Skip to main content

Are You Coming to Father’s House? (John 13:33-14:31)

Fathers’ Day: At one point we actually had a glimmer of hope that we would see Rebecca on Fathers' Day weekend and for most of the week leading up to it, it looked like Susan, Sarah-Grace, and Heather would be able to head to the mainland this weekend to see her, but it didn’t work out. 


Fathers’ Day is often a chance when children are able to visit their fathers. This can be quite an occasion if the children live a distance from their fathers and/or if they don’t get to see their fathers very often. If they live quite a distance away sometimes the visits are longer because of it. Children, even adult children going to see their fathers can be quite an occasion.   


Jesus, in our passage today is speaking about going to see his father. Jesus is unmarried and probably in his early thirties and he is at dinner with his students and closest friends when he tells them that he is going to see his father and the conversation that ensues with his disciples is quite interesting. 


Jesus says, 13:33-34: “My children, I will be with you only a little longer. You will look for me…[but] Where I am going, you cannot come...” 


Simon Peter then asks Jesus, ‘Where are you going? What do you mean that we can’t come with you? Jesus tells Peter, 14:1-4, “I am going to my Father’s House;” he says, “…My Father’s house has many suites… I am going there to prepare a place for you. And …I will come back and take you to be with me…. [and then he says] You know the way to the place where I am going.” 


Peter and the others don’t really know the way and are still not entirely sure where he is going, so Thomas now tries to get a clear answer. He re-asks Peter’s question his own words, he asks, Verse 5, “Lord, we don’t know where you are going, so how can we know the way?” 


Jesus answers, Verse 6, “I am the way... No one comes to the Father except through me. If you really know me, you will know my Father as well. From now on, you do know Him and have seen Him.” 


Thomas was trying to help, by rephrasing Peter’s simple question ‘where are you going’? And now Thomas, like Peter, is left to ponder Jesus’ responses. Jesus’ answer to, ‘how do we get to where you are going?’ is ‘I am the way to where I am going’. This probably isn’t all that helpful for Thomas and Peter. 


Philip takes a crack at finding out exactly where Jesus is going as he asks for further clarification; Verse 8, Philip asks, “Lord show us the Father and that will be enough.” Jesus says that he is in the Father and the Father is in him and that they will know that Jesus is in the Father and that they will be in Him as long as they obey His commandments. Jesus is in God and God is in Jesus, He says, and they too can be in God as they obey Jesus’ commandments. 


But the disciples still don’t quite understand where Jesus is going, so now Judas (not Judas Iscariot) asks, 14:22, “But, Lord, why do you intend to show yourself to us and not to the world?” Jesus then more fully explains to his disciples that He is going away but He is not leaving them (or us) alone – the Paraclete is with us to comfort and help in times of trouble – and Jesus will come back too (15:28) and when he ultimately comes back, he will be with those of us who love him and so keep his commands forever – for we will receive a suite or a mansion that he has prepared for us right in his Father’s House (14:2). We never need to be alone. We can be with the Lord forever and for now,


So the answer to the question, ‘where is Jesus going?’ After dinner, Jesus will be arrested. He will be tried. Jesus will be executed. Three days later He will rise from the dead and come to his disciples, then he will go to His Father’s House, he will ascend to the Father who is in Heaven.  


That is where Jesus is going now in our text and then sometime very soon now in our world he is coming back. Jesus went to the Father and made the way for us to follow. Everyone of us who loves Jesus will continue to live our life with him even after we pass away. So the question for us today is not where is Jesus going – we know that - but rather the question for us today is where are we going? The disciples were probably wondering how they can continue on when Jesus leaves them to go to his Father's house. He comforted them by letting them know that he is going there to make a spot for them to stay with him forever and that until that time they can always rely on the Holy Spirit to help them get through all the difficult challenges of life. So what about us?  If we are walking with the Lord now then we can be assured that our journey will not end even at the grave. The Lord will never leave us or forsake us and even after we leave this life we can join him in the suite, the mansion, that he has prepared for us in his Father’s House for eternity. 


Let us pray. 


   

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Psalm 147:7-11: Does God Prohibit the Kilt?

  7 Sing to the Lord with grateful praise;     make music to our God on the harp.   8 He covers the sky with clouds;     he supplies the earth with rain     and makes grass grow on the hills. 9 He provides food for the cattle     and for the young ravens when they call.   10 His pleasure is not in the strength of the horse,     nor his delight in the legs of a man [or ‘the warrior’]; 11 the Lord delights in those who fear him,     who put their hope in his unfailing love.   Psalm 147:10 : “His pleasure is not in the strength of the horse, nor his delight in the legs of a man.” I thought this was an appropriate passage to look at on Robbie Burns Day. For Christmas one year Susan bought me some Bible Commentaries on Psalms. In one of these books the author, Peter C. Craigie, from Scotland, writes:   …. It was the custom in Scotland for boys to ...

Resurrection and Frankenstein's Creation (2 Corinthians 5:17 and Revelation 21 3b-4)

 2 Corinthians 5:17 Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here!  We went to see Frankenstein the Ballet last night. If anyone knows that story. The beginning is like the book. Dr. Frankenstein makes a creation out of the parts of corpses who had had terrible things happen in their lives - and then he brings life to the new creation and it becomes whole - with a whole new lease on life. A new chance to live. No matter all the awful stuff that had happened before. Now - the book actually ends poorly after that but the ballet does not. The ballet includes a story of Giselle. This bride, who herself suffered a horrible fate, learned forgiveness and is resurrected. She meets Frankenstein's creation; they fall in love - and start off again, this time living a transformed life. Revelation 21:3b-4: God himself will be with them and be their God. 4 ‘He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death’ or mourning or ...

Low Saturday (Genesis 3, Revelation 21)

  Hello, I am Major Michael Ramsay from TSA. As well as running The Salvation Army, the Bread of Life soup kitchen, shelter and The Salvation Army thrift store, I am a Christian pastor / teacher. This weekend is Easter. That is the most important time on the Christian Calendar. Christians acknowledge Jesus as God. Our teachings tell us that God, as creator, created the whole world. And when He did it was perfect. Not only did we not harm each other, ourselves or the earth; but we never got sick, we never got injured; and the earth itself – the trees did not fall to the ground and die. Animals did not eat animals. All of creation was in perfect harmony. The Creator even walked in this Garden He created with people He created. Then something happened. The first people created made a choice.   Because of this choice, death, decay, harm and hurt entered the world. Where there was none before, now there was illness, injury and death for all of creation. Plants, animals and al...