“And for Their Sake…”
| Sometimes, it’s easy to take a spouse or best friend for granted; it’s good to regularly recall why you love them. It’s also possible to take Jesus’ love for granted—so on Truth For Life, Alistair Begg is pausing to ensure we don’t do so! |
Bob Lepine: Sometimes it's easy to take a long-standing relationship like a spouse or a best friend for granted. It's good to pause and recall what it is you love about the other person. Similarly, it's possible to take the gospel for granted.
So today on Truth for Life, Alistair Begg helps us pause to reflect on the extent of Jesus' love, so we don't take that for granted. Let's open our Bibles to John chapter 17.
Alistair Begg: Well, the 19th verse, it is there. "And for their sake," says Jesus, that is for the sake of his disciples, expressly those who are in earshot of him and all who will believe on the word that they proclaim, which becomes an expansive number. He says, "And for their sake I consecrate myself, that they also may be sanctified in the truth."
Jesus, in his love for his disciples, is revealing his love in so many different ways. But he is revealing his love for them in preparing them for what lies ahead. And just the little phrase with which 19 begins, that's 17:19, points us in this direction, doesn't it? "And for their sake. And for their sake."
In other words, Jesus, in light of all that awaits him, is thinking more about them than he's thinking about himself. And I want simply to do this. First of all, to encourage you along with me to consider the love of Jesus for his own. Just listen to me as I try as best I can to remind us all of the extent of how much Jesus actually loves us. That's point one. That we might consider the love of Jesus for his own.
Now, in 13:1 where it says that he loved his own, you know the gospel and you know that his own is already mentioned in the opening narrative, in the opening statement, the prologue, where it says that he came unto his own, and his own received him not. The reaction of people to him was scorn, it was abuse, it was unbelief and so on.
And so what we're discovering here is that the reference to "his own" is to those whom the Father had given him out of the world. He has loved them, and he is showing them now the extent of his love. He wants them, he wants us, to know just how utterly and completely he actually loves us.
In fact, I would suggest, and though I haven't checked it, but I wouldn't be at all surprised if "love" is not actually given a completely new prominence from the beginning of 13 all the way to the end of 21. I think if we go back and check we will discover that one through 12, there's far more emphasis on Jesus as light and Jesus as truth.
There's not as much emphasis on that in the balance, but there is a clear focus pointing us to the extent of Jesus' love. It is actually more than possible for us, for good reasons and for bad, to actually miss the profound simplicity of the fact that is contained in probably the song that every child in a Christian home learns to sing first of all: "Jesus loves me! This I know, for the Bible tells me so."
I want to suggest to you that I don't care how old you are, you will never progress beyond that reality. That is the reality. That's why Barth, whether it is an apocryphal story or not, the great theologian in the 20th century, when he was confronted by a seminary class and somebody was bright enough to say, "Dr. Barth, what is the greatest thought that you have ever had?" And that was his answer. "Jesus loves me! This I know, for the Bible tells me so."
So let me show you his love is on display. In chapter 13, which is where we began, it is immediately on display because you know that he does what no one else is prepared to do. He wraps a towel around him and he washes the feet of the disciples. Washes the feet of Judas who will betray him. Washes the feet of Peter who will deny him. Washes the feet of every one of them who wasn't prepared to do for each other what needed to be done.
Why did he do that? Well, because he loved them. And indeed, that moment with that towel and that basin is actually a foreshadowing of all that was going to be expressed when he came to the cross.
When you get into chapter 14, his love for them is expressed in his opening statement. "Let not your hearts be troubled. I don't want you to be troubled. I don't want you to be upset." This is an expression of his love. "You believe in God; believe also in me." His love. He comes back to it again in 14 right around verse 27 or so, you can find it later on for yourself. And Jesus looks on the face of these folks. He's known them now for three years, the good, the bad, the ugly about them, and he loves them.
And so he says, "I don't want you to think for a moment that I'm going to leave you as orphans. No, we'll be taking care of that." Still in chapter 14, he says, "I'm going to tell you these things so that when they happen to you, it won't cause you to fall off the trolley," so to speak.
You know, when you're flying transatlantically and you're coming out of the East Coast and eventually the fellow says, "Well, so far so good, but when we cross the jet stream, you should be alert to the fact that it may just get a little turbulent." And somewhere in the darkness in the middle of the night, you're very, very thankful when it begins to rock and roll that the guy up front was so sensitive as to let us know we are not to be alarmed. Trust him. That's what Jesus is saying here.
When the drama unfolds of which you're going to be a part, he says to his own, "I want you to make sure that you understand that I've told you this ahead of things so that you might not be caught off guard." He goes on to say, "If you want to know how much I love you, let me tell you. As the Father has loved me, that's how I love you."
His love for them assures their protection. 16 begins, "I've said all these things again to you to keep you from falling away." They're going to put you out of synagogues and so on. "But I love you." And again, his concern that they will not be overburdened by things is an expression of his love.
"I still have many things to say to you, but you can't bear them now. I'm not going to load you down with stuff. No, there will be a time for that. When the Spirit of truth comes, he'll guide you into truth and so on. I've got a lot to say, but you're not ready to hear it." Why does he hold back? Because he loves them.
And of course, when you get to chapter 17, that gets us up to date, almost. And verse one: "When Jesus had spoken these words," that's all that was in 16, he lifted up his eyes to heaven and said, "Father." And he prays for his own. It's remarkable that within hours of the conclusion of his prayer, he's going to be deserted, confronted by opponents, set upon in the garden by people with lanterns and torches and a spirit of animosity.
He knows that that is what is coming. But look at what it says. "And for their sake. And for their sake." When the moment arrives, his love for them actually shines through. And when you go on into chapter 18 and that encounter finally takes place, what does he say? He says to his opponents, he says, "If you seek me, let these men go." Such love.
That was the first point. Second point. The extent of his love, secondly, that we see expressed in his consecration. "And for their sake I consecrate myself." The word in Greek is *hagiazō*. It's the same word that is used to translate "sanctify" throughout the passage. It's interesting that the translators in this particular translation choose to translate it "consecrate." I think I understand exactly why that is. To make the distinction between what it meant for Jesus to become the priest and the sufferer and what it means for those of us who are his followers to be increasingly holy.
In fact, Bishop Ryle, when you come to his little commentary on this and you get to this particular verse, he says, "This is a rather hard passage." And that's like a big red flag going up for me when I'm reading it. I said if it was hard for Ryle, it's going to be hard for me. One of my friends down in Memphis in the South, Ronnie Stevens, he says of it, "These words take us to the heights and to the depths." Because in what Jesus is saying here, he's clearly referring to the fact that he is going to give himself up to death for their sake.
And in verse 18, he has acknowledged that he was sent by the Father into the world. But here in verse 19, it is equally clear that although the Father gave the Son, the Son gave himself. And that's what he's mentioning here. Both the Father and the Son take the initiative in saving sinners. They're in it together, if you like.
In fact, Stott masterfully brings it home for us when he says, "When we talk of the Father's plan and the Son's sacrifice, we should not think of the Father laying on the Son an ordeal he was unwilling to bear, nor of the Son extracting from the Father a salvation he was unwilling to bestow." No, it cost the Father to give up his only begotten Son, and it was costly for the Son to lay down his life for the sheep.
I guess today's the day for old songs, but I remember again in the same kind of context to which I was referring this morning, we used to have often on Sunday night somebody would stand up and sing a solo about the ninety and nine that safely lay in the shelter of the fold. I don't know if you're familiar with that.
And it was usually quite good, but sometimes not so good. But it happened so many times that I knew the words off by heart. And it's obviously from the story of the ninety and nine and Jesus tells the story and they were all there, but one was out and the shepherd went out to get them.
And then it's, I think, the second verse that always stood out to me. It goes, "But none of the ransomed ever knew how deep was the water crossed, or how dark was the night that the Lord passed through when he found his sheep that were lost." How could we ever know that? All we could ever know is the love of the shepherd who came to seek us. We didn't know exactly all that he undertook in order to execute that rescue.
But if we take it to the bottom line, we're simply affirming what we're pointing out all the way through, is because of his love. That what Jesus knew and planned for from all of eternity, he actually then learned in the experience of the suffering through which he went.
And there is an approach to talking about the gospel that almost leaves out the immensity of what is taking place. And that's why he gives us this supper, so that we would never forget what took place. That his body was broken, that his blood was shed, and all because of his love for us.
But read on in the gospel and what do you discover? That Jesus in the garden is distressed. He's troubled, he's sorrowful, even to the point of death. Luke the doctor tells us that on an evening when it was cold enough to have a fire in the courtyard of the high priest's house, Jesus' sweat became, quotes, "like great drops of blood falling down to the ground."
Listen to him as he speaks to his Father. "Father, if you are willing, remove the cup from me; nevertheless, not my will, but yours be done." And then the gospels say, "And there appeared to him an angel from heaven strengthening him." The idea of God being strengthened by an angel, and being in agony he prayed more earnestly.
And Jesus in that moment of being seized and defended and the high priest's ear, the servant of the high priest's ear going south. And Jesus said to him, "Put your sword back into its place, for all who take the sword will perish by the sword. Here it is. Do you think that I cannot appeal to my Father, and he will at once send more than twelve legions of angels?" By perfect right, he was the Son. He could easily have done so. But he chose to walk the inflexible path of obedience.
Consider the love of Jesus for his own expressed in his consecration. And finally, to the end that they also may be sanctified in the truth. In walking in obedience to the Father's will, Jesus is the sinless priest who offers the sacrifice of himself in order that what we read at the beginning of the service or earlier on again in Hebrews chapter 10 might be worked out.
Actually Hebrews 9 and verse 26 makes it clear, "For then he would have had to suffer repeatedly since the foundation of the world. But as it is, he appeared once for all at the end of the ages to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself." And again in the following chapter, "And by that will we have been sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all."
Now what do we know? Simply this. That only on the basis of that act of God in Jesus by way of redemption and sanctification could pave the way for those for whom he's praying there and therefore for us, that we in turn might be sanctified through the truth. If Christ had not sanctified himself or consecrated himself to the work of redemption, there would be no need for anything else.
But it is in doing so that he then opens up the way so that we might actually be holy. That we might be saved, that we might be different, that we might be his possession, that we might by the articulation of our lips and our life explain to the world Jesus really loves us. And because he loves us this much, we are committed to loving him back.
You can go look for all the verses yourself. Let me give you just three. "Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her," what, "that he might sanctify her." Jesus gave himself for us to redeem us from all lawlessness and to purify a people for his own possession, zealous for good works. That was Titus 2. The first one was Ephesians 5.
And in 1 Peter 2, he, that is Jesus, himself bore our sins in his own body on the tree. Why? "That we might die to sin and live to righteousness." He didn't die in order that we got an insurance policy, in order that we get a free pass into heaven. There was no other good enough to pay the price of sin; he only could unlock the door of heaven and let us in. Yeah.
When we understand that, then it changes a lot, doesn't it? The Father's plan from all of eternity was to conform us to the image of his Son. And all that we've been considering in these verses concerns that.
Let me draw this to a close as I must by pointing out, first of all, that we find sanctification accomplished in all of its fullness at the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ. That is made perfectly clear in the verse to which I keep returning and keep losing my place every time.
Verse 10 of Hebrews 10. "By that will," the will that he has fulfilled, "and by that will we have been sanctified." Past tense. Sanctified. Remember what we said when we looked at sanctification. That regeneration, justification, sanctification, glorification and all is in one big sweeping move of the Spirit of God.
He doesn't justify those that he doesn't sanctify, and he doesn't justify those that he doesn't glorify. And the reason that one day we will have a glorified body is because of what he has done in the past for us, and by his grace we've entered into that. That's what he's saying. Sanctification has been accomplished.
Here it is. We are to be sanctified because we are sanctified. Do you get it? We are to be sanctified because we are sanctified. We are set apart, but we're not sinless. Set apart but not sinless. Sanctification is there in all of its fullness in the cross. Sanctification is then experienced by us on an ongoing basis.
Jesus sanctifies those whom he has sanctified. Now the 14th verse, which we again read earlier too, "For by a single offering," that was his offering on the cross, "he has perfected for all time those who are being sanctified." Shouldn't trouble us. There's a renovation process going on. And though at times it is painful, it's always purposeful.
Because what God by the Holy Spirit is doing in the life of the believer is making us increasingly fit for the title which he has put upon us. He has marked us out as his own. He has said, "Father, these are the ones that you have given to me. I love them with an everlasting love. I'm leaving them; they're going out into the world. Make sure, Father, that they are preserved and kept and sanctified in order that they might be, if you like, in real life expressing the reality which is true of them."
For example, if you think about the thief on the cross, if he had not been taken immediately into the presence of Jesus, his life then would have borne testimony. He would have been increasingly sanctified. So that the reality of it accomplished in the cross is then experienced on an ongoing basis.
And finally, it is consummated on that resurrection morning when the dead in Christ shall rise and the glory of his resurrection share, and with bodies all celestial we will meet him in the skies. That's where we're going.
Beloved, we are God's children now, and what we shall be has not yet appeared. But we do know that when he appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is. Do you know what the next verse says? "And everyone who has this hope within him purifies himself, as he is pure."
That it is our sanctification which bears testimony to the reality of our justification and sends us onto the ultimate fulfillment of that for which God has made us his own. Consider the extent of Jesus' love expressed in his consecration to the end that we might become like him.
Bob Lepine: You're listening to Truth for Life with Alistair Begg. Today is the last day we're featuring the book *Praying the Bible*. This is a book that provides a framework for how to make the words of Scripture the basis of your prayers. A while back, I had the opportunity to sit down with the author of the book, Donald Whitney, and he explained how this approach helps believers enrich their prayer lives.
Donald Whitney: I have discovered in teaching this literally over 500 times that people will find themselves praying much longer than they're used to, they intended to. Whereas often they might struggle for five to seven minutes, their mind is wandering half the time, they'll suddenly come to themselves and say, "Wait a minute, where was I? I haven't been thinking of God for the last several minutes."
They find themselves with these reminders in the text that if their minds do wander—and we're human, eventually we will, we're tired or whatever—we've got something to come back to, the next verse. And because it's fresh, it's not the same old words we always say, it tends to keep our attention and our focus longer and continue the prayer.
Bob Lepine: When you request your copy of the book *Praying the Bible*, you'll learn how to experience these same benefits. And the book is yours today for a donation. You can give online at truthforlife.org/donate or call us at 888-588-7884.
I'm Bob Lepine. On what is Christian unity based? Is it truth or feelings? Tomorrow, Alistair explains God's answer to that question. The Bible teaching of Alistair Begg is furnished by Truth for Life, where the learning is for living.
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By: Donald Whitney
For many believers, prayer is often marked by repetition and a lack of intimate communion with God. Praying the Bible invites readers to revitalize their prayer lives by using the very words God has given us in Scripture. The Psalms, with their rich themes, language, and emotions, serve as a God-given prayer book and a powerful foundation for prayer. Praying the Bible offers an easy-to-apply framework for making the words of the Psalms—and other portions of Scripture—one’s own, opening the door to a deeper, more meaningful experience of communion with God.
Featured Offer
By: Donald Whitney
For many believers, prayer is often marked by repetition and a lack of intimate communion with God. Praying the Bible invites readers to revitalize their prayer lives by using the very words God has given us in Scripture. The Psalms, with their rich themes, language, and emotions, serve as a God-given prayer book and a powerful foundation for prayer. Praying the Bible offers an easy-to-apply framework for making the words of the Psalms—and other portions of Scripture—one’s own, opening the door to a deeper, more meaningful experience of communion with God.
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Truth For Life distributes the unique, expositional Bible teaching of Alistair Begg. Studying God’s Word each day, verse by verse, is the hallmark of this ministry. In a desire to share the good news of the Gospel without cost as a barrier, the entire teaching archive is available for free download and resources are available at cost with no markup.
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