Sermon
for Easter 7, June 1, 2025
Grace to you and peace from God our
Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.
John 17:20-26 20“I
am praying not only for them, but also for those who believe in me through
their message. 21May they all be one, as you, Father, are in me, and I am
in you. May they also be one in us,
so that the world may believe that you sent me.
22I have given them the glory you gave me, so that they may
be one, as we are one: 23I in them, and you in me. May they become completely one, so that the
world may know that you sent me and loved them even as you loved me. 24“Father, I want those you have
given me to be with me where I am so that they may see my glory—the glory you gave me, because you loved
me before the world’s foundation. 25Righteous
Father, the world did not know you, but I knew you, and these men knew that you
sent me. 26I made your name
known to them and will continue to make it known, so that the love you have for
me may be in them, and that I may be in them.” (EHV)
Jesus
prays that you be united with Him in glory.
Dear
beloved of God,
A favorite hymn for many people, in
our hymnal and likely in most modern hymnals, makes the bold, emphatic
statement, “What a friend we have in Jesus!”
It goes on to celebrate how Jesus took the punishment for our sins, and
how He now hears and answers prayer, and again, how someday, we can expect a
good life in heaven. That is all well
and good, but the hymn doesn’t really dive into the depth of what Jesus is for
you and me. I think people often
approach a text like we have before us this morning with a similar shallow
approach. In fact, it could be that none
of us can fully grasp the depth of all He is doing here as Jesus prays that
you be united with Him in glory.
Our
text is the concluding portion of what is known as Jesus’ high priestly
prayer. In that prayer, Jesus prays for
help for Himself as He undergoes the final suffering and sacrifice for the sins
of the world. He prays for His disciples
who will witness His crucifixion, death, and resurrection, and then Jesus prays
for all those believers yet to come, including you and me.
To
His Father in heaven, Jesus says, “I am praying not only for them, [His
chosen twelve apostles] but also for those who believe in me through their
message.” Jesus here pleads with His
Father, and ours, for every person who will ever read or hear the Gospel of all
He has done for us. In His great love
for people who don’t even yet know anything about Him, Jesus is imploring the
Almighty to work saving faith in what were once stone-dead hearts, and that God
preserve and keep us in that faith until we are together with the Lord in life
everlasting.
Jesus
has no delusions about the wickedness of this world and the people in it. He knows not everyone will believe. Yet, Jesus doesn’t want anyone lost who has
heard the Good News. For the baby who is
brought into the Kingdom of God through baptism, Jesus is praying that parents do
not neglect to continue to lead that child in the word of God’s grace. Jesus is praying for the person who stumbles
into the devil’s snares or the tempting spirits trying to mislead us, so that Christ’s
holy Word and Spirit keep us believing God’s promises. Jesus prays, “May they all be one, as you,
Father, are in me, and I am in you. May
they also be one in us, so that the world may believe that you sent me.”
Jesus
and the Father are perfectly united in this mission to save sinners from the
devil’s rebellion. There is never a
moment in Jesus’ life as a Man when He is not perfectly united with His
Father’s will. Consider how important
that is for us. Jesus’ righteousness is
what we need to enter God’s heaven. If
the Man, Jesus, ever had even one second of doubt, worry, or fear as He faced
our greatest foe who has deceived mankind since the Garden of Eden, you and I
would be lost eternally. As Jesus prays
this prayer, He knows exactly the cruelty and pain, the lies, distortions, and
false accusations that will be poured upon Him in a matter of hours. Jesus already understands the separation from
His Father’s care that He must endure on the cross for you and me. Jesus was willingly undergoing all that pain
to reconcile the world with God. Yet,
boldly, Jesus prays that you be united with Him in glory. When believers are united with Jesus, we tell
the world of His victory for all.
Sometimes,
when people read this plea for us to be one, they misuse it to insist that all
churches, or even all religions, be united in one big association without
regard to actual doctrines, leading to the mythical lie that all roads lead to
heaven. The enemy has pushed that
delusion almost since Jesus ascended to heaven.
In response, we must make two points.
First, Jesus is praying for us to have true, indivisible harmony. Second, that true harmony must be not just
among people, but most importantly, complete unity between us and God’s Word. It really doesn’t help anyone to be united
with multitudes of people if they are not united with God in truth. Therefore, anyone leading people away from
relying fully on God’s true Word is not and cannot be united with Jesus. A division in doctrine marks a division in
spirit, and false doctrine separates from Jesus.
Still,
in this Church of believers who trust in Jesus, there is real unity, but it
won’t always be visible here on earth.
Here on earth, we are all frail, imperfect people who may have faults
that would disqualify us from membership in God’s kingdom if our membership
depended on us. Therefore, we like to
call this united assembly of believers the Invisible Church. If you remember that term from your
confirmation days, that is the assembly of all believers who while repenting of
their sins, believe in Jesus as their Lord and Savior who has lived and died
and rose again for them. He is their
only hope. They trust in Jesus’ promise,
“Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved, but whoever does not
believe will be condemned.” (Mark 16:16)
Likewise, St. Paul was inspired by the Holy Spirit to write, “So
then, faith comes from hearing the message, and the message comes through the
word of Christ.” (Romans 10:17)
Thus, Jesus’ prayer is answered through the work of the Holy Spirit in
granting faith to imperfect souls, so that we are counted as holy through
faith’s connection with Jesus.
Jesus
prayed, “I have given them the glory you gave me, so that they may be one,
as we are one: I in them, and you in me.
May they become completely one, so that the world may know that you sent
me and loved them even as you loved me.”
We might ask, what glory did that ragtag bunch of disciples have as
Jesus prayed this prayer? But Jesus had
called them to believe in Him, and by that faith, weak and wavering though it
was as He was arrested, crucified, died, and buried, those men possessed the
righteousness that Jesus was living for them and for us. The world won’t see the glory Jesus gives His
people until Judgment Day comes. Yet,
even now, the world sees differences between believers and unbelievers in how
we approach the troubles and sorrows of this sin-damaged world. As Paul wrote to the Roman congregation: “Don’t
you know that all of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into
his death? We were therefore buried with
him by this baptism into his death, so that just as he was raised from the dead
through the glory of the Father, we too would also walk in a new life.” (Romans
6:3-4) Here on earth, we strive to live
for Jesus. In heaven, Christian
believers will live forever in His glory.
We
read Jesus’ plea for our eternal welfare, “Father, I want those you have
given me to be with me where I am so that they may see my glory—the glory you gave me, because you loved
me before the world’s foundation.” From
before time began, the Father has loved the Son. Because the Son is living the Father’s love
for us, and voluntarily being the atoning sacrifice for our sins, Jesus could
tell His disciples, “This is why the Father loves me, because I lay down my
life so that I may take it up again. No
one takes it from me, but I lay it down on my own.” (John
10:17-18)
As
the Son of God in human flesh, Jesus has always been the human representation
of God’s divine goodness. The Holy
Spirit tells us, “For all the fullness of God’s being dwells bodily in
Christ.” (Colossians 2:9) Jesus
likewise told His disciples, “The one who has seen me has seen the Father.” (John
14:9) Though separate persons, the three
persons of the Trinity are always united in substance and truth, and united in His
desire to save us from the devil’s betrayal.
Jesus came into this world to restore united harmony with all of us and
our Creator. That is what Jesus lives
for and why Jesus prays that you be united with Him in glory.
After
Adam’s fall into sin, and after God preserved Noah and his family in the great
flood, the world soon forgot about God and all His love and promises for our
fallen race. Thus, Jesus prays, “Righteous
Father, the world did not know you, but I knew you, and these men knew that you
sent me. I made your name known to them
and will continue to make it known, so that the love you have for me may be in
them, and that I may be in them.”
The disciples learned to know God through Jesus. By His preaching, and the evidence of His
life, Jesus convinced His followers that He was the long-promised Messiah and
Savior. Still, when Jesus prayed this
prayer, His disciples had many questions.
On
the other hand, though you and I may sometimes have questions about Jesus and
His plan for us, we have sure and certain proof that Jesus is who He claims to
be. He gave solid proof that He has
accomplished our salvation and peace with God when He rose from the grave
Easter morning. Because Jesus made sure
that there were numerous eyewitnesses that He lives and breathes even though He
had been dead, we can have real certainty about the grace He gives us.
Furthermore,
because Jesus continued to give men and messages concerning His love and how
His Church is brought into eternal life and peace, there is no good excuse for
anyone who denies Jesus as Savior. Thus,
we say boldly, “What a friend we have in Jesus!” Jesus not only won our salvation and grants
that grace to us full and free, but He continues to intercede with His Father
on our behalf. In line with this, so
that you and I never waver in that sure truth, and working to make His own
prayer come true, Jesus prays that you be united with Him in glory. Amen.
May the LORD our God
be with us, just as he was with our fathers.
May he never leave us or abandon us. May he turn our hearts to him, to walk in all
his ways.
Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment