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Do YOU Want to See Jesus?
a sermon based on John 12:20-33
By Rev. Rick Thompson

     Word had been getting around about Jesus.

     He’d been doing some pretty amazing things!  He’s healed a blind man, and that was pretty incredible.

     But the latest one was even better than that!

     Jesus had raised his friend Lazarus from the dead! 

     Lazarus had been raised from the dead, and everybody was talking about it!

     In fact, Jesus had caused such a stir that the religious leaders got really nervous.  The Jewish high council gathered.  After much debate, the high priest issued his judgment: Jesus would have to die.  He was causing too much of a stir, risking undue attention from the Romans, and Jesus would have to go.  They’d have to find a way to hand Jesus over for death.

      And, before much longer, they came to the same conclusion about Lazarus.  Because he had dared to be raised from the dead—as if he had any say in the matter!—and because his walking around among the living brought attention to Jesus, Lazarus would have to die, too.

     There was life bursting out, but the smell of death was in the air.  Tension was ratcheting up.  Things were at the breaking point, and something would have to give.  Somebody would have to die!

     Then Jesus made his next move.  Riding on a borrowed donkey, he paraded into Jerusalem, praised by the great crowd of common people Jesus was gathering.  But the leaders were furious, and it was clear things would soon come to a head.

     Then some Greeks—Greeks perhaps sympathetic to the Jewish way of life—were attracted to Jesus.  They wanted to know more.  They were captivated by this man who had raised the dead and now had stirred up the religious leaders.  They wanted to know more about Jesus—in fact, they wanted to see Jesus.  They approached one of his disciples, Philip who had a Greek-sounding name:  “Sir, we wish to see Jesus.”  Philip approached another disciple, Andrew, and, together, they agreed to bring the Greeks to see Jesus.

     And when they came to Jesus, he said to them, “My time has come.  I’m about to claim my glory!” 

     Now, wouldn’t you and I like to see that, too?  Wouldn’t we like to see Jesus, glorified, coming in power?  Wouldn’t we like to see Jesus crush his enemies—especially if they were our enemies too!  Wouldn’t we like to see Jesus retaliate against those who had resisted him?  Wouldn’t we love it if Jesus stomped out all his opponents, and made it all nice and peaceful and comfortable—just for us?

     Would you like to see Jesus?

     I would.  I’d like to see Jesus as clearly as I can see you.  I’d like to see Jesus make himself clear, obliterate his enemies—because that’s what we think of as glory, isn’t it: success, victory, fame, and all that goes with it, the wealth and the power and the admiration. 

     Do you want to see that Jesus?

     Well, I’m sorry to disappoint you, but Jesus doesn’t seem the least bit interested in being that kind of Jesus.

     “Unless a grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it remains just a single grain,” Jesus says—a single grain, not good for much of anything.

     And a bit later, “…when I am lifted up, I will draw all people to myself.”  And, John has to remind us, “He said this to indicate the kind of death he was to die.”

     Jesus was about to die.  And it would not be a beautiful death.  It would be ugly, horrible, tragic and undeserved. 

     He was going to die on a cross—and that would be his hour of glory!

     If we were looking for Jesus, is that where we’d look?  On a cross?  In the darkest places in the world?  In a place of horrible death?  Right where it seems God is most absent?  Is that where WE’D look for Jesus?

     I doubt it.  We’re like those Greeks.  We’d like to see Jesus clobber his enemies—and, even better, share the spoils of his victory with us.

     And, actually, that’s precisely what Jesus does—but the enemy is not the one we’d identify.  We think Jesus should go after our human enemies, make everything sweetness and light for us, but Jesus has another idea.  For Jesus, that’s small potatoes!  The enemy he’s got in his sights is Satan.  The enemy Jesus has his eye on is sin!  The enemy he’s got in his sights is Death.  “Now is the judgment of this world; now the ruler of this world will be driven out!” he declares to the Greeks. 

     Jesus is going to his cross, and there’s he’s going to defeat Satan and destroy death and deliver from sin and draw ALL PEOPLE—some Greek versions actually have ALL THINGS—to himself!

     His death will be his victory!

     Now, I don’t know how that sounded to those Greeks—but my hunch is, it sounded a lot like it sounds to me.  It sounds like a ridiculous idea—destroy death and evil by dying??  It sounds like Jesus is headed for total, utter failure!

     A seed dies, lies dormant in the soil—and an abundant crop grows, after all. 

     So why can’t abundant life come out of death—even death on a cross?

     And why can’t letting go result in receiving far more than what is lost?

     That’s what Jesus is preparing us for.  That’s what Jesus is teaching us today—that God’s ways are far, far different from ours—and that God’s ways actually produce what God intends—abundant life!

     It’s a mystery.  Just like the death of a seed, buried in the ground, produces a crop, it’s a mystery.

     Death results in life.  To let go is to receive. And a repugnant, hideous death by crucifixion attracts and saves all things, all people.   

     How can this be?

     Only in the strange but true wisdom of God.  Only to those who cling to Christ in faith.  Only to those who, in faith, let go of our own control, our own perceptions about how life ought to work, and our own pathway to glory—only to these is the mystery of abundant life made available!

     A talented woman was on the fast track to a successful, lucrative career as a graphic artist.  She married a successful attorney and, in a couple years, they had a son. 

     Although they eagerly awaited their son’s birth, he was born severely retarded, with numerous physical problems.  As a baby, he required full-time care.  The parents agreed to both cut back on their work and share the responsibility of caring for the child.

     It was a demanding, grueling, 24/7 task.  Within a year, the husband left, leaving a note that said, “I love you, but I just can’t take this.  I’ve got to have a life of my own.”

     The woman quit her job and cared for her son full time.  Because of her constant, loving, and devoted care, the child lived far longer than doctors expected.  But, at age 8, the boy died.

     When the church met for the funeral, they sang victory songs, Easter songs,  Speakers extolled the woman as an example for all, as someone who embodied the teaching of Christ.

     She gave that child eight wonderful years, though she “lost” eight years of her own life, as the world measures gain and loss.  But, when asked, she said, “If I had to do it all over again—I would!”  In Christ, she had a fullness of life that could not be explained or contained![i]

     That woman saw Jesus.  In caring for her son, in letting go and receiving, in entering into the place of darkness and death, she saw Jesus.

     Had she really lost everything?

     No—she had gained abundant life!

     And just as that woman gave up her life for her child, so God has done.  God has made a sacrifice—the ultimate sacrifice.

     God has given up God’s own Son—for us, for you, for me, for all people and all things—TO GIVE LIFE, ABUNDANT LIFE!

     And that’s where we’ll see Jesus in all his glory.

     On a cross, dying to give life to all.

     That’s where we’ll see Jesus—when we follow him, and let go of our own life, and embrace Christ and his life. 

     That’s when we’ll see Jesus!

                                                                                                AMEN.


[i] Source unknown