A reminder from Peter
Let us learn a lesson from Peter, we may be willing to give our lives for Christ, but we are also capable of deny Him also. Stay in the Word, and ask that God will give you strength to stand for Him.
This is a blog of my daily devotions (or my daily gain). Why gain? In reading and studying God's Word each day, I'm gaining. I'm gaining in my walk with Him, in my relationship with Him, in wisdom, in knowledge, and in life. If you are a Christian, take time each day to read the Bible. If you aren't a Christian I'd love to hear from you.
There are a couple of things that stick out to me today in John 11.
First off, I notice that as Jesus talks with Martha, we see true faith. In verse 22, Martha says "Even now I know that whatever You ask of God, God will give You." While many of the Jews were questioning Jesus (and his divinity), we see Martha's faith. She knew that Jesus was able to do whatever He asked of God. What a great encouragement! Can we say the same thing?
Secondly, Jesus as He goes and sees the mourning family, shows really emotion. I always through of Jesus as a non-emotional person, but I see His emotions come out two verses. In verse 33 it says, "When Jesus therefore saw her weeping, and the Jews who came with her also weeping, He was deeply moved in spirit and was troubled" Also in verse 35 it simply says, "Jesus wept." While Jesus was/is fully God, He was fully man. In this being human had the same emotions that we do. We can take refuge in that Jesus can relate to those of us we was troubled and are mourning.
I know the theme of my blogs have been very similar. But when John spends so much time talking about the deity of Jesus, I can't help, but focus on it. In John 10, the Jews made an amazing statement, they said "How long will You keep us in suspense? If You are the Christ tell us plainly." (vs 24) After Jesus just got done telling them that is "I Am", which any Jew would have know right way that He was claiming to be God, how did they not understand that He was claiming to be God?
At this point Jesus made a statement, that I have often marveled at. He first said the obvious, "I told you, and you do not believe; the works that I do in My Father's name, these testify of Me." (vs 25) He then goes on to tell an analogy that He is the shepherd and that we are His sheep. At the end of the story, He said, "If I do not do the works of My Father, do not believe Me; but if I so then, though you do not believe Me, believe the works, so that you may know and understand that the Father is in me, and I in the father." (vs 37-38)
This begs a question, "if you don't believe that Jesus was God, what about His works/deeds?" Nobody in the history of the world, has done what Jesus did. His works should bring us to Him and should make us believe His words.
Jesus then goes on in chapter 11, to raise Lazarus from the dead, which is a great act. Only God can raise another person from the dead. If you don't believe Jesus was God, then believe in Him through His works!
As I read John chapter 8, I see an amazing exchange between Jesus and the Jews in the temple. Jesus directly tells the Jews that they are not of God, but of the devil. It's an amazing statement, because the Jews being devout were clearly seen as God's people. But here we see Jesus condemning them, "You are of your father, the devil, and you want to do the desires of your father. He was murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth because there is no truth in him. Whenever he speaks a lie, he speaks from his own nature, for he is a liar and the father of lies." (Jn 8:44)
This statement speaks volumes, the Jews would have been enraged by this statement, but isn't it true. They were trying to seek to kill Him (or at least find a way to condemn Him), and Jesus tells them that they are of the devil. They claimed to be of Abraham (vs 39), yet their actions were ones of death and seeking death.
On a side note, we have all done things that are evil and sinful; does this not make us a descendent of the devil? Maybe that is a little harsh, but that is what Jesus is saying. When Adam and Eve sinned they chose the way of sin, instead of the way of God, and the Bible clearly teaches that because of that first sin, sin entered into the human race, and continues in each person to this day. That is why we need a Savior, One that can rescue us from the life of sin.
Anyway, the Jews did not like to hear this, and could not accept the fact the Jesus was in fact from God, and was God. He went on to reason with them about why they don't believe (vs 45-47). They responded by accusing Him of being possessed by a demon (vs 48). Jesus response by telling them that He is the one that honors God (His Father), and that He does not seek His own glory, the glory of the Father.
Then He makes a profound statement, that "if anyone keeps M word he will never see death" (vs 52). The Jews questioned Him on this statement; they could not understand what He meant for they did not understand that eternal life was not necessarily in this life, but in the life to come. So they questioned Him by telling him that even Abraham had tasted death, but yet He was promising eternal life. So how could Jesus (who they did not see has greater then Abraham), promise eternal life, when Abraham saw death.
Jesus then answered by saying that He knows God and honors God, and that even Abraham longed to see the days of Jesus (vs 54-56). They said to him, "You are not yet fifty years old, and have You seem Abraham?" (vs 57).
At this point Jesus made a statement that struck a chord in them and made crystal clear, who Jesus claimed to be, He said, "before Abraham was born, I Am." (vs 58) This was clearly a statement of divinity because in the book of Genesis, God identified Himself, as "I Am". And this is what Jesus claimed, they sought to kill Him right there, but He escaped, because it was not His time.
If anyone claims that Jesus never said He was God, they are wrong, because it's clear in this passage that He claimed to be God. And while the Jews could not accept this fact, we must in order to be saved.