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His
Friends Must Also Die
6.
The
Value Of The Word John 5:38; 8:31-32; 14:15, 21, 23-24 We will choose three of the Lord's statements, from John's gospel, regarding the Word of God, which are directed to three different audiences. They will clarify for us the place the Word of God occupies in the life of a believer who aspires to walk with Christ. The
unbelieving Jews In
John 5:38, the Lord Jesus has a specific claim against the Jews: You
don't have the word of God dwelling in you; for you do not believe
the one he sent. The
Jews possessed a glory, and one that Paul also recognized: they had
been entrusted with the very Words of God (Romans 3:2). From their
origins as a nation, in the Sinai, they were the executors of the
Word of God. They
all possessed a culture for preserving it, for studying and teaching
it. In Jesus' days, several theological schools existed, which competed
with one and other in their zeal for the orthodoxy of doctrine. They
instructed their children rigorously -masterfully - in the law of
Moses. However,
the Lord Jesus demolishes their glory by telling them that they didn't
have the Word of God living in their hearts. They had the word from
the outside, but not from inside. In other words, they knew a great
deal about the word, externally, but had none of it dwelling within
them. They
knew the Word of God as a doctrinal system, as a dead body that is
the object of theological dissection, but not as daily sustaining
food. The
Lord's words to these Jews left no room for hope; they were a strong
and definitive judgement. As a result of not having the Word dwelling
within them, they could not believe in He who the Father had sent.
Their eyes were blinded and they could not see God; their ears had
been deafened, so they could not hear God. It
is the Word dwelling in man that makes the heart docile, it makes
the soul submissive, and makes the spiritual senses willing to please
God. Without the word dwelling within, none of this will occur. In
spite of their vast knowledge of the prophecies concerning the Christ,
the Jews could not discern that Jesus of Nazareth was the Christ.
The extensive references that they had learnt regarding the prophets
were merely memorized studies, not a revelation from God through the
Spirit. In the precise moment in which they were required to apply
that knowledge, they didn't have the spiritual capacity to do it.
Having the knowledge that Jesus was from Nazareth, they could not
see how that could complete the prophecy that the Christ would be
born in Bethlehem. As if God were not able, just by a small movement
of His finger, to make both things possible at once. The
Jew's blindness in Jesus' time teaches us that the study of Scriptures
as a mental exercise, and not as spiritual quest, carried out in humility
and brokenness before God, doesn't serve for much. Rather than bringing
clarity to the soul, it will tend to confuse. The
Scriptures gave testimony of Jesus, but because the Jews studied them
with presumption they didn't benefit from them. If they had studied
the Scriptures with a contrite heart, trembling before the Word, they
would have come running to kneel at Jesus' feet, they would have recognized
that He was the one about whom the scriptures testify. The
Jew's attitude -which we ourselves find to be absurd - is not strange
in our days. In spite of this sad precedent, there are still those
who fall into the same error. When the Holy Scripture is studied with
scientific or humanist methods -as if were just another book - it
devalues its message, makes its demands relative and makes the voice
of God invalid. Excellent Christians have strayed from God, when by
getting entangled in the entanglements of theology, and in the thousand
intricacies of doctrinal subtleties. This
is extremely delicate. If
the Word isn't dwelling within us, we won't be able to discern the
direction in which God is working. We may be able to understand -by
examining history - how He acted yesterday, but that does not necessarily
help us to know what He will specifically do today. God's paths don't repeat themselves. His purpose doesn't advance in circles, but rather in a straight line that has a beginning and an end. God usually surprises those that follow him only in their carnal senses (flesh and blood). In order to truly follow him, something more is required. The
believing Jews On
another occasion, Jesus said to the Jews that had believed in him:
If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then
you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free. (John 8:31-32).
These
words were for the Jews that had believed in him. There is therefore
a different panorama here from the previous one. These men haven't
closed the door; on the contrary, a fortunate road opens up before
them, which begins with a demand. If this demand is accomplished,
a remarkable advance could take place in their condition before the
Lord: they would end up being his disciples, and they would know the
true freedom of Christ. The
required condition for all this to happen is plain and simple: that
they hold to his teaching. The
Jews whom we spoke of earlier didn't have the Word of God living in
them; here the demand is to remain in the Word, which implies that
they already possess it. They have it, but they must remain in it.
This demands an intimate, personal experience, with the Word of God.
It is not enough to know it, but to remain in it, that is to say,
to become familiar with it, to attach it to the heart, to eat of it,
to like it, to believe it, to live for it. Just
as children in schools learn those long poems to recite in ceremonies,
the believer must internalize the promises, exhortations, and thanksgiving
that enrich the spirit. In turn, they are a blessing to others when
they are spoken. A river of life flows from the lips of the Christian
when the Word is spoken opportunely and fluidly. We
find then, that for each necessity, or affliction; for each test or
joy, there will be a word that blossoms from the lips, or a memorized
word that will suddenly appear by the prompting of the Spirit. By
dwelling and remaining in the Word, Christ's followers will reach
the dignity of being a disciple. What
is a disciple? A disciple is one who walks in the Teacher's footsteps,
and who walks as he walked (1 John 2:6). It is the one that has learnt,
from the teacher, how to react in each circumstance, how to respond
to necessity; and what's more, how to think, how to feel and how to
love. In short, it is one that ends up being like him. This
will bring, in turn, knowledge of the truth. Notice that although
these Jews had believed in him, they were still not his disciples,
nor had they known the truth. As Jesus is the truth, they still had
not appropriated him to themselves. To
know the Truth - in uppercase - as a global and comprehensive reality,
was not enough. Christ is the Truth, but from Him, thousands of truths
are broken down which, when applied to the believer and to his to
walk, allow him to know the Truth in its fullness. The
believer brings with him a retinue of lies from their past without
Christ, of half truths or open deceit that must be denounced, corrected
or eradicated. A truth of God must be established in the heart, replacing
each one of Satan's lies. What
is the Truth of God regarding our form of thinking, of laughing, of
singing, of dreaming, of waiting, of loving, of getting angry, of
acting and reacting; of our relationship with the world, with the
boss, with the neighbor, with our wife or our children? What is the
truth regarding the spiritual victory, of the unity among believers,
of heaven and of hell, of life and the death? If
we continue in His Word, myriads of small truths will be discovered
before our eyes, which if we believe, accept and follow, will truly
make us free. These truths -all emanating from the Truth - will settle in the heart and will produce the emancipation of the believer from all ties of the past. All these truths come from Jesus Christ, the absolute, luminous, and perfect Truth. For that reason, one can say with conviction: "If the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed" (John 8:36). For
the Twelve In
John 14 the Lord addresses an even more intimate audience than the
previous. They are the twelve apostles that, gathered on that last
night before the cross, to receive from the Lord's mouth the last
and most precious teachings. The
Lord speaks to their heart, and he tells them: -
"If you love me, you will obey what I command... Whoever has
my commands and obeys them, he is the one who loves me. He who loves
me will be loved by my Father, and I too will love him, and I will
show myself to him... If anyone loves me, he will obey my teaching.
My father will love him, and we will come to him, and we will make
our home with him. He who does not love me, will not obey my teaching..."
(John 14:15,21,23-24). Here
the tone is familiar. The Lord has been with them for three years,
so he can appeal to their love. And it is because they love him that
they will keep his word. There
is, however, still a conditional expression, as if he was still uncertain
about their feelings towards him. So he says to them: If you
love me... In
order know if they really loved him, there would be no surer way for
Christ to know that they loved him than this: that they would keep
his commandments. What
it means to "Keep" Today,
the term to "keep" has a very faded meaning in some Christian
atmospheres. It is spoken of as a simple observance, as the "keeping
of a day", as "keeping" some holidays (1),
etc. It normally suggests an external act, without greater significance
or spiritual application. Its use is like that which the rich young
man used in his dialogue with the Lord Jesus. (Matthew 19:20). In
the Greek New Testament there are two words that are translated as
keeping, one is 'tereo' and the other one is 'phylasso'. The first
one means an obedience from the heart, and the second suggests a mere
external observance. When the Lord tells the rich young man that if
he wanted eternal life he would have to keep the commandments, he
uses ' tereo '; but when the young man answers him, he uses ' phylasso
'. The Lord used it correctly, but the rich young man answered in
an insufficient way. The
second one means to perform a merely external act; to shine before
others, to reach one's own righteousness. 'Tereo' on the other hand,
indicates an obedience of love, like its portrayed John's passage.
Indeed, keeping Jesus' commandments is a matter of love, of internal devotion. The Lord detests an offering of the lips that doesn't contain the warmth of the beloved's heart. It is love, and no other motivation that must impel a disciple to obey his Teacher. The
Word brings God Verse
21 emphasizes "having" and "keeping" the commandments.
Hence the glorious promise for those that fulfill this is: he and
the Father will love them, and they will show themselves to them and
they will make their home with them. Obedience
brings with it a greater recompense, because there is not a more glorious
a reality in the world than this: that the Father and the Son make
their home in the heart of a man. Therefore, one's whole life has
a purpose for Jesus Christ, and will find full satisfaction even in
the darkest of days or amid the pain and the adversity. Jesus
speaks firmly to the unbelieving Jews; he exhorts the believing Jews;
and to the twelve, he speaks to the heart, and commands them through
love. Keeping
his word is and nothing more than this: the confirmation that the
heart truly loves him. The word will be received with the fruit of
honey that distills the honeycomb and with the longing solicited by
one who searches for beautiful pearls and finds them. The word will
be received with the joyful expectation of one that finds a rich reef
of gold, and exploits it gram by gram, because he doesn't want to
lose any of it. Then,
that well kept and retained word, will serve as a light for us. It
will be the only light for our daily walk during the days in which
it is necessary to live in the earth as foreigners and pilgrims. When
the tide of unbelief increases, and humanist philosophy is imposed
in Christian circles, we can return to the pure and precious Word
of God to find there wisdom that flows from its mouth. The
received and well kept word, brings with it the same God that inspired
it. His presence will be a comfort to the soul, and refreshment to
the bones. God
comes through the Word, and He is its permanent resident. In
the Word we will also find the guide to help us take steps of faith
in the right direction. We will not only know what God did in the
past, but also what God is doing today, and what he wants to do in
the coming days ahead. The same blessed God that has come to us will
speak to us every day. Through the Word, God will persuade us to follow him, closely, depending on his voice alone. He will show us the way and he will give us the strength to walk in it. How sweet is the path which we walk with him, and with the guidance of His Holy Word!
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