A sermon delivered by Patrick H. Wrisley, May 12, 2024.
Years and years ago, what feels like a lifetime ago, I was a martial arts instructor. I just loved to fight! Every year, there was a karate tournament held in Atlanta called The Battle of Atlanta where several thousand martial artists came from all over the county and competed. I had made it to the quarter-finals in my age group – mid-high school – and was simply having a great time. My match got called up and my opponent and I bowed to the referee and then towards each other and we each took an on-guard stance.
Things were going well, and we began the second round. Crowds of people were around the mat watching what was going on when it happened. A martial arts uniform is called a gi. It has a loose top for ease of movement and baggy pants secured by a cord that goes around your hips. No sooner had the ref said, “Fight!” than my pants came untied! Now, both of my hands were in gloves which prohibited me from reaching down and grabbing them. Every inch I moved to the left or the right, I could feel my gi pants slip a bit further until they just hit the floor. Just try to imagine what a sophomore in high school would be feeling and thinking at that point. Surrounded by people with my opponent on the floor laughing, I was on full display to everyone with my bright blue boxer shorts with my pants around my ankles and I couldn’t do a thing! Finally, the ref came over chuckling, bent over pulled my pants back up, retied them, smirked at me, and said, “Fight.”
Yeah, about that. It didn’t go so well. I didn’t do well that afternoon. I just wanted to quietly disappear into the crowd and hide.
Our text this morning is one where Jesus is on full display with those who mattered the most to him. He’s fully revealing himself and his purpose to them. No longer were there parables for the disciples to figure out. No longer were the crowds of followers jostling to see Jesus and his miracles or to hear his teaching. It was just Jesus and his closest disciples gathered together for the Passover. It was intimate, emotional, and a brutally frank gathering on what was about to happen.
Our Story today is from the Gospel of John. John takes five biblical chapters to cover one entire scene of his Story the night before Jesus dies. He wants his readers and listeners to pay attention, so he slows the action down by spreading the scene out. The essence of John’s gospel is wrapped up in these five chapters and it’s in our portion for today that many feel is a concise summary of who Jesus is, what he came to do, where he is now going, and what the disciples are to do next.[1] Jesus’ identity, purpose, and plans are on full display.
I am going to be reading from The Message Bible, written by the late Presbyterian pastor/scholar/author Eugene Peterson. He wrote this translation and paraphrase when he was a new church development pastor in Maryland, so his members might better understand the Bible and its meaning. I encourage you to go ahead and open your Bible for reference, but feel free to close your eyes and listen to the Story from John 17:6-19. We are picking up in the Story when Jesus is praying out loud. It’s often been called “The Great Priestly Prayer.” Jesus is having this intimate conversation with his Father and allows his disciples to overhear what he is saying. It’s almost like a parent praying over his or her children while they listen in. It’s a wonderful rhetorical technique John is using in this instance because we are invited to listen to Jesus, in effect, pray for us. Listen to the Word of the Lord.
John 17:8-19
6-12 I spelled out your character in detail
to the men and women you gave me.
They were yours in the first place;
then you gave them to me, and they have now done what you said.
They know now, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that everything you gave me is firsthand from you,
For the message you gave me, I gave them;
and they took it, and were convinced
that I came from you.
They believed that you sent me.
I pray for them.
I’m not praying for the God-rejecting world
but for those you gave me,
for they are yours by right.
Everything mine is yours, and yours mine,
and my life is on display in them.
For I’m no longer going to be visible in the world;
they’ll continue in the world
while I return to you.
Holy Father, guard them as they pursue this life
that you conferred as a gift through me,
so they can be one heart and mind
as we are one heart and mind.
As long as I was with them, I guarded them
in the pursuit of the life you gave through me;
I even posted a lookout.
and not one of them got away,
except for the rebel bent on destruction
(the exception that proved the rule of Scripture).
13-19 Now I’m returning to you.
I’m saying these things in the world’s hearing
so my people can experience
my joy completed in them.
I gave them your word;
the godless world hated them because of it,
because they didn’t join the world’s ways,
just as I didn’t join the world’s ways.
I’m not asking that you take them out of the world
but that you guard them from the Evil One.
They are no more defined by the world
than I am defined by the world.
Make them holy—consecrated—with the truth;
Your word is consecrating truth.
In the same way that you gave me a mission in the world,
I give them a mission in the world.
I’m consecrating myself for their sakes
so they’ll be truth-consecrated in their mission. [2]
If you listened closely, you heard four critical truths.
Jesus reveals with utter clarity that he is the living, tangible expression of the inexpressible infinite God whom he calls Father. It’s the great “scandal of the Gospel” that causes so many to squirm and struggle with regarding our Christian faith. As Christ-Followers, we believe the laws of physics, as we currently understand them, are broken and that what makes Jesus different from other religious figures is that in their very essence, Jesus and the Father are one. Jesus is more than just a prophet like Moses or Jeremiah; Jesus and God are wired together. There is this dynamic, flowing, interconnected, fly-wheeling reciprocity between Jesus and the Father. Jesus is the very essence of God who has been living, laughing, crying, arguing, and loving among the people. “Everything of mine is yours, and yours mine,” Jesus prays. The Gospel of John has been hammering home that Jesus is both 100% divine and 100% human being. To be less of either throws all the calculus off.
Second, Jesus reveals it is time for him to pass on the baton of gospel declaration – his ministry of preaching, teaching, and healing – to the women and men gathered as his disciples. In his prayer, he tells the disciples he is going home to be with his Daddy. I have a colleague in ministry named Simeon Rogers who, when he prays, he prays to Papa. Jesus is letting his closest followers know he is going home to Papa and that they will continue his work in the world on his behalf, on his Papa’s behalf, too.
Next, Jesus reveals that as his disciples, we will be exposed. In other words, we are going to be vulnerable to the powers of evil and will be hated by people in the world. It’s interesting to notice that Jesus in his prayer speaks reflectively, “The godless world hated them” because they followed the humble way of the Cross and lived counter-culturally to the world’s ways. It’s not that the world will hate them, future tense, but it’s that the world has already hated them, past tense. The world hates us still! Why?
I believe the world hates, dislikes, disrespects Christians and the Church because we are a mirror that reflects back to the world what life together is supposed to be like. It’s a community that is to love one another, get along with one another, helping one another. Christians should be countercultural and different. Christians should be iconoclastic in tearing down the values of injustice, war, and prejudice.
That’s the way it’s supposed to be at least. Instead, people are leaving the Church in droves because many churches in America are not reflecting the character of God back into the world; they are bringing the world’s character into the church! On the contrary, article after article reveal people are leaving the church, criticize and mock the Church because we Christians are perceived as hypocritical, intolerant, patriarchal, discriminatory, non-accepting, closed-minded, or politically too far right or too far left.[3]
Finally, Jesus clearly reveals that his disciples, i.e. you and me, are to put him on full display in how we live our lives. In the Bibles we typically use, verse 10 has Jesus say, “I am glorified in them.” Peterson translates that to say, “And my life is on display in them.” Think about that for a moment: My life, your life, this church’s life puts Jesus on display for all to see. And this is what I want to leave you with today.
Next week we will gather for communion. The Apostle Paul reminds us that we are to examine our spiritual walk and take the temperature and blood pressure of the depth and quality of our walk in God.[4] To help us do that, I invite you to join me in a spiritual exercise called The Examen – an intentional reflection on the state of things spiritual. And this is the question I want us all to use in our reflections: How does my life put Jesus on display? Does it?
In the Name of the One who is, was, and is to come. Amen.
© 2024 Patrick H. Wrisley, Pastor, First Presbyterian Church of Glens Falls, NY 12801. Sermon manuscripts are available for the edification of members and friends of First Presbyterian Church of Glens Falls, New York and may not be altered, re-purposed, published or preached without permission. All rights reserved.
[1] Lance Pape, Connections: Year B, Volume 2: Lent through Pentecost (Connections: A Lectionary Commentary for Preaching and Worship) by Joel B Green. See https://a.co/j1DCSMq.
[2] All Scripture quotations are taken from THE MESSAGE, copyright © 1993, 2002, 2018 by Eugene H. Peterson. Used by permission of NavPress. All rights reserved. Represented by Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.
[3] See, for example, The New York Times article, America Is Losing Religious Faith, Aug. 23, 2023, By Nicholas Kristof. A version of this article appears in print on, Section A, Page 17 of the New York edition with the headline: Americans Are Losing Their Religious Faith. See https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/23/opinion/christianity-america-religion-secular.html
[4] See 1Corinthians 11:17-29.