The Glory That Comes from Man... Or God?
"Jesus' Triumphal Procession into Jerusalem" by James Tissot |
“Isaiah said these things because he saw His
glory and spoke of Him. Nevertheless, many even of the authorities believed in [Jesus],
but for fear of the Pharisees they did not confess it, so that they would not
be put out of the synagogue; for they loved the glory that comes from man more
than the glory that comes from God” (John 12:41-43).
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and
the Lord Jesus Christ!
The news spread quickly that Jesus was in
Bethany, and large numbers of people headed there to see Him. With the influx
of pilgrims in Jerusalem getting ready for the Passover, it wasn’t long before
a great crowd had gathered. No doubt, their curiosity was doubly piqued, since
they would also be able to see Lazarus, whom Jesus had recently raised from the
dead. Realizing they were losing the battle for public opinion, the chief priests
decided to kill Jesus. They would do whatever was necessary to end Jesus’
popularity. They added Lazarus to their hit list, for many Jews believed in Jesus
because He had raised Lazarus from the dead.
Jesus had arrived in Bethany on Friday. The dinner
at Mary and Martha’s, the anointing by Mary, and the gathering of the crowd
took place after His arrival, with the Sabbath intervening. On the next day—Palm
Sunday—the ever-growing crowd learned that Jesus was on His way to Jerusalem.
They cut palm branches and went out to the road to meet Him, receiving Him with
all the pomp and circumstance of a king as the Jewish leaders feared they might.
The people hailed Jesus with words from Psalm
118:25-26: “Hosanna! Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord, even the King
of Israel!” This was from the Hallel,
sung as part of the Passover feast. For centuries, Jews had sung it in
anticipation of the Lamb of God on His way to be their sacrifice. But they
weren’t thinking of sacrifice that day; they received Jesus as Israel’s King.
It happened spontaneously, but it was foretold
years earlier. Jesus rode a young donkey, fulfilling the prophecy of Zechariah
9:9. The messianic King from David’s line entered Jerusalem amid the praise and
glory of the crowd.
The Pharisees cursed their bad fortune. Every threat
they had made, every trap they had set, every accusation they had leveled, hadn’t
accomplished a thing. Jesus was, on that day, more popular than ever. The
Jewish leaders reacted as we often do when we realize we are no longer in
control—frustrated and fearful. “Look, the world has gone after Him,” they
exclaimed in classic hyperbole.
To the Pharisees, “the world” meant primarily
the Jewish people. But Christ came for the whole world. Even then and there
some Greeks were among the crowd. They singled out Philip from Jesus’ disciples
and made their intentions known: “We wish to see Jesus.” Philip told Andrew;
Andrew and Philip went and told Jesus. Up to this time, Jesus had insisted repeatedly
that His hour had not yet come. But now, He says, “The hour has come for the
Son of Man to be glorified.”
What Jesus came to do He likened to a seed of
grain. That seed remains nothing but a lonely seed unless it is planted. But
when it is buried in the ground and dies there, a plant grows from it and bears
fruit. Similarly, Jesus would not bear the fruit of His mission until He first
died. All His miraculous signs had no eternal benefit without the miracle of
the cross and the empty tomb. The Son of Man had to die for the spiritual
harvest to come, the harvest of souls for eternity.
When Jesus warns against loving our lives, He
means putting this earthly life first. When we believe in Jesus and have eternal
life in Him, worldly living loses its attraction. Everything worldly carries
sin’s taint. Only in Jesus does the good life, eternal life, become ours. It
would be better to lose this earthly life than to lose Jesus. Our faith in Jesus,
however, carries a price. We must follow where He leads. We face sacrifices. We
risk the scorn of others. But we do so with the promise of the heavenly Father’s
honor and with praise and thanksgiving for His Son.
Jesus had come to Jerusalem to die. As true
man, He was troubled by what He faced. The triumphant procession did not change
the reality He knew was coming. He already felt the burden we associate with Gethsemane.
He opened His soul for us to look in. Jesus was not a robot, heading for the
scrap heap without feeling. As true God, He did not simply switch off all
sorrow and suffering. His sufferings would be intense beyond measure because of
our sin. Still the God-man never wavered from His assigned path. He had come
from heaven for this very purpose, prepared for this time. He was there to
bring glory to God.
Jesus turned attention from Himself to His
Father, praying, “Father, glorify Your name.” The Father answered Jesus’ prayer
aloud from heaven. His name had been glorified and would continue to be
glorified. By sending His Son in the flesh and through His Son’s miraculous signs,
the Father received glory (John 1:14). In the events to come, Christ’s work of
salvation—His death, resurrection, and ascension—would most assuredly glorify
God’s name further.
The crowd needed to hear the voice as a sign
that a truly cosmic event was being set in motion—the confrontation God had predicted
in Eden (Genesis 3:15). The judgment of this world would be based on the
outcome. The judgment is an ongoing process, as people either in faith accept,
or in unbelief, reject Jesus as their Savior. The ruler of this world, Satan, would
be driven out as the Seed of the woman emerged as the risen victor. Jesus would
break the devil’s power over us.
For all this to happen, Jesus was headed for
death by crucifixion. He told the people as much, using an image most of them
would have understood, at least in principle. He would be lifted up from the
earth on a cross. That lifting up would affect all human beings. Through it and
His subsequent exaltation, Jesus would draw all people to Himself. At the
cross, all people must invariably accept or reject Jesus as Savior. There are
no other paths.
This crowd had just hailed Jesus as the Christ
in the line of King David, and now they heard Him talk about Himself as the Son
of Man, saying that He must be crucified. They searched for understanding. They
believed from Scripture that the Christ would be eternal but assumed that meant
He would set up an eternal kingdom on earth. It didn’t make sense to them that
the Christ would die. Rather than try to explain away their doubts; He called for
them to trust in Him. They didn’t need all their questions answered just then.
They needed only to believe.
Still, not all who were gathered that Palm
Sunday believed in Jesus even though He had done so many signs in their
presence, including the raising of Lazarus. This too, fulfilled messianic prophecy.
Isaiah had prophesied this unbelief, and Jesus had quoted him elsewhere to show
why many Jews didn’t recognize His messianic claims. They were locked away in
their own unbelief.
Isaiah prophesied these things because He had
seen the glory that comes from God. In his vision, Isaiah saw the Messiah’s
great suffering to achieve our salvation and the Messiah’s glory, restored in
the resurrection and ascension.
Many rejected Jesus, but some, even some of the
leaders, believed in Jesus. Sad to say, the Pharisees succeeded in intimidating
them, so they hid their real views for fear of being put out of the synagogue. They
loved the glory that comes from man more than the glory that comes from God in
Christ.
We should not be surprised at this faintheartedness.
Our own lives display it today. How often do we Christians fail to confess our
faith because we fear the reaction of those around us? How often do you and I
love the glory that comes from man more than the glory that comes from God?
The fact is, we really have a hard time
understanding glory as God defines it. We’re used to glory in human terms. A
person finds glory when he is surrounded by power, strength, and prestige. When
someone is glorious, he seems invincible. That’s hardly the appearance of the beaten,
bloody Man hanging on the cross.
But God measures glory in a different way. In
God’s terms, glory is achieved by doing His will. Something none of us is capable
of doing ourselves. Not perfectly. Not all the time. But Jesus does, and He
does it in our place.
Against all appearances, God is glorifying His
name at the cross because Jesus is fulfilling His Father’s plan of salvation, dying
the death of sinners so that sinners can be raised to eternal life. That hill
outside Jerusalem is a more glorious mountain than Sinai; on Mt. Calvary,
Christ defeats sin, death, and the devil.
When the Greeks wished to see Jesus, Jesus
pointed them to the cross. That is where the Son of Man is glorified. As a pastor,
it is given me (and all pastors) to point you to the cross, time and time
again. We do so with reason, because there is your salvation. There you will
see the glory that comes from God.
In Christ, you have much more than what the
world appears to offer. The world’s glory consists in displays of power, popularity,
wealth. All of them are so fleeting. Look how long it takes for the cheering crowds
of Jesus’ triumphal entry on Palm Sunday to turn to chants of “Crucify Him!” on
Good Friday. How quickly a celebrity can go to persona non grata with one rumor
of scandal. How quickly wealth can disappear with a bad investment or shaky
economy.
Jesus’ glory is to do His Father’s will. His
death is glorious, because by His death He saves you from the devil, the world,
and your own sinful nature. Furthermore, He continues to accomplish His Father’s
will, visiting you by His Word and Sacraments, working in you forgiveness, life,
and salvation.
This is a world of trouble and anxiety because this
is a world of sin. You’ll be tempted to love the glory that comes from man more
than the glory that comes from God. In the midst of trouble, trial, and
temptation, Jesus visits you with that glorious forgiveness. Where you might be
frustrated at your station in life, He calls you His child and an heir of the
kingdom of heaven. He reassures you that this time of tribulation will pass and
that He will use it for your good and for His glory.
Remember that glory in times of grief. There is
little in life that is more heart-breaking than the death of a loved one. Like
all people, Christians must also endure grief. But with the grief, they also
have the hope of the grain. In the midst of mourning, you know that Christ was
put to death and buried in a tomb. You also know that He rose from the dead three
days later. You also have the confidence that He is the firstfruits of those
fallen asleep, and He will raise His people to everlasting life. Those who have
died in the Lord are delivered from suffering; and because they have died in
the Lord, they will be raised up to eternal glory on the Last Day.
Remember that glory when troubled by guilt. The
devil still accuses; but since he has no access to the throne of God anymore,
he whispers the accusations into your ear instead. He would abuse your
conscience and try to convince you that, despite Jesus’ death, you still stand
guilty before God. He seeks to make your guilt appear far more real than the cross.
But the devil has been lying since he first slithered into Eden, and his
accusations are falsehood at the foundation. Have you sinned? Yes, that much is
true. Do you still stand guilty before God? No, because Christ has died to take
away your sins. The true blood of Christ has covered and removed evidence of
your sin before God. “There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ
Jesus” (Romans 8:1).
The glory that comes from God is found in the
cross, because that is where the Savior saves you. By gloriously fulfilling His
Father’s plan for your salvation, Jesus takes your sins away and give you
eternal life. He rescues you from tribulation, from guilt, and from death. He
declares you His holy, innocent child, and makes you an heir of eternal life. Because
of His death, the risen Lord now utters these glorious words to you: You are forgiven
for all your sins in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen.
Unless
otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are from the Holy Bible, English
Standard Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of
Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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