“Peter said to
Him, ‘Never shall You wash my feet!’ Jesus answered him, ‘If I do not wash you,
you have no part in Me.’ Simon Peter said to Him, ‘Lord, then wash not only my
feet, but also my hands and my head.’” John 13:8 – 9.
Are there times
when we refuse to receive the ministry of Jesus Christ because it makes no
sense to us? Are there times we gloss over Scripture because it is, we think,
not practical or because it does not conform to our thinking and practice? Are
there times we insist on adding to Christ’s ministry – that is, times when we
insist on supplementing the things of the Spirit of God with our own common-sense
approach to religion?
For his part, Peter
stands in judgment on Jesus in two respects. First, he judges the action of
Jesus in washing feet, that is, Peter superimposes his own image on Jesus of
who Jesus is and how Jesus ought to act – Peter knows better than Jesus, just
as Peter knew better than Jesus in Matthew 16:21-23 when Peter attempted to correct
Jesus’ thinking about going to the Cross.
Then Peter
decides that if he must allow Jesus to wash his feet, that Jesus ought to also wash
Peter’s hands and head. First Peter wants to detract from what Jesus is doing,
“Never shall you wash my feet!” Then Peter wants to add to what Jesus is doing,
“…my hands and my head.”
Since Jesus
Christ is the Word of God (John 1:1- 3), we can say that in our passage we see
Peter sitting in judgment on the Word of God – and is this not what we do, is
this not our tendency?
Someone recently
sent me a Bible study lesson his small group is using, the passage is Matthew
15:21 – 28, the story of the Canaanite woman beseeching Jesus to deliver her
daughter from the demonic. In response to the woman’s plea, “Lord, help me!”
Jesus says, “It is not good to take the children’s bread and throw it to the
dogs.” Does Jesus’ response not take us aback?
The lesson
material that was sent to me stands in judgment of Jesus, and its position is
that “Jesus is still learning, he is still maturing, he is still progressing –
just as God is still learning and growing.” That is, a more mature Jesus would
not have spoken to the woman in such a harsh manner.
Leaving aside
the moral, spiritual, metaphysical, and ethical chaos that is embedded in such
thinking, here is an example of sitting in judgment on the Word of God – the
Person of Jesus Christ and the Scripture of Jesus Christ. When we don’t
understand something in the Bible we want to sit in judgment on it. I have seen
this time and time again in small groups, in Sunday schools, in conversations
with professing Christians, in commentaries, and in preaching.
We want to
control Scripture; we do not want Scripture to control us. We want to judge
Scripture; we do not want Scripture to judge us. How often do we want to
transform Scripture into our image, rather than allow Scripture to transform us
into the image of Jesus Christ? This is true of those who profess a high view
of Scripture just as it is true of those who do not hold to a high view. Often
those who shout Sola Scriptura! are just as judgmental of Scripture as
those who make no pretensions to seeing Scripture as God breathed.
Our call is to
seek Jesus Christ in Scripture, to submit to God’s Word, and to obey God’s
Word. In God’s Word we will find communion, koinonia, with Him. In God’s Word
we will partake of the Divine Nature (2 Peter 1:4). In Christ, Scripture
becomes Heavenly Manna; from the Rock of Scripture, we drink Living Water.
“He who has
bathed needs only to wash his feet, but is completely clean; and you are clean…”
(John 13:10a).
What does Jesus
mean, “but you are clean”?
As we think
about this, let us consider that Jesus’ view of His followers is not what we
would likely anticipate – after all, they are soon going to desert Him and one
is going to vehemently deny Him, then they are going to hide in a locked room
out of fear. And yet Jesus says, “I have manifested Your name to the men whom You
gave Me out of the world; they were Yours and You gave them to Me, and they
have kept Your word.” (John 17:6).
Jesus continues,
“Now they have come to know that everything You have given Me is from You; for
the words which You gave Me I have given to them; and they received them and truly
understood that I came forth from You, and they believed that You sent Me.”
(John 17:7 – 8).
How can Jesus say
these things to the Father, knowing that within minutes these same men will
desert Him and deny Him?
What can we
learn from what Jesus is saying?
Perhaps Jesus
says these things because Jesus sees the end from the beginning, and let’s remember
that Jesus Christ is the Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the End. Jesus sees
His accomplished and perfected work in the lives of His People, in you and in
me…in us. Jesus sees us complete and perfected in Him (Colossians 2:10; Hebrews
10:10), we are the “joy set before Him” (Hebrews 12:2). I write “perhaps” for
how can I possibly understand these things? We may get glimpses, but I fear to
be presumptuous – I am still a child in many respects…too many respects I
imagine.
What can we
learn? At the least we can learn that we do not see things as Jesus sees things,
God’s ways are not our ways (Isaiah 55:8 – 9), and while we can learn to “see”
the unseen rather than the seen, to focus on the eternal and not the temporal
(2 Cor. 4:18; 5:7; Hebrews Chapter 11), I think this pilgrimage of “seeing” is
just that, a pilgrimage…at least (hopefully) for most of us…always learning to “see”
just a little bit better.
Jesus was not
overlooking what was about to happen, but He was seeing that His work and grace
in these men was far greater than their desertion and denial and fear – and isn’t
that the way we should learn to see one another? Is there not a Treasure within
us that transcends our foolishness and meanness and pettiness and sin? Do we
not belong to Jesus?
Does not Christ
live within us? (John 14:23; Gal. 2:20; Col. 1:27).
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