In the previous reflection
I asked, “What cord did Jesus strike in the hearts of the disciples to elicit, ‘Now
You are speaking plainly…now we know’”?
I want to share
with you my sense of the answer to that question. There are likely other
perspectives, other facets, other thoughts; I can only pass along to you my own
sense; that which I have touched, heard, seen, and that in which I live (1 John
1:1 – 4). I am told that I am now old, and being old in Christ I am looking
forward to that City, and in looking forward to that City I will die either as
a fool, or I will go Home to that for which I was redeemed. The response of the
disciples is the essence of my life in Christ, it is indicative of my hope and
trust in Him, it is a foretaste of eternal glory.
For when Jesus
speaks of coming forth from the Father into the world, and then leaving the
world and going to the Father, He strikes a cord in the heart of the disciples;
a cord of identity, a cord of calling and purpose, a cord of destiny.
In the previous
reflection I listed moments in the Gospel of John in which the disciples
recognized the numinous in Jesus, the Divine, the Other, they identified
with Him in those moments, those moments and glimpses of glory pulled them into
Jesus.
We see these
moments in the Gospels along the sea of Galilee when Jesus calls Peter, Andrew,
James, and John to follow Him. We cannot explain or understand their response
other than there was something inside them that responded to the heart of Jesus
Christ; as is written in the Psalms, “Deep calls unto deep.”
We see such a
moment when Matthew leaves tax collecting, makes restitution where needed, and
follows Jesus. We witness a deepening moment when Peter confesses, “You are the
Christ, the Son of the Living God.”
There is a sense
in which our lives in Christ are an unfolding of the dawn and the rising of the
morning star (2 Peter 1:19), our “paths shining brighter and brighter until the
full day” (Pro. 4:18), in a continual transformation into His image as we
become who we truly are in Christ Jesus (2 Cor. 3:17 – 18; 1 John 3:1 – 3).
Jesus came to
bring us home to the Father. He came to declare the Father’s Name to His brothers
and sisters (Hebrews 2:11 – 13). O dear
friends, when we hear the Father’s Name spoken to us, when our ears are opened,
when our hearts, which have lain dormant, begin to come alive in response to
the Voice of our Elder Brother, then our pilgrimage truly begins, then we head
toward Home, Home in Jesus, Home in the Father, Home in the Holy Spirit, Home
with one another.
Our hearts are
God’s Divine instrument. Upon them God plays His song of love and compassion
and tender mercies. Upon them God plays His song of sonship, of bringing His
sons and daughters to glory (Hebrews 2:10 – 11).
As the Holy Spirit
births the dawn within us, our hearts respond to the light which unveils, “For
those whom He foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the image of
His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brethren; and these whom
He predestined, He also called; and these whom He called, He also justified;
and these whom He justified, He also glorified” (Ro. 8:29 – 30).
The musical score
is placed before us and we begin to hear the music, what was once simply notes
on paper, comes to life as we take our place both as instruments and as musicians
in our Father’s grand massed orchestra.
“Just as He
chose us in Him [Christ] before the foundation of the world, that we would be
holy and blameless before Him” (Eph. 1:4).
“To those who
reside as aliens…according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, by the sanctifying
work of the Spirit, to obey Jesus Christ and be sprinkled with His blood” (1
Peter 1:1 – 2).
There is only
one way to encounter these passages, and that is to play the music, to enter
into the music, to absorb the music, to allow the Holy Spirit to tune our
hearts to the key of Jesus and for our hearts to play and sing to the Lamb who
was slain from the foundation of the world…for whom? Why for you. Why for me. Why
for us.
When Jesus says,
“I came forth from the Father into the world; I am leaving the world again and
going to the Father,” the context of the Gospel of John and the immediate
context of the Upper Room, informs Jesus’ words thusly:
“I came forth
from the Father into the world for you; I am leaving the world again and
bringing you back to the Father. I will go ahead of you, yet I will not leave
you. I will go ahead of you, yet we will walk this road together. This is
more than My return, this is our Return.”
This is what we
see in John chapters 13 – 16, this is what we will see and experience in the
Holy of Holies of John 17. This is what Jesus affirms on Easter with, “I ascend
to My Father and your Father, and My God and your God” (20:17).
O dear, dear
friends, passages such as Romans 8:28 – 39 are given to us to bring us Home, to
transport us into the bosom and heart of the Lamb, into the arms of our Good Shepherd.
How foolish we are when we insist on pulling down the glory of God to earth,
when the Holy Spirit is saying over and over again, “Come up. Come up. Come up”
(Rev. 4:1). Our blessings are in the heavenly places (Eph. 1:3) in Christ, in
Christ, always in Christ.
My sense is that
when the disciples heard Jesus say, “I came forth from the Father and have come
into the world; I am leaving the world again and going to the Father,” that
their hearts identified with those words, that calling, that destiny. They may
not have understood what Jesus was saying, and indeed they still had much to
learn, much of which would soon come into focus; just as it is with us – or at
least with me.
When they heard
these words they said in their hearts, “Me too. Us too. Yes, yes – we are going
back to our Father with You.” What had been an enigma is now being made clear,
what was once perplexing language, is now plain.
We are not
accidents looking for a place to happen. We are the sons and daughters of the
Living God and heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ (Rom. 8:15 – 17; Gal. 4:1
– 7).
This is our identity,
this is our destiny. I am told I am old, and for sure closer to Home than I
was before. But I’ll tell you a little secret, when that glorious Day of
transition comes and I pass through that portal into the Presence of the Lamb
and my fellow pilgrims…I will say, “Why, I’m not old at all. Life is just
Beginning.”
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