Red Letter Year: 11/14

John 10.22-42

“This book is mine. You can’t use it to do the opposite of what I did.”

22 It was now winter, and Jesus was in Jerusalem at the time of Hanukkah, the Festival of Dedication. 23 He was in the Temple, walking through the section known as Solomon’s Colonnade. 24 The people surrounded him and asked, “How long are you going to keep us in suspense? If you are the Messiah, tell us plainly.”

25 Jesus replied, “I have already told you, and you don’t trust me. The proof is the work I do in my Father’s name. 26 But you don’t trust me because you are not my sheep. 27 My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me. 28 I give them eternal life, and they will never perish. No one can snatch them away from me, 29 for my Father has given them to me, and he is more powerful than anyone else. No one can snatch them from the Father’s hand. 30 The Father and I are one.”

31 Once again the people picked up stones to kill him. 32 Jesus said, “At my Father’s direction I have done many good works. For which one are you going to stone me?”

33 They replied, “We’re stoning you not for any good work, but for blasphemy! You, a mere man, claim to be God.”

34 Jesus replied, “It is written in your own Scriptures that God said to certain leaders of the people, ‘I say, you are gods!’ 35 And you know that the Scriptures cannot be altered. So if those people who received God’s message were called ‘gods,’ 36 why do you call it blasphemy when I say, ‘I am the Son of God’? After all, the Father set me apart and sent me into the world. 37 Don’t trust me unless I carry out my Father’s work. 38 But if I do his work, trust the evidence of the miraculous works I have done, even if you don’t trust me. Then you will know and understand that the Father is in me, and I am in the Father.”

39 Once again they tried to arrest him, but he got away and left them. 40 He went beyond the Jordan River near the place where John was first baptizing and stayed there awhile. 41 And many followed him. “John didn’t perform miraculous signs,” they remarked to one another, “but everything he said about this man has come true.” 42 And many who were there believed in Jesus.

Comments

The people finally corner Jesus and try to force a direct answer from him. Why does he refuse? You will often hear something like: Here Jesus reveals enough to make faith possible, yet hides enough to make faith necessary. But it runs much deeper than that. Jesus refuses to allow the people to define him, the Father, or even the meaning of ‘their’ Scripture, because what we name as “faith” or “belief” Jesus rejects as just so much more failure to trust. We want belief we can possess and Jesus won’t give us that. Karl Barth wrote this regarding this passage:

“In John, believing is equally both coming from the known Father to the unknown Son and also coming from the known Son to the unknown Father. There can hardly be anything contrary to the sense of John if in this context we substitute for Father and Son the concepts of form and content in their distinction and unity. Invariably, then, faith is acknowledgment of our limit and acknowledgement of the mystery of God’s Word, acknowledgement of the fact that our hearing is bound to God Himself, who now leads us through form to content and now from content back to form, and either way to Himself, not giving Himself in either case into our hands but keeping us in His hands.” Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics I/1: The Doctrine of the Word of God, p. 176.

What does Barth mean here? What’s the point of “form” and “content?” It is an attempt to get us to see that we don’t get to come to the text with privileged notions about what “Father” or “Messiah” or “Scripture” or “Son of God” or even “Jesus” names. The meaning of these is not self-evident and left to our own we more often than not get it wrong. Typically, we get a wrong notion about who Jesus is, what God is like, what the nature of Jesus’ relationship with the Father is like, and then we construct an ethic – a way of acting in the world – based on that skewed notion.

Just yesterday, I had a lengthy back-and-forth on Twitter with a guy who argued for a subordinate, suppressed “role” for women in the church based on a misunderstanding that Jesus is subordinate to the Father. Such a misconstrual is completely at odds with Christian orthodox teaching. When I pressed him on it, he agreed that the relation between the Father and the Son is not like that, and yet he persisted in his view regarding women because he refused to understand that our hearing of Scripture remains in God, not in our own hands. We don’t get to move outside the teaching and practice of Jesus because he specifically denied that move.

This is why Jesus appeals twice in this passage to the works he had been doing. They are the most concrete things we have, the least susceptible to misunderstanding. He will make this same appeal to his core followers just before his arrest. Apart from Jesus, we don’t understand our Scriptures any better than these people did, and we are as likely to stone Jesus as they were. We don’t get to use the Bible to deviate from Jesus’ own ethic without forfeiting the labels “Christian” and “biblical.”  If reading the Bible causes us to suppress, oppress, or treat people differently than Jesus treated people, then we’re reading it wrong.

New Living Translation (NLT) Holy Bible. New Living Translation copyright© 1996, 2004, 2007 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale HousePublishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.

Red Letter Year: 11/13

John 10.11-21

11 “I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd sacrifices his life for the sheep. 12 A hired hand will run when he sees a wolf coming. He will abandon the sheep because they don’t belong to him and he isn’t their shepherd. And so the wolf attacks them and scatters the flock. 13 The hired hand runs away because he’s working only for the money and doesn’t really care about the sheep.

14 I am the good shepherd; I know my own sheep, and they know me, 15 just as my Father knows me and I know the Father. So I sacrifice my life for the sheep. 16 I have other sheep, too, that are not in this sheepfold. I must bring them also. They will listen to my voice, and there will be one flock with one shepherd.

17 The Father loves me because I sacrifice my life so I may take it back again. 18 No one can take my life from me. I sacrifice it voluntarily. For I have the authority to lay it down when I want to and also to take it up again. For this is what my Father has commanded.”

19 When he said these things, the people were again divided in their opinions about him. 20 Some said, “He’s demon possessed and out of his mind. Why listen to a man like that?” 21 Others said, “This doesn’t sound like a man possessed by a demon! Can a demon open the eyes of the blind?”

Comments

Here we have one of those passages where John was consciously trying to lay out an understanding of who Jesus was that would answer the Ebionite teaching that Jesus was not fully God, but only human. The “I am” statements, the claims divine knowledge, the special relation Jesus has with Father, all these place emphasis on the divinity of Jesus, the God who comes and sacrifices himself in our place, our victorious spiritual replacement. 

John will balance this later by reminding us that sacrifice itself inherently places emphasis on Jesus’ humanity, that he sacrifices to set us a moral example to follow. The church has debated (for at least the past 150 years) between these two poles: whether Jesus’ sacrifice was an example for us to emulate or something he does in our place (this is often called substitutionary atonement). The answer John gives us is that it is both, and the emphasis today is on the substitution, so we should take time to reflect on that and be grateful for it. We have a good shepherd, let’s be glad about that.

One other note: Jesus mentions that he has sheep in other flocks. It is common to think that this is referring to the Gentiles (since this was such an issue when John was writing), and while that’s probably true, it is also true that the text here remains (I think intentionally) vague. Always know this – Jesus has other followers we don’t know about. He is always working to gather in ones we do not notice, ones we would not think to include. But Jesus notices those we don’t and includes the ones we preclude. All part of him being a good shepherd.

New Living Translation (NLT) Holy Bible. New Living Translation copyright© 1996, 2004, 2007 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale HousePublishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.