Wednesday, September 25, 2013

KEEPING THE FAITH--Week 16
According to Jesus, Christian spirituality is the belief that as Jesus says in John 10.38--the Father is in Me and I in the Father.

In this same passage Jesus says--If I do not do the works of the Father, do not believe Me; but if I do them, though you do not believe Me, believe the works, that you may know and understand that the Father is in Me and I in the Father, John 10. 37,38.


Jesus is indicating that for those Jews who might have stoned Him, if they would believe the works He does, they can believe that He is in the Father and the Father in Him. So what work has He done?

Just before John 10, in chapter 9 Jesus heals a blind man. Let's look at this account. In John 9 a blind man had been healed by Jesus. The Pharisees did not believe the blind man when he said Jesus healed him. So they put the blind man out of their presence.
The blind man had told them Jesus healed him. He then tells them the great insight--If this man were not from God, He could do nothing, John 9.33. With that in mind, the Pharisees don't think the Father would speak to Jesus, whom they call a sinner. The blind man retorts--if anyone is God-fearing and does His will, He hears him.

Before that the Pharisees had said--we do not know where He is from, John 9.29. This brings us to the point that the Pharisees do not believe that Jesus could be from the Father.


We can conclude that the Jews did not believe Jesus was from the Father. Since they didn't believe that, they could not accept Jesus doing anything which could only come from the Father.
Therefore, in the next chapter, Jesus calls Himself, The Door, 10.7. He calls Himself, the Good Shepherd, John 10.14. The door is the entrance to a belief that He and the Father are one; the shepherd is the one who keep the sheep in the belief that He and the Father are one. Jesus says this in John 10.27, 28--My sheep hear My voice and I know them and they follow Me and I give eternal life to them and they shall never perish..


This section of John 10 is the bridge from unbelief with the Pharisees into belief with the blind man.
The Jews continue in unbelief, making the accusation--You, being a man, make Yourself out to be God, John 10.33. But the man who was born blind had already turned away from them, he has turned to Jesus in belief. When Jesus comes to him afterward He asks the man--Do you believe in the Son of Man?

The man said--Lord I believe, John 9.38.

For us in this day and age, Christian spirituality begins with the blind man's expression--if anyone is God-fearing and does His will, He hears him. God-fearing is belief, doing His will is acting on belief. There is no nationality here, no gender, no race...only belief.


To be God-fearing is to take pleasure in pleasing God. It is the pleasure which God brings to a soul that inspires one to do His will. That is the beginning which this passage brings out in chapter 9.
Chapter 10 takes us further into God. Speaking of a good shepherd, He says in John 10.4--When he puts forth his own, he goes before them and the sheep follow hhim because they know his voice. In Christian spirituality that voice is the Holy Spirit, that shepherd is Jesus Christ.


We enter into Christian spirituality when we know that to have a relationship with the Father, we must realize He is in the Son and the Son is in Him. This understanding is by the Holy Spirit.

We can conclude that Christian spirituality is the Trinity.
Jesus asks the blind man--Do you believe in the Son of Man?' He is asking the blind man, do you recognize Me as the God in whom you believe? The blind man sees Jesus and sees that He is God--'Lord I believe.' And he worshiped Him.

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