John 17:6-19 · Jesus Prays for His Disciples
Not of the World
John 17:6-19
Sermon
by Richard A. Jensen
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The preacher urged his television congregation to tithe.

"Give 10¼ of your income to the Lord," he said.

"But why should I tithe?" someone asked him.

"To get," the preacher replied. "We tithe in order to get. I want to get healed, I want to get well, I want to get money, I want to get prosperous."

This popular form of Christianity was recently written up in Time magazine. The "prosperity Gospel." That is what it is called. There are many who peddle its wares. You might have heard some of them on radio or television. "Name it and claim it." That is what it is about. Just name what blessing you want in life. Then claim it. Claim that the Lord has given it to you. If you name it and claim it in true faith, it will be yours. If you fail to get what you ask for, then your faith is obviously weak. Anyone who wants to prosper in this world, and who claims that prosperity in true faith, will prosper indeed. That is the message of the so-called "prosperity Gospel."

On another televangelist’s program, the host interviewed a guest who was a Christian will and investment counselor. She helped Christians manage their assets so that they might be financially secure. So far so good. Then the preacher said: "God does not want anybody to be poor. God does not want us to have to rely on anyone else for our earthly financial security." While the sentiment expressed here is all right, such a statement simply cannot square with biblical realities.

These true stories have illustrated for me the incredible ways in which the values of the world that we live in and the values held by some Christian people are virtually indistinguishable from each other. The world’s agenda has become the church’s agenda in these instances. In the scripture reading for this sermon, Jesus prayed about the world and our relation to the world. In his prayer Jesus says that his followers are not of this world as he is not of this world. When Jesus says that we are not of this world, he means that we have been born from above or born anew. When Jesus Christ gives us his word, we experience a new birth.

Reborn Christians are not of this world. Since we are not of this world, Jesus says, the world hates us. (See John 17:14.) The world and the evil one do not give up on us easily. They work to conform us to the world’s values. One of the chief values of our culture, of the American world in which we live, is the accumulation of riches and things for their own sake. The world and the Evil One would very much like us to conform to this world view. The world and the Evil One would very much like us to equate Christianity with riches and things.

One of the greatest temptations in this marvelous land of plenty in which we live is the temptation to measure our success in life in dollar signs - in the accumulation of possessions. The dollar sign can easily become almighty for us. That is a primary means we have in our culture of measuring a person’s worth. The more money you make, the more you are worth. That is simply the way it is in our culture.

With the money we make we can buy this world’s goods. And there are plenty of goods to buy. Just watch an hour of television. We are bombarded with commercials. Buy this. Purchase that. You need this. You cannot get along without that. The consumer goods literally dance before our eyes. That is the American way.

Riches and things. That is the American dream. The more riches and things we possess the better off we are. We have been sold that agenda. It is part of who we are. We almost take it for granted. To be a blessed person in this society is to be flush with riches and things. The world and the Evil One will try to conform us to that agenda. When Christian people start defining Christian blessings in the same terms, when Christian people start defining blessings in terms of riches and things, then the world has simply won the battle. "Name it and claim it," the "prosperity Gospel" says. "God does not want anyone to be poor." Those slogans are a sure sign that the world has gotten the upper hand in the struggle for our soul.

Let me just quickly review for you some basic biblical realities on this matter. Let us look at Luke’s Gospel. In Luke 6:20, we hear Jesus say, "Blessed are you poor, for yours is the kingdom of God." Biblical scholars agree that Luke means the real poor here, not the spiritually poor or some other way of hearing these words. In most of the world today that word of Jesus comes as a great blessing. The majority of the world’s people are very poor in riches and things. But this word does not sound much like a word of blessing to us. In fact, it almost embarrasses us. What are we going to do with such a word? "Blessed are you poor ..." That is a very strange word to our ears, to ears bombarded daily with American values. Poverty is of no value in our culture. Our society is almost prejudiced against the poor. But there stands Jesus’ word. "Blessed are you poor ..."

Jesus not only blesses the poor. In story after story Jesus makes it clear that riches and things can, note my words very carefully please, riches and things can create a barrier between us and God. It is in the Gospel of Luke where these stories abound. In Luke 12, Jesus tells the parable of the rich young fool in order to show that our life, as Jesus puts it, "... does not consist in the abundance of possessions." This rich young farmer had bumper crops. He built bigger and bigger barns. When the farmer finally thought that he had enough riches to last a lifetime, he said, " ‘... Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; take your ease, eat, drink and be merry.’ But God said to him, ‘Fool! This night your soul is required of you; and the things you have prepared, whose will they be?’ So is he (Jesus said) who lays up treasure for himself, and is not rich toward God" (Luke 12:19-21).

Jesus also told the parable of the rich man and Lazarus. Lazarus was poor. Very poor. He lay at the rich man’s gate every day begging for food. Both men died.

The poor man died and was carried by the angels to Abraham’s bosom. The rich man also died and was buried; and in Hades, being in torment, he lifted up his eyes, and saw Abraham far off and Lazarus in his bosom. And he called out, "Father Abraham, have mercy upon me, and send Lazarus to dip the end of his finger in water and cool my tongue ..." (Luke 16:22-24a)

Lazarus was a poor man as the world counts riches. But he was rich towards God.

In Luke 18:18-30, we hear yet another story. It is the story of the Rich Young Ruler. The Rich Young Ruler comes across in this story as an extremely fine young man. He has kept all the commandments faithfully from his youth. "One thing you still lack," Jesus told him. "Sell all that you have and distribute it to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come, follow me" (Luke 18:22b). Then we read some of the saddest words in all of Scripture. "... when he (the Rich Young Ruler) heard this he became sad, for he was very rich. Jesus looking at him said, ‘How hard it is for those who have riches to enter the kingdom of God!’ " (Luke 18:23-24).

How far removed these words of Jesus are from the Americanized versions of Christianity that I cited! It is not that there is anything wrong with riches and things in and of themselves. Let me be very clear about that. The Bible does not say that money is the root of all evil. Paul writes to Timothy rather that, "... the love of money is the root of all evils ..." (1 Timothy 6:10a). Being rich in things but not rich toward God - that is the problem. Being so blinded by our treasures that we forget that Jesus Christ is our truest treasure - that is the problem. Possessions that possess us - that is the problem. When these things happen to us, it is a sign that the world has won the battle for our soul. The world and the Evil One has hated us, and out of that hatred they have managed to conform us to the world’s agenda. Any version of the Christian faith that equates the blessings of our culture with the blessing of God is doomed to walk the path of the rich fool and the rich young ruler. The so-called "prosperity Gospel" is simply bankrupt from a biblical point of view.

None of us intentionally wishes to be overcome by the agenda of the world and the Evil One. How can we keep God as our treasure when we are surrounded by so many other kinds of riches? The world hates us. The Evil One wishes to conform us to the world’s agenda. How shall we persevere?

Fortunately, we are not the only ones concerned about our perseverance. Jesus Christ is also concerned with our perseverance. This text from John’s Gospel is part of Jesus’ prayer on our behalf. Jesus begins by praying to his God, "... keep them in thy name ... While I was with them I kept them in thy name, which thou has given me" (John 17:11b-12a). Jesus has guarded the life of his followers. He prays that God will keep all future followers in God’s name. We are remembered in Jesus’ prayer. God is on our side. We shall persevere.

Jesus’ prayer gets more specific. "I do not pray that thou shouldst take them out of the world, but that thou shouldst keep them from the evil one" (John 17:15). We do not face the Evil One alone. We do not face the temptations of our culture alone. We are remembered in Jesus’ prayer. God is on our side. We shall presevere.

And Jesus not only prays that we might be kept safe from the world. He prays that we might be agents of change in the world. "As thou didst send me into the world, so have I sent them into the world" (John 17:18). We are remembered in Jesus’ prayer. God is on our side. We shall persevere. Indeed, as those sent forth by God into the world, we shall do more than persevere. In a world dominated by riches and things, we shall live lives that proclaim that Jesus Christ is our most priceless treasure. Kept safe in Jesus’ prayer, we shall announce to our world that it is in Jesus Christ, and him alone, that true riches are found.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Crucified Ruler, The, by Richard A. Jensen