Memory Verse:
"Let not your heart be troubled;
you believe in God, believe also in Me.
(John 14:1)
John, as pastor at Ephesus, preached his share of funerals. John 14 is used in times of mourning. John, last of all of the living disciples, likely felt lonely. It wasn’t just the disciples he had seen die, but he had heard of thousands of Christians being put to death for the gospel’s sake. He had seen the temple burned and destroyed along with countless fellow Jews.
The night before Jesus died, his Lord comforted his disciples with these words. Jesus did not leave them orphans. Though John felt lonely, he was not alone. He had the comfort of the Holy Spirit of Christ living within him.
The sixth “I AM” statement of “I AM the way the truth and the life, no one comes to the Father except through Me” is one of the strongest statements of Christ being the only way to God. It comes after Thomas’ question, “Lord, we do not know where You are going, and how can we know the way?”and is linked to the miracle of the nobleman’s son (John 4:46–54).
The nobleman believed, but insisted twice that Jesus “come down.” Jesus said, “Unless you see signs and wonders, you (plural) will not believe.” Like the nobleman, Thomas would later learn that believing is not always seeing.
Day 30: Morning
Love Revealed Through Faith!
(John 14:1–6)
Someone asked me on Facebook what I would tell my younger self if I could. I said, “Don’t sweat the small stuff.” Especially with your kids. Maybe that’s why grandparents are so nice, they regret all the grief they gave their own kids.
Jesus was about to leave and He tells the disciples, “Don’t sweat the big stuff.” Well, not exactly in those words, but He’s told them there is going to be persecution and betrayal and death and violence. Then He says, “Don’t let your heart be troubled.” Now how exactly are we supposed to do that? Jesus sees the big picture and even the big stuff in our lives are small things for Him and for us, if we have a heavenly perception.
Peace of Christ “Let not your heart be troubled.” Jesus said this as He was soon to be crucified. You too can have peace.
Place of Faith “you believe in God, believe also in Me.” What are you trusting in? Finances, friends, abilities, power? Seek first God’s kingdom and put your faith in Him alone.
Personal Place of Heaven “In My Father’s house” Heaven is not on a cloud or a quiet boring place. Jesus related it to a personal, family home, where you can find rest and peace.
Plentiful Place in Heaven “are many mansions” Do you think there may not be room for you? No, Jesus has prepared a large, plentiful place for those who trust Him (see Rev. 7:9).
Promised Place “if it were not so, I would have told you.” People are dishonest but you can trust Jesus. He always told the truth, no matter the consequences. He will keep His promises.
Prepared by Christ “I go to prepare a place for you.” Heaven is not one size fits all; it is prepared especially for you, custom-built by Christ himself.
Preceded by Christ “I will come again and receive you to Myself” Isn’t it good to follow a guide who has already been there. Jesus will personally come and take us there.
Presence of Christ “where I am, there you may be also.” Some translations call the “mansions” as “dwelling places” or even “apartments.” I don’t care as long as Jesus is there.
Passage provided “where I go you know, and the way you know.” This is not a hope so, think so, maybe so. We can know where we are going and how to get there.
Perplexing questions Thomas said, “Lord, we do not know where You are going, and how can we know the way?” Do you have questions? That’s okay. We know who has the answers.
Powerful answer “I am the way, the truth, and the life.”
Provided only by Christ “No one comes to the Father except through Me.” Don’t trust in others, or other faiths or even yourself. Trust only in the work of Christ on the cross.
Pray this prayer to God: “Dear Jesus, thank You for being the Way, the Truth and the Life. Help me have a heavenly perception so that nothing would trouble my heart. Amen.”
Day 30: Evening
Love Revealed Through Jesus Christ
(John 14:7–14)
The word “love” is mentioned more than 20 times in chapters 13, 14, and 15, more than anywhere else in three consecutive chapters of the gospels.
When Jesus says, “Let not your heart be troubled,” He is speaking to His disciples, but He is also speaking to us today.
It is innate within all of us to have a “troubled heart” at times. Even Jesus was on occasions “troubled” in His soul (John 12:27) and in His spirit (John 13:21). Because of this tendency within all of us, Jesus commands us to strive for our hearts to not be troubled nor afraid (notice He repeats this phrase again in John 14:27).
How can we keep our hearts from being stirred up, anxious, disquieted, and not at peace? The antidote is found in 14:1: Belief/Faith/Trust.
Belief, faith, and trust all mean that we have to put our confidence in Someone else (Jesus and His Father), rather than ourselves. “Trust God…and Me.” Jesus commands us to trust Him in verses 1, 10, 11, 12 and 13–14. We trust that Jesus went to His Father’s house, is preparing a place for us, will come again to take us there, and is the only way to get there.
Kyle Idleman wrote a book entitled Gods At War, with its title meaning that there are many gods who are at war to take your attention away from the true God. One of the chief false gods in this world is the god named Worry.
Phillip was the third disciple Jesus called (John 1:43), yet still he did not understand that Jesus Christ was the bodily manifestation of the Heavenly Father. Even though he and the rest of the disciples had been personally taught by Jesus Christ Himself over the past three and a half years, Phillip and Thomas still had questions. How does that make you feel about your own understanding of God? Circle all that apply below:
a. I need to study more
b. It’s okay to have questions
c. I probably would have asked something even dumber
d. We will never arrive to a point where we know everything
I would answer e. All of the above
Even when we have questions, the answer ultimately will be to believe (verse 11). It is not to be sincere or do your best. The answer is to believe that Jesus is the only way to get to God the Father. Jesus is not “a way” but “THE way.”
Pray this prayer to God: “Heavenly Father, thank You for revealing yourself to us through Jesus Christ. Help me to trust You and Your love for me more. Thank You that whatever I pray in Your Name, according to Your will, You will do. Amen.”
Day 31: Morning
Love Revealed In Obedience
(Read John 14:15–24)
Have you truly and completely trusted Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior? If you trust Him with the salvation of your eternal life, which is far greater than anything in this temporal world, should you not also trust Him by obeying Him in your actions while you are here on earth?
There is a problem we all have with people who say with their mouths that they have trusted Jesus for salvation, and yet they do not keep His commandments. (John 14:15, 21, and 24).
James, the half-brother of Jesus, did not believe in Jesus as Savior until after His resurrection. Later, however, he would write that “faith without works is dead,” meaning that a person is not truly a Christian who only professes faith but has no actions to back it up. Believers are proven to be righteous not only by what they say they believe but also how their life is lived as a result of their faith (James 2:24).
The love relationship between God and His children is not a one-time profession with no change in behavior. You don’t simply pray a prayer and everything is all finished! True love is shown by how we are changed. We do not change our ways and obey God’s commands to receive God’s love. Our response to God’s love is to first love Him back.
“This is love, not that we love God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be an atoning sacrifice for our sins…We love Him because He first loved us.” 1 John 4:10, 19
If we have truly received the God of the universe into our lives, we have received the very essence and manifestation of God (John 14:21, 23–24). That is the proof that we truly love God.
How can you explain that God the Father, God the Son, and the Holy Spirit of Truth all three will dwell in your life? (John 14:17, 21, 23)___________________
How can you receive Christ into your life? (check one based on John 1:12)
___ To believe on His Name
___ To earn His love
___ To be born Jewish
We as Christians aren’t the only ones who reveal our love in obedience. Look at John 14:31. Jesus doesn’t ask us to do anything He hasn’t already done. Jesus demonstrated His love for His Father in His obedience, “as the Father gave Me commandment, so I do.”
Pray this prayer to God: “Dear God, I confess I have received You into my life. You are my Lord and God, not just for my eternal salvation, but also for my life here on earth. Help me keep your commandments in my life. In Jesus’s name. Amen.”
Day 31: Evening
Love Revealed In The Holy Spirit
(Read John 14: 25–26)
When you receive God the Father into your life, you receive God’s Holy Spirit. When you receive Jesus Christ into your life, you receive the Spirit of Christ.
Read Romans 8:9–11
9But you are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God dwells in you. Now if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he is not His. 10And if Christ is in you, the body is dead because of sin, but the Spirit is life because of righteousness. 11But if the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who dwells in you.
Paul later reveals that having “Christ in you, the hope of all glory,” was a mystery throughout the Old Testament and is revealed in the New Testament through the Holy Spirit (See Col. 1:26–28).
Jesus in John 14 calls God’s Spirit in us the “Comforter” or “Helper,” and is also translated as “Advocate.” John later uses that same word “Advocate” in describing Jesus in Heaven. It is as though that God’s Holy Spirit is doing the same thing for us on earth (Helping, Comforting, Advocating) that Jesus is doing at the right hand of the Father.
The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Truth, and accomplishes the following things:
1) Abides in us forever and
2) Cannot be received by the world
3) Teaches us all things, bringing to our remembrance Jesus’s words
4) Is better for the Spirit to dwell in us than for Christ to be here on earth
5) Convicts of sin, righteousness, and judgment
6) Guides us and speaks to us into all truth
7) Glorifies Jesus Christ by declaring things from Christ
Being a Christian is more than saying a prayer, agreeing with Biblical truth and having a good answer to God’s question of why He should let you into heaven. It is having the living Christ dwelling in you.
Pray this prayer to God: “Spirit of the Living God, fall fresh on me. As I have received Your Spirit, teach me to walk in the Spirit, live in the Spirit and worship in the Spirit. In Jesus’s Name. Amen.”
Day 32: Morning
What Can The Holy Spirit Do For You?
(Read John 14:26–27)
When we are saved, we are baptized in the Holy Spirit. When we are controlled by God, we are filled with the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is our Helper. But perhaps the greatest thing about the Holy Spirit is that He is at home in our hearts.
I have shared with children that if you make a home in your heart for God, He will make a home in His heaven for you when this life on earth is over. Like a child who hosts a sleepover or a birthday party at his house, and then later gets to go spend some time with his friends, Jesus promises His Spirit will stay with the believers and equally promises He will come back for them to bring them to His Father’s house.
Jesus is trying to give peace to His disciples by telling them of all of the good things he is going to prepare in heaven, while still giving reassurance that until He comes to bring them home, they will not be left as orphans. Both the Father and the Son will come and make their home within the believers. How? Through the Holy Spirit. As you grow, ask the Holy Spirit to teach you all things and to also keep them in your “remembrance” (verse 26).
This passage here teaches one of the most profound and hardest to understand truths in Scripture: The Trinity. We as Christians believe in one God, but He is manifest in three personages: The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. When Christ lives in you, that is the Holy Spirit.
However, just because we have the Spirit, and just because the Spirit will help us and teach us, all of those things will not mean we will understand everything. In those times, Jesus promises us peace, but not externally in the world, but internally in the heart.
While Jesus promises peace, one thing He does not promise: He did not say we would feel like we are truly home in this world. In fact, we will not feel like we are at home until He returns for us. The ruler of this world at this time is not Jesus, nor His Father, but of course the great Satan, to whom God has temporarily given partial control of the world. When humanity fell, God purposely let the devil rule here on earth temporarily as a consequence for our sins. (We will see more of this in the next devotional and in John 17).
But even so, God is still in ultimate charge. And He gives us His Holy Spirit to make a little Heaven for us on earth.
Pray this prayer to God: “Lord, there are things I just do not understand. There are things that happen that just don’t make sense. In those times, let me long for Your return for me to take me home. Let me never get used to being here. In Jesus’s Name. Amen.”
Day 32: Evening
We Are Not At Home In This World
(Read John 14:28–31)
Do you feel a little uneasy in the world? Are you longing for something, but you can’t quite put your finger on it? Don’t worry and don’t fear. Jesus is coming back to take us to a home that we have never been to before.
How can it be home if we’ve never been there? Because our Father, our Savior and our spiritual family of brothers and sisters are there. Jesus said to the disciples that they should rejoice that He was going back to the Father (John 14:28). I understand how the disciples felt. I have been to many a funeral and while I know my loved ones are now in heaven with our Savior and loved ones, I know I am going to miss them and to be honest I don’t always feel like rejoicing at a funeral.
And that’s okay. Jesus, as you may recall, wept at Lazarus’ funeral. It is not a sign of lack of faith or even a sign of lack of joy for them. It is a sign of our love on how much we will miss those who have gone on to glory.
But I also think that sadness at a funeral is a sign that we are not at home in this world. If death is so natural, if dying is a part of life (the last part, that is), then why don’t we shrug our shoulders and move on.
The Father is greater than we are and He really does know best. When death comes to pass, whether it was the death of Jesus as foretold in John 14:29, or in our own lives when loved ones die, we can mourn and miss the departed. When the cruelty of this world and its ruler, Satan, seems to have solidly taken charge of this earth, we can say with Jesus, “He has nothing in me.” Why? Because, as the old saying goes, “the world didn’t give it to me and the world can’t take it away.”
Maybe Jesus said it better with His words in Matthew 6:20. “But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not break in and steal.”
Makes you a little home-sick, doesn’t it?
Pray this prayer to God: “Dear God in Heaven, my heart and my spirit are with You, hidden in Christ’s heart at Your right hand. Help me to have a heavenly perspective on this world. When I get weary by the world’s wicked ways, let me remember this is not my home. In Jesus’s Name. Amen.”
No comments:
Post a Comment