betray Him. It is interesting that, at this point no
more seems to be said about the one having the devil. We are not told the
disciples questioned Jesus about it.
John
Chapter 7
v1
Jesus
was now in Galilee. He went there because the Jewish leaders wanted to
kill Him, but it was not yet time. This passage takes us back to
John 1:11b “11He came to His own, and those who were His own did not
receive Him.” This again lets us know Jesus was in control not the
Jews.
vs.2-9
The
Feast of Booths is the same as the Feast of
Tabernacles. This festival was instituted by Moses (Leviticus
23:34) to commemorate the years that the Israelites wandered in the desert
after their Exodus departure from Egypt. Therefore, Jews celebrate the
festival by living outdoors in booths or tents through the
festival period in accordance with Leviticus 23:42-43.
It was time to journey to Jerusalem to celebrate the Feast of
Tabernacles. The Feast of Tabernacles was a joyful, weeklong celebration, when
families camped out in “booths” to remember God’s faithfulness to Israel
during the wilderness wanderings. We are
told His brothers asked Him to go to Jerusalem to the feast. Some scholars
manipulate the word brother to mean something different than natural born
brothers. Jesus had half brothers and sisters. They were the natural children
of Joseph and Mary. Jesus and His siblings had the same mother but not the same
father. YHWH is the Father of Jesus and Joseph was the father of His brothers
and sisters.
It is worth noting the reason the brothers invited Jesus to
go to the Feast. They wanted Jesus to perform miracles where everyone
could see them. This would bring attention to Jesus and perhaps his brothers.
The brothers were interested in man’s timing, not God’s. Jesus cared about
God’s timing and doing God’s will. Jesus said He would not go to attract
attention (as His brothers wanted) but that did not preclude Him from
going up privately.
vs. 10-13
Jesus
does go to the feast but goes privately so as to not
attract attention. At the feast, many people were wondering
where He was. The people were split between those who considered Jesus a
good man and others an evil man. In either case people were afraid to say
anything publicly because the leadership had already decided those
who said anything about Jesus, especially in support, would be put
out from the synagogue (assembly). This was not an excommunication
as we know it but rather an ostracism from the assembly.
Being
put out of the synagogue was much more than simply no
longer belonging to a local church. The synagogue was/is the
center of Jewish life and community. Being put out of the synagogue was
to be excluded from family, friends, local happenings, the feasts, etc.
Once put out of the synagogue a person could not join another synagogue. Much
like the Greeks in Athens the Jewish leadership used putting a person out of
the synagogue as a preemptive way to neutralize those who did not agree with
them.
vs. 14-18
In
the middle of the feast Jesus goes to the Temple and starts to teach God’s
Word, the Torah. Those listening were amazed at His knowledge and wisdom
since He had not had formal schooling. When growing up He was taught at home, but
He was not educated in the law, prophets, and writings beyond that. They
could not understand how He knew everything He knew and could teach it so
well.
Jesus does
not point to His credentials, but to His doctrine. It is as if He
says, I do not have a seminary degree, but judge Me by My
doctrine. If the Jewish leaders listened carefully to
the doctrine of Jesus, they would know that it was all rooted in
the Torah and that it was from God. In the next passage Jesus
provides an example to make clear what He was telling them.
vs. 14-24
Jesus
refers to the law that Moses gave them. The law came from
God to guide His people until the Messiah, Jesus, came to fulfill
that part of the prophesies written of His first coming. Although the
leaders claimed to follow the law none of them did completely and when
they did, they were not consistent. What they required of the
people often they did not do themselves.
Jesus
immediately follows this with asking why they (the leadership) wanted to kill
Him. The people said He had a demon, in our words was crazy. The crowd did
not know the leaders wanted to kill Him. Jesus does not address the crowd
with His response but rather the leaders that were present. Jesus noted He
did one deed and they all marvel. It would seem that one deed was
healing the man at the pool. I say this because Jesus immediately talks about
circumcision and how a child can be circumcised on the Sabbath and it does not
break the law. Jesus also makes it clear that, despite what they think,
circumcision did not come from Moses but from the fathers (specifically from
God through Abraham).
Now
we see the inconsistencies in how they applied the law. It is acceptable to
circumcise on the Sabbath, remove a part of the body, but not to make a person
whole. The Pharisees said it was acceptable to remove an animal from
a ditch, pit, etc. to save the animal but not to heal a person.
Their priorities and way of seeing was all wrong. They were looking
only at the physical and nothing else. (Nothing has changed over
the centuries.)
vs. 25-31
Now
the Jews start to speak openly about Jesus. The change may well have happened
because Jesus taught in the Temple and the Jewish leaders did nothing to stop
or even Hinder Him. They start to wonder if the leadership know Jesus is the
Messiah. Now they make an error that comes from not knowing the Scripture. They
think that when the Messiah comes no one will know where He comes from. Looking
back at the prophesy we can readily see this is not the case. (Isaiah
7:14; Micah 5:2)
At
the birth of Jesus Herod asked the scholars where the child was to be born.
(Matthew 2:4-8). The scholars had no [problem telling Herod where the Christ
was to be born so His birthplace was not hidden knowledge. The people were
following tradition not the Torah, prophesies, or
writings.
Jesus
tells the people, perhaps quite loudly that yes, they do know where He is
from and they know Him. Jesus says He did not come by His own volition but
the One (YHWH) who sent Him is true and they do not know the One who sent
Him. Jesus knew who sent Him because He came from God and God sent
Him. The Jews did not miss His point. Jesus was saying He came from God
(was one with God) and God sent Him. Again, the Jewish leaders want
to take hold of Him but, since it was not yet the proper time, they could not.
Once again, we see Jesus, not the authorities, is in
control.
Now
many of the people were believing in Jesus as the Messiah. They saw His works, heard
His teaching, and saw the leaders could do nothing to stop him. They
started to connect the dots and realize He was doing the works of the
Messiah.
vs. 32-36
The
Pharisees heard the crowds and became determined to stop Jesus. They had the
authority to send officers to arrest Jesus and stop His preaching. It did not
work out well for them. They did not realize, or chose not to realize, Jesus
came from a much higher authority than did they. They came from the
Jewish leadership; Jesus came from YHWH.
Jesus
now lets the crowd and officers know that He will not be with them much longer.
Jesus tells them where He is going, they cannot come. This
confused the listeners. Where was He going that they could not come? Again,
they were looking physically not spiritually. The wondered if He would be going
to the Jews in dispersion. Perhaps He would be going to the Hellenist Jews
only. They missed the point. Jesus often told them He came from God (YHWH), now
He would be going back to God.
The
comment they will seek Him but will not find Him has at least two meanings. One
is they will not be able to find Him physically. He will be crucified,
murdered, and they cannot find Him since He has been killed, is resurrected and
is back with the Father. The is another layer to this thought. They can seek
His body in the tomb, but it will not be there since He resurrected
from the dead. They will also seek Him spiritually but without believing
He is the Son of God and believe in His death and resurrection as the salvation
from our sins He cannot be found.
vs. 32-39
A
bit of background on the Feast of Tabernacles. “the meaning of the festival
beyond the traditional emphasis of the desert experience (being protected while
living in temporary dwellings - tents)………..For six consecutive days, the
water procession took place once each morning. On the seventh day, it was
repeated seven times to show the emphasis and concentration on prayer
and worship.” (The Jewish Gospel of John, p174) The Torah did not prescribe the
pouring of water, it was an innovation of the Pharisees based (loosely) on
Isaiah 12:2-3. (As a note the Sadducees opposed the pouring of water since it
was not in the Torah.)
Jesus
used this feast and the pouring of water to show He fulfills Isaiah
and Jeremiah 2:13. Jesus is saying He is the living water. From Him comes
salvation. When Jesus died and the spear was pushed into His side both blood
and water came out. Blood because of His sacrifice of His blood we are saved
and healed. Water, because through the Holy Spirit sent by Jesus, we
have the power to live for and work for Him eternally. This would not
have been missed by the listeners.
vs. 40-44
Now
we have a division about who Jesus is, a division still going on today. Some
thought He was the prophet (Jeremiah?) others that He is the Messiah. Some
looked at where He had his home, Galilee, and said He could not be the Christ.
Others said the Christ had to come from Bethlehem (City of bread) so
Jesus could not be the Christ. Once again, they were looking
physically only and they did not investigate where Jesus was born or His
history, just what was happening in the present. This is still
happening.
Jesus
was born in Bethlehem. He came from Judea, not Galilee. The people and
especially the Pharisees, Sadducees and Scribes did not practice due diligence
when looking at who Jesus Is, Was and Will Be. His birthplace (Was), What
He said and His works (Is) and His prophesies and His going back to
the Father (Will Be).
vs. 45-53
This
section has two separate but related parts. In the
first part the officers return to the chief priests and Pharisees but
without Jesus. The leaders want to know why Jesus is not with them. Their
answer tells us a lot about Jesus, they said “Never has a man spoken the way
this man speaks.” The officers were used to arresting people that claimed to be
the Messiah or that disagreed with the leadership. They had heard just about
everything from incredibly talented speakers. Jesus was
different.
The
response of the chief priests and Pharisees shows how egocentric and self-important they
were. They said “You have not also been led astray, have you? 48No
one of the rulers or Pharisees has believed in Him, has he? 49But
this crowd which does not know the Law is accursed.” This chides the officers
for not bringing in Jesus but very clearly lets them know the chief priests and
Pharisees considered themselves much better than the crowd. They call the crowd
accursed but clearly do not think they are part of the crowd or the accursed.
Nicodemus
(John 3) reminds them that the law “does not judge a man unless it first hears
from him and knows what he is doing, does it?” This is the law that both the
Sadducees and Pharisees claim to follow completely. Their answer shows they are
willing to ignore the law when the law does not suit their purposes. They
are also quick to attack Nicodemus for even bringing up the law. The
message is clear: if anyone, regardless of their position, thought something
positive about Jesus, they could not voice it without being
attacked. This has become very personal to the leadership. It
is between them and Jesus, they ignore the law, YHWH and what is morally
and ethically right.
John
Chapter 8
vs. 01-07
We need to
remember these things had a flow and consistency that can be missed when we
look at the writing in chapters and verses. Chapters and verses are artificial
and can hide the flow and connectivity of the writing. Before we look at the
woman taken in adultery, we need to look at what is written leading up to this
section.
In chapter
five we read where Jesus has the witness of God the Father, the witness of His
(Jesus) works and the witness of the scriptures (Torah and Tanach) of who He
(Jesus) is, the Messiah.
In chapter
6 we see Jesus feeds the 5,000, walks on water, showing He is in charge of all
the elements as well as here for all people. Jesus tells the people He is the
bread of life and the way to the Father is through Him and that people must eat
of His flesh and drink of His blood. He lets them know they must believe in Him
and live for Him completely. This is also where Peter and the other disciples
recognize Jesus as the Messiah, the Christ.
In Chapter
7 Jesus goes to the Feast of Tabernacles and taught the people. Jesus makes it
plain He is the living water. Although Jesus did not have formal schooling
(sitting at the feet of a sage or rabbi) His knowledge and understanding of the
Torah was much greater than that of the Jewish leaders and it amazed everyone.
Many people believed Jesus is the Son of God, the Messiah but many others did
not believe. At this time, the Jewish leaders try to arrest Jesus but, since it
was not yet God’s timing, it did not happen. The leaders make it clear they
considered themselves above the people and they were very egocentric.
Now we
come to the woman taken in adultery. The Jewish leaders were trying to set
Jesus up for failure. This is evident by the fact they did not bring in the man
who was also participating in adultery, only the woman. This is a continuation
of the previous events. Again, Jesus is showing He is the Messiah, He is in
control. He can forgive and, try as they might,
the leaders are not going to trip Him up.
When they
brough the woman to Jesus wanting Him to decide to either stone (kill) her for
adultery (Leviticus 20:10) or forgive her Jesus did not directly answer them,
He wrote in the ground. We have no idea what He wrote but there has been a lot
of speculation and guessing about it. What He wrote is immaterial to us and
probably none of our business. What is evident and important is that what He
wrote had a great impact on the people who brought her to Jesus.
The Jews
did not give up but persisted in badgering Jesus to make a judgement about the
woman. Finally, Jesus stands up and makes His decision. He puts the decision
back on them. “He who is without sin among you, let him be the first
to throw a stone at her.” In Jewish law the chief accuser of a person is
to be the first to throw a stone at the person. We see this later with Paul
being the first to throw a stone at Stephen. The people who brought the woman
must either forget the whole thing or say they are without any sin. They must
obey each and every law completely and without fail every time. No one was
willing to do that. No one was willing to lie to that extent.
vs. 08-11
After
saying the person who has no sin should cast the first stone Jesus again writes
in the dirt. As He is writing the accusers all leave one by one. The point is
made that they leave starting with the oldest and ending with the youngest.
Perhaps the older were a bit wiser and saw they were in a no-win position.
Perhaps the older recognized their sinful condition more quickly. We cannot
know for sure, but everyone walked off leaving Jesus alone with the woman.
Jesus gets
up and asks the woman where are the people that accused her? Where are those
that condemned her? They were gone, so the answer was, there were no accusers.
Jesus states He also will not condemn her but adds something very important.
Jesus tells her “From now on sin no more.” Jesus did not ignore or condone
the woman’s sin; He forgave her sin. It is important to know that Jesus
expected her life to change. The message is for her and everyone. Through
Christ you are forgiven now your life must change, sin no more.
A thought
occurred to me when thinking about this event. The actions of the Jewish
leaders showed a lack of respect for Jesus as well as the woman, and a high
regard for themselves. They thought bringing the woman to Jesus would result in
His doing something they could seize on to discredit Him. They obviously did
not consider Jesus to be up to their level of intelligence. Given they failed
to bring the man involved gave a hint this circumstance was purely to trap
Jesus. It also shows a disrespect for women and an unloving attitude.
vs. 12-20
This next
section happens after the event of the woman taken in adultery. The Pharisees
were not mentioned in the story about the woman so how did they suddenly show
up? The woman taken in adultery was intended to trap Jesus. That being the case
I think we can safely assume there were others present to witness Jesus being
trapped and could let others know He disobeyed the law or the rules of the
Romans. Either way He would lose credibility with the people. Things did not
work out as the Pharisees expected.
After the
accusers left and Jesus tells the woman to sin no more Jesus again tells the
Pharisees who He is. He is the light of the world. He reveals things as they
truly are. Those who believe in and follow Christ will walk in light and see
things as they truly are. They will see real reality, not the shadows of
reality or partial reality non-believers see.
The
Pharisees accuse Him of testifying about Himself and therefore was not to be
believed. Jesus makes the point that He testifies of Himself and He is
qualified to do so since He knows He came from the Father and is going back to
the father. Those making the accusation have no idea where He comes from or
where He is going. The accusers are judging Him and others by fleshly, worldly,
criteria but Jesus is not judging.
Jesus
tells them that even if He does judge His judgement is valid since His judgment
comes from both Him and the Father. This means there are at least two
witnesses, Jesus, and the Father. What
is not stated is that the Law and Prophets also testify of Him providing more
than the required two witnesses.
The
Scribes and Pharisees want to know where is Jesus’ Father. They were, again,
seeing only physical and, since Jesus said His Father is a witness, they want
to see the Father. Perhaps their thought is to question His father. Once again
Jesus lets them know they are blind to the reality of who He and the Father
are. If they were not blind, they would know that seeing Jesus means they are seeing
the father. He said all these things in public, but He was not arrested since
the time for His sacrifice had not come.
vs. 21-30
Jesus is
continuing His teaching. He has just told the listeners “I know where I
came from and where I am going; but you do not know where I come from or
where I am going.” (John 8:14) Now He clarifies His meaning giving two truths,
truth about Himself and truth about man.
The truth
Jesus gives about Himself is He came from the Father to fulfill a mission and
once that mission is accomplished, He will return to the Father. His mission is
the salvation of mankind for all who will accept Him as savior. Just as Adam
sinned causing sin to infest all mankind. Jesus came and lived without sin and
therefore His sacrifice, His blood, redeems all who accept and believe in Him
from the infestation of sin.
The
reaction of the listeners indicate they just did not understand what Jesus has
been telling them all along. Their understanding was deficient, perhaps through
a desire to not understand, an intentional failure to understand the
Scriptures, or an honest lack of knowledge/understanding of the Scriptures.
Many did
understand when He said “When you lift up the Son of Man” that He was
speaking of His death and that they would have Him crucified. When Jesus was
crucified and resurrected then they would know He was sent by the Father and
did just what the Father instructed.
Despite
the attempts to silence Him many people who heard what He said and saw what He
did believed on Him as the Messiah, the savior. As it happens many times the
best efforts to silence God fail and have the opposite effect.
vs. 31-36
Now
Jesus spoke to those who believed in Him. His words are words of
instruction and warning. It would also appear those who believed are also
stiving to understand. We must remember Jesus
is reforming Judaism and taking it back to what YHWH established,
not necessarily what the leaders and rabbis wanted or had been
teaching.
Jesus’
first instruction is they must continue in His word, His teachings. If
they do so they will be true disciples of Christ and will be free because
they will know the truth. The fact He said they would be free caused
confusion among them. From their point of view, they were
children of Abraham and had never been enslaved.
Once again, they were seeing physically while Jesus was speaking
spiritually. They were not enslaved physically but were enslaved spiritually,
enslaved to sin and the world. They did not recognize this fact even
though Jesus was quite clear “Truly, truly, I say to you, everyone who
commits sin is the slave of sin.” (vs. 34) The only true freedom from sin
and spiritual death is through Christ.
vs. 37-42
Christ
continues and addresses their contention that they are Abraham’s
children. Jesus agrees that they are the physical descendants of Abraham
but that does not make them Abraham’s children. We see the same
thinking in Matthew 21:28-31 with the story of the two sons. One
son said he would work the fields but did not. The other son said he
would not work the fields but did. The son who said he would not work but did,
was the son who truly did what his father wanted. Just because a
person is a descendant does not mean they are doing the father’s
will. Just because the Jews were descendants of Abraham does not mean they did
the Father’s will.
The
Jews were trying to kill Him, something Abraham would not have done. Jesus
makes another delineation between Himself and the Jewish priests, Scribes,
leaders, and Pharisees. Jesus does what His Father, YHWH, does
which is different from what their father does. Jesus told the
people that if they were the (true) children of Abraham they would do
the deeds of Abraham. This raises the question; What were the deeds of
Abraham? Abraham had faith and acted on that faith even before he saw
results of the faith. He believed God’s word and acted on it. (Genesis
12:1-4; Like 13:28; Hebrews 11:8-10) The people claimed to love
God but hated His Son Jesus. If they genuinely loved God
and believed the Scriptures, they would love Jesus the Messiah.
vs. 43-47
Jesus
asks them a question and then answers His own question. Why do they not understand Him? It
is because they follow Satan, not God. Like the son who said he
would work but did not, they say they follow God the Father but
do not do His works. Jesus has said they wanted to kill Him, now He
tells them their desire to kill Him comes from their father Satan, who was a
murderer from the beginning and is totally devoid of any truth. The
Jewish leaders claimed they were not trying to kill Him but were lying and knew
they were lying. This lying also comes from Satan. Truth comes
only from and through Jesus the Messiah.
Jesus
now puts them to the test. He asks who can convict Him of sin? Who was
witness to any sin He committed? There is no one. They have
tried, they have laid traps to catch Him in sin, but no one can
witness that He sinned. Since they cannot convict Jesus of sin, He
must be telling the truth. If He lied at all they could have convicted Him
of sin, but He did not lie or commit any other sin. Since
He does not lie and only speaks the truth why do they not believe what He says.
The answer is “He who is of God hears the words of God; for
this reason, you do not hear them, because you are not of God.” Jesus
points out their actions show they are not of God but are acting like their
master, Satan. (Matthew 6:24; John 8:34)
It
is appropriate to point out that nothing has changed. Those who are of God hear
and do His word. Those who are not of God deny His Word and do the acts of
their master, Satan. People’s words and actions condemn them long before they
are in front of the judgement seat of God.
vs. 48-59
Now
the Jews accuse Jesus again. They accused Him of being a
Samaritan. To the Jews this was calling Jesus a follower of
idols. (Jeroboam changed the worship of the Israelites in 1 Kings 12:25-33. No
longer did the inhabitants of the north travel to Jerusalem to offer sacrifice
and worship [Deuteronomy 12:5-14].
Instead, Jeroboam set up idols in Dan and Bethel.) They also accused Him
of being possessed by a demon. They said these despite all the
miracles and Torah oriented teaching He had done.
“Jesus’
desire to honor God and His personal humility disprove any charge of demonic
possession. Since those who have Satan as their spiritual parent will have some
of the characteristics of Satan, they will have an evident pride and
self-seeking - things that are absent in Jesus.” (e-sword, David Guzik
Commentary) Jesus repeats what He has often said, salvation, eternal
life is through Him. The Jews accuse Him of having a demon because He said
those who keep His Word, believe in Him as the Messiah, will never see death. They
said all the prophets died so how can He say those who keep His
word will never die. They thought Jesus was saying He was greater
than Abraham or the prophets. They were right but
misunderstood. Jesus was speaking of spiritual life, eternal life.
Jesus
is greater, but it comes from the Father, not Himself. The Jews say
the Father is their God (YHWH), but they do not know Him. (Their
words and actions prove they do not know Him.) Jesus knows the Father
and, if He said He did not, then He would be a liar like them. Jesus knows
the Father and keeps (does) His word. Now Jesus refers to
Abraham and states Abraham was glad to see Christ’s day and did see
it. God is not God of the dead but of the living. We need to remember
that those opposing Jesus included Sadducees who did not believe in a
resurrection. This is one of the many times Jesus made the point that
Abraham, the prophets, and others live.
Jesus
makes who He is clear which infuriates the opposition at that time and
throughout history. The Jews mock Jesus saying He is not yet 50
years old; He has seen Abraham who, in their mind,
died millennia before Jesus was born. Jesus responds “Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was
born, I AM.” Jesus saying this tells them in no uncertain terms
is the Son of God, He is part of God. It also takes them back to Moses when
Moses asked God what he should tell the Hebrews is God’s name. God said I AM that I AM.
(Exodus 3:13-14) By giving the answer He gave Jesus is saying He is
God. Because He said He was/is God they wanted to stone Him but could not
see Him to do so. People today either refuse to believe Jesus is God,
belittle Him and His claims, or dismiss/ignore Him, but many believe in
Him as savior.
John
Chapter 9
vs. 1-5
“The
sense of the flow of the text is that Jesus was not shaken or disturbed by the
almost deadly confrontation with the religious leaders that just happened. We
find Him calm and self-possessed, acting with a profound disregard of His enemies
and their hatred.” (Boice) Jesus was often reviled but never ruffled. “One of the things worthy to be noticed in our Lord’s character is
his wonderful quiet of spirit, especially his marvelous calmness in the
presence of those who misjudged, and insulted, and slandered
him.” (Spurgeon)” (https://enduringword.com/bible-commentary/john-9/ ) Jesus was not ruffled. He was
in control of all situations. While the Jewish leaders wanted to kill Him, they
could not until the proper time, which was determined by the Father.
Jesus
had just left the Jews who wanted to stone Him for what they thought was
heresy. Jesus said “I Am” which made Him YHWH or at least equal with YHWH. YHWH
stopped them from stoning Him and He passed through the crowd and, on the way,
passed by a man begging who was born blind. The man begging probably was
letting people know he was blind from birth and needed their help. This could
be how the disciples knew he was blind from birth and asked their question of
Jesus, “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he would be born
blind?”
At
that time many people thought illness or disabilities were the results of God
punishing people for their sin. They also believed the sins of the parents
could be the cause of a child’s illness or disability. Jesus’ response was clear
that neither the man nor his parents sinned but rather God chose this man to
show His works. Jesus tells us “we must do the works of Him who sent me” which
raises the question of who is the “we” He is referring to here. There are a few
answers: He may be referring to Himself, the Father, and the Holy Spirit; or
Himself and His disciples; or both. Again, Christ says He is the light of the
world as long as He is in the world but also makes clear that night is coming
when work cannot happen. The night Jesus speaks of is spiritual night, a time
of chaos, a time when He is not in the world.
vs. 6-12
Jesus
now spits on the ground, makes clay, anoints the man’s eyes with the clay, then
told him to “Go, wash in the pool of Siloam” (which is translated, Sent), which
he did. In Genesis 2:7 God formed (not created from nothing) man from the dust
of the ground. The people of that day had an elevated view of saliva’s
healing properties and Jesus did use His spit for healing more than once. (https://www.gotquestions.org/Jesus-spit.html) Jesus used
his spit and the dust of the earth to make eyes for the man. This is the same
thing He did when He formed Adam. There is a consistency of actions that did
and does escape many people.
The man went
to the pool Sent, washed his eyes as instructed, and came back seeing, He had
faith, acted on that faith, and was healed. He also came back to where Christ
healed him. An interesting note is the English meaning of Siloam, “sent.” The
man was sent to the pool and when he went to the pool, he received his healing.
Very, very often we are told to do something and when we do it then we receive
the blessing. Faith first, then blessings. If blessing comes first, then faith
is not needed (James 2:14-26)
When he
returned, the people who saw him were not quite sure what to make of him.
Shortly before they saw him begging and knew he was blind. Now they see him
with sight. Some who saw him said it was the beggar who was blind while others
could not believe he could now see and said it only looked like the man. The
man healed told them he was the same man, some believed while others did not,
despite the facts and what they saw. This is much the same as what happened and
happens with Jesus. He told people who He was, and His works verified who He
was, but people refused to believe either His works or words.
People asked
him how he received his sight. The formerly blind man told them what Jesus did,
that he was told to wash in the pool and when he did, he received his sight.
The next obvious question was, where is Jesus? The man did not know.
vs. 13-17
The
people brought the formerly blind man to the Pharisees. We are not told why but
it may be because the healing happened on the Sabbath. Several things happening
here that would irritate the Pharisees. First, Jesus “worked” making clay and
then worked healing the man. Second, the man walked to the pool which was
considered work. Third, he washed his eyes which the Pharisees considered work,
and finally, he walked back to where Jesus healed him. We must remember these
were Not God’s rules but were instituted by the Pharisees. Neither Jesus nor
the blind man violated the laws of God, they just violated the rules of the
Pharisees.
The
Pharisees asked the man how he received his sight and he told them what
happened. Some of the Pharisees immediately condemned Jesus as not coming from
God because He did not obey their Sabbath rules while others said He had to be
from God since a sinner could not do what Jesus did. There was a stark division
between the two groups. To try and resolve the conflict within the group they
asked the man what he thought since his were the eyes that were opened. His
immediate reply was that Jesus was a prophet. The man did not yet have a full
understanding of who Jesus was/is but knew He was special. (Psalm 146:8)
vs. 18-23
The
Jews questioning the man just could not believe he was born blind but now could
see. To verify that he was born blind they called in his parents. The parents
affirmed that this was their son but how he gained his sight they do not know.
They tell the Pharisees their son is old enough to answer for himself. The
parents were afraid of the reaction from the Jews since the Jews had already
decided that anyone who said Jesus was the Messiah that person would be removed
from the synagogue.
Some
information concerning the importance of the synagogue is in order here. “Synagogue, in Judaism, is a community house
of worship that
serves as a place not only for liturgical services but also for assembly and
study. (https://www.britannica.com/topic/synagogue) We often
look at church as ancillary to our daily lives, a place we go once a week or
perhaps more often. To the Jews, the synagogue WAS their daily life. They went
to the synagogue (assembly) to pray bet ha-tefilla (“house of
prayer”), bet ha-kneset (“house of
assembly”), and bet ha-midrash (“house of
study”). To be put out of the synagogue effectively meant the person was no
longer part of the life of Israel. The ground of their existence was pulled out
from under them. This is what the man’s parents were afraid would happen to
them. Being excommunicated from the synagogue could be similar to being
excommunicated from the community.
vs. 24-26
The
Pharisees tried to pressure the man to recant or at least diminish Jesus’ part
in his healing. Their motives can be seen by their statement “Give glory to
God; we know that this man is a sinner.” By adding that they know Jesus is a
sinner they are saying God condones sins and listens to and works miracles
through those who sin. This is totally false and diametrically opposed to who
God is and His character.
The
man states he does not know if Jesus is a sinner or not. What he does know is
he could not see and now, after Jesus healed him, he can see. The man is much
more honest than the Pharisees. He does not attempt to judge Jesus he just
knows and just relates the facts: he could not see and now he can.
vs. 27-34
His
response did not satisfy the Pharisees and again they asked how Jesus opened
his eyes. This is not an honest inquiry but rather they were looking for a
way to refute what he said, show he lied, and cast doubt on the healing and
Jesus. The man responded by reminding them he had already related what
happened. Why do they want to hear it again? Perhaps they want to become
disciples of Jesus. By this question, the man cut through their posturing and
attempted misdirection. This upset the Pharisees. They immediately claimed the
man was a disciple of Jesus, but they were disciples of Moses, not Jesus. They
said they knew God spoke to Moses but have no idea where Jesus was from. Where
Jesus is from means where He was born and, more importantly, why He does what
he does, what is His motivation, what is His purpose, where does He get His
authority?
The
formerly blind man again cuts through their smoke and mirrors and tells them it
is amazing that they, Pharisees, and leaders, do not know where Jesus is from
even though Jesus opened his eyes. He points out what the Pharisees should
know, God does not hear sinners but does listen to those who fear God and do
His will. He also pointed out the obvious fact that never had anyone opened the
eyes of a person born blind. The fact Jesus did this for him shows Jesus was
from God, despite what the Pharisees may choose to believe. The Pharisees now
verbally attack the man and in doing so let him know they consider themselves
of a higher status, smarter and wiser than him. They then threw him out of the
synagogue.
vs. 35-41
Jesus
heard what happened and looked for him. When Jesus found him, He asked a
tremendously important question: Do you believe in the Son of Man? Jesus is
asking if the man believes what God said through the law and prophets. The fact
Jesus looked for the man shows His caring and love for the individual. The
man’s answer shows he recognizes the signs of the time and the working of God.
He responds: Who is He Lord, that I may believe in Him? The man addresses
Jesus as Lord and asks his question knowing Jesus can answer. This is in direct
opposition to how the man interacted with the Pharisees. In that event, the
man, in effect, taught the Pharisees, those who were supposed to be leaders and
teachers.
Jesus
tells him: “You have both seen Him, and He is the one who is talking with you.”
Jesus opened the man’s physical eyes and, as we can see next, also opened his
spiritual eyes. The man immediately shows his faith by believing in Jesus and
worshipping Him. Again, we see the unity of faith and then doing. This interaction
made an impression on those Pharisees who were there and witnessed these
events. Jesus’ next words made them think and perhaps do a bit of
self-reflection. “For judgment I came into this world, so that those who do
not see may see, and that those who see may become blind.” The formerly blind
man was blind and now saw. Many Pharisees had eyes but refused to see what was
directly in front of them, they were effectively blind physically, and
spiritually.
Upon
seeing what happened and then hearing Jesus’ words the Pharisees asked if they
were also blind. If they were blind, they would have no sin. Even worse because
they said they could see they were deceiving themselves and their sin remains.
This takes us back to the formerly blind man answering the Pharisees. In James
4:17 James says the same thing. The Pharisees knew the right thing to do and
refused to do it, they followed the leading of their master, Satan.
John
Chapter 10
vs. 1-6
Referring
to the sheep and sheep fold is something that would be familiar to the
listeners. In towns, sheep from multiple flocks were kept for
the night in a common sheepfold. This sheepfold was overseen by one doorkeeper who regulated which
shepherds brought and took which sheep. A second kind of sheepfold was one used
in the field. A field sheep pen was an enclosure for sheep with only one entrance. In
a field sheepfold, the
shepherd physically laid his body across the entrance. This was to keep the
sheep in and to keep out the wolves. The shepherd was in fact the door. (e-Sword, David Guzik)
This
lesson about the sheep and sheepfold is a direct reference to what happened with the
man born blind and the Pharisees. The Pharisees did not like what the man said
and excommunicated him from the synagogue. They showed themselves to be false shepherds
who had their own interests in mind and not those of the sheep. The blind man
did not listen to the Pharisees but did listen to Jesus. He recognized the
voice of the true shepherd, Jesus, and followed him.
Jesus’s
words and examples should have been clear to them, but they did not understand
what He was saying. Their ears were closed to the voice of the true shepherd
but listened only for the voice of their shepherd, Satan.
vs. 7-10
Jesus
repeats what He said, but in even stronger words. Using “truly, truly” is a way
to strongly emphasize to the listener that what is about to be said is
extremely important. Jesus repeats He is the door to the sheep fold. He places
Himself at the entrance of the sheep fold. He is prepared to give, and in fact
does give, His life to protect the sheep. All those had already come claiming
to be the Messiah were liars, thieves, and robbers. They were intent on
stealing the sheep. Those who were Jesus’ sheep did not listen to or follow
them.
Again,
Jesus states He is the door. He maintains access to salvation and eternal life.
He keeps the thieves and robbers out of the sheep fold and protects the sheep.
Jesus leads His sheep to green pastures and living water. Anyone else comes
only to lead the sheep away to destruction.
vs. 11-18
Christ
continues His metaphor of shepherds. Jesus is the good shepherd, the shepherd
who genuinely cares about the sheep. He is not only willing to lay down His
life for the sheep; He did lay down His life. Those who came before and after
claiming to be the Messiah were not in fact the Messiah and did not genuinely
care for the sheep. In our day those who pastor as a profession and do not have
a calling from the Lord are also hired hands, they care for themselves more
than they care for the sheep. The Lord knows which sheep (people) are His.
Those who believe know His voice. They know His voice through their knowledge
of Scripture and through the Holy Spirit working in their lives.
Now
we come to a comment that has had theologians arguing about its meaning for
years. “I have other sheep, which are not of this fold; I must bring them also,
and they will hear My voice; and they will become one flock with one shepherd.”
Some theologians say He is speaking of the ten Israel tribes that were not part
of Judah. Some think He is speaking of the Jews in diaspora. Some think He is
speaking of the of the native Americans in North and South America. Some think
He is speaking of the Gentiles. My personal thought is He was speaking of all
those who would come to believe in Him throughout time, culture, and geography
until He returns. All Hebrews and Gentiles, who believe in Jesus as the Messiah
will be one in unity and Christ will be their shepherd.
Next is an important, foundational statement. Christ decides when
He will lay down His life, no one on earth has the power or authority to make
that decision. Christ also decides when He will raise His life up. Again, no
one on earth has the power or authority to make that decision. While in the physical
world it appears His life was taken from Him, in reality He decided when it
would happen. Everything in Jesus’ life was in accordance with prophesy,
including His death and resurrection.
vs. 19-21
Once
again there is division among the Jews concerning what Jesus has said. Some
take the stance that He is demon possessed and insane. This is similar to what
people say today. If a person truly preaches Christ, and especially if they
preach with the power of the Holy Spirit, people say they are insane, took
leave of reality. Seldom will people say they are demon-possessed since belief
in demons is neither culturally of politically correct in our time.
Another
group listens to what Jesus says and His works and recognize these are not the
words or actions of a person who is demon-possessed or insane. His words prove
He is not insane, and a demon cannot open these eyes of a person born blind.
vs. 22-30
The
Feast of the Dedication was also called the Feast of Hanukkah,
celebrated annually by the Jews for eight days to commemorate the cleansing of
the Temple in Jerusalem after it had been desecrated by the Syrians under
Antiochus Epiphanes (also known as Antiochus the madman). It is interesting
that Jesus is in the temple when this event occurred. While He was walking the
Jews (probably the leadership. Pharisees and Sadducees) asked Jesus very
directly if He is the Messiah. Jesus’ answer is that He has already told them
and, if they do not believe Him then believe the work He does in the Father’s
name. This happens after He restores the blind man’s sight, and some say He is
insane. His words and work prove who Jesus is but as has happened since, some
believe, and many do not believe.
Jesus is
clear that those who do not believe are not His sheep. They follow their
father, Satan. Those who believe in Jesus as the Messiah follow Him, know His
voice and He knows them. Those who love Jesus follow Him and Jesus gives them
eternal life, they will not perish. We now come to a very misunderstood
passage: “no one will snatch them out of My hand.” This passage is used to state
once a person is saved; they cannot be unsaved. That is, once saved a person is
always saved. The problem is the passage states nothing can pluck, or take, a
believer out of Jesus’ hand, He does not say they cannot walk out of their own
free will. 2 Timothy 4:10 tells us Demas did exactly that. Hebrews 6:4 “For
it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the
heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost,” tells us that not
only was it possible to leave Christ, but some did. See also Matthew 24:12; Luke
8:13; John 6:66; Hebrews 3:12; 1 Timothy 5:15; 2 Peter 3:17 and 1 John 4:19.
Christ
again says He and the Father are one. This is without equivocation stating who
Christ is and answers their questions.
vs. 31-39
Once
again, the Jews want to stone Jesus for saying He and the Father are one. To
their thinking this was blasphemy. Jesus had said they should believe because
of His good works from the Father. Now He asks for which of these good works
they want to stone Him. The people reply they are not stoning Him for any good
works but because He said He is the Son of God. Jesus’ reply that is that they
should believe His works even if they do not believe what He says. Believe the
facts of what He does. Remember this comes after Jesus created sight for a man
born blind and had many other works. Faith and works go together (as we see in
James 2:14-18).
Jesus
ends by saying “that you may know and understand that the Father is in Me, and
I in the Father.” Again, the Jews wanted to stone Jesus but, since Jesus was in
charge not the Jews, they were not able to do so.
vs. 31-42
Jesus
went to where John had been baptizing. Once again, we see a division among the
Jews concerning who Jesus is. This time the people were looking at what Jesus
said and His works and recognized He is the Son of God. They referred to John
the baptizer and realized everything John said about Jesus was true and the
believed Jesus is the Son of God as He said.
John
Chapter 11
vs. 1-10
Jesus has healed the man blind
from birth, tells the Jewish Pharisees and leaders He is the Son of God, told
them to believe His works and words and then went to where John had been
baptizing. While there, messengers from Martha and Mary told Him Lazarus whom
He loved was sick and they wanted Him to come. Jesus said that the sickness was
not to death and the sickness was to show God’s glory. Jesus waited two days
before going to the sisters. Given Jesus waited two days before going to the
sisters means by the time He was told about the sickness Lazarus was already
dead.
After being told about Lazarus
Jesus waited two more days before He told His disciples was going to Judea. The
disciples were confused, those in Judea had just tried to kill Him and now He
was going back? Jesus’ reply is an important lesson for all of us, not just the
disciples. “Are there not twelve hours in the day? If anyone walks in the day, he
does not stumble, because he sees the light of this world. 10But if
anyone walks in the night, he stumbles, because the light is not in him.”
Christ is the light. While we walk in Him, we will not stumble but is we do not
walk in Him we will stumble. Notice Jesus says the light is not in that person.
That means Jesus is not in that person and they will not see or recognize the
temptations and sin that cause stumbling.
vs. 17-29
“There is a tradition in
Judaism that, after death, the soul does not immediately depart the deceased,
but hovers over the body for a period of three days, during which time
resurrection is possible. Jesus arrived in Bethany near Jerusalem on the fourth day. This could explain
why, after hearing the news that Lazarus was extremely ill, “he stayed two days
longer in the place where he was.” (Jn. 11:6) Jesus knew how long it would take
to travel to Bethany and He would arrive, not only after Lazarus’ death, but
when, according to popular Jewish belief, resurrection was no longer possible –
on the fourth day.” (The Jewish
Gospel of John: Discovering Jesus, King of All Israel p180 Eliyahu
Lizorkin-Eyzenberg)
That Jesus waited until
Lazarus had been dead four days does not mean He believed the tradition. But
rather would give the Judeans no opportunity to say Lazarus’ soul was still
there and he was brought back to life by anything other than the power of God.
Martha went to meet Jesus. Her
first words came from both her grief and her belief in Jesus. “Lord, if
You had been here, my brother would not have died. 22Even now I know
that whatever You ask of God, God will give You.” Jesus assures her Lazarus will rise
again and Martha immediately thinks of the resurrection on the last day. Her
thinking did not include immediate resurrection. Jesus said He is the
resurrection and the life.
Resurrection was not something
Jesus would do with his Father’s help. Resurrection
and Life are who Jesus is. When we
look at the story of Lazarus, we can see parallels between the raising of
Lazarus and the healing of the man who was blind from birth. In the case of the
healing of the blind man, light was
given; and in the case of Lazarus, life
was given. (John 1:4) (The Jewish
Gospel of John: Discovering Jesus, King of All Israel p179 Eliyahu
Lizorkin-Eyzenberg)
Martha
confirms her belief in Christ as the Son of God, the Messiah, the Savior. Once
she did this, she left to find Mary and tell her that Jesus was calling her.
vs. 30-37
When Mary met Jesus, He
had not yet arrived at the village but was still where Martha met Him. Thinking
she was going to the grave of Lazarus, the mourners at their house followed
Mary. Those who followed Mary were witness to all that subsequently happened.
Most Jews of the first
century in the land of Israel buried people twice. When someone died, the body
was first wrapped in a cloth and placed in a cave for a prolonged period. After
the body decayed and only bones remained, they were collected and placed in a
special box called an ossuary.
Biblical Archeology has had several articles on ossuaries. At this point
Lazarus was in the first stage of burial.
When Mary came to Jesus
she fell at His feet in supplication and worship. Her comment “Lord, if You had been here, my brother would
not have died.” Shows her faith in Jesus. She knew He would have been able to
heal him and keep him from death. Seeing Mary and those with her weeping Jesus
was moved in His spirit and He was troubled. It was more than just His close
friend dying. Death was not what God wanted for man. Man was made to love and
serve God, when sin entered the world so did death, physical and spiritual
death. Jesus was very troubled and grieved over His friend’s death but also in
the fact death entered the world at all. There was no need for death if only
man had not decided to follow Satan.
Jesus
asked where they had laid Lazarus. They were about to show Him when Jesus wept.
The people with Mary commented on how much Jesus loved Lazarus. This is true,
but He also wept for His creation and for mankind. While some commented on how
much Jesus loved Lazarus others asked if Jesus opened the eyes of the man born
blind couldn’t He save Lazarus from dying? In the midst of the grieving, they
seemed to be looking for a way to find fault with Jesus.
vs. 38-44
Jesus was very moved by the
death of Lazarus and the results of sin in the world, death. Jesus came to the
cave where Lazarus had been laid and saw a stone was lying across the entrance
to seal the cave. Jesus told those at the tomb to remove the stone. The
immediate reaction was one that would be normal from a purely human, temporal
perspective, he has been dead four days and there will be a stench from decay.
Jesus operated in complete reality, temporal and spiritual. He tells them
believe and see the Glory of God. See what God will do.
They removed the stone as he
told them. Jesus prayed to the Father thanking God for hearing Him. Jesus said
this for the sake of those with Him. Jesus knew the father always heard Him but
wanted to make sure those with Him knew YHWH was who sent Him in to the world.
Once Jesus did this He called for Lazarus to, come out of the tomb. Lazarus
came out of the tomb in his grave wrappings. One phrase shows the authenticity
of the account “…, and his face was wrapped around with a cloth.” The face was covered
with a cloth separate from those that covered the body. We see the same thing
with Jesus after He was crucified and resurrected. (John 20:6-7)
Lazarus in Hebrew is Eliezer, which means God will help. (John 1:4) When we look
at the story of Lazarus, we can see parallels between the raising of Lazarus
and the healing of the man who was blind from birth. In the case of the healing
of the blind man, light was given;
and in the case of Lazarus, life was
given." (John 1:4) (The Jewish
Gospel of John: Discovering Jesus, King of All Israel p179 Eliyahu
Lizorkin-Eyzenberg)
vs. 45-46
Jesus
raised Lazarus from the dead. There is no question Lazarus was truly dead. Many
people who saw this believed in Jesus as the Messiah. His power and control
through the Father in Him are evident. This was the good news. The bad news
(from our perspective) was some others went and told the Pharisees what Jesus
had done.
vs. 47-53
When
the Pharisees heard that Jesus had raised Lazarus from the dead, they and the
chief priests called a council to discuss what they would do about Jesus. They
felt they just could not continue to allow Jesus to continue doing God’s work.
Their reasoning was straight forward: “If we let Him go on like this, all men
will believe in Him, and the Romans will come and take away both our place
and our nation” The Chief Priests and Pharisees were concerned only with
themselves and their positions and wealth. That Jesus was doing God’s work
complete with signs and miracles was of no concern to them.
Caiaphas,
the high priest made the comment and prophesy that it is expedient that one man
dies for the entire nation. While Caiaphas was specific to one nation, Israel,
Christ died for all nations and peoples. Also, Caiaphas was truly only
concerned about himself. The Chief priests and Pharisees started to look for a
way to kill Jesus. Again, their thoughts were only for themselves and not for
Israel.
vs. 53-54
Jesus
now no longer walked among the Jews but went to Ephraim, close to the
wilderness. Ephraim is thought to have been about 13 mile north of Jerusalem
and was considered a wilderness area.
vs. 55-57
It
was almost time for the Passover and many people were going to Jerusalem to
prepare for it. Remember
that Jesus was not a Christian, but a
real, Torah-observant Israelite. Jesus was thoroughly Jewish, the Torah - all
the Torah - was utterly important to Him, therefore, He would go to the
Passover celebration. Passover was particularly important to Jesus. It
celebrated when He saved the Israelites from the death angel and led them to
the promised land. He was about to do the same spiritually for all peoples.
The Pharisees and chief
priests, wanting to kill Jesus, gave orders to everyone that if they knew where
Jesus was, they were to report it so they might kidnap and kill Him.
John
Chapter 12
vs. 1-7
Before
the Passover Jesus came back to the house of Lazarus, Martha, and Mary. They
made a supper for Him and Martha served. Mary had a pound (about 12 ounces in
Roman measurement) and anointed the feet of Jesus with it and wiped off the
excess with her hair.
There are a few things that must be inserted
here. This Mary is often thought of as the same Mary in chapter 7 who was a
prostitute. They (probably) were not the same person. Nard is an oil-producing plant, the horizontal subterranean plant
stems of which were crushed to produce an extravagant, aromatic oil. In
Judaism and in many other cultures in the ancient world, hair was associated
with a woman’s glory, her self-worth and self-respect. (1 Cor. 11:15) Not only
did Mary anoint Jesus’ feet with an extremely expensive ointment she also used
her hair to wipe the excess oil that did
not get absorbed into Jesus’ skin. She placed her self-worth at His feet; she gave Him her riches and
her glory. It was an act of worshipful and devotion.
Another thing to keep in mind was the local area of Bethany was extremely
poor. Those who had the means provided help to those who were poor. This gives
a bit of a different view of Judas’ comment and apparent concern for the local
poor. I say apparent because, as John points out, what he really cared about
was himself. Since he kept the money, if the cost of the perfume had been given
to him to give to the poor, he would have been able to steal some or all of it.
The response of Jesus is interesting. “Let her alone, so that she may keep it for the
day of My burial. 8For you always have the poor with you, but you do
not always have Me.”. This is not an excuse for Christ
followers to be unconcerned for the poor. Rather it is an answer to Judas’
statement about using the money for the poor in the Bethany area. It is also
set against the worship actions of Mary. Mary recognized the truly important,
Judas did not.
vs. 8-11
Now
we come to a passage that absolutely amazes me due to the self-serving, evil,
depravity of heart, thinking and life and of the chief priests and pharisees. Many
people came not to see or hear Jesus but to see Lazarus who Jesus had raised
from the dead. Lazarus was walking, talking, proof that Jesus was who He said
He was, the Messiah, the Son of God. Because Lazarus being proof of Jesus as
Messiah the chief priests and Pharisees were planning to kill him also. This
shows the state of their hearts. Instead of worshipping God they choose to try
and eliminate the proof and ignore the facts. It did not work. Because of Lazarus
many people listened to and believed in Jesus as the Christ.
This
passage could be speaking about any point in time and on earth since Jesus was
born. We still see people denying Christ and trying to stop any person or
organization testifying about what Christ has done and Him as savior.
vs. 12-19
Jesus
was coming to Jerusalem for the Passover. He was well known by this time and
the crowd gathered in Jerusalem went to meet Him. As they went to meet Him,
they cut palm branches and laid them in His path as well as many laid their
outer garments on the ground in front of Him. This fulfilled Lev. 23:40 and
Neh. 8:15. God commanded that during the Feast of Tabernacles the Israelites
were to cut palm branches and make temporary booths in which to dwell. (This
makes sense since Jesus is the perfect Tabernacle and was born during the feast
of Tabernacles.)
The
crowd shouted Hosanna meaning “save now,” and on this day the crowd received Jesus as a
triumphant Messiah. There is a strong possibility at least some of the crowd was looking to
Jesus as a political savior, one who would drive out the Romans. They did not
necessarily see Him as a spiritual savior. At this point Jesus found a young
donkey and sat on it to ride into Jerusalem. Jesus riding into Jerusalem on a
donkey fulfilled Zechariah 9:9, it also showed He came in peace. In that time a
ruler who came in peace rode on an ass.
The ruler who came on a horse came as conqueror. The fact Jesus came riding on
an ass should have, and given subsequent events probably did, let the people
know He did not come as a political leader or conqueror to defeat the Romans.
At the
time, the disciples did not understand what was happening and its place in
prophesy, but they did after Christ’s crucifixion and resurrection. Those who
were there when Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead continued to tell everyone
they saw what happened and how God moved through Jesus. This did not sit well
with the Jewish leadership and the Pharisees. They just wanted Jesus and now
Lazarus to go away and if they had to murder them to make that happen, so be
it.
vs. 20-26
The
Greeks coming to the feast would have been Gentiles who had converted to
Judaism. Their request was not an accident. These were Greeks who had a heart
toward God, were thinking people who made a decision they wanted to see Jesus.
Here, just before His crucifixion and resurrection, we see the Gentiles coming
to Christ. Now we have both Jews and Gentiles coming to Christ, the whole
world.
Jesus’
response to the Greeks wanting to see Him can appears to be a disconnect. Jesus
now states it is time for Him to die. He also gives the reason He must die and
uses a seed to make the point. A seed, unless it dies, cannot produce fruit.
Jesus must die and then resurrect in order to produce the fruit, saving mankind
from their sins, He came to produce. Note: In order to fully experience fruit a
person must eat it, make it part of themselves. In order to fully experience Christ,
we must partake of Him, make Him part of ourselves. Christ said this in Matthew
26:26-29; Mark 14:22-24; John 6:53-56. Jesus now makes a comment that can cause
people to say Huh! ”He who loves his life loses it, and he
who hates his life in this world will keep it to life eternal.” Cultures
throughout the eons have taught that we should love our lives and do our best
not to lose our lives. Christ says the opposite. What is important is why we
should do the opposite. What is the state of our heart? Do we truly follow
Christ? Do we love Christ first, even above our lives? To “hate” our lives mean
we make our wants and desires second to Christ. We operate through the love of
Christ and put others before our own wants and desires. Our physical lives are
only for a short time. We need to recognize that the eternal is more important
and act that way.
vs. 27-36
We
read these words, but do we really consider and at least partly understand
their meaning? Jesus lived His life in obedience to YHWH (the Father) and,
unlike Adam He never sinned. He never let Satan lead Him into any sin. Jesus
chose to follow the Father only. He came to be a sacrifice, the sacrificial
Passover lamb for us. Now He is getting close in time to when He will be
sacrificed. As a human He is very, very troubled when contemplating what will
soon happen. We see His obedience and commitment to the father even while He is
extremely troubled and stressed. He chooses to follow God’s Will and knows what
is about to happen is exactly why He is here. He then says something very
characteristic, ”Father, glorify Your name.” Jesus is not looking
for self-glory but rather the Father’s glory.
God answered Jesus and when he did some people said it thundered and
some said an angel spoke to Him. Jesus is very clear that the Father spoke to
Him, but it was for the benefit of the people with Jesus. This is very similar
to the Father speaking to Jesus at His baptism. Jesus goes on to say judgement
has come upon the world and the ruler of the world will be cast out. The ruler
of this world Jesus referred to is Satan. Jesus the Messiah continues on “And
I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to Myself.” The verb used for lifted up (the ancient Greek word hypsothenai) has a
deliberate double meaning. It means both a literal elevation (as in
being raised up on a cross) and exaltation (being raised in rank or
honor). Here being “lifted up” refers to being hung on a tree, a most ignominious
and cursed death. Deut. 21:22-23 states And if a man have committed a sin worthy of death, and he be to be put
to death, and thou hang him on a tree: His body shall not remain all night
upon the tree, but thou shalt in any wise bury him that day; (for he that is
hanged is accursed of God;) that thy land be not defiled, which the LORD
thy God giveth thee for an inheritance.” In the case of Christ, He was hung on a tree (the cross) not for His
sins but for ours. We have sin worthy of death; Christ had no sin.
The people were
confused. They heard that the Christ would live forever and now Jesus said the
Son of Man must be lifted up, that is, hung on a tree. They asked Him who is
the Son of Man? Jesus responds by saying that the light will be with them for
just a little while longer. The people, at least some of them, would remember
Jesus said He is the light of the world. This answers their question, Jesus is
the Son of Man and He will be lifted up.
vs. 36-43
Immediately
after Jesus said these things he hid from the people. We are not told why.
Perhaps it was because the chief priests, Pharisees and Jewish leaders still
wanted to kill Him, and it was not yet time. We must remember Jesus was in
charge, not Satan or Satan’s followers. John makes a telling comment, it is as
true for our time as it was when Jesus was on earth “ But though He had
performed so many signs before them, yet they were not believing in Him.”
Isaiah’s prophesy was and is on target. People would just not believe despite
the evidence. Isaiah said “3Then the eyes of those who see will not
be blinded, And the ears of those who hear will listen.” (Isaiah 32:3
NASB) The
people had prepared themselves to be blinded and hardened. God gave them what their
lives showed they wanted. Despite many
people choosing not to see or hear many people, including leaders and rulers
believed in Jesus as the Messiah but were afraid to say anything because of the
Pharisees were excommunicating anyone from the synagogues who said they
believed in Christ. John’s comment ’43for they loved the approval
of men rather than the approval of God.” Goes to the source of the issue.
vs. 44-50
Jesus
is the representative of God in so close and perfect a manner that "He who believes in Me, does not believe in Me
but in Him who sent Me. He who sees Me
sees the One who sent Me." To believe in Christ is to believe in God,
because all that Jesus is and does proceeds from God and leads to God. The
whole purpose of Christ’s manifestation
was to reveal God. Jesus’ purpose was to guide thought to Him whom He revealed.
Jesus was sustained by the Father, and all He said and did came from the
Father. Whoever believed in Him believed in the Father.
John
Chapter 13
vs. 1-4
Jesus
knew this would be His last Passover with His friends/disciples on earth.
Within 24 hours of this meal Jesus would be crucified. Jesus knew He would be
departing to the Father but before that He would be beaten almost to death,
reviled, spit on, crucified and take on the sins of the world from the
beginning of time until He returns. He would take the wrath of the Father for
the sins He took on. He would suffer these as both fully human and fully
divine. An unbelievably difficult and appallingly horrific time.
Jesus
“having loved His own who were in the world, He loved them to the end.” There
have been several interpretations of this passage all trying to understand what
Jesus meant. I tend to take it just as He said. Jesus knew He was departing and
loved those who believed in Him. He loves them to the end, not only the end of
Hid life on earth but also to the end of all time and eternity. These people He
loved must stay in the world to testify and witness of Him while He goes back
to the father.
Finally,
we are told that Satan had already put into Judas Iscariot’s to betray Jesus.
This would not have been a spur of the moment decision on the part of Judas,
but one made over time. Like a fisherman enticing fish with bait Satan would
have been enticing Judas for a long time.
vs. 3-11
Jesus
knew what was going to happen and, because God had given everything to Him,
knew He was in total control. Before we look the next action of Jesus, we need
to look back on some of the dynamics among the disciples. The mother of James
and John asked Jesus to have one sit at His right hand and the other to sit on
His left when He comes into His kingdom. They also discussed which of them
would be the greatest. Jesus had corrected their thinking previously and now
makes His point visually.
Jesus,
gets up from the supper (probably before the meal actually started, laid aside
what He was wearing, girded Himself with a towel and started to wash the
disciple’s feet. This is Amazing. Jesus, the Son of God, our Lord, washes the
feet of the disciples. Washing the feet of others was work done by the lowest
slave, here the Son of God is doing it. When He came to Peter’s feet Peter said
Christ would not wash his feet. Peter misunderstood what Christ was doing. This
is far more than just getting the road dust, sweat and dirt off a person’s feet
it is a philosophy for a successful life. Be willing to serve. Be willing to
give yourself for others. Operate by love, not pride and self- aggrandizement.
As Christ washed the feet of the disciples so we must be willing to do the same
in spirit and actuality.
One
last very important note. Christ washed the feet of Judas Iscariot who was
planning to betray Him. Jesus said, “Not all of you are clean.” Jesus knew who
was going to betray Him but washed their feet along with the others. The other
disciples would have remembered this after Jesus’ betrayal, crucifixion, and
resurrection. It is a powerful lesson for everyone. Matthew 5:44 and Luke 6:28
both document Jesus saying to pray for those, love those, help those that
despitefully ues you. Christ washing Judas Iscariot’s feet is a crystal-clear
example.
This
section also provides a clear view of the difference in the basis of God’s
actions and those of Satan. God’s actions are motivated by love and caring. We
see this from the beginning and is consistent throughout all of God’s
actions. Satan’s actions are motivated
by pride and what is in it for him. We see this is Satan’s actions from the
very beginning.
vs. 12-20
After
Jesus finished washing their feet he got dressed and reclined at the table. He
then asks the disciples if they knew what He had done to them. This was not
just asking if they observed, but did they understand. Did they truly
understand what He, the Son of God, the Messiah, their maker, creator of
everything, just did? He SERVED them. He put them before Himself. He did not
allow pride to rule. He truly loved the disciple and ACTED on that love. He
taught them and us we are to prefer others before ourselves and this is
especially true with other true Christians.
Jesus
emphasizes His lesson by pointing out a slave is not greater than their master.
We are not greater than our maker, Christ. If He was willing to do the job of
the lowest slave, then we must also be willing to do so. Jesus says we will be
blessed “IF WE DO THESE THINGS.” (Romans 2:13) This is very important believe
and faith always result in appropriate action. James tell us the same in his
letter (James 1:22; 2:20b). Jesus now switches the subject from being His
disciple and a servant to one of them betraying Him. One of them, Judas
Iscariot, is only feigning belief in Christ and being a servant.
Jesus
now tells all of them, including Judas Iscariot, that one of those who shares
bread with Him will betray him. I am amazed that Jesus shared bread and all He
had with Judas knowing Judas would betray Him. Jesus is telling them this will
happen so when it happens the disciples will remember He told them, and their
faith and assurance will increase. Now Jesus assures them whoever accept them,
and their words, accepts Jesus and the Father.
(A
note: Christ is the Bright Morning
Star, Revelation 22:16-17. Lucifer was the Morning Star, Isaiah 14:12. Job 38:7
and Isaiah 14:12-17 tells us of a
time the Morning Stars sang together. A
time when Jesus and Lucifer were in accord before Lucifer sinned and became
Satan. Lucifer means light bringer, shining one. Satan means adversary.)
vs. 21-30
Jesus
is more specific about His betrayal. Sometimes language is not able to
transmit how deeply a person feels something, I think that is the case here.
John said Jesus became troubled in spirit and said “Truly, truly, I say to you,
that one of you will betray Me.” Jesus KNEW He would be betrayed. He also knew
what would come of that betrayal. He knew the physical torture and pain He
would go through. He also knew the spiritual pain He would suffer as He took on
all the sins of the world from Adam and Eve until He returns. He also knew
those sins would separate Him from the Father for a time. Perhaps something we
may not think about, but He also knew the eternal fate of Judas Iscariot for
betraying Him and that would weigh on Him. All of these would be piled up on
Him spiritually, emotionally, and mentally. It is very hard to convey that in
any language.
When
Jesus said this the disciples started wondering to which of them Jesus was
referring. The disciple reclining on Jesus bosom was John and Peter asked Him
to ask Jesus who it was. Jesus answered, “That is the one for whom I shall dip
the morsel and give it to him.” Jesus then took the morsel, dipped it, and gave
it to Judas Iscariot. After Judas Iscariot took the morsel Satan entered him
and, when Jesus told him to go do what he must, Judas Iscariot left. No one at
the table except Jesus knew what Judas Iscariot was to do.
Now
Jesus had just told John who would betray Him but no one at the table knew why
Judas Iscariot left. Perhaps John had not had the chance to tell Peter. Perhaps
John did not really understand. Perhaps their minds were clouded so they would
not try to stop Judas from doing what was needed for Christ to fulfill His
mission.
On a
side note, when Judas Iscariot left to betray Christ it was night. In Job
24:13-16; Psalm 74:20; Isaiah 29:15, 1 Thessalonians 5:2 and many other
scriptures show evil deeds are done in the dark and not in the light. Judas’,
the Pharisees, and priests’ actions are very consistent with evil being done in
the dark.
vs. 31-38
Once
Judas Iscariot left, Jesus states now is the Son of Man glorified. He is saying
with Judas leaving His journey to His death and resurrection has started. Through
His death and resurrection God is glorified. This goes against human logic,
through the death and resurrection of His Son God and His Son are glorified. I
find Jesus calling His disciples “little children” interesting and genuinely
nice. It sends a message of fatherly love and recognizing the disciples are
children and are learning. He assures them He will be with them for a little
longer but then they will look for, but not be able to find Him. At this time,
they cannot go to where He is going.
Now
comes a critical commandment “that you love one another, even as I have loved
you, that you also love one another.” Because of the love we have for each
other everyone will know we are disciples of Christ. This is an area where
Christians have fallen far short. Many times, Christians instead of showing the
love of Christ and forgiving those who have sinned, we bayonet the spiritually
wounded. Forgiving does not mean condoning, but it does mean truly forgiving
through love. If Christ forgives us how can we not forgive others?
After
Christ says this Peter asks where He is going that they could not come. I would
think Peter would ask about loving each other but instead he asks about where
Christ is going. Jesus does not answer directly but does say they will follow
later. Peter does not understand and says he will lay down his life for Jesus.
Jesus knows man and what man will do. He tells Peter that he will deny Him
three times that night. Peter did. Before we get upset with Peter, we must
realize we all do the same and, like Peter, without realizing it until
after-the-fact.
John
Chapter 14
vs. 1-6
The
disciples are very distressed because of Jesus’ words. Christ, who knows He
will soon be crucified, comforts them. His action tells us a lot about God and
His love for us. Despite what is going on around us, despite all external
circumstances and how they appear or even affect us, God loves us, cares for
us, protects us and comforts us. Christ says to believe in God and believe in
Him. Have faith. Our world has many true Christians with different doctrines
but with the same belief in Christ, His death and resurrection, as the Savior. There
is room for all of them in the Kingdom of God. Not only is there room for all
true believers but Jesus is there and show us the way. In fact, we already know
the way.
Thomas
asks the question many of us would ask: “Lord, we do not know where You are
going, how do we know the way?” Thomas still did not understand Jesus was going
back to the Father. Given that he did not understand Jesus is God and was going
back to the Father he did not understand Jesus is the way. Jesus makes it very
clear He is the way, the truth and the life and the only way to the Father is
through and via Him.
“I
am the way, and the truth, and the life no one comes to the Father but through
Me” This is quite a statement to make. Unless Jesus is who He says He is this
is the statement of a megalomaniac or an insane person. There is no other way
to the Father except through Christ, through believing Jesus is the Son of God,
the savior of the world. In fact, non-believers point to this statement to
disparage and diminish Christ. Unless Jesus is who says He is, the Son of God,
a very part of the Trinity the statement is a lie. The proof Jesus is who He
says he is has already been shown, His life, His words, His works, His
miracles, His testimony from Scripture and God’s Words to Him, John the
Baptist, and His Disciples. The proof is overwhelming but, in the end, it is a
matter of faith in YHWH. If there was any other way to the Father, any other
way of salvation, Christ would not have needed to come, live, be crucified,
dead, buried and resurrected. After His crucifixion, burial, and resurrection there
were about 500 people who, at different times, saw Jesus alive. Given the times
and circumstances this could not have been, and was not, mass delusion or hallucination.
Jesus is the Messiah, the way, the truth and the life.
vs. 7-15
The Gospel repeatedly drives
the same point home, to see Jesus is to see God; to accept Him is to accept
God; and to serve Him, is to serve God. Jesus, and Jesus alone is the center of
God’s presence and is the center of our life. Jesus drives this home by saying “If
you had known Me, you would have known My Father….” Philip now asks Jesus to
show them the Father and it will be enough. Jesus’ reply sounds like a mild
rebuke: “….. He who has seen Me has seen the Father; how can you say, ‘Show us
the Father’?....” In some ways the disciples still did not get it. Jesus has
been clear more than once that the person who sees Him sees the Father. Jesus
does what the Father instructs, Jesus says what the Father says. Now, before we
think less of Philip for asking this people in our day do the same. While they
may not say the words, they act like they do not believe Jesus is God. As said
earlier, Jesus has many, many works and proofs He is the Son of God.
Jesus now says something that
has been a problem for many people. ”Truly, truly, I say to you, he who believes
in Me, the works that I do, he will do also; and greater works than these he
will do; because I go to the Father.” “greater works than these he will
do” means what? Can we do greater works than Christ? Should we do greater works
than Christ? The words of Christ say we can and will. Why do we not?
Could it be because we lack faith? Could it be because we have been taught we
cannot do greater things than Christ did? When, during the Council of
Nicaea, Emperor Constantine replaced the
Judaic system of Church with a Greco-Roman hierarchical the church Christ
instituted was replaced with a system that part of the pagan worship hierarchy.
This is not surprising since Constantine was a pagan and remained a pagan
throughout his life. He was baptized on his deathbed, but no one is sure if he
became a true believer in Christ. How can a pagan be expected to truly believe
and promulgate the words of Jesus the Messiah?
(One
of the problems that came out of Nicaea and other councils was changing
Christian feast days [i.e. Passover to Easter] which coincided with the Jewish
feasts to coincide with pagan feasts. Constantine hated the Jews and did not
want anything that was even a little bit Jewish associated with Christianity.
Remember, Constantine was a pagan and we have allowed his direction to
determine our beliefs since his time. Beyond heretical.)
We
are instructed to ask what we ask in Jesus’ name. It is NOT a formula to get
what we want from God. It is NOT a type of ritual to get God to hear us. To ask
something in the name of Jesus is to
ask because of who He is, what He says, and what He does. Jesus is the focal
point. “Whatever
you ask in My name, that will I do, so that the Father may be glorified in the
Son. If you ask Me
anything in My name, I will do it.” If we ask with Jesus as the focal point, we
will not ask inappropriately. If we ask with Jesus as the focal point, we will
ask in love. If we ask with Jesus as the focal point, we will ask preferring
others before ourselves. If we ask with Jesus as the focal point, we will ask
that which further the Kingdom of Heaven. If we ask with Jesus as the focal
point, we will ask for that which will bring people to Christ for salvation. If
we love Christ we will keep His commandments. We do not keep His commandments
to get His love but because we love Him and Christ loves us.
vs. 16-17
Verse 16 is a verse that shows the
Trinity. Jesus asks the Father who sends the Holy Spirit. The Greek word “parakletos” is translated here as Helper and means “a person
summoned to one’s aid.” It may refer to an
advisor, a legal defender, a mediator, or an intercessor. This
helper will be with them forever, not just for a short period of time but
throughout eternity, without end. This helper is the Spirit of Truth and is a
personality, not an it but a person.. Truth is not just in the Holy Spirit but
is the truth. Just as Jesus the Son and God the Father are the truth the Holy
Spirit of God, being part of the Trinity is also the truth.
The world cannot receive the Holy
Spirit because the Holy Spirit is holy and true. The world rejected Christ, one
of the Trinity so it follows the world cannot receive the Holy Spirit also part
of the Trinity, one God. The world cannot even see the Holy Spirit or recognize
or perceive the working of Him. The disciples know the Holy Spirit because the
Holy Spirit is with them in the person of Jesus and, after Jesus leaves, will
be in them. The Holy Spirit will live in them and in all true believers.
vs. 18-24
Christ will not leave the disciples, or
us alone without anyone to love and care for us. He repeats that in a short
while the world will not see Him, He will be gone. Even though the world will
not see Him the disciples will because, like the Holy Spirit, Jesus will abide
in them. Because Jesus lives, they will live. They will do Jesus’ work and
commandments. They will show Jesus lives in them through their love. Very
importantly is Jesus tells them He is in the Father and He is in them and they
are in Him. The first two parts of that comments tell us, again Jesus and the
Father are one. If Jesus and the Father are one and Jesus is in us, then the
Father and Holy Spirit are also in us. The person who loves Jesus keeps His
commandments because they love Him.
Judas
(not Iscariot) did not understand and questions Jesus. What is going to happen
and how will it happen that Jesus will reveal himself to the disciples but not
to the world? Jesus repeats what He had said, the person who loves Him will do
His commandments and Jesus and the Father will live in that person. Jesus also
repeats what He has often said, His words are the Father’s words. The words we
keep reading here are love, commandments and abide. If we love Christ, we will keep His commandments
and He, the Father and the Holy Spirit will live in us.
vs. 25-31
Jesus
reminds them that He has said all these things while He physically with them
but after He is gone the Holy Spirit will be with them, teach them all they
need to know and will cause them to remember what Jesus said while with them.
It does us well to realize He does the same for us. We read His words and can
forget what we read. The Holy Spirit will teach us and bring what we read and
hear to our remembrance at the proper time. (Matthew 10:17-20; Luke 21:12-15)
Christ
gives His blessing to the disciples, and to us. The word used would have been
shalom. We
think of shalom as hello or goodbye, it is far more than that. Shalom
carries the meaning of prosperity, health of soul, serenity, and all good
things coming to the person. Remember Christ said the Holy Spirit would be with
them (and us) forever. Because Christ is in us, the Holy Spirit is in us and
God loves us we do not need to be afraid or troubled. There is nothing man can
do that will separate us from God. There are no external circumstances that can
separate us from God. Only what happens in us can grieve the Holy Spirit and
separate us from God. (Matthew 12:31; Ephesians 4:30; James 1:14-15)
Christ
gives His almost final lesson to the disciples. After He tells them not to be
troubled or afraid, now He tells them why they should not be troubled or
afraid. 1) They see the Father in Him. He is God come to man. 2) He gives them
His peace. 3) He assures them of His continuing love. (1 John 4:18) 4) The Holy
Spirit will abide in them. 5) He has told them in advance what will happen. 5) He
is going back to the Father. 6) Satan has no hold on Him and He has defeated
Satan. Christ did what Adam did not. (1 Corinthians 15:45) Finally, 7) Christ
does exactly what the Father commands.
Christ
also said He goes back to the Father and the Father is greater than Him. This
is a bit confusing since Jesus is part of the Trinity and, like the Holy Spirit
is part of God. One thought is Jesus was speaking about His mortal being,
before His death and resurrection. This seems to make sense.+
John
Chapter 15
vs. 1-8
The use of a vine was not new to Jesus’ listeners. We see a vine used
in Genesis 49:22, Isaiah 5:1-16,
Ezekiel 15:6-8, and Zachariah. Jesus is
the main vine and the branches stem from Him and get their nourishment from
Him. The word translated vinedresser is
better translated husbandman. The Father is the owner of the vineyard as well
as the vinedresser. The Father lifts up or removes the branches that are not
fruitful. He lifts up to bring them into more light and help their growth. If
they still do not produce fruit He removes and destroys them. God prunes the
branches to remove anything that would hinder or stop their growth. God brings
to light the things in our lives that hinder or stop our growth in Christ.
The branches get nourishment from the main vine.
Without the vine the branches would die. We have our spiritual and physical
nourishment from Christ. Without Him as the vine, we would die of physical and
spiritual starvation. When we abide in Christ, we will be fruitful because we
are nourished by Him. If we separate from the Vine, Christ, we cannot bear any
fruit.
Continuing
the analogy of the vine Christ tells us any branch does not abide in Him dries
up and is thrown away into the fire and is burned. The opposite is to abide in
Christ and be nourished and grow. If we abide in Christ, then what we wish will
be done for us. What is important is: if we abide in Christ, we will not ask
amiss, we will not ask in accordance with the desires and lusts of the world.
vs. 9-17
Now
we come to an amazing and exciting word from Christ. “Just
as the Father has loved Me, I have also loved you; abide in My love. 10If
you keep My commandments you will abide in My love; just as I have kept My
Father’s commandments and abide in His love.” As much as the Father loves
Christ, so Christ loves us. The only thing Christ says we must do is to keep
His commandments as He kept the Father’s commandments. Remember Christ said the
greatest commandment is to love God and the second is to love others.
Christ
is specific about His commandment, to love one another as Christ loved them.
Christ loves them and us to the point He was willing to die for all of us. (1
John 2:2) We must have the same kind of love for each other. If we do what
Christ commands, love one another. We are His friends. Christ tells us, and
helps us understand, God’s Word. Christ chooses us and appoints us, sends us,
to bear fruit. To show Christ to others by our actions, lives, words,
philosophy, and everything we are at all times, that is, to show Christ in us
and us in Christ. Because Christ is in us God will give us what we ask. Christ
repeats His primary commandment, love one another.
We
see this save emphasis on love throughout the Gospel of John and his three letters. John is simply
repeating the emphasis of Christ. (Matthew 5:43-46; Mark 12:30-31; Luke 6:35)
The command to love cannot be overemphasized. Love is action not just words.
During the Holocaust many in Germany said they loved God, went to church on
Sunday and loved their peers. They did this while murdering Jews, Gypsy’s, the handicapped
and many other groups. Although their words said love their actions were the
opposite.
Finally,
Jesus the disciples and all believers are to love each other. Remember this
when we think of Ireland where Protestants and Romans Catholics kill each
other. Think of this when we see churches dividing over (sometimes minor)
points of their belief system. Think of this when we see one group in a church
not talking with another group because of some difference. Where is the love
for one another? Where is the witness of the love of Christ for each other? Christ
died and resurrected for everyone, including those who hated and abused Him,
how can we do less?
vs. 18-21
Jesus
prepares believers for what will happen because they believe and follow Him. (1
John 2:6) They should expect the world to hate them. The world hated Jesus so
why would it not hate His disciples? The reason the world will hate them is
because they are not of this world, they do not follow Satan as does the world.
This is a rather important point. The word world does not necessarily refer to
the created physical world but the people in the world and the spirit of the
world that is in opposition to God. The believer’s allegiance is to the Son of
God and they act in accordance with that belief. Living for Christ and striving
to live like Christ puts the believer in opposition to the world and reminds
the world their actions, philosophy, where they put their faith and living is
wrong and will bear the appropriate reward. Believers, by their lives, make it
clear they serve YHWH while the world does not. (Psalms 35:1-8; 69:1-4)
vs. 21-27
Christ
tells believers they are not alone. He will send the Helper to come and be with
them. The Helper is the Holy Spirit. I like the term Helper for the Holy Spirit
since that is exactly what the Holy Spirit does, He helps us. The Holy Spirit
comes from God, is always truthful, helps us follow Christ, teaches us about Christ
and helps us testify about Christ in our lives and words.
John
Chapter 16
vs. 1-4
Christ
has been telling the twelve and us what will happen in order that they and we
will be prepared, not taken by surprise, and fall into sin. Making the
believers outcasts from the synagogue (assembly) is not the same as
excommunication. It will get to the point people will be so blinded to the
truth they think they are doing God a service by killing God’s people and
messengers. (We see the same in our day.) Christ did not tell the disciples this
because He was with them and protecting them.
When
Christ says they will be made outcasts it is more ostracism, excluding the
believer from the synagogue and the life of the synagogue. While this may seem
a lesser punishment, given the culture of the time it was not. While
excommunication is being banned from a denomination a person can always go to
another. In Bible time that was not possible. The practical result is other
synagogue members will not talk with, fellowship, etc. with the person, nor can
they join another synagogue.
It
is important that we recognize the difference between being a member of a
synagogue in Jesus’ day and being a member of a church or (to a certain extent)
synagogue in our time. The synagogue was the center of Jewish life. It was a
place of worship, teaching, prayer and social gathering. Being cast out of the
synagogue resulted in losing communication and closeness with friends and
families. It could also result in a loss of business. People were not nearly as
mobile as they are today and moving to another area and starting over was just
not possible.
vs. 5-15
Jesus
is coming to the time of His crucifixion. He knows what will happen and when it
will happen. He has been preparing the disciples, especially the 12, for what
is coming. The disciples are very sad they will lose their Lord and
friend. Their grief was such that they did not even ask Him where He was going.
They could only think of the loss when He left. Christ opens a new perspective
to them, His being crucified and leaving them was to their advantage. While He
was with them they communicated with Him when He was with them while He was
physically in their presence. Once He has resurrected Jesus will send the
helper, the Holy Spirit, who will be with them always and everywhere. The Holy
Spirit and Christ are not limited by geography, physical presence, time or
space. He will always be there to help the believers. Jesus cannot send the
Holy Spirit until He has been crucified and resurrected.
When
the Holy Spirit comes, He has a job, to convict the world “concerning sin and righteousness
and judgment; 9concerning sin, because they do not believe in Me; 10and
concerning righteousness, because I go to the Father and you no longer see Me; 11and
concerning judgment, because the ruler of this world has been judged.” The Holy
Spirit does that through the believers. Christ has much more to say but the
disciples were not, at that time, able to hear them. There was a time when
Corrie ten Boom was on a train with her father. She overheard a comment about
“sexsin” and asked her father what it was. Her father replied “Some knowledge
is too heavy for children. When you are older and stronger you can bear
it. For now you must trust me to carry it for you.” We can see the same
thing here. As we grow in the Lord we are able to bear more knowledge and
wisdom. The Holy Spirit know when we are able to bear more and teaches us,
until them we must trust our Father for what we are not yet able to bear. The
Holy Spirit testifies to Christ and only repeats what He hears the father say.
vs. 16-22
Jesus
now makes a statement that some of the disciples did not understand A little
while, and you will no longer see Me; and again a little while, and you will
see Me.” They were very confused and tried to understand what He was saying. It
is important to note Jesus did not correct or admonish them for questioning.
Jesus knew their question and answered it. Jesus states they will have grief He
is gone but the world will rejoice. They will rejoice because the one who
brought their sins into the light has gone. The disciples will grief but then
they will see Him again and their grief will turn to joy. This is possibly
talking about the disciples seeing Him after the resurrection when he walked in
Jerusalem and it might also be talking about when they died they would be with
Him permanently. In either case they will see and truly understand Jesus is the
Messiah. Their spiritual eyes will be fully opened.
vs. 23-28
The
disciples will not need to question Christ about anything. Their spiritual
eyes, ears and understanding will be opened. Jesus now tells them they can ask
the Father for anything in the name of Christ and the Father will grant it.
This comment is very Jewish in nature. We ask the Father, no one else. Jesus
takes this a step further and says “In that day you will ask in My name, and I
do not say to you that I will request of the Father on your behalf; 27for the
Father Himself loves you, because you have loved Me and have believed that I
came forth from the Father.” Sometimes (perhaps many times) we think of Jesus
going to the Father and asking on our behalf. Jesus said this is not the case.
The Father hears us and answers us because we believe in Christ as the
salvation from our sins. The Father hears each and everyone of us. That does
not mean we are not to pray in Jesus’ name but must realize the father hears us
because we are His.
Jesus’
final comments affirm He came from the Father and is returning to the father.
vs. 29-33
The
disciples tell Jesus they now understand He knows all things and that He came
from God. Jesus asks them what seems to be a rhetorical question, do they
finally believe. They may say they believe but the time is now upon them that they
will scatter, each to their own home, and apparently leave Jesus alone to face
the crucifixion. Although Jesus may seem to be alone, He is not because the
Father is always with Him. He is never alone. There is perfect love and
communication between God the Father, God the Holy Spirit and God the Son.
Jesus
tells them what will happen, while in the world there will be tribulation,
things will look bad, but do not let that discourage or keep a believer from
working for the Lord, Jesus has overcome the world. During World War II, when
the Nazi’s were killing Jews in the Gas chambers, the Nazi’s could hear the
Jews reciting the SHEMA (Hear O Israel, the Lord our God, is One Deuteronomy 6:4) and
praying. The Jews knew God was really in charge.
John
Chapter 17
vs. 1-5
Jesus prayed first for Himself, then for the
disciples and then for those who would believe in Him in the future.
Jesus prayed and asked the Father to
glorify Him so He can Glorify the Father. Now Jesus makes the statement that
God has given Him authority over all flesh. This shows the fulfilment of Daniel
7:13-14. (13“I kept
looking in the night visions, and behold, with the clouds of heaven One like
a Son of Man was coming, And He came up to the Ancient of Days And was
presented before Him. 14“And to Him was given dominion, Glory
and a kingdom, that all the peoples, nations and men of
every language Might serve Him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion
Which will not pass away; And His kingdom is one Which will not be destroyed.) Notice
Jesus did not ask the Father to give Him the authority, He already had it.
Jesus just asked God to glorify Him with the glory He had previously with the
Father from before the world was created. This takes us back to the beginning
of John’s Gospel. Jesus is with God, Jesus is God from before the world began. Bing
part of the Trinity Jesus is light, the light and love that sustains the world.
vs. 6-10
The
use of the word “manifested” here is important and interesting. To manifest is
to make clear or
obvious to the eye or mind; to display or show (a quality or feeling) by one's
acts or appearance; to demonstrate. Jesus did these throughout His life,
especially during His ministry and with His disciples. We need to remember this
prayer is for all of His disciples, past, present and future. We can clearly
see by His acts and words Jesus is the Son of God, part of the Trinity, without
beginning or end.
God gave the
disciples to Jesus. The Father separated them from the world and
gave them to Jesus and these disciples kept God’s Word in their minds and
lives. Their minds and understanding have been opened and they now know Jesus
came from and is YHWH and everything Jesus has done and is doing comes from the
Father. This includes His words. Jesus spoke with them and taught them God’s
Words. They actually, accurately and beyond doubt know and understand Jesus
comes from God.
Jesus
is now specific to His disciples. Again, I feel very strongly He was speaking
about all of His disciples throughout time. Jesus is asking, praying to the
Father on the behalf of the disciples, not on behalf of the world. That is not
saying That Jesus does not care about those in the world but knows the world
system and those who follow the world system will be against the disciples and
do all possible to stop the disciples from spreading the good news (gospel) of
Jesus the Messiah.
Jesus
makes His relationship to the Father very clear. It is the closest possible
relationship, closer that anything man has or can imagine. It is so close that
while they are two they are also one. What Jesus has is God’s, something many
people say, but also what the Father has is Jesus’, something no human can say.
vs. 11-12
Jesus
knows He is leaving the world. Jesus says this as if it already happened and,
it has, it is an accomplished fact. How can the statement “I am no longer in
the world” be made when Jesus is physically standing there among them making
the statement? Despite appearances it is an accomplished fact, Jesus is in
charge, He is the decision maker. Although the crucifixion has not yet happened
at a point in time and space it is God’s Will that the crucifixion happens, so
it is already accomplished. This can be difficult to grasp intellectually since
humans are bound by time and space, but God is not therefore Jesus is not.
Jesus
asks the Father to keep them in His name which is the name the Father gave to
Jesus. This is another very clear
statement that The Father and Jesus are one. Now Jesus makes a startling
request of the Father, He asks “that they may be one even as We are.” Jesus is
requesting that the disciples, those who believe and accept His salvation, can be
one with Him and the Father, that they might share in this closest of
relationships. That He might live in us and we might live in Him. He is NOT
saying that we will be God or completely consumed in/by God. He is talking
about a relationship and communication beyond anything we can conceive of in
our lives.
While
Jesus was with the disciples, He guarded them so the authorities and the world
could not harm them. The only one lost to the world was Judas who betrayed Him.
Judas is not named but his character and actions are, he is the son of
perdition. Perdition at that time meant utter destruction. Judas being called
the son of perdition is stating he is the son of utter destruction and eternal
hell, the son of Satan.
vs. 13-19
“My
joy made full in themselves.” The pure joy of a relationship with Jesus and the
Father. The pure joy that comes with true faith. The joy that we can have
regardless of external or even internal circumstances. Hebrews 12:2 expands
this a bit more and tells us Christ had His eyes and thoughts firmly fixed on
the future joy and could endure the cross for that joy. (Galatians 5:22) So we
can and must we as believers. His joy. The joy of knowing, serving and living
with the Messiah transcends any hate or harassment from the world.
Christ
has given His disciples, including us, His Word. Because we live for and
witness to Christ the world (world system and ungodliness) will truly hate
believers. It is important to understand Christ does not want us to be removed
from the world, as in monasteries or convents, but to live in the world and
witness to His glory, holiness and love. Locking ourselves away from the world
does not allow us the privilege to speak of Christ to the world. Christ asks the Father to keep us from the
evil one while we are in the world. Regardless of what might be done to us, to
keep our faith in Him. Paul emphasizes
Christ’s word in Romans 8:35-39.
Finally,
Jesus asks that those who believe in and accept Him as savior would be
sanctified, made holy. We are made holy by the truth, by God’s Word of Truth in
us. Jesus equates the Father sending Him to the world with Jesus send believers
into the world. As Jesus was sent because He had a work to do for the Father,
so we are sent to do Jesus’ work. Now we have an interesting comment, Jesus
sanctifies Himself, He does not ask the Father to sanctify Him, Jesus as a part
of God has the power to make Himself holy. He does this for the believer’s sake
so they can be made holy in the truth.
vs. 20-21
Christ
is praying for each one of us. Think about this, the Son of God, a part of the
Trinity, God, prayed for each of us believers. Christ knew there would be
people who came to believe in Him as the Messiah through the words of the
apostles and disciples. They would believe through faith. Christ also knew they
would have troubles in the world because of their belief. Jesus prayed that,
just as with the original disciples, those who believed after He went back to
the Father would also be one with Him and the Father. This is almost beyond
human comprehension, that those who believe through hearing the Word and faith,
would have the same reward and personal relationship with the Father and Christ
as did those who walked and lived with Him.
vs. 22-26
Christ
repeats what He has already said. Perhaps this was to emphasize its importance,
help us to remember it or both. Again, He asks that the disciples be one just
as He and the Father are one. That they might have an extraordinarily close
relationship with each other through Christ. Christ asks that they may be
perfected in unity. This takes us back to Genesis 17:1 and Matthew 5:48. There
is a purpose here, so their unity and love for Christ and each other may be a
testimony of Christ as well as the Father’s love for Christ. “You loved Me
before the foundation of the world” reminds us of Micah 5:2 and John 1:1.
John
Chapter 18
vs. 1-11
Jesus
now went to the Garden
of Gethsemane, a place He often went with His disciples or to be alone and pray. Since
Jesus often went there with the disciples Judas knew of the garden and knew Jesus
would be there. Judas was in the company of a Roman cohort as well as officers
from the Chief Priest and Pharisees.
A
Roman cohort usually numbered about 600 men. It is very doubtful the full
cohort came with Judas, perhaps a maniple came (about 200 men). In addition, we
are told the Temple Guards came with the Roman soldiers. This is not the first
time the Temple guards were sent to arrest Jesus. The first time they were sent
they were so impressed they did not arrest Him. Now the Temple Guards came with
Roman Soldiers to ensure Jesus is arrested this time. (John 7:45-53) The
actions of the Romans and Jewish leadership resulted in a large number of armed
men arriving to take Jesus. They came at night in order to hide what they were doing
from the people. The seizing and crucifixion was done by the Jewish leaders and
the Romans, not the Jewish people as a whole. (Mark 14:1-2; John 11:47-50; 12:19) In fact,
many of the Jews in Jerusalem did not know what the Chief Priest, Pharisees and
leaders were doing. The leadership hid what they were doing because Jesus had a
large following and the leaders were in fear of them.
A
note is order here. As Barrie Wilson observes, “The charge was political; the
trial was political; and the crucifixion was political. The fear itself was
political, that Jesus would lead an insurrection against Roman Power.” (Barrie
Wilson, How Jesus became Christian (New York: Mcmillan Publishing, 2008) p.
193)) John 11:49-50 makes clear this concern was shared by the Jewish leaders.
They were afraid they would lose their positions as leaders in Israel. The Romans
crucified Jesus, the Jews did not have the authority. Pilate could have stopped
the crucifixion at any time, he had the power. Pilate knew the Jewish
leadership wanted Jesus killed out of jealousy. Pilate was also concerned about
his position. He was concerned if the Jewish leaders complained to Rome he was
fostering rebellion he would be removed, or worse. (Mark 15:10-15) It seems
everyone interested in murdering Jesus was self-serving and very self centered.
We
now see Jesus is totally in charge of what is happening. Jesus knew what was
happening and was going to happen. Jesus approaches them and asks who they
want. The fact they said Jesus proves they did not recognize him and needed
Judas to identify Him. The soldiers and Temple Guards drew back and fell to the
ground. While they would not have voluntarily fell to worship Jesus it seems
they may have fell involuntarily fallen in front of the God of the Universe. Jesus again tells them He is the one they are looking for
and to release the disciples with Him. Finally, Peter cuts off the ear of Malchus,
a priest’s servant. Jesus heals the ear. Even this healing did not make an
impression on the soldiers and guards. All of this fulfilled prophesy. Jesus
knew this is why He came, to be the Passover sacrifice for the world.
By mentioning that Jesus was
bound John was showing a connection with Abraham’s offering of Isaac. (Gen.
22:1-19) Both Isaac and Jesus, were willing to accept their own death. Isaac
was (figuratively) be raised from the dead. (Hebrews 11:19) We must remember
Isaac was old enough to carry the wood for the sacrifice showing he was old
enough to understand what was happening. Like Jesus he was willing to be
sacrificed. Both Abraham and Isaac had faith in YHWH.
We
now see the true hierarchy of the Jewish leadership. Although Caiaphas
was the high priest, Annas was making the decisions with Caiaphas automatically
approving his decisions. The Scripture makes it very clear their mindsets were
self-serving and their priority was their positions, not God’s Word of the
people. When Jesus peaks of the ruler
of the world He is speaking of Satan and it appears Satan was leading and
motivating the actions of Annas and Caiaphas.
vs. 12-18
Peter
and another disciple, thought to be John followed Jesus. Because he was known
to the high priest John was able to enter the court, but Peter was not. There
is the thought that John came from the Levitical priesthood and therefore was
known to the high priest. (Eusebius quotes Polycrates of Ephesus (c. 130-196)
indicating this was the case) John spoke to those determining who could enter
and gained entry for Peter.
Once
Peter gained entry he was recognized as having been with Jesus when He was
arrested. The servant girl identified Peter as a disciple of Jesus which Peter
immediately denied. After this denial Peter warmed himself by the fire with the
priest’s slaves and temple officers.
vs. 19-24
The
high priest now questions Jesus about His disciples and teachings. The High Priest questioned
Jesus about His disciples/followers first and about His teachings second. The
real concern was not Jesus and His teaching, but Jesus and His following. (Jewish
Gospel of John) Once more this allows us to see the motivation of the high
priests and Jewish leadership was political much more than religious. They were
blind to the spiritual insights and were focused only on politics and their
agendas. While their focus was earthly, worldly God used their blindness to
accomplish His will, the salvation of His creation.
Jesus
answers about His teaching, ignoring the question about His disciples. Jesus’
priority is the Word of God. His ignoring the question about the disciples is a
clear message that Jesus is in charge and the spiritual is important not their
politics or positions. Jesus also tells them to question those who herd Him.
This response invokes the law that said there must be two or three witnesses.
After
His response one of the officers hit Jesus and asked if that is how He answers
the high priest. Jesus points out that if He had answered wrongly, insolently,
then testify to that wrong. Show proof that He had answered wrongly. If that
cannot be done, then why was He hit. Again, this takes us back to the law and proves
what they were doing was not in accordance with the law they claimed to care
about and follow.
We
see a very similar event in Acts 23:2-5 when the high priest commanded that
Paul be hit in the mouth. Paul takes him to task for requiring he be struck
which was against the law. Those with the high priest asked if he reviled the
high priest. There is one huge difference between the tow events. In the first
Jesus asks why He was struck and offers no apology for what He said to the high
priest or others. When Paul asked the same question, once he found out it was
the high priest, he apologized because the law one should not speak against the
rulers of the people. The difference is Jesus did not apologize but Paul did.
Why? I think it has to do with relative positions and the law. In both cases
the law was violated by hitting Jesus and Paul. Paul was Jewish, acted in
obedience to the law and should have respected (not necessarily agree with) the
rulers of the people. In Jesus’ case , He us the ruler of all and the high
priest should respect Him.
vs. 25-27
While
Peter is warming himself at the fire he is once again recognized as a disciple
of Jesus but denies it. Then a relative of Malchus, whose ear he had cut off,
recognizes him but for the third time Peter denies knowing Jesus. Immediately
after the third denial the cock crows.
vs. 28-32
Now
we see a great irony, the leaders who were will and wanting to kill an innocent
man, certainly against the Law, were not willing or wanting to defile
themselves by stepping into an impure place before the Passover. We can see
Jesus addressing this thinking in Mark 7:13 and
Paul in Titus 1:15-16. The leaders were more than willing to set aside
the Law for their own purposes but insisted on keeping the law where it suited
them and was visible to others.
Pilate
went out to meet the Jews since they would not come into him. It is very
possible Pilate knew about Jesus and the leaders’ problems with His message. His
initial response is to tell them to take care of their own problems. First the
Jewish leaders said it was against Roman law for them to put anyone to death. They
made it appear Jesus was planning an insurrection against Rome. Pilate now had
to listen to them. As far as the Jews could not being able to put anyone to
death, that was true but only for crucifixion. There was no problem later when
they stoned Stephen.
vs. 33-37
Pilate
goes from the Jewish leaders and summons Jesus to answer their charges. Pilate
asks Jesus the most important question concerning the charge of insurrection.
“Are You the King of the Jews?” Jewish does a very culturally Jewish thing, He
answers the question by asking a question of His own; “Are you saying this on
your own initiative, or did others tell you about Me?” Where did Pilate’s
question com from, what caused it? The question Jesus asks does two things, it
makes it clear Pilate must make a decision and it also makes both the Jewish
leaders and Roman authorities responsible for what is about to happen.
Pilate’s
answer “I am not a Jew, am I? Your own
nation and the chief priests delivered You to me; what have You done?” tells us
he is not a Jew he is the Roman authority. The Jewish leaders delivered Jesus
to him and Pilate wants to know what Jesus had done to have the leaders so hating
Him. Jesus is very clear that He is a King but not of this world, not of the
Roman realm, not of Satan’s realm. Pilate now clarifies that Jesus is a King
and Jesus agrees. Jesus makes His purpose for being born into the world quite
clear, “I have come into the world, to testify to the truth. Everyone who is of
the truth hears My voice.” Jesus has now made the dichotomy facing the Jewish
leaders and people clear. Either they follow the truth, or they do not. Jesus
testifies to the truth of YHWH. People either listen and worship God as God
requires or they do not. People either see the purpose of the law, to bring
people to God or they do not. People either accept God’s plan of salvation or
they do not.
vs. 38-40
Pilate
now asks a question the world often asks. “What is truth?” This question is
simply a way to avoid what people know is right. This question has been asked
since sin first entered the world. The unspoken problem with this thinking is;
who determine what the truth is in any given circumstance? “The morality of a
action depends on the situation” (Joseph Fletcher, 1963) Joseph Fletcher (an
American professor in the 1960’s) claims truth and therefore ethics are situational
and depend on people, circumstance and expediency. The result is a moving foundation
of truth that becomes whatever a person wants it to be at that moment. The
totally dismisses God as being truth and replaces it with man’s whim.
Both
the Jewish leaders and Pilate were operating from this philosophy. Truth was
what they wanted it to be. At that point in time the Jewish leaders wanted
Jesus killed to protect their positions and status. Pilate agreed to have Jesus
killed for the same reasons. They both refused to recognize God’s truth and
therefore set themselves outside of God’s people (believers) and plan of
salvation.
Pilate
gave the Jewish leaders the opportunity to have Jesus released but they
refused. Instead, they asked that a robber and murderer be released. There is
irony here. Pilate asked if the Jewish leaders wanted their king released. They
answered no and asked a murderer be released. The murderers asked that a
murderer like them be released and a totally innocent man be killed.
A
note is in order here. The Praetorium
was not a large space. The space can hold about 100 people. In this space would
have been the Roman Guards, the Temple guards, The Chief priests and his
minions, some Jews and Jesus. Given all the other people in attendance there
would not have been room for very many Jews aside from the Jewish leaders and
minions. This could very well have been by design. When condemning Jesus the
Jewish leaders did as much as possible away from public scrutiny. Many
Scriptures indicate many, many of the Jewish believed in and followed Jesus.
The leaders were afraid of them and did not want them to know what they were
doing. (Mark 11:18; Luke 22:2; John 12:12-13; Acts 5:26) It would have been
very easy for the Jewish leaders to gather people into the Praetorium who were
not from Israel but were in the diaspora and only knew what the leaders told
them. It would also have been easy for them to load the Praetorium with those
who had a vested interest in killing Jesus. Often we hear and are told the Jews
generally wanted Barabbas released and Jesus killed. Given the Scriptures
referenced it may well have been a small group of Jews hand-picked by priests
that wanted Barabbas. Either way, God’s will was done. It is very important to
remember God was in charge. Not man.
John
Chapter 19
vs. 1-7
As
we read this the words cannot begin to convey the savagery and violence Jesus
endured. Jesus was beaten without mercy.
Most people would not live through the beatings, whippings, beatings with rods,
etc. Very sharp thorn vines were twisted together and forced down on His head
causing deep, painful wounds. It was thought those to be crucified were subjected
to flagellation. “Because of its brutality flagellation was feared: it produced
deep wounds and could even lead to death. Unlike Jewish law, which had a
maximum of forty lashes, Roman law did not provide for limits. Flavius Josephus
offers accounts of flagellations carried out in Palestine where the strokes
were delivered with such strength that they exposed the victim’s innards. He
also confirms that scourging was a prelude to crucifixion.” (https://www.bing.com/search?q=scourging+jesus&qs=LS&pq=scourging+&sk=EP1&sc=8-10&cvid=3DBDD6E67D29461888CC8B4328F3F9B&FORM=QBLH&sp=2&ghc=1)
After Jesus
was beaten and was a bloody, disheveled mess Pilate brought Him out to the
Jewish leaders and is very clear he finds no fault in Jesus. The leaders yell
even more for Jesus to be crucified. Pilate tried to be done with the whole
thing and told them to crucify Jesus. Now the leaders provide their real excuse
for wanting Jesus crucified. Jesus said He was/is the Son of God. That makes
Him God. The leaders could not accept this at all.
vs. 8-15
When
the Jewish leaders said Jesus should die because He said He is the son of God
he was even more frightened. Given the pagan world’s belief in multiple gods
and their superstitious nature Pilate would take their words very seriously.
What if this Jesus is the Son of God? The Romans and all the world knew how God
had blessed the Israelites. The leader’s words were not to be taken lightly.
Pilate,
trying to clear things up in his mind asked Jesus where He was from. This
question goes beyond where was He born or in what town did He live but what is
His origin? Did He come from God? Jesus did not answer. Pilate then states what
he sees as the reality of the situation. He has the power, the authority, to
release Jesus or to crucify Him. Jesus answers by giving Pilate a dose of
reality, He lets Pilate know he has no authority or power apart from that which
God gave him. The message here is clear, Pilate does not have the authority,
God does. Pilate is not in charge, God is in charge. Pilate does not control
the situation, God controls it.
Pilate
wants to and tries to release Jesus but runs into a roadblock, the Jewish
leaders. As Pilate tries to release Jesus the Jewish leadership yells “If you
release this Man, you are no friend of Caesar; everyone who makes himself
out to be a king opposes Caesar.” (vs.12) Now Pilate has a choice to make: does
He release the innocent Jesus or bow to the wishes of the Jewish leadership? If
he releases Jesus he runs the risk of losing his position and perhaps life if
the leaders protest to Rome. If he orders crucifixion he is killing a man he
knows is innocent and perhaps the Son of God. The choice for him, like for us,
is clear; should he please man or God. Should he release Christ or crucify Him?
Pilate chose poorly, he decided to hand Christ over to be crucified. He put
himself and the world ahead of what he knew was the right thing to do. His
actions were self-serving.
vs. 17-22
Nothing about Jesus’ death was coincidental
After
beating Jesus almost to death the Romans forced Jesus to carry His cross to the
place of execution. In other gospels we are told a bystander, Simon, carried
the cross at least partway for Jesus. This was due to Jesus being too weak from
the beatings, blood loss, and pain to carry the cross. Jesus was not the only
person crucified that day. Two men, one on each side of Him were also
crucified. It is thought they were not nailed to the cross but were tied on.
The end result was the same, death.
In
other gospels, we are told one of the men ridiculed Jesus, even while they were
on their crosses. The other man recognized Jesus as the Lord and accepted the salvation
Jesus brought. Even at His crucifixion, we can see an important point. One
person accepted Christ and would be with Christ in paradise but the other
person did not accept Christ and would not be with Christ for eternity. It is
the same choice we have. It also emphasizes as long as we are physically alive
it is NEVER too late to accept the salvation of Jesus.
When
Jesus was crucified Pilate put a sign on the cross “JESUS THE NAZARENE, THE
KING OF THE JEWS.” The Jewish leaders were not happy about this and asked
Pilate to change it to read He said He was King of the Jews. Pilate refused. He
wrote what he wrote. There could be a number of reasons for his refusal.
Perhaps he was tired of the Jewish leaders bothering him about the matter.
Perhaps he believed Jesus is the Son of God. Perhaps he wanted to get a sort of
revenge on the Jewish leaders. We cannot know for certain, but it was a clear
message to everyone that the King of the Jews had been crucified by the Romans
and Jewish leaders.
vs. 23-30
While
Jesus was on the cross the soldiers divided His clothes and cast lots to
determine who would get the tunic. (This was prophesied in Psalm 22:18) The
dividing of the clothes of a crucified person was not unusual. The soldiers
were allowed to take the clothing of a condemned person and keep or sell them
as they wish, a sort of bonus for the executioners. We are also told that at
the cross were Jesus’ mother, aunt, and Mary Magdalene, John the apostle was
also there. One of Jesus’ last acts was to transfer the eldest son’s
responsibility for His family to John. He told both His mother and John that
John was now her son and was therefore responsible for her.
It
is important to know that everything was accomplished, to fulfill the
Scripture. Neither the Jews nor Romans were in charge but YHWH was in charge
and Jesus knew when the Scriptures for His death were complete and He said “It
is finished” then gave up His spirit, He died. Again, neither the Romans nor
the Jews decided when it was finished. Jesus, the Son of God, knowing the
Scriptures and God’s plan decided
vs. 31-37
Now
we come to an area that is a problem to many academics and theolgians. What is
the actual timeline for the death and resurrection of Jesus? There are a few
clues provided in this passage. 1) It was the day of preparation. 2) the next
day was a Sabbath, but a High Sabbath, not the normal 7th day
Sabbath. A short timeline follows: Nisan
– 14 Luke 23.44 shows that Jesus died around the ninth hour or
approximately 3PM. He would have been buried before sunset because of the
approaching Sabbath, for that
Sabbath day was a high-day (John 19.31). Nisan – 15 Is the first Holy Day, high-day, or annual Sabbath of
the 7-day festival of Unleavened Bread. It begins at sunset on the 14th.
John
19.31 mentions that the day following Jesus' crucifixion was a high day as
opposed to the weekly seventh-day Sabbath. TWO Sabbaths – first an annual Holy Day and then the
regular weekly Sabbath – are mentioned in the Gospel accounts. Compare Mark
16.1 with Luke 23.
A
person crucified could take a few days to die. The Jews did not want the
bodies. dead or alive, on the crosses during the high Sabbath. (Deut. 21:22-23) The
Jewish leaders asked the legs of the men on the crosses to be broken. Breaking
their legs would mean they could not put weight on their legs which would
result in their suffocation. Since Jesus was already dead the soldiers did not
break His legs but thrust a spear into His side. (Zechariah 12:10) Not breaking
His legs fulfilled Exodus 12:46.
vs. 38-42
After
Jesus was pronounced dead Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemas, who came to Jesus
at night, asked Pilate for His body. They wanted to give Jesus a Jewish burial.
Nicodemus brought spices to put in the wrapping with which they wrapped Jesus’
body. They put Jesus in a new tomb, where no one had been placed previously.
Many think it was planned as Joseph of Arimathea’s tomb. Jesus was placed in
the tomb before the day of preparation, before about 6:00 pm.
John
Chapter 20
vs. 1-10
Mark 16:1 tells us, "And when the Sabbath was past, Mary
Magdalene and Mary (the mother of James and Salome), bought sweet spices that
they might come and anoint Him." Luke's account also describes how the
women "prepared the spices and ointments" and then they "rested on the Sabbath
day according to the commandment." (Luke 23.56)
According to these two accounts, they
bought the spices and prepared them after the Sabbath and yet before the
Sabbath and then after the Sabbath they came to the tomb. There had to be two Sabbaths involved here
with a day of preparation between them. Jesus' promise was fulfilled exactly as
he said it would. He said that, like the prophet Jonah, He would be entombed
three days and three nights and that then He would be raised up from the dead
the third day after His crucifixion and death (Matthew 12.39-40; 17.23; 20.19).
Jesus' resurrection had already
taken place by the time Mary Magdalene arrived at dawn Sunday morning. (John
20.1-2) In Matthew's account he states that "In the end of [or after] the
Sabbath(s), as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week" they
came to see the sepulchre (Mt. 28.1) The original Greek word used here
for Sabbath is
actually plural and should be translated "Sabbaths."
John
gives us a somewhat truncated story of the events. When Mary Magdalene and the
other women arrived at the tomb they saw the stone was rolled away and assumed
the body of Jesus had been stolen. It did not cross Mary’s, or the other
women’s, minds that He had risen from the dead and was physically alive. Since
they thought Jesus’ body had been stolen they ran to tell Peter and John. These
two gentlemen ran to the tomb. John got there first but stopped at the entrance.
Peter got there second and went into the tomb.
The
two men saw the linen body wrapping laid out in the tomb an a very specific
way. The disciples saw the “linen clothes lying” –- uncut, undisturbed, lying
just as they had been onHis body, yet they were empty –- it convinced them that
the body had been
miraculously, supernaturally removed. Had some human hand stolen the body, he
would have been forced to slit open the bindings in order to remove the
body. HAD JESUS REVIVED AND EXITED THE TOMB HE COULD NOT HAVE LEFT THE
WRAPPING UNDISTURBED.
The Greek words translated, “wrapped
together” in John 20:7, actually mean, “twisted together” or “rolled up” –- it
speaks of a fixed position – much like a cocoon. The linen cloths were
“wrapped” or “rolled together,” however the body was missing. The “linen
clothes” had not been unfolded, loosed or disturbed in any way! They just lay
there! An empty shell of the linen clothes that had been wrapped around and
around the body of Jesus. (lancewallnau.com/miracle-grave-clothes-jesus/)
vs. 11-18
while
Mary was crying because she thought the body of Jesus had been stolen, she
looked into the tomb and saw two angels. Where did they come from? They were
not there previously and no one had entered the tomb. The angels asked why she
was crying and her answer makes it clear she did not understand Jesus would
rise from the dead. The grave could not hold Him. Jesus called her name and
Mary immediately recognizes His voice and replies “teacher!” Imagine the wonder
and joy of Mary when she realizes Jesus is alive. He is not in the grave. His
body was not stolen. He is alive in the flesh. He knows her and is talking with
her. He knows her name. He knows her.Mary now knows with certainty Jesus is the
Messiah. He is salvation for Israel and the world. Hope is alive.
Mary
holds on to Jesus and He must tell her not to cling to Him, do not detain Him
from ascending to the Father.Jesus has a normal physical body. He was not just
a ghost or spirit. He could be held, could eat, could speak, etc. Mary went to
the disciples to tell them Jesus was alive and talked with her and she told
them what Jesus said.
It
is important we realize Jesus appeared first to a woman. At that time courts of
law would not accept a woman’s testimony. That Jesus appeared to a woman first
shows He cares about all people, genders, racial groups, ethnicities, equally. Also,
if the story had been made up it would have had Jesus appearing first to a man
in order to be correct for the culture.
vs. 19-23
It
is evening, the disciples are gathered together. They are all in one room with
the door locked in fear of the Jewish leadership. While they are gathered Jesus
appeared among them very unexpectedly. He did not come through the door, He
just appeared. To say this was a shock to the disciples is an understatement. Think
about this. Jesus appears in the room where the disciples are gathered and are
scared. Their leader, Jesus, had been killed by the Romans, they saw Him die
and placed in the tomb. They are expecting and waiting for the Roman authorities
and Jewish to come and arrest them. Jesus’ first words are “Peace be with you.”
Peace, peace? They are shaking in their sandals waiting to be arrested and
killed and Jesus, who they saw dead and buried, suddenly appears and tells them
peace be with them. Until Jesus appeared peace was the last thing on their
minds.
Jesus’
message of Peace was not just an absence of violence. Not just an absence of
worry. Not just an absence of fear. It was far more than that. It was a message
of the peac e that comes from and is in God. Peace that comes from knowing we
are totally loved. Peace that comes from our best friend and protector being
with us always. Peace that comes from knowing what is truly important. Peace
that comes from knowing they serve God and His Son. Peace that comes from the
certaintude that physical death is not final. Peace that comes from seeing the
evidence, the proof in front of them when Jesus shows them the injuries in his
hands and side.
Jesus
now gives them a mission. As He was sent by the Father, He is sending them. He
then breaths on them and gives them the Holy Spirit. Their mission comes with authority.
They have the authority to forgive sins or not to forgive sins. This comes
through being attuned to and led by God’s Holy Spirit.
vs. 24-29
The
apostle Thomas was not with the disciples when Jesus appeared to them in the
room. The others told him they had seen Jesus but Thomas did not believe them.
He wanted proof. He wanted to put his finger in the marks of the nails in
Jesus’ hands and put his hands in the wound in his side. Unless he could do so he
would not believe. Thomas is typical of many people, unless they physically see
they will not believe. What is unfortunate is the evidence of God is all around
but people refuse to see and acknowledge it. (Romans 1:20) Instead of seeing,
acknowledging and worshipping God, people would rather see, acknowledge, and
worship the creation or parts the creation.
Jesus
told Thomas to put his finger in the nail holes and hand into the spear hole in
His side and to stop not believing and start believing, Thomas recognized Jesus
as His Lord and God. Jesus mentioned Thomas believed because he saw physical
proof. Jesus make a point of sying those who do not have physical proof yet
still believed are blessed. Jesus is saying those who have faith are blessed.
Those who have faith, the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of
things not seen. (Hebrews 11:1)
vs. 30-31
John
was clear what was written in his gospel were not the only actions Jesus performed
after He was raised from the dead. Christ performed many, many signs but these
were written so we, the readers of the Gospel may believe in Jesus the Messiah
and have eternal life in Him.
John
Chapter 21
Vs 1-8
After
all that happened Peter, Thomas, Nathanael, James and John with two other
disciples went fishing. The went back to the livelihood. The fished throughout
the night but did not catch anything. When dawn came they saw a man on the
beach. It was Jesus but they did not recognize Him. Jesus told them they had not
caught any fish and they agreed. Jesus told them to cast their net on the right
side of the boat and they would catch fish. They had been fishing all night and
had not caught anything so the might as well cast their net again as the man
said. When they followed instructions they caught a large quantity of fish.
Enough fish they had a hard time bringing in the catch.
When
this happened John told Peter it was the Lord, Jesus. Peter immediately put on
more clothes since he was stripped for work and hurled himself into the water
to go to Jesus. The rest of the men came in the boat dragging the large catch
behind them.
vs. 9-14
When
they got to shore Jesus already had a fire going and cooked their meal. Even
after Jesus, the Son of God, had arisen from the dead, He continued to be a servant. The disciples all
knew He was Jesus. Jesus serves the disciples. We should understand by His
actions how important it is to be a servant. We can never think because we move
up in society, standing, position at work or are Christians that we should not
serve. Service is fundamental to being a Christian. When we love someone we DO
for them, we serve.
The Love Motivation
15So when they had finished
breakfast, Jesus said to Simon Peter, “Simon, son of John, do you love Me more
than these?” He said to Him, “Yes, Lord; You know that I love You.” He said to
him, “Tend My lambs.” 16He said to him again a second
time, “Simon, son of John, do you love Me?” He said to Him, “Yes, Lord; You
know that I love You.” He said to him, “Shepherd My sheep.” 17He
said to him the third time, “Simon, son of John, do you love
Me?” Peter was grieved because He said to him the third time, “Do you love
Me?” And he said to Him, “Lord, You know all things; You know that I love
You.” Jesus said to him, “Tend My sheep.
vs. 15-17
Now we come to an event that is sometimes
misunderstood. Jesus was asking Peter if Peter loved Him more than he did
fishing, Peter’s livelihood. Jesus was NOT asking Peter if he loved Him more
than the other disciples. Jesus never compares the love of one disciple to the
love of another. Jesus asked Peter the question three times, the same number of
time Peter denied Christ. I do not think this was an accident. Jesus was making
sure Peter knew in his own mind that he would follow Christ. Each time Peter
answered “Lord You know that I love You.” Jesus gave him a job, a mission for
life, :Feed my sheep.” Take care of those who follow me. Feed them, feed them
spitiual food, the Word of God. Shepard them, tend them, take care of their
needs. Potect them.
Our Times Are in His Hand
18Truly, truly, I say to you,
when you were younger, you used to gird yourself and walk wherever you wished;
but when you grow old, you will stretch out your hands and someone else will
gird you, and bring you where you do not wish to go.” 19Now
this He said, signifying by what kind of death he would glorify God. And when
He had spoken this, He said to him, “Follow Me!”
vs. 18-19
Jesus
now tells Peter how he will die and then teels Peter to follow Him. Physical
death is not nearly as important as following Jesus.
20Peter, turning around, saw
the disciple whom Jesus loved following them; the one who also had leaned back
on His bosom at the supper and said, “Lord, who is the one who betrays You?” 21So
Peter seeing him said to Jesus, “Lord, and what about this man?” 22Jesus
said to him, “If I want him to remain until I come, what is that to you? You follow
Me!” 23Therefore this saying went out among the brethren that that
disciple would not die; yet Jesus did not say to him that he would not die,
but only, “If I want him to remain until I come, what is that to you?” 24This
is the disciple who is testifying to these things and wrote these things, and
we know that his testimony is true.
vs. 20-25
We now come to Peter being Peter, and like most
of us, he asks what will happen with John. Jesus does not really answer, His
comments are really telling Peter it is not his business. If Jesus wants John
to remain alive until He returns it is not Peter’s business or concern. Again
Jesus tells Peter to follow Him. This is a lesspon we all must learn. We are to
do what Christ called us to do. We are not to worry about what Christ calls
someone else to do. It is enough we do our job to the best of our ability. We are
not to judge or worry about another person’s work in Christ. ALL work in Christ
is important. All callings in Christ are important. (1 Corinthians 12:14-26)
25And there are also many other
things which Jesus did, which if they were written in detail, I suppose that
even the world itself would not contain the books that would be written.
REFERENCES:
Daily
Study Bible
God & Israel,
John D. Garr Ph.D. Th.D.
Christian
Fruit – Jewish Root, John D. Garr Ph.D. Th.D.
Our
Lost Legacy, John D. Garr Ph.D. Th.D.
God’s
Lamp Man’s Light, John D. Garr Ph.D. Th.D.
http://www.hebraiccommunity.org/
http://www.awarenessministry.org
http://thechurchofgodntj.org
Torrey,
R. A. (Reuben Archer). The Person and Work of The Holy Spirit
The Jewish Gospel of John:
Discovering Jesus, King of All Israel
Copyright © 2015 by
Eliyahu Lizorkin-Eyzenberg jewishnewtestament.com
New American Standard Bible
https://www.jstor.org/stable/43716732
https://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/false-messiahs-in-judaism/
https://jamestabor.com/messiahs-in-the-time-of-jesus/
Betty
Smith, my wife, help and constant cheerleader.
Full
Gospel Study Bible, NIV, Life Publishers International, c 1973
https://www.whatchristianswanttoknow.com/john-the-apostle-bible-biography-facts-and-death/
www.britannica.com
https://considerthegospel.org/2015/09/23/the-feast-of-tabernacles-layered-like-an-onion-with-meaning/?gclid=CjwKCAjw8-78BRA0EiwAFUw8LGtDrX2MOLVXpn9JQWHCXgvhjS_XRPXpR57s8eQ9XzZzLezeP6hXCxoCpXcQAvD_BwE
The
New Bible Commentary Revised, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, MI.
August 1976
https://www.gotquestions.org/Jesus-spit.html