The Gospel of John Lesson 67 (03-16-14)
Lesson 67 – John 16:5-6
In John chapter 16 vs. 5 and 6 Jesus shared with His
disciples some of the joy and anticipation that He was looking forward to in
the near not too distant future. In v. 5 He makes a brief and, to His
disciples, a seeming unimportant comment to them that they did not think to ask
Him about. In thinking about His comment here in v. 5 it would have been easy
for them, and us for that matter, to miss what Jesus was thinking about and
what was on His mind when He made this comment to them.
It is hard to know what someone else is thinking about when
they are not talking and their words do not express or reveal what they are
thinking or when they are not sharing truly what is on their mind. We can
assume all kinds of things. More often than not we tend to transfer how we would
react or what we would be thinking to them when actually what they are thinking
in their mind may not be what we thought they were thinking at all. But, in
contemplating Jesus’ comment in v. 5 at that moment He could have been only
contemplating one thing, going Home…and His eventual reunion with the Father!
In reading vs. 5 and 6 it appears that Jesus is preoccupied
and overcome with anticipation of the eventual outcome and end result of the
events of the next few days that He is overcome with the Joy of it, so much so
that He is almost bursting and overflowing with the Joy of what is about to
happen that He wants to share this excitement and Good News with His closest
friends.
To be sure, even in anticipating what is about to happen and
the excitement of the eventual outcome of being reunited with the Father, Jesus
is fully aware of the dangerous and difficult times that are ahead of Him to
get there. However, in thinking of this eventual outcome and victory, even
though pain and real suffering was a reality of the journey to get to His
eventual destination, even with suffering at His doorstep, Joy and excitement
are the dominant emotions that Jesus is experiencing and wants to share with
His followers here.
In the verses that follow we see that Jesus, even though
wanting to prepare His followers for the difficult times that are ahead of
them, desires to comfort and encourage them with the same encouragement that He
was encouraged by in looking to the end result instead of being focused on
present difficulties and circumstances. What would it take to encourage you in
your present difficulties? Could an adjustment and refocus on the eventual
realities make the difficult and often painful process you may be facing more
bearable?
In sharing with His disciples some of the real difficulties
that were indeed at their doorstep sorrow had overcome them and fear had taken
a grip upon them losing sight of their ultimate victory and exaltation in Him.
It was Jesus’ perspective on being reunited with the Father that gave Him true
Joy even in the presence of painful realities.
We must remember that it was not just the physical torture
and brutality of the Cross, if that were not enough, that was before Jesus.
Very soon He would also bear God’s wrath for the punishment and payment for our
sin. He wanted them to have the same Joy during their difficult times that He
had experienced in keeping an eye on His destination. The Apostle Paul knew of
this Joy. So did Stephen. The following verses would do that.
In vs. 7-11 Jesus shares with them the source of their joy
and confidence in hope. It is interesting that in this final conversation just
before the Cross that Jesus tells them that He is transferring to them the very
things that He Himself was given by the Father to see Him through and to make
Him victorious even in a world filled with difficulties.
We remember that at the beginning of Jesus’ ministry that He
too was given the same Holy Spirit that He will promise to His followers in vs.
7-11 to comfort them in their difficulties.
Upon Jesus’ baptism we are told that the Spirit descended upon Him and
shortly thereafter the Spirit drove Him or directed Him into the wilderness to
be tested. It is true that there will be some differences in how the Holy
Spirit will interact and minister to Jesus’ followers than He did to Jesus, but
this same Spirit was given to Jesus also to support and assist Jesus in his
work.
I am afraid that all too often we as Christians living in
this world are become all too secularized, setting aside the things offered to
us by God in His Holy Spirit, choosing instead to use our own abilities and
resources instead of relying on the Power that God has imparted to us to assist
us in this world that is too big for us. Jesus told His disciples “Here, you
are going to need some help, use this” giving them the same help that He availed
Himself of in the Holy Spirit.
If we were real honest with ourselves, in our daily life
there is very little dependence upon God’s Spirit to accomplish our day. If we
were to just pick any day and review it objectively we would find that it is
rare, if ever, that our plans and actions included abiding and depending on
God’s Spirit to accomplish what is in it. If we look at what Jesus gives them
here in chapter 16 we see that it is one all-encompassing gift that is found in
His Spirit. Today if we were honest we might in practice say that instead it
was Google that we look to for our guidance…how sad.
We forget that the word abide has a connotation of continual
and ongoing or maybe even unending component to it. It is not just an
occasional connection or acknowledgement of this gift or of a truth, but a
continual dependence upon God…this Guide and Presence. In considering what this means it may be a good idea to pause for a
moment and ponder how this looks in practical experience in the current environment
of our day.
However, this was not the only thing that Jesus promised to
transfer to them that made Jesus and His ministry so special. Because of Jesus’
special relationship with the Father of always doing the Father’s will, Jesus
was given opportunities and freedoms to act without boundaries, restrictions or
restraints to act on the Father’s behalf. The Father knew that Jesus could be
trusted with His work and reputation and would, as an obedient and abiding Servant,
do His will. In doing so, whatever Jesus asked or did was fully blessed by God
and any request that He would ask of the Father would be given Him.
Now in this conversation, specifically stated in John
chapter 15, Jesus tells His followers that if they abide in Him and His
commandments and words abide in them, then they will have the very same
privilege offered to them as was given to Him. Jesus told them clearly and
plainly that if they abode in Him and His ways that they could ask ‘anything’
and He and the Father would honor their request. Jn. 14:13-4, 15:7
Two other things that are worth mentioning that Jesus
transferred or offered to His disciples that the Father had given to Him that
would empowered them to continue Jesus’ work and ministry on earth. The first
was His special relationship with the Father God and second the ability to love
as He loved giving them a new commandment that contained the power to do it.
These were powerful tools that the Father had given to Him. Now Jesus would
pass these tools carrying the same power and result to His followers for them to
use as He would in His absence.