Jesus did not come to take—to pursue His own agenda or to seek to increase His own stature—but rather to give: to give eternal life to lost sinners and to give glory to the Father who sent Him on His life-giving mission. In having regard for others, as already demonstrated at the foot washing, Jesus serves as an example for believers (John 13:15–16; see Phil. 2:1–11). According to Jesus’ “new commandment,” we are to love each other as He loved us (John 13:34–35). Jesus’ example of selflessness and supreme regard for others—His boundless self-giving love for others—proves extremely convicting in a world where self-promotion and self-interest are the order of the day, even among many professing Christians.
hile Jesus’ prayer in John 17 has traditionally been dubbed His High Priestly Prayer, others have called it “the Lord’s Prayer,” because Jesus here engages in one of the longest recorded prayers in the Gospels. This is noteworthy also, since John’s gospel does not include the “Lord’s Prayer”—perhaps better named “the disciples’ prayer”—which Jesus taught His disciples at their request and which is included in both Matthew and Luke (Matt. 6:9–13; Luke 11:2–4). On the reasonable assumption that John knew the earlier Gospels when he wrote his, one may surmise that, rather than featuring the Lord’s Prayer from Matthew or Luke, he recorded Jesus’ final prayer before His crucifixion instead.
Note also that John, immediately after Jesus’ final prayer, refers to a “garden” that Jesus and His followers entered after crossing the Kidron ravine, shortly before Jesus was taken into Roman custody (18:1–2). While John does not give the garden’s name, readers of the earlier Gospels will have no difficulty inferring that it was Gethsemane, where Jesus prayed just before His arrest (Matt. 26:36–46; Mark 14:32–42; Luke 22:40–46). In these earlier Gospels, we’re told that Jesus pleaded with the Father three times, “My Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as you will” (Matt. 26:39, 42, 44; Mark 14:36, 39, 41; Luke 22:42). John, it appears, significantly expands our knowledge of what Jesus prayed just before entering the garden that night.
The Context
The account of Jesus’ prayer in the garden of Gethsemane in the first three Gospels thus provides a fascinating canonical backdrop to John’s account of Jesus’ final prayer. But what is its context in John’s gospel? John essentially divides his account of Jesus into two dramatic acts, which scholars have dubbed the “Book of Signs” (chs. 2–12) and the “Book of Glory/Exaltation” (chs. 13–21). In some ways, reading the two halves of John’s gospel is therefore like watching a theater performance or football game with an intermission or halftime. In the first half, Jesus is shown to engage in a series of breathtaking signs, ranging from turning water into wine at a Jewish wedding (ch. 2) to raising a man named Lazarus from the dead (ch. 11). Tragically, however, the Jewish nation rejects her Messiah (12:36–41).
Now before the Feast of the Passover, when Jesus knew that his hour had come to depart out of this world to the Father, having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end. . . . Jesus, knowing that the Father had given all things into his hands, and that he had come from God and was going back to God, rose from supper (John 13:1–4).
The well-known foot washing scene follows, in which Jesus modeled His love for His own, the very love He would shortly demonstrate when dying on the cross for their sins (19:30; see 3:16). In this way, the foot washing serves as a “sneak preview” of the cross (13:1: “he loved them to the end,” whereby “to the end” likely means both “till the very end” and “to the fullest extent”).
Chapters 13–17 of John’s gospel are almost entirely unique and depict Jesus’ Last Supper with the twelve Apostles (note that John does not explicitly refer to Jesus’ institution of the new covenant in His body and blood, presupposing the Synoptic Gospels, though the Bread of Life Discourse in John 6 may mirror the Last Supper). Only here do we find Jesus’ parting instructions to His closest followers, including directives regarding the coming Holy Spirit (chs. 14, 16) and instructions on how to abide in Christ after His departure (ch. 15). The overall structure of chapters 13–17 (called the Farewell or Upper Room Discourse), which precede the Johannine passion narrative, is as follows. John 13:1–30 narrates the foot washing as a sort of narrative preamble to both the Farewell Discourse and the entire Book of Exaltation (including the passion narrative in chs. 18–21).
Then, once the community is cleansed and Judas the betrayer has left the room (13:30), Jesus turns to instructing the Eleven in the Farewell Discourse proper, which spans from 13:31 to 16:33. Jesus’ words are occasionally interrupted by questions from His disciples (e.g., 13:36–37 [Peter]; 14:5 [Thomas], 8 [Philip], 22 [the other Judas]), though for the most part it is Jesus who prepares His followers for life apart from His physical presence with them. Doubtless Jesus’ followers thought losing their beloved Master would be utterly disastrous; yet, He tries to convince them that it will actually work out for the better. Once He had passed from the scene, He—in conjunction with the Father—would send the Spirit to indwell believers. In this way, rather than Jesus being with them, the Spirit would be in them, leading to an intensified and even more powerful divine presence in their midst and even in their innermost being.
With this, Jesus concludes, “I have said these things to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world” (16:33). In this way, Jesus reassures His followers in view of the upcoming tribulation and anticipates His victory over the world and Satan, “the ruler of this world” (12:31; 14:30; 16:11).
The Prayer Itself
In the New Testament, it is primarily the book of Hebrews that sets forth and expands on Jesus’ high priestly role. The New Testament as a whole depicts Jesus in His three roles as Prophet, Priest, and King. Regarding His prophetic office, Jesus acts as a Prophet when clearing the temple at His first visit to Jerusalem at the occasion of the first Passover recorded in John’s gospel (2:13–22). In keeping with the psalmist’s portrait, Jesus is shown to be consumed with passion for God’s glory and the purity of people’s worship (John 2:17; see Ps. 69:10). The temple is Jesus’ “Father’s house” (John 2:16; see Luke 2:49), the place where He—the messianic Bridegroom (John 3:9)—will go to prepare a place for His followers after His departure (14:2–3).
Also, when people see the messianic sign Jesus has performed when feeding the five thousand, they say, “This is indeed the Prophet who is to come into the world” (6:14, emphasis added), in keeping with the expectation of the arrival of a “prophet like Moses” (Deut. 18:15–19). Note, however, that at the temple clearing, Jesus is rejected and pronounces judgment on the Jewish nation, and when recognized as “the Prophet who is to come into the world,” He withdraws, “perceiving then that they were about to come and take him by force to make him king” (John 6:14–15). Thus, as John remarks regarding Jesus just before His performance of one of His messianic signs in Galilee, “a prophet has no honor in his own hometown” (4:44; see Matt. 13:57; Mark 6:4; Luke 4:24). So, in John’s gospel, Jesus is indeed a Prophet, but One who is rejected both by the Jewish authorities in Jerusalem and by His own people in the Galilean north.
With regard to Jesus’ role as King, we’ve just seen that people, right after the feeding of the five thousand, were going to compel Jesus to be their king by force (John 6:15). Later, at His triumphal entry into Jerusalem just before the crucifixion, Jesus mounts a donkey and rides into the city in Solomonic fashion (12:12–19; see 1 Kings 1:38), emblematic of His regal humility (John 12:14) and in fulfillment of the Old Testament prophet Zechariah’s prophecy, “Fear not, daughter of Zion; behold, your king is coming, sitting on a donkey’s colt!” (v. 15; see Zech. 9:9). Large crowds come out to meet Him, waving palm branches in a gesture of Jewish nationalism—nearby Jericho was known as “the City of Palms,” and palm branches were symbols of Jewish national pride—and crying out: “Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord, even the King of Israel!” (John 12:13).
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