The Ministry of Amazing Love
The ministry of Amazing Love begins with discipleship and continues with spiritfilled obedience to God.
Introduction
Training Time
If any person think it strange that Christ sought a place of concealment, who, by the mere act of his will, could break and render powerless all the efforts of his enemies, it is easy to reply, that he remembered the commission which he had received from the Father, and determined to confine himself within the limits which belonged to him as man; for, having taken upon him the form of a servant, he emptied himself, till the Father exalted him, (Philip. 2:6–8.)
while Christ avoided dangers, he did not turn aside a hairsbreadth from the course of duty; for to what purpose would life be maintained and defended, but that we may serve the Lord? We ought always to take care, therefore, that we do not, for the sake of life, lose the reasons for living.
Most of the six months, however, was spent discipling the Twelve. The Lord taught them extensively (Matt. 16:13–27; 17:19–23; 18:1–35), including telling them for the first time of His impending rejection, crucifixion, and resurrection (Matt. 16:21; cf. 17:22–23). He also revealed to the inner circle (Peter, James, and John) a glimpse of His divine glory (Matt. 17:1–8).
That Jesus spent only two days with the large crowd (perhaps 20,000 people) mentioned in chapter 6 but six months predominantly involved with the Twelve is highly significant. It shows that the primary focus of the Lord’s ministry was not on mass meetings, but on discipleship. He devoted His time and effort to the small core group of men who would carry on His ministry after He was gone. The Christian church is in large measure the legacy of those eleven men (plus Matthias [Acts 1:26] and Paul [1 Cor. 9:1]), who faithfully discipled their followers who discipled others and so on, down through the centuries to our own day.
Discipleship must also be a priority for the church. The Lord did not commission the church to attract large crowds, but to go and make disciples (Matt. 28:19). Likewise, Paul charged the young pastor Timothy, “The things which you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses, entrust these to faithful men who will be able to teach others also” (2 Tim. 2:2). The measure of any church’s success is not the size of its congregation, but the depth of its discipleship.
Temptation Time
Jesus’ brothers challenged Him to perform His miracles openly, on the grand stage that Jerusalem would provide during the Feast of Tabernacles. Then, they reasoned, His disciples from both Galilee and Judea would see the works which He was doing—works which demonstrated that He was in fact the Messiah. Further, some of the disciples who had recently abandoned Him (6:66) might be won back. The Lord’s brothers were not, as some mistakenly think, zealous for Him to show His glory.
Their comments appear to have had a dual motivation. First, they may have wanted to see Jesus perform miracles, so they could decide for themselves whether or not His works were genuine. Second, they were probably expecting a political Messiah, like the crowd Jesus fed (6:14–15). Thus, in their minds, the acid test of Jesus’ messiahship would be at Jerusalem (the political center of Israel), and not in Galilee. If the ruling authorities at Jerusalem signed off on Jesus, His brothers would also accept Him as the Messiah.
“If You do these things, show Yourself to the world,” reveals their doubt and unbelief. The word if foreshadows the mocking unbelief that Jesus faced on the cross (Matt. 27:40), and is reminiscent of Satan’s challenge (4:3, 6) during Christ’s temptation.
“If You do these things, show Yourself to the world,” reveals their doubt and unbelief. The word if foreshadows the mocking unbelief that Jesus faced on the cross (Matt. 27:40), and is reminiscent of Satan’s challenge (4:3, 6) during Christ’s temptation.
The apostle John’s footnote, For not even His brothers were believing in Him, explains why they spoke to Him the way they did. Earlier in His ministry, their unbelief had led them to think He had lost His mind (cf. Mark 3:21, 31–34). Nothing the Lord had done since then had penetrated their hard hearts. It would take His resurrection from the dead to finally persuade them that He was the Son of God (Acts 1:14).
Two World Views
He would not allow His brothers’ skepticism to dictate His actions. His course of action was determined by the sovereign Father who orchestrated everything in His time.
Christ also rejected pressure from His family to reveal Himself prematurely. But He would not manifest Himself before the right time, the moment chosen by the Father.
Unlike Jesus, they would face no hostility at Jerusalem from the Jewish authorities. The world could not hate them, since they were part of it, and it loves its own (15:19). But the world, as Jesus reminded His brothers, “hates Me because I testify of (or against) it, that its deeds are evil”
Since it is controlled by Satan (1 John 5:19), the activities and priorities of the world are inherently sinful. When believers testify against the world and confront its wickedness, like Jesus did, they arouse its antagonism and hatred (cf. 15:18–19; 17:14; Matt. 10:22; 24:9; Luke 6:22; 1 John 3:13; 2 Tim. 3:12; James 4:4).