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Welcome
Good morning everyone!
It’s good to be with you today.
How are we this morning?
Introduction
Today we’re going to be in the Gospel of ’m currently going through a class on the Gospels and one of the big themes we’ve been focusing on is the Kingdom of God.
What does the kingdom of God look like?
What does it mean to be in God’s kingdom?
Where do we fit in as a part of God’s kingdom?
I hope that as we leave from church this morning we’ll have answered these questions and that these answers will serve as a reminder to us of what it means to follow Christ.
Let’s read together …
PRAY
Background
At this point in John’s gospel we are nearing the beginning of the end.
John has told the story from John the Baptist, to Jesus’ miracles at the wedding of Cana, to interactions with Nicodemus and the woman at the well, to feeding thousands, and healing those who were sick and ailing.
Jesus has refuted Pharisees, declared his divinity by reaching into their history to declare that before all they knew, he was there.
He has dealt with the death of one of his closest friends, and did the unthinkable, the inhuman, the supernatural when raising him from the dead.
He has been anointed, praised, anticipated, and celebrated.
He’s also been mocked, questioned, had to fend off death threats, and most recently - betrayed.
At the beginning of our chapter, it is the week of Passover and Jesus has gathered the disciples for a time meal together before the beginning of the end.
John describes this dark brooding scene full of turmoil, and in John’s motifs a battle of darkness and light, good and evil, and we see Judas succumb to the desires of the enemy.
They were gathered in a room, and Jesus chose to serve his disciples in a way that has become a staple in the church for demonstrating a humble servants heart - he washed their feet.
In a moment where He knew that what was to follow would be full of pain, suffering, and separation from the Father, he continues to serve and love on his disciples.
He couldn’t bear it any longer and his spirit was so troubled that he declared that one of his closest followers, one of the entrusted 12, one of his disciples - would betray him.
Leveling the room, he doesn’t stop it but instead tells Judas is verse 27, “What you are going to do, do quickly.”
I can’t imagine being in a position of being betrayed, but Jesus - the creator and king and fully God, does not stop this evil plot, but recognizes this as part of the Messiah’s glorification process.
“And it was night...” this is the author John using his creative writing to communicate the evil intent in the air, the darkness and terror that were in the midst of an all out attack on the true Light of the World.
It’s in the midst of all this that we come to our passage this morning.
Exegesis
I want to pause here at verses 31-35 to take a deeper look into what is happening here.
Let’s start in verse 31.
It begins with setting the stage for the rest of this short passage in saying this happened after Judas left.
Jesus then gives this speech about his glorification process.
After telling of his betrayal, Judas steps out and there is this air of uncertainty in the room (we see this in verse 28).
Knowing what is about to happen Jesus addresses some issues of His Messianic kingdom.
This reminded me of what some organizations or companies do after there has been an incident with one of their employees or an unfavorable event.
There is this need to clarify and clear the air that whatever just happened does not reflect the organizations principles or values.
I’m a big sports fan and I hear about this all the time with players who act out or who have somehow messed up.
The team must clarify to their fans and to the world watching that the players actions do not reflect the beliefs or values held by the team.
And there’s often some sort of restatement of what the team actually does believe and the values that it does hold - things like a high levels of respect, character, devoted work ethic, and integrity.
With Judas, one of the disciples, about to go on to make the most heinous act in history, Jesus takes it upon himself to restate what his kingdom is about.
So that people do not get confused at the actions of one of its followers, Jesus clarifies in the following verses what being in God’s kingdom is all about… and it’s far from Judas’ decision and actions.
Jesus then makes the pronouncement, “Now the Son of Man (this phrase we’ll come back to in a second) is glorified, and God is glorified in Him.”
Then verse 32 continues with this condition, “If God is glorified in Him...” then a prediction “God will also glorify him in himself”… followed by this statement of escalation “and glorify him at once.”
A pronouncement, a condition on the prediction and the escalation of that prediction.
In verse 33 Jesus directly addresses the disciples calling them, “Little children”
Now we have not heard this greeting to the disciples before but I love it.
It conveys the divine nature of Jesus, his ability to see the larger picture and know that these disciples, that they may be afraid, anxious, and nervous for what is coming.
Imagine yourself at this table.
Your leader has mentioned before his time not yet coming, he’s referred to what “must happen for God to be glorified”, and then drops a bomb at the dinner table by saying one of you will betray him.
we’ve all had some awkward dinner conversations or Thanksgiving dinners with some family members that we just don’t see eye to eye with
But this is far beyond our realm of conversation.
There’s a lot to process and it does not always make sense to you as a disciple.
But it’s from this flow of betrayal that this New Commandment is stated, and even afterwards a denial of the Messiah is prophesied about Peter, so the need to know where God stands and what the kingdom of God looks like is even greater.
So he says “little children” - and these are young men, in their young twenties most likely.
Now i’m pretty fresh out of my young twenties and I can still remember the attitude, mindset, and headspace of a young twenty something year old man and there’s a sense of wanting to prove oneself, being able to stand on one’s own feet, maybe a sense of dependence
and I can’t say this for certain but even though Jesus is older, he’s not generations older, but he calls them little children.
And i bring up all that to say that if someone called me a “little child” I would not take kindly to whatever else came out of their mouth.
I consider myself a bit older than a “little child”.
But in this verse - Jesus calling his disciples “little children” is not condescending or patronizing, at least i don’t read it that way.
I think it points to Christ’s divine character, his omniscience and
and I think It shows that the disciples were in a anxious, despairing state and we see Christ meeting them where they are at
We know that this is true for us today too right?
That Christ meets us where we are at.
No matter where we are at in life, whether we’ve just recently started walking with the Lord or we’ve been walking with Him for 40+ years… He always remains in the same place in our lives (seating on his throne, with a knowledge and care that we think similar to that of a parent)
And we are all God’s children, and when there is stuff going on in our lives that is causing us to freak out, stress out, where we slip into despair and anxiety - God can say to us, “little children” and there’s a deep sense of comfort, peace, and the chaos in our hearts and minds dissipates.
Now just as Jesus has called them by saying little children, he freaks them out a bit more by saying “yet a little while I am with you.
You will seek me, and just as I said to the Jews, so now I also say to you, “where I am going you cannot come.”
WHAT?!?
what a roller coaster night this is.
This is supposed to be a celebratory time, meals and togetherness and yet this night has just been one thing after another.
Jesus says, “as i said to the Jews” - and what does he mean by this? well earlier in John’s gospel he’s had the jewish people following him but these are unbelieving Jews, and Jesus had said to them where I am going you cannot come.
But now the disciples are hearing this, young men who DO believe.
They don’t get to follow Jesus either!
You can tell this is getting to them because in the verses immediately following our passage this morning it’s the first thing Peter brings up.
Peter’s given the last 3 years to this man, and has every intention of following Jesus everywhere he goes.
Peter probably can’t imagine himself farther than 3 feet away from Jesus.
But I digress, and our passage continues with Jesus giving them a commandment.
I think is is brilliant by Jesus - again he is meeting them where they are at.
He knows that their hearts and minds are just racing right now, trying to deal with these cloudy unknowns about what is to come.
So what does he do?
He gives them a command, a task, something to wrap their minds around.
Verse 34 reads, A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another.
34 A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another.
Jesus coming for his Messianic kingdom
The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), .
Jesus coming for his Messianic kingdom
It begins with the base of this commandment - love one another
then Jesus offers a comparison, an example of this love - just as I have loved you,
then he expands on this commandment from that example - just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another
He gives them what he calls a “new commandment”
And he uses this language purposefully.
To the disciples, there was already a commandment about loving other people
It’s in which reads, “You shall not take vengeance or bear a grudge against the sons of your own people, but you shall love your neighbor as yourself: I am the Lord.”
We may known this more commonly as “the golden rule” - this is already a high standard, loving your neighbor as yourself.
it’s not easy always easy to treat someone the way you would want to be treated, especially if they have wronged you or angered you in some way
It’s a lot easier to invoke some sort of justice, or vengeance, or payback but we are to love them.
Now Jesus ups the ante even more.
We’re not just supposed to love others as ourselves but now we are to love as Christ has loved us.
Christ - whose love is unconditional, whose love knows no bounds, whose love is for all people - is to triumph in these disciples lives all the time.
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