Our Lord Prays for His Own: Thoughts on John 17Ravenio Books, 13 mei 2014 THIS chapter is emphatically the Lord’s prayer. That which we commonly call the Lord’s prayer He taught His disciples, but did not use Himself. The petition, “Forgive us our trespasses,” could never have been uttered by the Lord Jesus Christ. This prayer, on the other hand, is His own—His disciples were not invited to unite in it; it was a prayer they did not and could not utter. Evidently the Lord spake so as to be heard, and the disciples listened. The Holy Ghost has provided that not one petition should be lost to the church of God. We often find our Lord teaching His disciples to pray, and we read of Him spending even whole nights in prayer; but we never find Him praying with His disciples. Indeed, there would seem to be something incongruous in Christ kneeling down with His disciples for prayer; there must always have been something peculiar in His petitions. At this time His work on earth was well-nigh ended: nothing remained for Him but to die: “I have finished the work which Thou gavest Me to do.” (v. 4.) The Last Supper was over. The Lord had dispensed to His disciples the broken bread and poured-out wine, memorials of His dying love; He had expressed to them His desire, that in remembrance of Him, they should often gather together and thus show forth His death in this illustration and their union with Himself and with each other, until His return to them in glory. He had washed their feet; He had comforted them; He had opened His whole heart to them. He now opens it for them to Him before whom “all hearts are open, all desires known, and from whom no secrets are hid;” and having poured out His soul into the ear, and into the bosom of God, He went forth into Gethsemane. May God the Spirit be with us and give unction and understanding to our hearts, while we meditate on His most precious prayer. |
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... Godhead, that the people given to Christ should be filled with all the fulness of God. Who can speak of eternal life? A life spent in the favour of God, in the presence of God, in the image of God, and in the power of God eternally; a ...
... Godhead; the Word of God, by whom all things were made, and without whom was not anything made that was made, was made flesh and dwelt among us. The Son of the Father became the Son of Man also; and, as such, He was “The brightness of ...
... Godhead bodily.” Therefore, the majesty, the holiness, the blessedness, the preciousness, and the glory of the Godman, Christ Jesus, can never be conceived or expressed; The Father's love for Him, and His delight in finishing the work ...
... Godhead, which even He could only manifest but not increase. Man's sin did not and could not diminish it in the most remote degree. The clouds that flit across the noonday sun may hide his beauty, but cannot mar his splendour; the moon ...
... Godhead; and I claim as the recompense of My lifelabour and thereward of My entire obedience unto death, even to be now glorified; and that My whole self, My whole Person, My whole manhood shall be taken up into theglory which I ...