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Sanctified in Truth, United in Christ: The Real Meaning of John 17

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  John 17 is not a casual prayer. It is not a closing thought or a gentle reflection. It is the final recorded prayer of Christ before the cross. What He prays here reveals what matters most as He prepares to lay down His life. And what He prays for is not vague. He does not pray for comfort. He does not pray for success. He does not pray for influence. He prays for a people who are sanctified by truth and united in Him. This is not optional. This is the foundation of the church. The Structure of the Prayer The prayer unfolds in three movements, and each one builds on the last. Jesus first speaks of His own mission and its completion. He then prays for His immediate disciples who will remain in the world after He departs. Finally, He prays for all who will believe through their message. This includes every believer who comes after them. What emerges is not just a prayer, but a vision. A people formed by the work of Christ, shaped by truth, and united in a way that reflects the very...

He Is Risen (The Gospel in Three Days — Part 3: Easter Sunday)

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  The Turning Point of History Easter Sunday is not simply the conclusion of the story that began on Good Friday. It is the turning point of all history. The cross revealed the cost of sin and the depth of God’s justice, but the resurrection reveals the power of God and the certainty of salvation. When the women came to the tomb in Luke 24, they expected to find a body. Instead, they were met with a declaration that changes everything: “He is not here, but has risen.” This is not symbolic language or spiritual metaphor. The resurrection is a real, historical event. The tomb is empty, not because Jesus’ followers imagined it, but because He truly rose from the dead. The Vindication of the Son The resurrection is the Father’s public declaration that the work of Christ is accepted. On the cross, Jesus bore the full weight of sin and judgment. In the resurrection, God confirms that the payment has been made in full. Romans 1:4 tells us that Jesus was “declared to be the Son of God in p...

He Is Enough: A Final Word on the “I AM” Christ (I AM Series Epilogue)

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  The “I AM” statements in John’s Gospel are not scattered teachings or isolated metaphors. They are a unified revelation. Each one answers the same question from a different angle: Who is Jesus? And taken together, they leave no room for a reduced Christ. He is not merely a teacher. He is not merely a guide. He is not merely an example. He is the bread that sustains, the light that reveals, the gate that saves, the shepherd who lays down His life, the resurrection who conquers death, the way who brings us to the Father, and the vine who sustains every moment of spiritual life. He is not part of salvation. He is salvation. The Unified Picture of Christ Each statement speaks to a deep human need, but none of them stand alone. Hunger, darkness, danger, lostness, death, separation, and fruitlessness all find their answer in the same person. We do not move from one need to another solution. We are brought again and again to Christ. He is the provision for every need because He is the c...

It Is Finished (The Gospel in Three Days — Part 2: Good Friday)

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The Center of the Gospel Good Friday brings us to the center of the Christian faith. Everything that began on Palm Sunday now moves toward its purpose. The King who entered Jerusalem in humility now hangs on a cross in apparent defeat. To many, this moment looks like a tragedy, a failure of expectation, and the collapse of hope. But Scripture makes it clear that this is not an accident of history or the result of human power alone. This is the unfolding of God’s eternal plan. Acts 2:23 tells us that Jesus was “delivered up according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God.” The cross is not a detour in the story of redemption. It is the very reason Christ came. The Necessity of the Cross The question we must ask is not simply what happened at the cross, but why it had to happen. The answer is found in the holiness and justice of God. Sin is not a small problem that can be overlooked. It is a direct offense against a holy God and demands judgment. God cannot simply ignore sin with...

Jesus Is the True Vine (I AM Series Part 7)

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  In John 15:1, Jesus gives the final “I AM” statement recorded in John’s Gospel: “I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener.” This statement comes in the final hours before His arrest. It is not casual teaching. It is a defining word to His disciples as everything they have relied on is about to be shaken. In this image, Jesus gathers together the major themes of His ministry—life, dependence, fruitfulness, and relationship with God—and brings them to a single point. More than any other image in the series, the vine exposes a reality that many resist. Spiritual life is not sustained by effort. It is sustained by connection. If that connection is absent, everything else is empty. The Biblical Background: Israel as God’s Vine In the Old Testament, Israel is repeatedly described as a vine planted and cultivated by God. Psalm 80 speaks of God bringing a vine out of Egypt and establishing it in the land. Isaiah 5 describes a vineyard carefully tended, yet producing fruit that d...

Jesus Is the Way, the Truth, and the Life (I AM Series Part 6)

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  In John 14:6, Jesus makes one of the most comprehensive and decisive statements about His identity: “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” This is not a statement of guidance alone. It is a claim of exclusivity, authority, and necessity. Jesus does not point people toward a path. He places Himself at the center of it. If this statement is true, then access to God is not discovered, constructed, or earned. It is found only in Him. This is not merely one teaching among many. It is a dividing line. The Setting: A Night of Uncertainty John 14 takes place on the night before the crucifixion. The disciples are unsettled, and for good reason. Jesus has told them that He is leaving. He has spoken of betrayal. He has warned Peter of his coming denial. Everything they thought they understood about the kingdom of God is beginning to unravel. Into this confusion, Jesus speaks words of reassurance. He tells them not to let their hearts be trou...

Jesus Is the Resurrection and the Life (I AM Series Part 5)

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  In John 11:25, standing before the tomb of Lazarus, Jesus makes one of the most sweeping and decisive claims in all of Scripture: “I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though they die; and whoever lives by believing in me will never die.” This is not spoken in abstraction. It is not a theological lecture delivered at a distance. It is spoken in the presence of grief, in the face of death, and in a moment where hope appears to have already passed. Jesus does not avoid the reality of death. He stands directly before it and declares His authority over it. This is not simply comfort. It is a claim that redefines life, death, and salvation itself. The Setting: Delayed Help and Real Loss John 11 begins with urgency. Lazarus is sick, and his sisters, Mary and Martha, send word to Jesus expecting Him to come quickly. But Jesus does not come immediately. He delays, and that delay is intentional. By the time He arrives in Bethany, Lazarus has been ...