The Prayer of Jesus
John 17
the Unique Relationship of the Son to the Father 1-5
The Father’s glorification of the Son has a full return to the Father 1
1.These words means the discourse given in chapters 14-16. His lifting up his eyes to heaven was a common posture of prayer. The deep penitence and sorrow and recognition of unworthiness of the penitent in Luke 18:13 is shown in that he “would not even lift up his eyes to heaven.” Jesus, however, comes with openness of heart and mind, clarity of purpose, and consciousness of having done all that the Father assigned to him in the incarnation as determined in the eternal covenant of redemption.
2. “The hour has come.” That hour that had been strategically sidestepped on other occasions now was upon him. This was the occasion and the hour of completed righteousness and the event toward which Jesus had moved throughout his ministry. The events to follow were not the sudden crushing of hope and aspiration, they were not the obliteration of a valiant attempt to put some light and kindness into a selfish and cruel world. Jesus was not just a teacher whose startling reversal of the common wisdom of worldly men had now resulted in his own destruction ending his usefulness. No, it was for these very things that he had come; for in this “hour” God would infuse his own eternal justice into the most unjust actions conceivable in the courts of humanity. He reiterates what had been announced by the text in 12:27 and 13:1. “For this purpose I have come to this hour. . . . Jesus knew that his hour had come to depart out of this world to the Father.”
3. Upon these events all of those subsequent manifestations of glory for both Son and Father were dependent. Because of this hour the Father would bring glory to the Son in the convulsing of nature, the opening of the graves of departed saints, the rending of the veil of the temple, the resurrection, the ascension, the intercession at the Father’s right hand, and the coming again with the bowing of every knee and the confession of every tongue. The Father would receive glory in the manifestation of the perfect and perfectly consonant attributes of wisdom, justice, righteousness, holiness, anger, goodness, mercy, lovingkindness, grace, patience; of the manifestation of power there would be no end. Moses asked to see the glory of God and the revelation included the message, “The Lord, the Lord, a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping steadfast love for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, but who will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children etc.” [Exodus 34:6, 7] It is in this hour of which Jesus speaks that we see the fulfillment of this divine glory.
The Son’s authority granted by the Father results in full effecting of the Father’s saving purpose 2, 3
1. As one with the Father in essence and equally invested in all the power, authority, and prerogatives of the Persons of the triune God, Jesus already has power. He is creator and sustainer in his eternal nature as the expression of the Father’s glory and character. But in his assigned and assumed role as Messiah, by the completion of his work he has been given authority that includes the authority of giving salvation. In this assignment of power the book of Hebrews [1:4] uses the phrase, “Having become as much superior to the angels as the name he has inherited is more excellent than theirs.” With gracious redemption accomplished, it now, in accord with perfect justice and the covenant with Abraham, Isaac,
2. This authority, that he earns in this hour, results in the salvation—the full acquittal from guilt and justification—of all of those given by the Father to the Son. It is for these that he has died, for these he gains all the necessary transactions that result in eternal life. As the Second London Confession states, “The Lord Jesus by his perfect obedience and sacrifice of himself, which he through the Eternal Spirit once offered up unto God, hath fully satisfied the Justice of God, procured reconciliation, and purchased an Everlasting inheritance in the Kingdom of Heaven, for all those whom the Father hath given unto him.”
3. Primarily eternal life consists of knowledge of the One True God as fully displayed in the glory of the Father. Popular perceptions often extend eternal life to all that die, simply because they die, and on the other side they will be reunited with those that have preceded them in death and will have some kind of heightened ability to do and enjoy those things that were the most pleasurable to them in this life. The truth is, those that did not want to know God in this life will not have eternal life after death, but certain and unending judgment fit for sin. Jesus also is explicit here, even adding emphasis by referring to himself in the third person (“Jesus Christ whom you have sent”) that this saving knowledge of God is conferred only in light of the work done by the one the Father sent, that is, the Son, that took to himself human nature and a human name and the role of anointed redeemer.
The Son’s revelation of God’s Saving Purpose summarized as the revelation of God’s eternal Glory 4, 5. Here he expands the meaning of his initial request.
The Son manifests it in his earthly work
Compare 14:31 – Certainly Christ’s obedience to the Father’s command shows his love for the Father and is the basis for his glorification of the Father.
“On earth” – this is a work that was peculiarly related to an earthly situation. The fall occurred on earth. Its effects were upon all those that descended from Adam and have lived in their sinful course of action on this earth. Christ’s obedience, both active and passive, must be accomplished as a man in this context of fallen human society on earth. The law, which constitutes the standard of human righteousness before God, must be obeyed for the righteousness that qualifies for eternal life (“The doers of the Law are justified before God” – Romans 2:13). This was his doing in our stead and in our situation, but without a favorable environment. To the contrary, his environment was absolutely hostile.
Though still veiled, yet its glory is revealed in the words of Scripture. All the doctrines revealed in Scripture showing the gifts that flow to us through Christ’s person and work manifest the glory of what Christ did in obedience to the Father. Its glory will be revealed to sight in the triumphant return of Christ in his state of exaltation.
“In your own presence” – That it did not fall short of God’s glory is manifest in the resurrection cf. Rom 6:4. Christ was raised “by the glory of the Father” and his life after having suffered death he now “lives to God” (Romans 6:10). While he was our substitute, death had “dominion over him” (Romans 6:9), but now that he has “accomplished the work” his life as the victorious man, our Messiah and substitute, is lived before God.
The Son is restored to the heavenly, pre-mundane eternal glory as a result of His work. All those assignments given to the Son of God in the covenant of redemption that could only be finished in the human nature result in the giving of a glory peculiar to these works. The indivisibility of this person, however, whose God “bestowed on him the name that is above every name” is shown in that , in addition to this bestowed glory, he has an eternal, naturally resident glory that will be manifest in his whole person at his ascension. So, that glory that was not visible in his person in the state of humiliation, will now be displayed in Jesus, Son of God and Son of Man – “The glory that I had with you before the world existed.”
The Son’s Care for the Father’s Gifts to Him 6-12
Declaration of the Son’s faithfulness to the Father’s glory and Success in His mission 6-8
Jesus has revealed his Name to His people – 6
The Father’s character is the chief concern in revelation and redemption
This revelation, both in external teaching and also in the secret operation of the Spirit comes to those that were given to the Son by the Father. It seems that Jesus has in mind at least the events following the feeding of the 5000 in John 6. See especially verses 60-65. There Jesus explained belief and non-belief in terms of the work of the Spirit peculiarly efficacious in the minds and hearts of those whose coming to Christ was “granted by the Father,” who are those “that the Father gives me [Jesus]” (65, 36).
It is to be noted that they, like the rest, were part of the world system in their natural state, but were given to Christ “out of the world.” In their natural disposition and state of merit they were in “the course of this world, the prince of the power of the air,” but according to divine prerogative, grace, invincible mercy, before the beginning of the world they were given by the Father to the Son for him to call them, die for them, intercede for them, and grant all the means by which they would finally be brought to the enjoyment of glory with him.
“They have kept your word” – in spite of all the perplexity, those given him have kept the word that Jesus has taught. They differ from others, because the Spirit has made them to differ.
They know that the Father’s worthiness is the Son’s preeminent concern 7 – The mission of Jesus totally conformed to the wisdom, character, and eternal will of the Father. Given the personhood of Father, Son, and Spirit in a singularity of essence, it is fitting to recognize that each of these persons must have an individual manifestation of will. Their wills’ discreet identification arises from the necessities of ontological personhood. That the complete unity of each of these wills can be traced to the will of the Father arises fittingly from the eternal relation of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. In this statement, Jesus speaks both as Son of God and as Son of Man. As Son of God, the Son does only that which is purely consonant with the Father’s eternal purpose, for he eternally wills the same things as it is impossible for his perception and affections to prompt him to anything other than the infinite perfection and glory of that which is willed by the Father. As Son of Man he lived in constant conformity, molded more fully and maturely into that will at every stage of his mortality and moral development {Luke 2:52; Hebrews 5:7-9}
They know that His teaching served the purpose of the Father’s glory. 8
Jesus has consistently pressed for his hearers to know that he spoke what he heard from the Father. His words were the Father’s words. They unfold the desire the Father has for manifesting the glory of the Trinity, the shared glory of the one true God in the indivisible essence of deity. This glory also is manifest in the distinct glory of each person (Ephesians 1:6, 12, 14) in his respective vital and essential operations for the salvation of the Father’s elect and the eventual subjection of all to the Father’s glory (1 Corinthians 15:24-28).
They have received the words Jesus spoke. Jesus spoke as their shepherd, and his sheep heard him (John 10:3, 4).
Jesus is certain, though many hills remain to be climbed and challenges to be subdued, that they know that Jesus’ appearance in this world is a result of the Father’s will. He has been sent with a specific assignment from the Father.
Safety of His chosen people 9-12
Their protection in the absence of Christ 11, 12 He prays that the Father will protect the very ones that he commissioned the Son to save
In his physical absence, they must maintain a keen sense that they serve him in the purpose of his mission from the Father.
Even as he was given a name that clarified the Father’s will through him, so must they be protected by that name. That is, these disciples must know that their life is to be spent in proclaiming the one faith given them in the words and works of Jesus. They do not preach different gospels, but they are one in their knowledge and their teaching (See Hebrews 2:1-4; Romans 1:1-6; Galatians 1:6-12; 2 Peter 3:15-18)
From the beginning Jesus knew that Judas would betray him, for he was left with the character of a lost person (“son of perdition”) and thus could not receive the teachings Jesus gave (John 6:71; 13:21). All the others came to him as those that would be transferred from the kingdom of darkness to the kingdom of the beloved Son. He retained the one while the other performed his betrayal as foretold in the Scripture (Luke 22:22; Acts 1:16). These foretellings were in the form of Christological applications of certain Psalms (69 & 109)
The Means of Safety in the World 13-19
His words are spoken that His joy [Hebrews 12:1, 2] might be in them [cf. 1 John 1:3, 4] True joy means, negatively, the removal of all that hinders a clear view of the holy joy of God. Jesus has told them what to avoid in action and thought and affection. True joy means the embracing of all the realities of the divine character and will. This is why Jesus stated it thus: “that they may have my joy fulfilled in themselves.”
These words operate negatively and, in their relation to the world, engender hatred, 14. Jesus discussed this fully in 15:18-25.
This hatred is generated peculiarly by the Evil One, who is the prince of this world, but Jesus has prayed for us. In Luke 22:31-34 we find that Jesus has prayed that Peter will be preserved through Satan’s attempt to destroy him. We also find in 1 John 5:18-20, that both Christ (through his intercession) and the Holy Spirit (through the new birth and his consequent indwelling) have rescued us from the power of the evil one and given us true knowledge and fellowship with the Father.
This Word set them apart for holiness as opposed to worldliness 16-18 Cf. John 15:19 [Their otherworldliness was initiated by eternal election and effected temporally by the new birth]. The Christian must never tire of increasing his knowledge of Scripture for its living energy chips away at our worldliness and indwelling sin and conforms us to Christ in increasing measure.
His separation to death guarantees the protection and holiness of his people through truth. Jesus sanctified himself, that is, set himself apart for death, for those that the Father had given him, that they all might be set apart for salvation by the word of truth. This operation of truth in bringing salvation is described by Paul in Colossians 1:3-8.
The Inclusion of Future Believers
Future experience of visible glory and infinite love 23b-26
There seems to be an eschatological emphasis in the phrase “That the world may know that you sent me and loved them even as you loved me.” The world, those still remaining out of the saving work of Christ, on the day of reckoning will see the infinite glory of having been loved by God in this way of election and union with Christ in his glory.
Those that have been given to Christ by the Father will, in that day, experience and be transformed by the beatific vision of the glory of the Son in context of Father’s glory.
This glory is the shining forth of the eternal attributes of the Son as he exists eternally generated by the love, infinite love, that the Father has for all aspects of his own worthy nature and every possible manifestation of it.
Jesus addresses the Father in the single term that summarizes the reason for which the Son was sent, “Righteous Father.” The unrighteousness of the world shuts it off from the knowledge of God. The Spirit comes to convince the world of sin, righteousness, and judgment. By Christ’s death God demonstrates his righteousness, while justifying those that have faith in Christ. Believers know that the Son was sent in order to magnify divine righteousness.
Christ’s having made known to his people the name [character] of God, introduces them into an unending world of holy love, even infinitely expansive experience of divine love [“even as you loved me”]
Lessons for Prayer and Life
Our prayers should reflect concern for the Name, will, and Word of God
Our prayers are built on the reality that all the Father gives us comes through Christ
Our prayers are optimistic because they follow Christ’s prayer for us
Our prayers should reflect confidence that our temporal welfare involves primarily our holiness secured by Christ’s intercession – all other things are given, or taken away, in that context cf. Phil 4:6, 7, 19
Our prayers should always manifest the concern that the world may know that the Father sent the Son