Christians Share In God's Glory
One day I was praying in the Spirit and the Holy Spirit
was telling me that the glory of God was on me. I shared this with my wife
and she rebuke me in this stating that the word of God states that God does
not share His glory with anyone to which I agreed. I could only tell her
what the Holy Spirit had told me to which she had raised her eyebrows
thinking I did not hear correctly. The following day I did a search and I
found this article from:
WARREN WIERSBE BE BIBLE STUDY SERIES – 4. WE
SHARE HIS GLORY (17:20-26)
We Share In His Glory (17:20-26)
Here our Lord focuses our attention on the future. He begins to pray for us
who live today, for the whole church throughout all ages. He has already
prayed about security and sanctity; now the burden of His prayer is unity.
He is concerned that His people experience a spiritual unity that is like
the oneness of the Father and the Son. Christians may belong to different
fellowships, but they all belong to the Lord and to each other.
The disciples had often exhibited a spirit of selfishness, competition, and
disunity, and this must have broken the Savior’s heart. I wonder how He
feels when He sees the condition of the church today! The Puritan preacher
Thomas Brooks wrote: “Discord and division become no Christian. For wolves
to worry the lambs is no wonder, but for one lamb to worry another, this is
unnatural and monstrous.”
What is the basis for true Christian unity? The person and work of Jesus
Christ and His glory (John 17:2-5). He has already given His glory to us,
and He promises that we will further experience that glory when we get to
heaven! All true believers have God’s glory within, no matter what they may
look like on the outside. Christian harmony is not based on the externals of
the flesh but the internals and eternals of the Spirit in the inner person.
We must look beyond the elements of our first birth–race, color, abilities,
etc.–and build our fellowship on the essentials of our new birth.
We already possess His glory within (John 17:22; and note Rom. 8:29), and
one day we shall behold His glory in heaven (John 17:24). As we grow in the
Lord, the glory within begins to grow and to reveal itself in what we say
and do and the way we say and do it. People do not see us and glorify us;
they see the Lord and glorify Him (Matt. 5:16; 1 Cor. 6:19-20).
One of the things that most impresses the world is the way Christians love
each other and live together in harmony. It is this witness that our Lord
wants in the world “that the world may believe that thou hast sent me” (John
17:21). The lost world cannot see God, but they can see Christians, and what
they see in us is what they will believe about God. If they see love and
unity, they will believe that God is love. If they see hatred and division,
they will reject the message of the gospel.
Jesus has assured us that some will believe because of our witness (John
17:20), but we must make sure that our witness is true and loving. Some
Christians are prosecuting attorneys and judges instead of faithful
witnesses, and this only turns lost sinners away from the Savior.
There is every reason why believers should love one another and live in
unity. We trust the same Savior and share the same glory. We will one day
enjoy the same heaven! We belong to the same Father and seek to do the same
work, witnessing to a lost world that Jesus Christ alone saves from sin. We
believe the same truth, even though we may have different views of minor
doctrinal matters, and we follow the same example that Jesus set for His
people, to live a holy life. Yes, believers do have their differences, but
we have much more in common, and this should encourage us to love one
another and promote true spiritual unity.
I have often used John 17:24 as a text for funeral meditations. How do we
know that Christians go to heaven? Because of the price that Jesus paid (1
Thess. 5:9-10), and the promise that Jesus made (John 14:1-6), and the
prayer that Jesus prayed (John 17:24). The Father always answers His Son’s
prayers, so we know that believers who die do go to heaven to behold the
glory of God.
In John 17:25-26, there are no petitions. Jesus simply reported to His
Father about the ministry in the world, and He made several declarations
that are important to us. He declared that the world does not know the
Father, but that we believers know Him because the Son has revealed the
Father to us. The world certainly has many opportunities to get to know the
Father, but it prefers to go on in blindness and hardness of heart. Our task
as Christians is to bear witness to the lost world and share God’s saving
message.
He also declares the importance of truth and love in the church. Believers
know God’s name (nature) and even share in that divine nature. Jesus makes
it clear that truth and love must go together (see Eph. 4:15). It has well
been said that truth without love is brutality, but love without truth is
hypocrisy. The mind grows by taking in truth, but the heart grows by giving
out in love. Knowledge alone can lead to pride (1 Cor. 8:1), and love alone
can lead to wrong decisions (see Phil. 1:9-10). Christian love must not be
blind!
As you review this prayer, you see the spiritual priorities that were in the
Savior’s heart: the glory of God; the sanctity of God’s people; the unity of
the church; the ministry of sharing the gospel with a lost world. We today
would be wise to focus on these same priorities.
One day, each of us will have to give an account of his or her ministry. It
is a solemn thought that we shall stand before the judgment seat of Christ
and give our “final report.”
I trust that we will be able to say, “I have glorified thee on the earth; I
have finished the work which thou gavest me to do” (John 17:4).
Questions for Personal Reflection or Group Discussion
How do people try to get recognition for themselves?
Read John 17. Why was Jesus interested only in the Father’s recognition?
Why did Jesus begin this prayer by praying for Himself?
How would you describe Jesus’ relationship with the Father?
Which of Jesus’ requests for His disciples seems especially significant to
you? Why?
How can we be sure that we are secure in Christ?
How does God’s Word enable us to overcome the world?
How does God sanctify us through His truth?
What did Jesus pray for those who were to come, including us? Why was this
such a priority for Him?
How can believers demonstrate true unity?
How does this prayer, in John 17, suggest we can share in Jesus’ overcoming
of the world?
In what ways do you need to change your priorities to match Jesus’?
Copyright © Warren W. Wiersbe. Generously provided by David C. Cook. See all
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