Numbers 19-20 Ashes of the Red Heifer
John 17 Jesus’ High Priestly Prayer
The Lord's Prayer, Chapter 17
We now come to one of the most remarkable chapters in the Bible. It is the longest prayer in the Bible, although it would take you only three minutes to read it. That is a good indication of the length of public prayers. If you can't say all you've got to say in three minutes, then you've got too much to say. I'll be very frank with you. Brief prayers, thought out right to the point, are more effective than these long, rambling ones we hear. No wonder prayer meetings are as dead as a dodo bird!
That said, Apologies for the length of this Article. I hope y’all get as much from J. Vernon Mcghee’s commentary below as I did.
The Upper Room Discourse is like climbing a staircase or like climbing a mountain, climaxing in this prayer. I would like to quote to you what others have said about this great chapter.
Matthew Henry: “It is the most remarkable prayer following the most full and consoling discourse ever uttered on the earth.”
Martin Luther: “This is truly beyond measure a warm and hearty prayer. He opens the depths of His heart, both in reference to us and to His Father, and He pours them all out. It sounds so honest, so simple. It is so deep, so rich, so wide. No one can fathom it.”
Philip Melanchthon, another of the reformers: “There is no voice which has ever been heard, either in heaven or in earth, more exalted, more holy, more fruitful, more sublime than the prayer offered up by the Son to God Himself.”
This is the prayer which John Knox read over and over in his lifetime. When he was on his deathbed, his wife asked him. “Where do you want me to read?” He replied, “Read where I first put my anchor down, in the seventeenth chapter of John.” We have the record of many others who have read it over and over. Dr. Fisher, who was bishop of Rochester under Henry VIII, had this read as the last portion of Scripture just before his martyrdom.
This is a great portion of Scripture. I feel wholly and totally inadequate to deal with this prayer. It is His high priestly intercession for us. It is a revelation to us of the communication which, constantly passes between the Lord Jesus and the Father in heaven. His entire life was a life of prayer. He began His ministry by going into a solitary place to pray. Often, He went up into a mountain to pray and spent the night in prayer. He is our great Intercessor. He prays for you and for me. If you forgot to pray this morning, He didn't. He prayed for you this morning.
God always hears and answers Jesus' prayer just the way He prays it. God answered my prayer also, but not always the way I pray it—sometimes He must answer my prayer with a no, or He may accomplish what I ask by a completely different method or at a different time. Jesus said,
John 11:41-42 “Father, I thank thee that thou hast heard me. And I knew that thou hearest me always: but because of the people which stand by I said it, that they may believe that thou hast sent me.”
Jesus Prays for Himself, John 17:1-5
I want you to notice that it is not out of line nor even a mark of selfishness to pray for one's self. I believe that when you and I go to God in prayer, we need to get our own hearts and lives right with God. We need to get in tune with heaven, as it were. Every instrument should be tuned up before it is played. Before you and I begin to pray for others, we need to pray for ourselves. That is not selfishness; it is essential.
John 17:1 These words spake Jesus, and lifted up his eyes to heaven, and said, Father, the hour is come; glorify thy Son, that thy Son also may glorify thee.
“These words spake Jesus.” Which words? The chapters we have just read, chapters 13–16. Now He stops speaking to the disciples, and He speaks to the Father. Although He is speaking to the Father in this chapter, He is speaking to Him for their benefit—and for our benefit also. He is our great Intercessor today. We may wonder what He is praying for. Well, here it is. This is the Lord's Prayer, the prayer that He prays to the Father.
The prayer in the Sermon on the Mount is not really the Lord's Prayer. It is the prayer that He taught to the disciples. When Jesus begins with “Our Father,” He means this for all the believers. However, Jesus calls God “Father” in a different sense. After His resurrection He said to Mary,
John 20:17 “I am not yet ascended to my Father: but go to my brethren, and say unto them, I ascend unto my Father, and your Father; and to my God, and your God.”
In other words, “I have not yet ascended to your Father, yours by the new birth, and to My Father, Mine because of My position in the Trinity.” Also, it could never be the prayer of Jesus to say, “Forgive us our debts, our sins.” He never had any sins. He could not pray that prayer. By the same token, you and I can never pray this prayer of John 17. This is His prayer.
Apparently, our Lord prayed this prayer as He was walking along. It says that He “lifted up his eyes to heaven,” which means that His eyes were open. Of course, we can pray without bowing our heads and closing our eyes. We can pray as we walk or as we work or as we drive.
Now notice His prayer. It begins, “Father, the hour is come.” What hour? Well, the hour that was set back in eternity. As He speaks, the clock is striking the hour that was set way back in eternity, because He was the Lamb of God slain before the foundation of the world. It was arranged back there; now “the hour is come.” Remember that when He began His ministry at the wedding of Cana, His mother said to Him, “They have no wine.” His answer to her was, “Woman, what have I to do with thee? mine hour is not yet come” (John 2:3-4). Now the hour has come, the hour when He will pay for your sins and mine. It is the hour when all the creation of God will see the love of God displayed and lavished as He takes your sins and my sins upon Himself and dies a vicarious, substitutionary, redemptive death for you and for me. And it won't end there; it will go on to the Resurrection.
“The hour is come; glorify thy Son, that thy Son also may glorify thee.” The death of Christ will demonstrate that God is not the brutal bully the liberal theologians talk about in the Old Testament, but that He is a loving Father who so loves the world that He gives His only begotten Son. Then the Son will be raised from the dead, ascend back into heaven, and He will be given a name that is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow to Him. “Glorify thy Son, that thy Son also may glorify thee.” Oh, the wealth of meaning that is here!
John 17:2 As thou hast given him power over all flesh, that he should give eternal life to as many as thou hast given him.
This is a startling statement. He has power over all flesh! He could make this universe and every individual in it bow to Him. He could bring us all into subjection to Him and make robots out of all of us. Although that is the last thing He would want to do, He has the power over all flesh.
The church is God's love gift to Jesus Christ. So, He gives eternal life to as many “as thou hast given him.” This brings up the question of election and free will, and I don't want to go into that extensively. There are extreme Calvinists and extreme Armenians, and the truth is probably somewhere between the two. If God would somehow reveal to me who are the elect ones, I would give the gospel only to them. But God does not do this. He has said that whosoever will may come. That is a legitimate offer to every person. You have no excuse to offer at all if you will not come to Him. It will be your condemnation that you turned down the offer that God has made to you.
John 17:3 And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent.
Does election shut out certain people? No. Life eternal is to know the only true God and Jesus Christ whom He has sent. Do you have a desire to know the true God and Jesus Christ? Then you are not shut out. You must be one of the elect. He gives eternal life to those who have heard the call and have responded down in their hearts. They have come to Christ of their own free will.
“That they might know thee.” It is not the amount of knowledge you have, but the kind of knowledge that is important. It is whom you know. Do you know Jesus Christ? In the same way, it is not the amount of faith you have but the kind of faith that is important. There is a song called “Only Believe.” Only believe what? Only believe in the only One, the Lord Jesus Christ. I quote Spurgeon again: “It is not thy joy in Christ that saves thee. It is Christ. It is not thy faith in Christ, though that be the instrument. It is Christ's blood and merit.” It is Christ who saves. One can believe in the wrong thing. It is the object of faith which is so important. “This is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ.” Now faith comes by hearing, hearing the Word of God. What does the Word of God say? The gospel is that Jesus died for our sins, was buried, and rose again. Those are the facts. Our knowledge of the facts and our response to that knowledge is faith. Faith is trusting Christ as our own Savior.
Life eternal is to know God and to know Jesus Christ. Jesus is His name as Savior, and Christ is His title—the Messiah, the King of Israel. To know Him means to grow in grace and in the knowledge of Christ. When we move on in the knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ, we come to the place of assurance. Anyone without the assurance of salvation is either unsaved or is just a babe in Christ. They need to move on to the place where they know that they are saved. Life eternal is to know the only genuine God and to know Jesus Christ. This is the reason that the study of the Word of God is so important. Many people stay on the fringe of things and are never sure they are saved.
John 17:4 I have glorified thee on the earth: I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do.
The Lord Jesus is handing in His final report to the Father. He hasn't died on the Cross yet; but, as far as God is concerned, He speaks of things which are not as if they are. Future tense for God is just as accurate as past tense. Our Lord Jesus is going to the Cross to die and then will rise again. On the Cross, He said, “It is finished” (John 19:30). That means our redemption was finished. He has done everything that was necessary. We can put a period there. We cannot add a thing to His finished work. Therefore, the gospel of salvation is not what God is asking you to do, but what God is telling you that He has already done for you. It is your response to that which saves you.
John 17:5 And now, O Father, glorify thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was.
In Philippians 2, it speaks of Jesus emptying Himself. Some try to teach that He emptied Himself of His deity. John makes it very clear that the Word became flesh. That little baby in Mary's lap is God, and He could have spoken this universe out of existence. He wasn't just 99.9% God; He was, and is, 100% God. So, of what did He empty Himself? He emptied Himself of His prerogatives of deity; He laid aside His glory.
At Christmas we make a great deal of the shepherds and the angels and the wise men who came to see Him. That is not the way it should have been. He is the Lord of glory, and the whole creation should have been there; every human being on the face of the earth should have been there. People will come from all parts of a country and even all parts of the world for the funeral of a great political leader. The whole world should have been at the birth of the Lord of glory when He came to earth. Although He could have claimed such homage, instead He laid aside His glory. Now He is ready to return to heaven, back to the glory.
Jesus Prays for Disciples, John 17:6-19
John 17:6 I have manifested thy name unto the men which thou gavest me out of the world: thine they were, and thou gavest them me; and they have kept thy word.
Notice this: “to as many as thou hast given him” (v. John 17:2): “unto the men which thou gavest me … and thou gavest them me” (v. John 17:6); “for them which thou hast given me” (v. John 17:9); “whom thou hast given me” (v. John 17:11); and “those that thou gavest me” (v. John 17:12). We are back to the great doctrine of election. Jesus talked to the Father about it. It was a private conversation, but He wanted the disciples to hear it and to know about it. I don't know as much about election as maybe I should know. I've read Hodge, Calvin, Thornwall, Shedd, and Strong on the subject, and they don't seem to know much more about it. The reason we know so little about election is because it is God's side, and there are a lot of things that God knows that we don't know.
It is a wonderful thing to be able to listen to this prayer and to know that Jesus is at God's right hand talking to the Father about us. The Lord Jesus has talked to the Father about you today, if you are one of His.
There is a mystical relationship between the Lord Jesus and His own. They belong to the Father and were given to Jesus Christ. I can't fathom its meaning. What a wonderful relationship!
John 17:7-8 Now they have known that all things whatsoever thou hast given me are of thee.
For I have given unto them the words which thou gavest me; and they have received them, and have known surely that I came out from thee, and they have believed that thou didst send me.
The Lord gave them the Words of the Father. That is important. He gave them no property or money or a cool laptop, but the Words of the Father. Jesus testifies here that these disciples believed that He came from the Father. They knew who He was. They did not understand His purpose and certainly not His death and resurrection, but they made tremendous advances during the three years they were with Him. They knew He came from God, and they believed that God sent Him.
John 17:9 I pray for them: I pray not for the world, but for them which thou hast given me; for they are thine.
I will make a startling statement which is no more startling than what He made: Jesus Christ does not pray for the world today. His ministry of intercession is for His own who are in the world. He doesn't pray for the world; He died for the world. What more could He do for the world? He has sent the Holy Spirit into the world to convict the world of sin, righteousness, and judgment. Jesus Christ prays for His own.
John 17:10 And all mine are thine, and thine are mine; and I am glorified in them.
The whole purpose of our salvation is to bring glory to Jesus Christ.
John 17:11 And now I am no more in the world, but these are in the world, and I come to thee. Holy Father, keep through thine own name those whom thou hast given me, that they may be one, as we are.
He prays for two wonderful things. He prays for us to be kept. You will be kept because you have been sealed by the Holy Spirit and because your Savior is praying for you.
His other request is that we should be one. He prays for the unity of believers. He's not praying for an ecumenical movement or that we all join the same denomination. There has been much wrong teaching about this. First of all, He prays to the Father that His own might be one. Notice that He isn't praying to us or to some church authority; He is praying to the Father. And He prays that we should be one “as we are”; that is, as the Father and the Son are one. The Father has answered every prayer of His Son, and He has answered this one. There is an organic unity which God has made. The Holy Spirit takes all true believers and baptizes them into the body of Christ, identifies them in the body of Christ. The disgrace of it all is that down here the believers are pretty well divided. But there is only one true church, and every believer in Jesus Christ is a member of that church. It is called the body of Christ.
John 17:12 While I was with them in the world, I kept them in thy name: those that thou gavest me I have kept, and none of them is lost, but the son of perdition; that the scripture might be fulfilled.
“Those that thou gavest me”—we have election mentioned again. There are certain things which I believe that to me are not contradictory, but they certainly are paradoxical. Election and free will happen to be one of those. I wish you could have met me when I went in the Army – Well, maybe not. I was a smart boy know-it-all, too full of myself, and I even had an Armenian answer to election and free will. Calvin was someone my preachers ridiculed. But I have a little more sense than I had then. Thank-you pastor Andrew Zeller! After a wonderful, intellectual parade of words defending Free Will from an Armenian perspective, Andrew simply asked, “When is God in charge?” That took me deep into Romans and a serious study of Calvin’s thoughts. Today, and I realize that it’s a sovereign God perspective and we simply do not understand it.
Judas Iscariot is, of course, “the son of perdition.” He fulfilled the prophecies concerning him.
John 17:13 And now come I to thee; and these things I speak in the world, that they might have my joy fulfilled in themselves.
God does not want us to be long–faced, solemn Christians. He came that our lives might be filled with joy—His joy.
John 17:14 I have given them thy word; and the world hath hated them, because they are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.
The Word of God causes problems in the world today. The Bible is the most revolutionary Book in the world. It is revolutionary to teach that you cannot save yourself, that only Christ can save you. We can’t do enough pushups, sit-ups, or works to save ourselves. I know because I’ve tried. And you can't make this world better. Only Jesus Christ can do that. That's revolutionary, and the world doesn't want to hear that. They'd rather plant a few flowers and try to clean up pollution. The problem is that the pollution is in the human heart.
John 17:15 I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that thou shouldest keep them from the evil.
This really should read “from the evil one.” Again, it is startling to note that He does not pray that we should be taken out of the world. God gets glory by keeping you and me in the world today. We think of the Rapture as wonderful, and it will be. We think of the Rapture as bringing glory to God, and it will. But let's understand one thing: God gets glory by keeping you and me in the world. If you knew me like He knows me, you'd know it is a miracle for God to keep me in the world. We long for the Rapture. In Revelation 22:17 it says that the Spirit and the bride say, “Come.” The Holy Spirit is weary of this world, He is grieved. He says, “Come.” We also are weary, and we who are the bride of Christ say, “Come.” But Jesus prays not that we should be taken out of the world, but that we should be kept from the evil one, Satan. And I wouldn't want to be here for a minute if my Lord weren't keeping me from the evil one.
Wouldn't it be wonderful if we could really learn this lesson? We cry and whimper because things are hard down here. Sure, they are. He said they would be hard— “but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world” (John 16:33). I suspect that every twenty–four hours there is a great hallelujah meeting in heaven, and the angels say, “Isn't it marvelous that Inman is still being kept in the world. It would be so easy to take him out of the world – like I deserve – but it is a real miracle to keep him in the world.” If we could learn that, it would enable us to endure more easily our problems and tensions and difficulties and temptations. The Lord Jesus has prayed to keep us in the world and to protect us from the evil one.
John 17:16 They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.
The measure in which we as believers realize this, the more completely we fulfill His will and accomplish His purpose… No matter how many elections we think are stolen or grouse about people in our nation’s capital working to steal the liberties God gave us.
John 17:17 Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is truth.
Sanctify means to set apart. The believer is not of the world; he is set apart. The thought has reference to the task rather than the person; it is a commitment to the task. The believer is set apart by the Word of God. That is, the Word reveals the mind of God. As you read the Word, you are led to set yourself apart for a particular ministry. We can serve Him only as we know His Word and are obedient to it.
John 17:18-19 As thou hast sent me into the world, even so have I also sent them into the world.
And for their sakes I sanctify myself, that they also might be sanctified through the truth.
We have been sent out into the world to bear a witness. He sets Himself apart to be identified with us, and we ought to be identified with Him in this world.
Jesus Prays for His Church, John 17:20-26
John 17:20 Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe on me through their word.
He had you and me in mind. Now, many centuries later, we can know our great High Priest is praying for us.
John 17:21 That they all may be one; as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us: that the world may believe that thou hast sent me.
This prayer has been answered. The church is an organic unity. Believers are one in Christ, for the church is one body. The minute any sinner trusts Christ, that sinner is put into the body of Christ. If believers would manifest that union to the world, the world would be more impressed with Christ. Too often the world sees believers hating each other which may well be one of the reasons they will not accept Christ. In the Army, we called this ‘friendly fire’ and their ain’t nothin’ friendly about it.
John 17:22-23 And the glory which thou gavest me I have given them; that they may be one, even as we are one:
I in them, and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one; and that the world may know that thou hast sent me, and hast loved them, as thou hast loved me.
“I in them, and thou in me.” How wonderful! Only the Spirit of God can accomplish that. The unity that exists between the Father and the Son is the unity that is to exist between the believer and the Lord Jesus Christ! “And hast loved them, as thou hast loved me”—means that God loves you as much as He loves the Lord Jesus Christ. That boggles our minds!
John 17:24 Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am; that they may behold my glory, which thou hast given me: for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world.
It will be heaven to be with Him in perfect fellowship. I take it that this was God's purpose in creating man. There are other creatures in the universe and on the earth, but God made man a creature with whom He could have fellowship. God created man with a free will; and, even though man sinned, God wants his fellowship. Heaven is going to be wonderful, and it will be important that every one of His sheep is there with Him. Each one will have his contribution to make.
To behold the glory of the Lord Jesus will be the satisfaction of the believer. Moses asked to see the glory of God. Philip asked to see the Father. Sometimes we get a glimpse of glory in a rainbow or a sunset. Think what it will be when we come into His presence and behold His glory! That is the goal to which we are moving.
John 17:25 O righteous Father, the world hath not known thee: but I have known thee, and these have known that thou hast sent me.
Being sent from the Father actually embraces His entire mission of redemption. Anyone who is a believer knows that the Father has sent Him, and the purpose was for Him to die for our sins.
John 17:26 And I have declared unto them thy name, and will declare it: that the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them, and I in them.
The last thing He mentions is that His love might be in our hearts and in our lives. We talk so much about grace and about faith, and rightly so; yet the great desire of His heart is that His love should be manifest in the lives of those whom He has redeemed. That should put us down on our faces before Him. How much of His love is manifest in you?
In review, this is what this prayer says about believers and the world:
1. Given to Christ out of the world (v. John 17:6)
2. Left in the world (v. John 17:11)
3. Not of the world (v. John 17:14)
4. Hated by the world (v. John 17:14)
5. Kept from the evil one (v. John 17:15)
6. Sent into the world (v. John 17:18)
7. Manifest in unity before the world (v. John 17:23)
These are the requests of Christ for His own:
1. Preservation (v. John 17:11)
2. Joy—fullness of the Spirit (v. John 17:13)
3. Deliverance—from evil (v. John 17:15)
4. To be set apart— “sanctify” (v. John 17:17)
5. Unity— “be one”— (this is not union) (v. John 17:21)
6. Fellowship— “be with me” (v. John 17:24)
7. Satisfaction— “behold my glory” (v. John 17:24)
The Lord Jesus Christ is our great High Priest. This is the great truth of the Epistle to the Hebrews. In the Old Testament economy, the high priest wore an ephod of beauty and glory, which was joined on each shoulder by two onyx stones with the names of the tribes of Israel engraved on them. Thus, he carried the names of the children of Israel with him when he went into the presence of God. This speaks of the strength and power of the high priest. Hebrews 7:25 tells us about Jesus Christ, our High Priest: “Wherefore he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him, seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them.” Christ is able to save us.. He has strength and power.
Also on the breastplate of the high priest were twelve precious stones, arranged three in a row in four rows across his breast. On each was the name of a tribe of Israel. When the high priest went into God's presence wearing the breastplate, he pictured the Lord Jesus Christ who is at the right hand of God interceding for us. The Lord not only carries us on His shoulders, the place of strength and power, but He also carries us on His breast, on His heart, which speaks of His love. He has all power, and He loves us!