John 18:3-9 During the Lenten season we see Jesus abandoned by his
disciples and betrayed by his friends and rejected by his people. We see religious leaders conspire against him
and plot his death. We see political
leaders convict him unjustly. We see
Roman soldiers beat him almost to death and then nail him to a cross.
And when Jesus finally bows his head
and gives up his spirit on Friday afternoon, I think we have this sense that--
the hatred of the devil, and the failure of his friends, and the political
powers of the day-- have finally had the victory.
Nothing could be farther from the truth! Throughout the Passion of our Lord Jesus
Christ there is one person in control, one person who knows how it will all
come out, one person who will have the victory and that is Jesus.
That is why this scene in the Garden of
Gethsemane is recorded in Holy Scripture:
so that we can see with our eyes of faith, before these terrible events
occur, that Jesus does not go to the cross and die as a helpless victim, but he
goes to the cross as our mighty champion who will win the victory over sin,
death, and the devil. The Bible says
that:
Judas, having
procured a band of soldiers and some officers from the chief priests and the
Pharisees, went there with lanterns and torches and weapons. Then Jesus, knowing all
that would happen to him, came forward and said to them, “Whom do you seek?”
Jesus knew all that would happen to him and
still came forward. Is that not the most
remarkable thing! I can assure you that
if an armed crowd was looking for me in the middle of the night, I would not be
coming forward! I am going the other way
as fast as I can!
And there’s even more to it than an
armed mob. Jesus knew ALL that was going
to happen. He knew who these people
were. He knew what they wanted. He knew that he was going to be accused and
condemned unjustly. He knew he was going
to be beaten almost to death and then suffer the worst kind of death imaginable.
He knew all of it and came forward to
meet them.
Jesus did not shrink back in the face of
pain and death. He went to meet it
because he knew that this would be the terrible price he would have to pay for
our sins and so he stepped forward and said to them, “Whom do you seek?’
Now think about that just for a
second. Remember, Jesus knew all that
was going to happen and yet asked them, “Who
do you seek?” If Jesus knew all that
was going to happen-and he did-why does he ask them that question?
It’s exactly the same kind of question
that God asked Adam and Eve in the garden, “Where are You?”, and asked for the same reason: that in that moment of sin and rebellion, the
people involved can have a chance to come to their senses and think about what
they have done and confess their guilt and turn to God.
With swords and clubs and torches in
their hands, hunting down an innocent man, it was still not too late for them
to repent.
Jesus knew exactly who the mob was
seeking but he wanted them, even in that late hour, to come to grips with what
they were about to do to an innocent man who had never been anything other than
kind and good and loving and gentle. “Whom
do you seek?” They answered him, “Jesus of
Nazareth.” Jesus said to them, “I am he.”
Jesus
of Nazareth. An angry mob armed with
clubs and swords looking for…Jesus of Nazareth.
Not some violent revolutionary.
Not some terrible criminal. Not
some enemy of the people. Jesus of
Nazareth. That name tells you everything
you need to know about Jesus and about
the mob.
Jesus.
The name given at this birth. The God who saves. Of Nazareth.
That humble man from a nowhere town.
The One who went around healing the sick and feeding the hungry and
raising the dead. The One who taught
that real love is love for enemies. The
one who was born and lived in poverty.
The One who embraced and welcomed all those on the margins of
society.
That’s who Jesus was and his name
revealed it all. But it also revealed
the truth about those in the mob.
Guards and soldiers. Swords and clubs. Lanterns and torches in the dead of
night. Armed to the teeth in the middle
of the night completely focused on capturing:
a teacher, and a miracle worker, and a friend to women and children.
As soon as the words “Jesus of Nazareth” came out of their
mouths they should have come to their senses and cast down their weapons and
asked themselves, “What on earth are we doing?”
“Have we lost our minds?” But of
course they didn’t.
Greed had gotten hold of Judas who had
been stealing form the common purse. Envy
filled the hearts of the Pharisees when the people followed Jesus instead of
them, Fear filled the hearts of the
Sadducees who didn’t want to lose their connection to the Romans.
And all that sin blinded them to the
terrible thing they were about to do to
the very Son of God. The Bible says
that:
Judas, who
betrayed him, was standing with them. When Jesus said to them, “I am
he,” they drew back and fell to the ground. So he asked them again, “Whom do you seek?” And they said, “Jesus of Nazareth.” Jesus
answered, “I told you that I am he.”
Have you
ever wondered about this? There were
perhaps a hundred people including thugs with clubs-- and armed roman
soldiers. They were pursuing Jesus with
a single-minded, hard-hearted purpose.
And yet when Jesus responds to them, “I am he”, to a man they fall to
the ground like they were struck by lightning!
What on
earth, or really who on earth, could
have caused such a reaction that would render a hundred armed men, helpless? In our English translations we render Jesus’
answer as “I am he.” But what he actually
says is just two words “I am”.
Thousands
of years before this moment, when the Lord called Moses to be his chosen
instrument to set his people free, Moses wanted to know the name of the Lord so
he could tell the people and their enemies the name of the God he served, the
Lord said to him: I Am.
I AM would set his people free. I AM would destroy their enemies. I AM would bring them home.
The soldiers and guards thought they
were on the hunt for Jesus of Nazareth, that gentle kind man who went around
doing good—and of course they were –but that is not ALL that Jesus was by any
means-- and if anyone had been paying attention they would have known that!
Jesus said about himself: I AM the bread of life. I AM the living water. I AM the light of the world. Before Abraham was, I AM.
Who are you seeking? Jesus of Nazareth. I AM.
And a hundred hateful men fell to the ground, helpless in his presence.
Helpless in his presence just like story
seas. Helpless in his presence just like
terrible diseases. Helpless in his
presence just like the devil. Helpless
in his presence just like death.
Here’ the point: There was no amount of money that could ever
be paid to a traitor to make Jesus do what he did not want to do. There was no legion of soldiers that could
ever take Jesus somewhere he did not want to go.
He was indeed Jesus of Nazareth: the LORD who saves-- and he would go
willingly to the cross to die in the
place of sinners. Jesus told them:
If you seek me,
let these men go.” This was to fulfill the word that he had spoken: “Of those whom you gave me I have lost not one.”
Every
one of Jesus’ disciples escaped harm that time because Jesus stepped up and
said “I am he.” The next morning a
violent criminal named Barsabbas would go free and Jesus would go to the
cross. And that afternoon Jesus would
die on the cross day in the place of every sinner under his Father’s just wrath
so that Jesus could say about every one of us:
let these people go free.
Earlier
that night in the upper room Jesus had prayed to his heavenly Father for all of
those the Father had placed into his hands, that he would faithfully preserve
them all. That prayer was answered and
those words fulfilled as the disciples escaped the death that would have surely
come at the hands of an angry, armed mob.
But that promise is a comfort for us
too. You see, it was not just the 11 who
were entrusted to the hands of Jesus, it was all of us here tonight as
well.
Our forgiveness, our salvation, our life
on earth and our eternal future in a heavenly home—all of that was entrusted
into the hands of Jesus, the very Son of God who willingly went to the cross as
our champion over sin, death and the devil.
Amen.
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