Soul

Scripture: John 14:1-7

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • Jesus connects the physical with the spiritual
  • Jesus is the way, the truth and the life
  • Jesus is the soul of creation
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

Blood vessels are extremely important. Blood vessels include things like arteries, veins and capillaries. They transport blood cells, nutrients and oxygen throughout the human body. They also remove waste and carbon dioxide. Blood vessels connect the different parts of the body. We need blood vessels to sustain life.

Blood vessels look a bit like tree roots and they are the source of healing. For example, if you have an infection in your leg, then you need blood vessels to bring anti-bodies to the wound site to fight the infection. Without blood vessels there is no blood flow and therefore no healing and no life. Jesus is a bit like the blood vessel system for humanity.

Today we conclude our sermon series on the I am sayings of Jesus in the gospel of John. Jesus uses a number of I am statements to describe himself. These sayings tell us about Jesus’ being, his identity.

Please turn with me to John chapter 14, page 137 toward the back of your pew Bibles. Last week we heard how Jesus is the vine and we are the branches. This morning we hear how Jesus says to his disciples: I am the way, the truth and the life. The main point here is that Jesus connects us with God, the source of life. From John 14, verses 1-7 we read…

“Do not be worried and upset,” Jesus told them. “Believein God and believe also in me. There are many rooms in my Father’s house, and I am going to prepare a place for you. I would not tell you this if it were not so. And after I go and prepare a place for you, I will come back and take you to myself, so that you will be where I am. You know the way that leads to the place where I am going.”

Thomas said to him, “Lord, we do not know where you are going; so how can we know the way to get there?”

Jesus answered him, “I am the way, the truth, and the life; no one goes to the Father except by me. Now that you have known me,” he said to them, “you will knowmy Father also, and from now on you do know him and you have seen him.”

May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.

Jesus connects the physical with the spiritual:

A yacht moves by harnessing the power of the wind. Which means, for a yacht to truly be called a yacht, it must have a mast and sails. The mast and sails are really the soul of the yacht because they create the harness of a meaningful connection with the wind.  Without the mast and sails the boat is just a raft, floating lifeless on the water.

In this morning’s reading from John 14, Jesus is talking with his disciples on the eve of his crucifixion and death. He has told the disciples he must die and they are distraught. They have formed a close bond with Jesus after following him all this time. They love him and now he is talking about leaving.

What will this mean for them? They have given up everything to be with Jesus. I suppose they must have felt a bit like sailors on the open sea being told they were about to lose their mast and sails. Or they may have felt like a patient in a hospital being told the blood vessels in their leg were so damaged that the blood flow had ceased and the leg would have to be amputated.

Jesus senses their distress and reassures them that his death does not spell the end. His going away will not sever the bond between them. Jesus is going to prepare a place for his disciples. Not just any old place but a room in God’s house. That means Jesus’ departure from this world is actually a good thing for his disciples because he is creating a permanent and secure connection for them with God the Father.

Jesus is talking here about the connection he creates between the physical world and the spiritual realm, through his death, resurrection and ascension to heaven.

Thomas, one of the disciples, doesn’t understand Jesus’ meaning and he is too honest to pretend otherwise. He says, “Lord, we do not know where you are going; so how can we know the way to get there?” 

The blood in our body does not need to know where to go. As long as the blood remains inside the blood vessel (inside the vein or the artery) it will end up where it needs to be. It is the same with us. As long as we remain in Christ, we will end up where we need to be; with God in the heavenly realm.

And so Jesus says to Thomas (and to us), “I am the way, the truth, and the life; no one goes to the Father except by me.

Trying to go to God the Father without Jesus is like trying to cross the ocean in a yacht without a sail and a mast. Or it’s like a single blood cell trying to reach the heart without being in a vein. 

The way, the truth and the life:

Now those three terms, the way, the truth and the life, need a little bit of explanation.

When we hear the word way, we might think method. This is the way (or the method by which) you cook a steak. This is the way you fold a fitted sheet. Or this is the way you parent a child. Jesus does give us a method for living. Jesus does show us the way to be human. Christ shows us how to face the difficulties of this world and the limitations of our humanity, with faith.

But Jesus has more in mind than a mere method for living when he talks about being the way. Jesus is saying he is the pathway to God the Father. He is the pilot boat who guides the ship of humanity to the harbour of heaven. He is the blood vessel who carries us to the heart of the Father. He is the mast and sails who harnesses us to the wind of God’s Spirit.

Jesus is the way in the sense that he connects the physical world with the spiritual realm. Jesus connects us to God. This is what Jesus is getting at in verse 7 when he says: Now that you have known me, you will knowmy Father also, and from now on you do know him and you have seen him.”

When we hear the word truth, we tend think facts and figures and abstract philosophical statements. The sun always rises in the east. There are 1000 millilitres in a litre. A square has four sides. The Nile is the longest river in the world. Jesus is the Son of God. All these statements are true but I think Jesus meant something more when he said, ‘I am the truth’.

If you have to jump out of an aeroplane then you need a parachute and you want to know the parachute is true; that it will work and save you. Likewise, if you have to abandon ship in the middle of the ocean then you need a life boat or at least a life jacket. And you want to know the life boat is true; that it won’t sink and the life jacket will support you.

Or if you are sick and the doctor makes a diagnosis and prescribes some medicine, you want to know the qualifications hanging on the wall are true and that the doctor knows what he or she is doing.   

When Jesus said, ‘I am the truth’, he meant, ‘I am the real deal.’ Jesus is completely trustworthy and reliable. He is who he says he is and he will accomplish what he promises to do. He will return for us and bring us home to God our Father.

Remember, in this context, the disciples are upset. They are worried and anxious about the future. They don’t need cold facts or heavy doctrinal statements at this point. They need a warm commitment from Jesus, something they can hold on to. Something that will support them, like a properly functioning parachute or life jacket. They need to know that Jesus, the good doctor, is prescribing the right treatment.   

In thinking of the truth we are reminded of Pontius Pilate. When Jesus said to Pilate at his trial, “Whoever belongs to the truth listens to me”,  Pilate responded, perhaps a bit cynically, ‘And what is truth?’ Little did Pilate know that truth is not just an idea or a body of information. Truth is a living person. Jesus is the truth.    

When we hear the word life, we might think in terms of physical life only. Eating and sleeping. Working and breathing. Making a crust and getting by. But, as we have heard throughout this sermon series, when Jesus talks about life he is thinking in more comprehensive terms.

Life, in a Christian understanding, isn’t just physical. It is mental and emotional and social and spiritual as well. Life has to do with how we relate with our inner self, how we relate to others and how we relate to God. Love God, love your neighbour, love yourself. Following this way of thinking, eternal life isn’t just existing forever. Eternal life means union with God, intimacy with Him, enjoying the Father’s presence always.

Jesus is the soul of creation:

Okay, so having dissected verse 6 into three parts, what happens when we hold the way, the truth and the life together? Well, we get soul.

The word soul can mean different things in different contexts. Sometimes it refers to an individual person, their whole self, body and soul. Like when you hear people say, there were 232 souls on board.

Other times though people use the word soul to mean the life force of a person. The soul, in this sense, is what animates the body, giving it energy and vitality. In fact, the Latin word for soul is anima, from which we get animate (as in movement).

If you have ever seen a corpse it is quite clear that the soul has departed. While a dead body is physically recognizable, there is no one home so to speak. A dead body is inanimate; without a soul in other words.  

This implies that it is the soul that enables connection and relationship. It is the soul which connects the body and the spirit.  

Then there is the sense in which soul refers to a person’s true essence. Who they are at their core. Their inner self. We might say for example that someone is a kind soul or they have a gentle soul. Or, she sang with real soul. Meaning she sang from a place deep within herself that was real and authentic. She wasn’t faking it or putting on an act.  

When we hold the way, the truth and the life together, we see that Jesus is the soul of humanity. But not just humanity. Jesus is the soul of all of God’s creation.

Jesus is the life force – he animates our lives with energy and vitality. As John says at the beginning of his gospel: Through him God made all things; not one thing in all creation was made without him. The Word was the source of life and this life brought light to humankind.     

Jesus is the truth – he is the real deal, 100% reliable. Jesus embodies the true essence of what it means to be human. We discover who we are at our core (we discover our true essence) through Jesus. Jesus is light to our soul.    

And Jesus is the way – more than just showing us the way, Jesus is the soul of creation, holding together the physical with the spiritual. He connects us to God in other words. Jesus makes right relationship possible.

Conclusion:

The life force (or soul) of Jesus is more powerful than death. Jesus is resurrected from the dead. So even if we feel like our energy and vitality is waning as we get older, we know Jesus has the ability to restore our soul once we have passed through the gate of death.   

Let us pray…

Lord Jesus Christ, we pray for those who have lost their way. Restore them to yourself.

Lord Jesus Christ, we pray for those who are seeking the truth. Reveal yourself to them.

Lord Jesus Christ, we pray for those who are tired of this life. Renew their connection with yourself.

Lord Jesus Christ, we pray for our own soul. Help us to remain in you.

Amen.

Questions for discussion or reflection

What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • Why does Jesus tell his disciples he is going to prepare a place for them? Can you imagine Jesus saying the same thing to you? How would you like to respond to Jesus?
  • What did Jesus mean when he said, ‘I am the way’?
  • What did Jesus mean when he said, ‘I am the truth’?
  • What did Jesus mean when he said, ‘I am the life’?
  • Discuss/reflect on the meaning and function of the soul.
  • What does your soul need at this time? How might you take care of your soul this week?      

Vine

Scripture: John 15:1-10

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • The vine
  • The gardener
  • The branches
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

One of the first things a new born foal does is stand. A baby horse normally attempts to get to its feet within the first 10 minutes of its life and manages to successfully stand after about 30 minutes or so.

Only after it has got to its feet does it begin to suckle off its mother. Then it will start to walk or run for the first time within 90 minutes of its birth. By comparison most human babies start walking independently around 12 months of age, on average.

Why the difference? Well, one reason could be that horses need to be able to run to survive. A horse can’t afford to wait a whole year before walking.

But humans are different. Human beings don’t rely so much on their ability to run. Human beings survive by forming attachments or relationships with other people. And so one of the first things a human baby does is cry, partly to get some oxygen into its lungs but also to get its mother’s attention and form an attachment.

Previously the experts thought that successful attachment was created by food, but John Bowlby discovered there was more to it than that. Babies need caregivers who are responsive to them, who smile at them and talk to them and spend time interacting with them in a warm and positive way. 

The central idea of attachment theory is that primary caregivers who are available and responsive to a baby’s needs allow the child to develop a sense of security. When the baby knows that the parent is dependable, this creates a secure base for the child to explore the world.

Today we continue our sermon series on the I am sayings of Jesus in the gospel of John. Jesus uses a number of I am statements to describe himself. These sayings tell us about Jesus’ being, his identity.

Please turn with me to John chapter 15. Last week we heard how Jesus is the gate for the sheep. This morning we hear how Jesus says to his disciples: I am the vine and you are the branches. The main idea here is that attachment to Jesus is essential to our spiritual survival. From John 15, verses 1-10 we read…

“I am the real vine, and my Father is the gardener. He breaks off every branch in me that does not bear fruit, and he prunes every branch that does bear fruit, so that it will be clean and bear more fruit. You have been made clean already by the teaching I have given you. Remain united to me, and I will remain united to you. A branch cannot bear fruit by itself; it can do so only if it remains in the vine. In the same way you cannot bear fruit unless you remain in me.

“I am the vine, and you are the branches. Those who remain in me, and I in them, will bear much fruit; for you can do nothing without me. Those who do not remain in me are thrown out like a branch and dry up; such branches are gathered up and thrown into the fire, where they are burned. If you remain in me and my words remain in you, then you will ask for anything you wish, and you shall have it. My Father’s glory is shown by your bearing much fruit; and in this way you become my disciples. I love you just as the Father loves me; remain in my love. 10 If you obey my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have obeyed my Father’s commands and remain in his love.

May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.

There are three main characters in Jesus’ allegory here, each in mutual relationship with the others. The vine (which represents Jesus), the gardener (which represents God the Father) and the branches (which represent those who follow Jesus). First let us consider Jesus, the vine.

The Vine:

The maple leaf is one of the national symbols of Canada.

The thistle is the national flower of Scotland.

The Protea is the national flower of South Africa.

While the silver fern is New Zealand’s symbol.

What plant do you think was used as the symbol of ancient Israel? Anyone want to take a guess? [Wait]

You are on to it. The vine, or the vineyard, in the Hebrew Scriptures, was a symbol for the nation of Israel.

In Isaiah 5:1-7 the prophet sings the song of the vineyard…

My friend had a vineyard on a very fertile hill. He dug the soil and cleared it of stones; he planted the finest vines. He built a tower to guard them, dug a pit for treading the grapes. He waited for the grapes to ripen, but every grape was sour…  Israel is the vineyard of the Lord Almighty; the people of Judah are the vines he planted. He expected them to do what was good, but instead they committed murder. He expected them to do what was right, but their victims cried out for justice.

There are other references in the psalms and the prophets describing Israel as the Lord’s vineyard and most of them end in a note of judgement. The message seems to be that ancient Israel had failed to produce the fruit of righteousness that God intended.

It is against this background that Jesus says of himself, “I am the real vine.” That’s like saying, “I am the real Israel.” Or, “I am the true Israel. I am the root stock of the nation who produces the fruit that God desires.”

That is an incredible claim to make. Jesus’ claim to be the true vine holds together judgment and hope. On the one hand, Jesus is criticising the nation of Israel, basically saying they have failed to produce the fruit God wanted.

But at the same time Jesus also castes a positive vision for the future. Judgment does not get the last word. Jesus is saying, I am what God called Israel to be. Where Israel failed, I will succeed. And so there is hope. In and through Christ, God gets the vineyard and the fruit he wants.      

Okay, so Jesus is the vine and God the Father is the gardener.

The Gardener:

From verse 2 Jesus explains how God, the gardener, breaks off every branch in me that does not bear fruit, and he prunes every branch that does bear fruit, so that it will be clean and bear more fruit.         

To better understand what God does let me take you through the annual cycle of tending to a grapevine.   

During winter, the vine dresser prunes (or cuts back) the previous year’s canes and chooses the best branches to grow new shoots. The gardener trains selected branches to grow along the wire. [1]

Then, during September or October, comes the bud break. This is when the first signs of life occur. The buds are extremely delicate during this time. You pray there are no hail storms.

The buds continue to grow and then flower. The gardener may choose to prune the downward facing shoots to reduce the crop size. Pruning in this way reduces the quantity of the crop with a view to improving the quality. With fewer grapes on the vine you get a concentration of flavour.

Then in November or December comes the fruit set. This is when bunches of green grapes appear and grow. You wouldn’t want to eat the fruit at this stage; it would be too sour.

Towards the end of summer, the green berries change colour and ripen. This process is called veraison. Depending on how many grapes are on the vine, some winegrowers will thin the crop so that more nutrients and goodness go into the remaining fruit.

Harvest usually happens in autumn, sometime between March and May, once the sugar levels in the grapes rise and they have reached their perfect ripeness. Harvest is a busy time. Once harvested the grapes do not continue to ripen.

When winter comes round again the leaves die off and the pruners trim the vines ready for spring and a new cycle of growth.

Leon Morris makes the observation that fruitfulness is the whole point of the vineyard. Left to itself a vine will produce a good deal of unproductive growth. Pruning is essential for maximum fruitfulness. The fruit of Christian service is never the result of allowing natural energies and inclinations to run riot. [2]

Or to put it another way; less is more. The temptation, particularly when we are young and have energy to burn, is to try and do everything. So rather than strategically focusing our time and resources on one or two things, we may be inclined to dissipate our energies in a flurry of busy-ness and activity.

There is no end of need and worthy causes in this world. There is always a long list of good things we could be doing. But the reality is, we can’t do it all. So the question becomes, what is it that God (the gardener) wants me to give myself to?  

Another way to frame that question is to ask yourself, what is it that I can do that others can’t do? If you have children, then no one else can really be a mum or a dad to your kids in the same way that you can. So giving love and time to your children, while they are still young, needs to be a priority.

I’m pleased that Bono chose to write songs instead of driving trucks. Just like I’m pleased Ashley Bloomfield chose a career in medicine rather than being a rock star. Just as I am pleased each of our deacons chose to serve the church instead of watching TV or playing golf. 

We can’t do everything. Less is more. Less quantity means better quality. What is it (or perhaps, who is it) that God wants you to give yourself to? And what is it that God is wanting to prune?  

Being pruned is not a pleasant experience. It can be painful and bewildering to be cut back. We think we are on the right track, doing well. We seem to be growing and making progress in our discipleship and then wham. We suffer some kind of loss or set back and we don’t understand why.

The temptation at that point is to give up on God. To lose faith. To cease remaining in the vine. But we need to remember that God is the gardener. God is in control not us. And God is very skilled at his job. He knows what he is doing and why.

If you feel like you are being pruned at the moment, hold on to the fact that God has a purpose in what he is doing. It could be that he intends to use this experience to improve the quality of your fruit. The quality of Job’s relationship with God, after he had suffered catastrophic loss and been restored, was far better than it was before his loss.

Now, by drawing a parallel between loss and God’s pruning I don’t mean to imply that every bad thing that happens to us can be put down to God improving the quality of our fruit. Suffering is often a mystery that we won’t understand this side of the harvest. By faith we know that whatever we might suffer, nothing is beyond God’s reach. God can redeem anything.

Jesus is the vine. God the Father is the gardener and we, the followers of Jesus, are the branches.

The Branches:

We began today’s message with the idea of attachment. Being attached to another human being in a nurturing, responsive relationship is essential to our survival. As infants, it is through a healthy attachment with one primary caregiver that we learn trust and find psychological security.

In verse 4 of John 15 Jesus says: Remain united to me, and I will remain united to you. A branch cannot bear fruit by itself; it can do so only if it remains in the vine. In the same way you cannot bear fruit unless you remain in me.

In other words, attachment to Jesus is essential to our spiritual survival.

We need Jesus like the branches of a tree need the roots and trunk. It is the roots and trunk that nourish and feed the branches. We need Jesus like a baby needs its mother or father. It is through Jesus that we learn trust and security.

Today is Pentecost Sunday when we remember afresh the gift of the Holy Spirit. Although Jesus does not explicitly mention the Holy Spirit, in the opening verses of John 15, he was just talking about God’s Spirit in chapter 14 and he will go on to say more about the Spirit in John 16.

We could think of the Holy Spirit as the sap flowing inside us from Jesus the vine. The Holy Spirit is life to the branches from within.   

More than once in today’s reading Jesus talks about the branches bearing fruit when they remain attached to him. So what exactly is the fruit? Well, verse 8 indicates the fruit is that which glorifies God. My Father’s glory is shown by your bearing much fruit;

When the vine produces quality grapes, the one who grew the grapes gets the credit. The gardener (God the Father) gets the glory. As branches grafted into Christ, our job (our main purpose in life) is to bear quality fruit for the glory of God. To glorify God means to reveal or reflect something of God’s goodness to others. To make God larger in the awareness of others, in a good way.

In Galatians 5 the apostle Paul lists some of the things that glorify God. Paul writes: But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, 23 gentleness and self-control. This is not an exhaustive list of the fruit but it gives us the idea.

When a husband and wife love each other and remain faithful through all the ups and downs of life, this is fruit which glorifies God. Their faithfulness points to God’s faithfulness.

Or when someone at work is having a bad day and you respond by not taking it personally but instead showing forbearance, this is fruit that glorifies God.

Or when a child sees someone alone in the playground without any lunch and goes over to share their own lunch and friendship, this is the fruit of kindness.

Or when a landlord does not charge a huge rent, simply because the market dictates it, but instead keeps the rent at a reasonable level, this kind of fruit reflects the mercy and justice of God. 

In verse 7 we see a connection between prayer and fruit where Jesus says: If you remain in me and my words remain in you, then you will ask for anything you wish, and you shall have it. 

This does not mean that we can use Jesus like a Genie in a bottle. Jesus is not promising to give us a never ending supply of wishes, like in the Tim Tam ad. Rather, when we are so closely attached to Jesus that his word is in us, we will be inclined to ask for things that are in line with his will and purpose anyway.

Another thing we notice is the number of times we come across the word remain in today’s passage. (The Good News Translation uses the word remain 11 times in ten verses.) The startling thing is that we bear the fruit of love by simply remaining attached to Jesus.

We are not required to go on some valiant quest to find the fruit like it was hidden treasure. Nor do we have to try and frantically manufacture or create the fruit ourselves. Branches don’t survive by running, like a horse. Branches grow and bear fruit by waiting, by remaining still. All we have to do is abide in Christ.

I say, ‘all we have to do is abide’, as if that is an easy thing. But in the rough and tumble of life, remaining attached to Jesus, over the long haul, is not as easy as it seems. Unlike the branches of a vine, we get a choice. We can walk away at any point. But in doing that we would only harm ourselves.

Okay then, if remaining (or abiding) in Christ is the key to fruitfulness, then what does it mean to remain attached to Jesus? How do we do that?

Well, in verse 9 of John 15, Jesus points us in the right direction when he says:

I love you just as the Father loves me; remain in my love. If you obey my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have obeyed my Father’s commands and remain in his love.

Our attachment to Jesus is defined by love. There is a possible connection here with the Song of Solomon. The Song of Solomon is a love poem from the Hebrew Bible. The poet uses the vineyard as the place where the woman and the man will share their love. From Song of Solomon chapter 7:11-12 we read,

Come my beloved… let us go out early to the vineyards and see whether the vines have budded, whether the grape blossoms have opened… There I will give you my love.

I won’t read anymore because I don’t want you to get too excited. The point is, the vineyard is a place of tender love and intimacy. 

Love is loyal. Remaining attached to Jesus means being loyal to him. Christianity is an exclusive religion in the sense that we worship one God. Jesus is Lord. Jesus is the way the truth and the life. We follow him and no one else.

Love is open. Remaining attached to Jesus means being open to him. Open to listening to what he wants to say to us in the Scriptures. Open to receiving what he wants to give. Open to his truth and grace. Open to the sap of his Spirit. But it is an openness that goes both ways. We need to be honest with Jesus and not hide from him.

There is a certain vulnerability that comes with being open to Christ. Openness requires faith and trust on our part.

Love is voluntary. Remaining attached to Jesus is something we do because we want to, not because we are forced to. Our attachment to Jesus is not based on fear of punishment, nor is it based on some legal obligation. We stay close to Jesus and spend time cultivating our relationship with him because we like him. We enjoy his presence.       

Love needs to be expressed. When love is not expressed it turns into a kind of unbearable pain. When we express love to someone we invest a part of ourselves in that person and we strengthen the attachment.  Remaining attached to Jesus inevitably involves us expressing our love to him.

There are many ways to express love for Jesus but the primary way is through obedience; doing what he asks. Notice how Jesus puts love and obedience together. He does not separate them. Jesus loves us first and we respond by obeying him voluntarily. The love goes both ways.

Love is loyal. Love is open. Love is voluntary and love needs to be expressed. L.O.V.E. Spells love.

Now in giving you this acrostic I don’t mean to imply that this is all there is to remaining in Christ. There is a certain mystery with our attachment to Jesus. We can’t fully define it, much less reduce it to a pithy acrostic. Jesus’ attachment to us is deeper and more profound than we are able to fathom.

Conclusion:

Jesus is the vine. God the Father is the gardener and we are the branches.

One of the things I like about Jesus’ allegory of the vine is that it implies there are seasons in our life; seasons of new growth, seasons of fruitfulness and harvest, as well as seasons of dormancy and loss, when it seems that not much is happening.

This means we don’t have to feel guilty if we are not being fruitful all the time. Producing fruit is a process. We are not responsible for the outcome. We just need to remain attached to Jesus. God will take care of the fruit.

Whatever season you happen to be in at the moment, may God the Gardener keep you close to Jesus.

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • Why is attachment so important for human beings? What is needed for successful attachment?
  • How would Jesus’ original Jewish audience have understood his statement: I am the real vine?  In what sense was this a criticism of ancient Israel? In what sense is Jesus’ statement pregnant with hope?
  • Why does God prune the branches? Have you ever felt like God has pruned you? How did God do this? How did you feel / respond? What was the outcome? What (or who) is it that God wants you to give yourself to at this time?
  • What does it mean to glorify God? Can you think of real examples of the sort of fruit Jesus had in mind?
  • How do we remain attached to Jesus, the true vine?
  • What season are you in at the moment? What might you expect in this season?    

[1] https://winefolly.com/deep-dive/lifecycle-of-a-wine-grapevine

[2] Leon Morris, NICNT John, page 594.  

The Gate

Scripture: John 10:7-10

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • Security
  • Freedom
  • Nourishment
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

Today we continue our sermon series on the I am sayings of Jesus in the gospel of John. Jesus uses a number of I am statements to describe himself. These sayings tell us about Jesus’ being, his identity.

Last week someone asked me if I was familiar with Colin McCahon’s I am paintings. Colin McCahon is one of New Zealand’s best artists. In 1970 McCahon painted an enormous piece called Gate III. For some time, it hung on the wall at Victoria University. It is 11 metres wide and 3 metres high.

Gate III is a landscape with the words I AM painted in the middle. Either side are a selection of Bible verses. One of those verses, a quote from Psalm 90:12, reads: Teach us to order our days rightly, that we may enter the gate of wisdom.

Some people say Gate III is a kind of protest or statement against the nuclear situation post world war two. Gate III could be showing a way through either to a pure land or a wasteland. Either abundant life or interminable death.

Please turn with me to John chapter 10, verse 7, page 132 toward the back of your pew Bibles. Last week we heard how Jesus is the good shepherd. This morning we hear how Jesus says: I am the gate for the sheep. From John 10, verses 7-10 we read…

So Jesus said again, “I am telling you the truth: I am the gate for the sheep. All others who came before me are thieves and robbers, but the sheep did not listen to them. I am the gate. Those who come in by me will be saved; they will come in and go out and find pasture. 10 The thief comes only in order to steal, kill, and destroy. I have come in order that you might have life—life in all its fullness.

May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.

In this reading Jesus holds before his readers the option of life or death. Jesus is basically saying he is the gate for entry into life. Not mere existence but rather life in all its fullness. Abundant life. Three aspects of abundant life are highlighted in these verses: security, freedom and nourishment. First, let us consider the security that is ours through Christ.

Security:

It seems every generation faces some kind of threat. Colin McCahon was acutely aware of the nuclear threat. Often the threat is related to war and starvation. But not always.

Many of you would remember the Y2K bug and the way the world nervously waited through 1999 to see if computer technology would crash, when the clock ticked over to the new millennium, sending us all back to the dark ages. It turned out to be nothing in the end.

Currently the threat we are most aware of is the Covid virus, which is something very real. I suppose for people in places like Yemen and Gaza and Sheikh Jarrah the threat is bullets and shrapnel.

Security is the state of being free from danger or threat. Security is one of the pillars of abundant life.

In verse 7 & verse 9, of John 10, Jesus says: I am the gate. In other words, I am your security. (Or, as Frankie Goes to Hollywood would say: I’ll protect you from the hooded claw, keep the vampire from your door…)

Verses 7-10 of John 10 envision a shepherd caring for his sheep in the wilderness. Kenneth Bailey [1] explains that when grass is plentiful, in the middle east, shepherds can easily find pasture for their sheep. Therefore, they don’t need to travel far and can return to the safety of the village at night.

But toward the end of summer and beginning of autumn, when it hasn’t rained for a while and grass is harder to find, shepherds must go further afield to find pasture. This requires them to stay out overnight in the wilderness with their sheep.

Obviously the wilderness at night is a more threatening environment and so the need for security is heightened. Unlike relatively safe New Zealand, the middle east was (and still is) a dangerous place, both in terms of wild animals and thieves (and rockets).           

Typically, the shepherd would build a walled enclosure for the sheep made of rocks with thorns on the top, to deter thieves from climbing over to steal the sheep. The enclosure did not have a door as such, because this is the wilderness and shepherds don’t carry around spare doors in their pockets.

So the shepherd himself would lie across the opening of the sheep fold [2] to prevent the sheep walking out into the night and as a guard to prevent thieves or wild animals coming in. The shepherd themselves would act as the door or gate. Sort of like a bouncer on the door of a night club, except without the loud music and drinking. 

Freedom:

Many of you would be familiar with the folk tale of Rapunzel. The princess who was trapped in a tall tower and who never cut her hair. Eventually she found freedom when she let her hair down so a brave prince could climb up.

Rapunzel was definitely very secure but her life was not at all full or abundant.    Security, by itself, is not enough to ensure abundant life. Too much security actually makes for an impoverished life. Rapunzel had lots of security but no real freedom.

In verse 9 Jesus says: …Whoever comes in by me will be saved; he (or she) will come in and go out…

This verse is talking about the freedom that comes with the security Jesus provides. The shepherd does not keep the sheep locked up in a walled enclosure all the time. The sheep are not prisoners. During the day the sheep are free to come and go from the enclosure as they please. Freedom goes hand in hand with security.

The implication here is that security is provided by one’s closeness to the shepherd, not by the walls of the enclosure.

F.F. Bruce makes the comment: Whenever the people of Christ have… tried to secure unity or safety by building walls around themselves, the results have not been encouraging. The walls have either been so comprehensive as to enclose a number of wolves along with the sheep… or they have been so restrictive as to exclude more sheep than they enclose. [3]   

If you want an example of what F.F. Bruce is talking about here think Gloriavale or Jonestown or the movie The Village or some other religious cult that cuts itself off from the world.

We might think of the walls of the sheepfold as the traditions of a faith community. The walls of our traditions have their place and they do make us feel safe in times of change and uncertainty. But the traditions are there to serve us. We are not there to serve the traditions.

For example, traditionally the communion elements are bread and wine. But we bend the tradition a little to serve the people. Instead of wine we serve grape juice because we don’t want to make life difficult for someone who may have a problem with alcohol. Likewise, we serve gluten free craters alongside the bread because not everybody has the same tolerance for gluten. 

It’s not the tradition that saves us. It’s staying close to Jesus that saves us. The purpose of the tradition is to help us stay close to Jesus. If the tradition no longer does that, then we change the tradition. 

Because Jesus is both the good shepherd and the gate for the sheep, he is at home in the church and in the world. There is a time for the sheep to gather in the fold of the church. Just as there is a time for the sheep to roam the hillsides of the world.

To follow Jesus is to walk in freedom and righteousness. Freedom is both exciting and frightening at the same time because it takes us out of our comfort zone. When we walk with Jesus, we walk by faith and not by sight.

In verse 8 Jesus says: All others who came before me are thieves and robbers. And then in verse 10 Jesus goes on to say: The thief comes only in order to steal, kill and destroy. So who is the thief?

Well, there are many potential candidates. Most likely Jesus is referring to those who falsely claimed to be the Messiah. Often these false Messiahs were insurrectionists and revolutionaries, willing to sacrifice the sheep in a violent uprising against the authorities.

Jesus is the good shepherd. He is not asking people to take up arms and die in a bloody revolution. He wants nothing to do with such violence. God’s kingdom is not of this world.

We are talking about those things that make life truly abundant. Abundant life is not about having lots of stuff. Nor is abundant life about achieving lots of things. Abundance is not the same as busy-ness and clutter. To have abundant life we need security with freedom. But we also need nourishment for our souls.

Nourishment:

It is thought that around 9 million people die of hunger every year. In contrast nearly 3 million people die of obesity. We live in a world of great disparity.

Nourishment can be defined as the food necessary for growth, health and maintaining a good condition. Some foods contain more nourishment than others. Salmon, for example, is one of the most nutrient dense foods. Apparently not all fish are created equal. But if you don’t eat salmon then kale is also high in nutrients, as are foods like garlic, potatoes, seaweed and sardines.

In verse 9 Jesus says: I am the gate. Whoever comes in by me will be saved; he will come in and go out and find pasture.

Pasture is of course nourishment for the sheep.

Earlier I mentioned that grass, in the middle east, becomes more scarce towards the end of summer and into autumn. This means it takes a skilful shepherd to find feed for his flock. Jesus has the wisdom and knowledge to lead his followers to places of spiritually rich nourishment. 

Because of the security and freedom that Jesus provides, his sheep are able to find spiritual nourishment for their souls. Notice though the relationship between nourishment and freedom. We are not free to do whatever we want. No. We are free to find pasture or nourishment for ourselves.   

Our pasture may come in any number of forms. Perhaps through reading and reflecting on the Scriptures. Maybe by spending time in the beauty of God’s creation; climbing mountains or walking beaches. Quality time connecting with other people in an unhurried way may also nourish one’s soul, as can solitude and stillness. 

Interestingly, in John chapter 4, when Jesus’ disciples brought him some food he said to them, I have food to eat that you know nothing about. The disciples misunderstood, taking Jesus literally. But Jesus wasn’t talking about physical food. My food, Jesus said, is to do the will of the one who sent me and to finish the work he gave me to do.

Ultimately, the thing that satisfies our hunger for meaning more than anything else, is doing the will of God. So, when Jesus refers to himself as the gate for the sheep to find pasture, he could mean we discover God’s will for ourselves through him – that is, through Christ.

Conclusion:

For life to be abundant we need at least three things: security, freedom and nourishment. Jesus is the one who provides those things.

Now you may be thinking, that’s all well and good but what difference does that make to me today? How does Jesus being the gate translate in our experience?

Well, a gate or a door is a transition point. A gate leads us from one space to another. Our lives are punctuated with gates. Starting school is a transition point or doorway both for the child and their parents. Adolescence is a significant transition in one’s life from childhood to becoming an adult. The mid-life transition is also significant.

Leaving home is a gateway. Getting married, changing jobs, immigrating to another country, retiring from the work force and, when the time is right, passing from this life to the next; these are all doorways where we transition from one place to another.

Each of us must pass through a kind of internal, psychological gate. If we are to develop and mature we must take off our masks, walk through the door of consciousness and face the truth about ourselves.

Transitions or gates, whether they are internal or external, are not always easy to negotiate. Often when we pass through one of life’s metaphorical doorways we feel anxious. What will we find on the other side?

When we follow Jesus, we don’t walk alone. Jesus is the gate or the door for the sheep. We are the sheep. That means Jesus is present with us when we face the many transitions we must make in this life. Most importantly, Jesus is with us when we make our final transition through the doorway of death to eternal life. In fact, Jesus is the doorway to God the Father.

May security, freedom and nourishment be yours in abundance.    

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • How is abundant life different from mere existence?
  • What does Jesus mean when he says: I am the gate for the sheep?
  • How does Jesus provide security for you? Can you think of a time or situation when Jesus shielded you from some kind of threat or fear?
  • Why is freedom a necessary companion to security? When are the walls of tradition helpful? When might we need to step outside the walls of tradition? (Think of an example from your own experience.)   
  • Where do you find nourishment for your soul?
  • Are you facing a transition (or doorway) in your life at the moment? Take some time this week to tell God how you are feeling and to ask his guidance. What is God saying to you?

[1] Kenneth Bailey, ‘The Good Shepherd’, pages 220-224

[2] William Barclay, John, page 58.

[3] F.F. Bruce, quoted in Bruce Milne’s BST commentary on John, page 147. 

Good Shepherd

Scripture: John 10:11-18

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • Jesus knows – intimacy
  • Jesus brings – outreach
  • Jesus volunteers – love
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

Theodore Roosevelt once said: “People ask the difference between a leader and a boss. The leader leads and the boss drives.”

Roosevelt was drawing attention to the fact that people willingly follow a good leader because they see value and meaning in where that person is taking them. By implication the leader is out front, showing the way by their example.

In contrast, the boss is behind, driving people, forcing them on a path they don’t necessarily agree with or understand.  

Today we continue our sermon series on the I am sayings of Jesus in the gospel of John. Jesus uses a number of I am statements to describe himself. These sayings tell us about Jesus’ being, his identity. What we notice is how closely Jesus identifies himself with God the Father.

Please turn with me to John chapter 10, verse 11, page 132 toward the back of your pew Bibles. This morning we hear how Jesus says: I am the good shepherd. A shepherd (in Biblical thought) is a leader. Jesus is referring to himself as a good leader, not a boss. We follow Jesus, we are not driven by him. From John 10:11-18, Jesus says… 

11 “I am the good shepherd, who is willing to die for the sheep. 12 When the hired man, who is not a shepherd and does not own the sheep, sees a wolf coming, he leaves the sheep and runs away; so the wolf snatches the sheep and scatters them. 13 The hired man runs away because he is only a hired man and does not care about the sheep. 14-15 I am the good shepherd. As the Father knows me and I know the Father, in the same way I know my sheep and they know me. And I am willing to die for them. 16 There are other sheep which belong to me that are not in this sheep pen. I must bring them, too; they will listen to my voice, and they will become one flock with one shepherd.

17 “The Father loves me because I am willing to give up my life, in order that I may receive it back again. 18 No one takes my life away from me. I give it up of my own free will. I have the right to give it up, and I have the right to take it back. This is what my Father has commanded me to do.”

May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.

Our message today focuses on three main things: Jesus, the good shepherd (or good leader) knows, brings and volunteers. First let’s consider Jesus’ knowing.   

Jesus knows (intimacy)

If you watch the TV program, Country Calendar, you would have seen (many times) the image of a farmer on a motor bike, or horseback, driving a large flock of sheep from behind. This is not typically the way shepherds move their sheep in the Middle East. In the first century shepherds led their sheep. They walked in front and the sheep followed because they knew the shepherd.

Gary Burge tells a true story which demonstrates the mutual knowing between Arab shepherds and their sheep. [1]   

During the Palestinian uprising in the late 1980’s the Israeli army decided to take action against a village near Bethlehem for not paying its taxes. The officer in command rounded up all of the village animals and placed them in a large barbed wire pen. Later in the week he was approached by a woman who asked him to release her flock. Her husband was dead and the animals were her only source of income.

The officer pointed to the pen containing hundreds of animals and said, with a chuckle, that it was impossible for him to find her sheep among so many. She asked that if she could separate the sheep herself, would he let her take them. The army officer agreed.

When the soldier opened the gate the woman’s son pulled out a reed flute and repeatedly played a simple tune. Within moments sheep heads began popping up across the pen. The young boy continued playing his tune all the way home with his flock of 25 sheep following him.

The shepherd knows his sheep and the sheep know the call of their leader.

In verses 14-15 Jesus says: I am the good shepherd. As the Father knows me and I know the Father, in the same way I know my sheep and they know me.

When we hear the word ‘know’, we tend to think head knowledge. Facts and figures. Objective, rational information. Nothing below the neck.

But to know someone in a Biblical sense means far more than mere head knowledge. Biblical knowing refers to deep, profound and intimate relationships between people.    

I guess it is the difference between knowing someone at a virtual Facebook level, without ever having met them, and knowing someone in real life who you’ve lived or worked with for many years. Biblical knowing goes way beyond Facebook knowledge. Biblical knowing involves personal experience. 

R. didn’t get to know me by reading my biography. When she agreed to marry me it wasn’t a case of picking me out of a catalogue. R. got to know me by spending time with me and with my family. She saw how I behaved in different situations and experienced how much she missed me when I wasn’t around. (I can say this because she is in Sunday school and can’t hear me.)

In verses 14-15 of John 10 Jesus is holding up his intimate knowing of God the Father as a model for the kind of intimate knowing his sheep (or his followers) are able to have with him. Jesus, the good shepherd, knows his sheep and through the experience of faith we know him.

Twice in these verses Jesus says: I am the good shepherd who is willing to die for the sheep.

That’s how much Jesus cares about the sheep. He is willing to sacrifice himself that we would live.

The word translated as ‘good’ comes from the Greek kalos. Kalos combines a number of ideas of goodness. It means morally good but not in a ‘holier than thou’ or legalistic sort of way. The moral goodness of Jesus has overtones of beauty and winsomeness. Kalos goodness leans towards being noble in the sense of having fine personal qualities.

So Jesus is an attractive leader. He is a noble leader, one we admire and respect. Jesus wins people over so they want to follow him. Jesus does not boss or drive people with guilt. He woos and draws people with grace.  

The mother in the story of the 1980 uprising was like a good shepherd. There was a certain attractiveness in the way she bravely but respectfully approached the army officer. The soldiers would have been armed but the woman and her son were willing to risk their lives to redeem their sheep.

There was of course some self interest in their risk. The sheep were their livelihood. Without the sheep they would be destitute. But there is no self-interest with Jesus’ willingness to die. The sheep in Jesus’ parable are actually people and Jesus is not dependent on them for his livelihood.

In contrast to the good shepherd, Jesus describes the hired hand who does not know or care about the sheep all that much. When the hired hand sees a wolf coming he runs away and leaves the wolf to snatch and scatter the flock.

In a general sense the hired hand represents those who are motivated by selfish gain. Some of the temple priests of the first century were corrupt and in it for the money. They didn’t like it when Jesus over turned the tables of the money changers in the temple because that was bad for business. But not all the priests were like that. I expect many were decent men who sought to honour God as best they could. 

Unlike the hired hand who is a flawed human being, the wolf is not human. The wolf is a powerful force of nature, a beast that cannot be reasoned with. The wolf represents death.

Now some of you may be thinking, how does it help the sheep if the shepherd is killed. Surely that is worse for the sheep. Well, ordinarily, that is true but Jesus is no ordinary shepherd. As we know Jesus has the authority to rise from the dead. Through the cross and the resurrection Jesus has conquered death.

Jesus, the good shepherd (the ideal leader) knows his sheep and Jesus brings his sheep into the fold.   

Jesus brings (outreach)

Some of you may have heard of the wives of Weinsberg. The legend goes that the Duke of Weinsberg possessed an immense fortune in gold, silver and fine jewels, which he kept in his castle.

The Duke had a falling out with King Konrad (the sovereign of the realm) and so the king gathered his army and laid siege to Weinsberg, demanding the Duke’s fortress, the massive fortune and the lives of the men within.

Although the King had allowed for the safe release of all women and children, the wives of Weinsberg refused to leave without having one of their own conditions met. They requested to be allowed to leave at sunrise the next day bringing with them whatever they could carry on their backs.

Thinking the women couldn’t possibly make a dent in the massive fortune, the king decided to grant their request. After all, he would be hailed as a generous and merciful king and most of the Duke’s fortune would still be left for him.  

But the king got more than he bargained for. The next morning at sunrise, as the women walked out, the entire army was stunned to silence as they saw each wife carrying her husband on her back. The wives and husbands of Weinsberg shared a love that was more powerful than death.  

Deeply moved by their love, King Konrad kept his word and no lives were lost that day.

The wives in this story are like Jesus who brings us out of the castle of death and into the freedom of new life. And we are like the husbands, in need of Jesus’ rescue.

In verse 16 of John 10, Jesus says: There are other sheep which belong to me that are not in this sheep pen. I must bring them, too; they will listen to my voice, and they will become one flock with one shepherd.

In the context of John 10, Jesus is speaking to the Jews. The other sheep he mentions here refer to the Gentiles or non-Jews (people like us). The one flock is the Christian church which includes people of all nations. And the one shepherd is Jesus himself. Jesus is looking forward to that time when his followers would comprise people of many different cultures and ethnicities. 

Jesus isn’t just the good shepherd (or ideal leader) of Israel. Jesus is the ideal leader of the church universal – all Christians, of every race, throughout history. 

What we notice here is that Jesus says, “I must bring them too…”.

To bring means: to go with someone or something. If I ask you to bring me an apple, you have to get up, go outside to the tree (or supermarket), pick the apple and walk back with the apple to where I am. Bringing takes time and effort.

Bringing an apple with you is relatively easy because the apple does not have a mind of its own. Bringing people with you is quite different. To bring someone with you involves reaching out and establishing trust. Forcing someone at gun point is not the same as bringing them. There is no coercion or threat of violence with bringing people.

When thinking of the way Jesus brings people with him we remember the wives of Weinsberg who brought their husbands out of death and into life.

At the same time, we are conscious that the women could not force their husbands to come with them. The husbands needed to swallow their pride and trust themselves to their wives. They needed to cooperate. It takes humility, on our part, to receive Jesus’ help and let him bring us with him. 

In relation to bringing these other sheep Jesus says, ‘they will listen to my voice.’ This tells us that bringing involves communication. The ability to communicate effectively is one of the essential qualities of a good leader.

Jesus communicates with people in a whole variety of ways. Preaching of the gospel has been one of Jesus’ main ways of bringing people to himself through the past 2,000 years, but it is not the only way. Jesus also speaks to people through dreams and visions. Even today we hear reports of people, who have never heard the gospel, having dreams in which Jesus appears to them and talks with them.     

It is not enough though to sit through a sermon in church or to receive a dream in the night. The thing that opens our ears to really hear the word of God and to really be moved by a vision of Jesus, is our need. More than anything else it is realising our own poverty, our deep hunger, that brings us to God.

The husbands of Weinsberg allowed their wives to bring them out because they were conscious of their need for salvation and their powerlessness to save themselves.

Whenever I pray for someone’s salvation I feel the weight of that prayer. Because I know that God’s answer will most likely involve some pain and humiliation for the one I am praying for, as they realise their need for God.

How did Jesus bring you to himself? What need opened your ears to hear Jesus’ voice and follow him?

Jesus is the good shepherd. Jesus knows, Jesus brings and Jesus volunteers.

Jesus volunteers (love)

There is a moving scene at the beginning of the first Hunger Games movie where Primrose Everdeen is selected to participate in The Hunger Games. Prim is just a young girl with a compassionate nature and will certainly be killed.

Prim’s older sister, Katniss, realises this and volunteers as tribute in Prim’s place. Katniss knows there is a pretty good chance that she will be killed in The Hunger Games but her love for her sister is so great she is ready to die for Prim. Katniss and Prim share a love that is more powerful than death.      

The Hunger Games is fictional of course, while Jesus’ death is a historical fact. But Katniss’ example serves to illustrate the point that Jesus volunteered to die as tribute in our place.

Some of you may have heard of the Catholic priest Maximilian Kolbe. Father Kolbe was arrested in 1941 and sent to Auschwitz. He had been providing shelter for refugees, including many Jews.

At the end of July 1941 a prisoner escaped from the camp, so the deputy commander ordered 10 men to be starved to death in an underground bunker as a deterrent to anyone else planning an escape. When one of the men cried out, ‘My wife, my children’, Father Kolbe volunteered to take his place.

Each day in the bunker Max Kolbe led the other nine condemned men in prayer. After two weeks Father Kolbe was the only man left alive. The soldiers wanted to clear the bunker so they gave Kolbe a lethal injection of carbolic acid. Max Kolbe did not resist but calmly offered his arm.

That’s a true story of a man who followed Jesus’ example by volunteering his life to save another. And, in case you are wondering, the man Father Kolbe saved survived the war and was present when they canonised Father Max.

Max Kolbe shared a love with Jesus and with his fellow prisoners that was more powerful than death.    

From verse 17 of John 10, Jesus says: “The Father loves me because I am willing to give up my life, in order that I may receive it back again. 18 No one takes my life away from me. I give it up of my own free will. I have the right to give it up, and I have the right to take it back. This is what my Father has commanded me to do.”

In these verses Jesus is saying he volunteers for the cross. He lays down his life freely and willingly because this is what God has asked him to do. 

Like Katniss and Max Kolbe, Jesus is willing to give up his life to save others. But Jesus’ volunteerism is not exactly the same as Katniss’ and Father Kolbe’s. Jesus volunteers from a position of power.

Katniss and Father Kolbe’s hands were forced in a way. They had little control in the situation. They had the power to volunteer in someone else’s place but, unlike Jesus, they didn’t have the power to overthrow their enemies.

Jesus did have the power to overthrow his enemies. When the guards came to arrest Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane and one of the disciples drew his sword, Jesus told him to put the sword away saying: Do you not think I could call on my Father and he would at once put more than twelve legions of angels at my disposal.      

That’s remarkable. Jesus had the power to destroy his enemies and avoid the cross but he chose instead to submit to God’s will in going to the cross, such was his love for God the Father.

You know the word Muslim is an Arabic term which means ‘one who has surrendered’. [2] More than any other human being Jesus surrendered to the will of God. But it wasn’t a forced surrender. Jesus surrendered willingly and freely to God’s will for him because of the love they shared.

When Jesus says, in verse 17, “The Father loves me because I am willing to give up my life…” he does not mean that he wins God’s love by going to the cross. Far from it. Later, in John 17, Jesus says that the Father loved the Son from the creation of the world. God the Father has always loved Jesus the Son.

The point is, Jesus’ voluntary death is a hallmark of his union with the Father’s will and an expression of the love they share together. [3]  The love, the bond, the relationship between God the Father and Jesus the Son is more powerful than death.

In verse 18 Jesus says, I have the right (or the authority) to give up my life and I have the right (or the authority) to take it back.

It wasn’t just God’s will for Jesus to die a sacrificial death on the cross. It was also God’s will for Jesus to live again, to experience resurrection life. Therefore, Jesus dies knowing he will receive his life back.

What we notice here is that Jesus’ authority comes from being one with God’s will. Being in God’s will gives us a certain authority also. I think Max Kolbe was able to volunteer like he did because he felt the power of being in harmony with Christ.  

Now, in some ways, I am reluctant to hold up the example of Max Kolbe. It may not always be the right thing to volunteer to die for someone else. If you are a parent of young children, then they can’t really afford for you to be a hero. You have responsibilities to your family.

More often Jesus does not call us to die for him. More often Jesus calls us to live for God. We are to be living sacrifices, giving ourselves to God’s will and purpose in a hundred different ways (large & small) every day. This is what it means to follow Christ. Volunteering as a living sacrifice, over a long period of time, is usually the more difficult thing.       

Conclusion:

Jesus is the good shepherd, the ideal leader of the church. And what a wonderful leader he is.

Jesus knows us intimately and desires that we share in his intimacy with God the Father.

Jesus reaches out, at great cost to himself, to bring us with him into the fold of God’s people.

And Jesus freely volunteers for God’s will, even unto death, such is the quality of the love he shares with the Father.

May grace and peace be yours in abundance.  

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • What does Jesus mean when he says: I am the good shepherd?
  • How is knowing (in a Biblical sense) different from head knowledge? How do we get to know Jesus and God?
  • How did Jesus bring you to himself? What need opened your ears to hear Jesus’ voice and follow him?
  • Why did Jesus volunteer for the cross?
  • Where did Jesus’ authority come from? Where does our authority come from?
  • In what ways has God asked you to volunteer?

[1] Refer Gary Burge, NIVAC on John, page 302. 

[2] Refer Kenneth Bailey, ‘The Good Shepherd’, page 243.

[3] Refer Gary Burge, ‘NIVAC John’, page 292.

Bread

Scripture: John 6:25-35 & 47-56

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • Material v. spiritual
  • Literal v. metaphorical
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

If you were to ask what bread is, most people would say that it is a staple food, made of flour and water and usually leavened with yeast. That is a literal definition of bread.

In Ireland they have a very specific legal definition for bread, which has to do with their Valued Added Tax (VAT) system (similar to New Zealand’s GST).

Ireland’s Value Added Tax Act of 1972 says, for bread to be tax exempt it cannot have more than 2% sugar in the flour. Other baked goods, like cinnamon scrolls and cream buns and the like, are subject to VAT.

The sandwich making franchise Subway found this out the hard way. They didn’t think they should have to pay VAT on the bread they baked but the court ruled against them. Apparently the flour in Subway’s bread contains 10% sugar (5 times the amount allowed for tax exempt bread). In other words, the court deemed Subway’s bread to be legally closer to cake than bread, which might be why their sandwiches taste so good.

As well as the literal and legal definitions of bread, we also know that the words bread and dough can be used as metaphors for money. We make a crust (we make our income) by working.

Bread is one of those words which is a bit elastic in its meaning, depending on the context in which it is used.

Today we continue our series on the I am sayings of Jesus in the gospel of John. Jesus uses a number of I am statements to describe himself. These sayings tell us about Jesus’ being, his identity. What we notice is how closely Jesus identifies himself with God the Father.

Please turn with me to John chapter 6, verse 25, page 126 toward the back of your pew Bibles. This morning we hear what Jesus means by bread when he says: I am the bread of life. From John 6:25-35, we read… 

25 When the people found Jesus on the other side of the lake, they said to him, “Teacher, when did you get here?”

26 Jesus answered, “I am telling you the truth: you are looking for me because you ate the bread and had all you wanted, not because you understood my miracles. 27 Do not work for food that spoils; instead, work for the food that lasts for eternal life. This is the food which the Son of Man will give you, because God, the Father, has put his mark of approval on him.”

28 So they asked him, “What can we do in order to do what God wants us to do?”

29 Jesus answered, “What God wants you to do is to believe in the one he sent.”

30 They replied, “What miracle will you perform so that we may see it and believe you? What will you do? 31 Our ancestors ate manna in the desert, just as the scripture says, ‘He gave them bread from heaven to eat.’”

32 “I am telling you the truth,” Jesus said. “What Moses gave you was not the bread from heaven; it is my Father who gives you the real bread from heaven. 33 For the bread that God gives is he who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.”

34 “Sir,” they asked him, “give us this bread always.”

35 “I am the bread of life,” Jesus told them. “Those who come to me will never be hungry; those who believe in me will never be thirsty.

May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.

In a nutshell, John chapter 6 is saying that faith in Jesus satisfies our deepest hunger for God. Or said another way, Jesus is the bread that sustains eternal life.

John 6 also acts as a kind of sieve, separating those who major on material things from those who see life in spiritual terms.

Material v. spiritual

Recently I had to replace the tap handles for our kitchen sink. Without handles we aren’t able to get access to the water.

The relationship between that which is material and that which is spiritual is a bit like the relationship between tap handles and the water that comes out of the taps. (And just to be clear, the handles in this analogy represent that which is material and the water represents that which is spiritual.)

We need the handles to turn the taps and release the water but the handles are not the most important part. The most important part, the thing that gives the handles their meaning and fulfils their purpose, is the water itself. It doesn’t matter how fancy your handles are, if they don’t work you are going to be thirsty.  

Now most of us understand what is meant by material things because we deal with material stuff all the time. Material things are physical. You can see, feel, taste or hear material things. Like cars and houses and ice-cream.

Material things are not bad in themselves. We need material things in this life. But if we make material things more important than spiritual things we run into problems. 

Spiritual things are a little harder to think about because that which is spiritual is not usually seen with the naked eye. Spiritual things require the intuition of faith to be sensed.

In practical terms, spirituality has to do with relationships. Our relationship with God, our relationship with the different aspects of our inner self and our relationships with other people.

You can’t physically see a person’s relationship with God but you can get a pretty good idea about the character of their relationship with God (or their spirituality) by the way they handle themselves and treat others.          

Prayer is spiritual because it is about communicating with God. Reading the Bible is spiritual because Holy Scripture shows us how to relate with God. Forgiveness is spiritual because it is part of the process of restoring right relationship. Practicing hospitality is spiritual because eating together helps to create and sustain friendship.   

Earlier in the service we heard a reading from the beginning of John chapter 6, retelling how Jesus multiplied five loaves of barley bread and two fish to miraculously feed a crowd of well over 5,000 people. In doing this Jesus was holding the material and the spiritual together.

The miracles of Jesus are a bit like tap handles. They are not the most important thing but they are material; they are helpful for accessing the water of Jesus’ teaching. The miracles are not the water itself but they do give people a handle on Jesus’ meaning.  Unfortunately, most people seemed more fascinated with the handle (or miracle) than with the water of Jesus himself. 

When Jesus miraculously fed the multitudes in the wilderness, the people could not help but make a connection with Moses and the feeding of the people of Israel in the wilderness of Sinai.

The people find Jesus the next day and are a bit puzzled as to how he got across the lake. We know that Jesus walked on water but Jesus does not draw attention to this fact. Instead he points out they have misunderstood what is most important here. They have focused on the material stuff rather than the spiritual stuff. They have given too much attention to the tap handle of the miracles, and not enough to the spiritual water of Jesus himself.  From verse 26 Jesus says…

“I am telling you the truth: you are looking for me because you ate the bread and had all you wanted, not because you understood my miracles. 27 Do not work for food that spoils; instead, work for the food that lasts for eternal life…”

In a manner of speaking Jesus was basically telling the people they were materialists. A materialist is someone who is blind or insensitive to spiritual things. A materialist is more interested in the physical tap handle (a superficial feature) than they are in the water inside.

If your only tool is a hammer, then every problem looks like a nail. A materialist only has one way of looking at the world. They look at the way Jesus fed the multitudes and think, ‘Wouldn’t it be good if we could get Jesus to do that all the time. We could use that to start a political movement and fix a lot of problems. Right a lot of wrongs.’

Verse 15 of John 6 tells us that is, in fact, what the people wanted to do. They wanted to make Jesus king by force. But Jesus refused to go down that path. The real issues are not physical or political. The real hunger is spiritual. Deep down people need to have a good relationship with God. That is why Jesus came, to satisfy people’s spiritual hunger and thirst for God.

When we attend to spiritual things (and when I say ‘spiritual things’ I mean our relationship with God, our self and others) then we get our priorities right and find that most of the material things work out.

If you know, deep down in your inner most being, that God loves and accepts you, then you are better able to love and accept yourself. And when you can love and accept yourself you find the freedom and energy to love others.

But if you are always feeling guilty, always looking over your shoulder, always fearful of God’s punishment, then you will find you don’t have the same resources to love God, yourself or others and your spirituality (or the quality of your relationships) will suffer.        

Although the people in John 6 are materialists they at least believe in the existence of God and have the perception to realise that Jesus is claiming to be the one sent by God. They just don’t have the faith to trust Jesus. They are not ready to swallow the idea that Jesus is from God, so they ask for a sign (even though Jesus has already given them many signs), suggesting that Jesus replicate the miracle of manna from heaven.

The people’s request for a miracle was based on the Jewish expectation that when the Messiah came he would renew the miracle of the manna. Having tasted the loaves Jesus provided, the multitude challenge Jesus to give them a permanent supply of bread. [1] They figured, since Moses provided a whole nation with manna in the wilderness for 40 years then, if Jesus was the Messiah, he could do the same.

The thoughts of the people are earthbound and materialistic. Jesus tries to get them thinking spiritually or heavenward. From verse 32 Jesus says…

“I am telling you the truth, what Moses gave you was not the bread from heaven; it is my Father who gives you the real bread from heaven. 33 For the bread that God gives is he who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.”

34 “Sir,” they asked him, “give us this bread always.”

35 “I am the bread of life,” Jesus told them. “Those who come to me will never be hungry; those who believe in me will never be thirsty.

Literal v. metaphorical

One thing we notice here is that God gives the bread from heaven. It is not earned by us. We don’t need to work for it, nor do we need to grovel and beg or try to manipulate the situation to get the bread. Jesus (the bread of heaven) is simply given by God.

Some of you may remember the story of The Little Red Hen from when you were children. It’s an American folk tale which is meant to teach the value of hard work and initiative.

In the story a hen on a farm finds some seed and decides to make bread with it. She asks various other animals on the farm if they will help her. ‘Will you help me plant the seed? Will you help me water the seed? Will you help me harvest the wheat? Will you help me grind the wheat into flour? Will you help me knead the dough? Will you help me make the fire to bake the bread?

And at each stage the animals all say ‘No, we won’t help you.’ Then at the end of the story, when the bread is freshly baked, all the animals are eager to help with the eating.  But the little red hen refuses to share her bread because no one helped her to make it.

That’s capitalism in a nutshell. While it is generally good to teach children to use their initiative and to work, so they don’t grow up with a sense of entitlement, the story of The Little Red Hen is not really the gospel of Jesus.

Unlike the little red hen, Jesus is saying the bread of heaven that God offers, is a gift. Even though we have done nothing to help in the process of making the bread we still get to eat it. All we have to do is believe in the one that God sent. In fact, that is our work, to eat the bread. Eating here is a metaphor for faith.

When we are very young (around 4 or 5 years old) we tend to take things literally. Our brains haven’t developed the cognitive ability to think abstractly and so metaphors like ‘the snow is a white blanket’ are lost on a small child. How can snow be a blanket? Snow is cold and blankets are meant to be warm? 

Psychologists reckon that children don’t develop the ability to understand complex metaphors until somewhere between 9-12 years of age.    

It appears many of Jesus’ listeners could not think in metaphorical terms either. They were locked into a literal interpretation of everything. Perhaps literalism and materialism go hand in hand. Which is unfortunate because at least one third of the Bible is poetry. In fact, the prophets mostly spoke in the language of metaphor.  

Later in John 6, from verse 47, Jesus goes on to say…

“I am telling you the truth: he who believes has eternal life. 48 I am the bread of life. 49 Your ancestors ate manna in the desert, but they died. 50 But the bread that comes down from heaven is of such a kind that whoever eats it will not die. 51 I am the living bread that came down from heaven. If you eat this bread, you will live forever.

The ‘bread from heaven’ is a metaphor for Jesus and ‘eating the bread’ is a metaphor for putting your faith in Jesus.

Faith is trust that puts its money where its mouth is. Faith isn’t just looking at the bread on the plate and agreeing that it exists. Faith is putting the bread in your mouth, chewing it over and swallowing it down. In other words, faith isn’t just agreeing that Jesus lived 2000 years ago in Palestine and that he was a good guy. Faith is accepting Jesus, receiving him and his teaching, into the deepest part of yourself. Faith is how we become one with Jesus.

Jesus presses the metaphor even further saying (in verse 51): The bread that I will give you is my flesh, which I give so that the world may live.”

This started an angry argument among them. ‘How can this man give us his flesh to eat?’ But Jesus did not back down. Jesus went on to say…

“I am telling you the truth: if you do not eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you will not have life in yourselves. 54 Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood have eternal life, and I will raise them to life on the last day. 55 For my flesh is the real food; my blood is the real drink. 56 Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood live in me, and I live in them.  

Once again the people misunderstand Jesus. They were thinking in purely materialistic terms and take Jesus literally. But Jesus isn’t speaking literally. 

To eat Jesus’ flesh and drink his blood is a metaphor for believing in Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross for the forgiveness of sins. Remember, eating in this context equates to faith. Eating is a personal act of trust, just as faith is a personal act of trust.

When you eat you take food into your person, into your stomach. You do so in good faith that the food will give life and strength to your body. Likewise, when you swallow the words of Jesus, you take them into your inner most being, trusting that they will give life and strength to your soul.

The point is, faith in Jesus satisfies our deepest hunger for God. Faith in Jesus sustains us for eternal life. As I’ve said on other occasions, eternal life isn’t just about existing for an infinite period of time. Eternal life describes a high quality relationship with God.

Keto has become fashionable lately. Keto is a kind of diet where you avoid eating carbohydrates. It is a diet high in fat and low in carbs. So you can’t eat bread. You can have a steak but not a donut. I’m not interested in promoting or condemning keto. I simply mention it by way of metaphor.

To the Jews of Jesus’ day, the idea of eating human flesh and drinking blood was deeply offensive. It was anathema. You just don’t do that. It was like suggesting to someone on a keto diet that they should eat a potato chip sandwich, except far worse. Because a keto diet is a physical thing; it is not done for religious reasons.

Jesus was Jewish and he knew full well how offensive his eating flesh and drinking blood metaphor was. It was like Jesus was sabotaging his own popularity. In fact, many people lost interest in him after that. So why did Jesus use such an offensive metaphor? 

Perhaps Jesus was using this metaphor as a sieve to filter out those who were following him for the wrong reasons. Just a day before the crowd had wanted to make Jesus king by force, to be their political and military leader, so they could get their own way. But that is not spiritual. That is materialistic.

If the reason for our relationship with Jesus is to make him do what we want, then we have got it all wrong. Our reason for following Jesus needs to be doing what God wants. He is the potter. We are the clay. We are his creation, his servants.   

We (in the 21st century) may not be too concerned by Jesus’ metaphor of eating his flesh and drinking his blood. But there are probably other things Jesus said that do offend us. If (or when) we are offended by Christ we need to ask ourselves why that is. Because, at the end of the day, it won’t be him that is wrong. 

Conclusion:

Some people see, in John 6, a reference to holy communion. The people in the synagogue in Capernaum could not have seen a connection with the Christian ritual of communion because the last supper had not happened yet. Jesus had not instituted the Eucharist at that point.

Nevertheless, with the benefit of hindsight, we can see a connection. When we share communion we eat bread which is a symbol (or metaphor) of Christ’s body and we drink grape juice which is symbol (or metaphor) of Christ’s blood.

We don’t believe that the bread and grape juice literally become the flesh and blood of Christ. No. Rather the physical act of eating the bread and drinking the grape juice reminds us that it is through faith in Jesus our sins are forgiven and we have eternal communion with God the Father.

This is not to imply that the death and resurrection of Jesus were just a metaphor. That literally happened. Jesus’ death & resurrection hold the material and the spiritual together in perfect unity.

It is through faith in Jesus’ material death & resurrection that our deepest spiritual needs are met.

May grace and peace be yours in abundance.

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • Why did Jesus miraculously feed the multitudes in John 6? What did Jesus mean by ‘bread’ in John 6:35?
  • What is spirituality? How would you rate the quality of your relationship with God, with your inner self and with those around you?
  • Where (or how) do you find nourishment for your spiritual life?
  • Discuss/reflect on ‘eating’ as a metaphor for faith. To what extent have you personally swallowed Jesus?
  • Is there anything about Jesus (or anything he said) that offends you? Why is that do you think?
  • Are you aware of any signs (or miracles) in your own life pointing you to Jesus? What are the signs saying?   

[1] Refer Leon Morris, NICT John, page 320.