John 12:20-36 · Jesus Predicts His Death
We Would Like to See Jesus
John 12:20-36
Sermon
by King Duncan
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If you could spend an evening hanging out with a celebrity, who would you want to hang out with? An organization named CharityBuzz is an online auction site that allows people all over the world to bid on exclusive experiences with world-famous celebrities. All the money raised goes to support various charities. You can bid on a private tour of the Vatican, or a golf game with a professional golfer and caddies, or a behind-the scenes tour of Conan O’Brien’s show with Conan himself as your tour guide.

In the past, CharityBuzz has offered exclusive experiences like dinner and courtside tickets to a Dallas Mavericks game with Mark Cuban, attending a Hollywood movie premiere with Denzel Washington, a private meeting with soccer superstar Cristiano Ronaldo before one of his games. You can even bid on a personalized lullaby sung to you by the children’s musical group, The Wiggles. (1) 

But what would you do if you actually got to meet your favorite celebrity face-to-face? Would you be calm and composed about it? Or would you blurt out something embarrassing? A young man named Gareth Dimelow wrote on Twitter about the time he met Dolly Parton. As she autographed a CD for him, he blurted out, “I’ve loved you for over 20 years!” In her irrepressible way Dolly grabbed his hand and said, “Oh, honey—don’t stop now!” (2)

We all hope we could stay calm and composed when we meet our favorite celebrity. We hope we wouldn’t do anything too foolish. Like not recognize them at all.

Comedian Ellen DeGeneres convinced soccer superstar David Beckham to pose as a Target employee to surprise his unsuspecting fans. Beckham, dressed in the standard red shirt and name tag of a Target employee, stood at in the perfume aisle and tried to convince passing customers to buy his new David Beckham cologne. He started up random conversations with passersby, sprayed them with cologne, even made up and sang a really bad little jingle to advertise the new cologne. At one point, a small crowd of shoppers gathers around to sample the cologne. They are within inches of the world’s most famous soccer player and they never suspect a thing. (3)

In this morning’s Bible passage, some men from Greece were seeking to meet Jesus. I wonder if they were nervous about their potential encounter with him. Did they have questions for him? When they met him, did they blurt out something embarrassing? If there had been cell phones in Jesus’ day, would they have asked to take a selfie with him?

We don’t know for sure. But we do know that the Greek culture of that time idolized philosophers and philosophies about the meaning of life. Yet these Greek men came to a Jewish Passover festival looking for a humble Jewish rabbi named Jesus. What did they hope to find?

Jesus was not a philosopher.  No one would compare him to Plato or Aristotle.  We have nothing that he wrote, and not much of what he said.  He did not employ complex sentences or high-sounding ideas.  He spoke mostly in parables and used the language and the symbols of the common listener.  So why is it then that, 2,000 years later, we still hang on to his every word?  Why is it that hundreds of thousands of brilliant men and women have studied every syllable that was recorded of his teachings, and whole libraries of books have been written concerning his impact on human history?

It was not what he said.  It was who he was.  There was something about the very person of Jesus himself that has fascinated people of every generation over the twenty centuries since he first caused such a commotion in that little region called Galilee.

That is why those words first spoken by some Greeks to the disciple Philip are so important to men and women and young people and boys and girls today: “Sir, we would like to see Jesus.” 

That is the most sincere desire of our hearts. We want to see Jesus.  We want to experience him for ourselves.  A second-hand report is not enough.  We long to be in his presence.  We want to assure ourselves that he is real—that he is relevant—that he is resurrected.  We, like Thomas, want to put our hands into his hands and feet and side.  We want to know him as our Savior and Friend.

We want to see Jesus.  That is part of why we are in worship today.  We haven’t come to learn the latest political philosophy or to celebrate some dead theology.  The hymns are lovely, the atmosphere is cordial, the prayers are reassuring, but none of it counts for anything if we cannot see Jesus.

We would like to see him because something is missing in our lives. Once we had such high hopes, such great dreams, such a fresh sense of Christ’s presence in our lives. But time has taken its toll. There is something missing. We would like to see Jesus. Our lives sometimes seem so tedious, so lacking in vitality, as if we are on a continual treadmill.

Most of us think of treadmills as high-end exercise equipment. But did you know that treadmills were originally invented as a form of punishment? Some of you are thinking, “Yeah, I can believe that.” In Victorian England, treadmills were placed in prisons. Prisoners were forced to walk for hours each day on a treadmill as a form of mindless, meaningless punishment. (4)

Many people suffer from such a deep sense of meaninglessness that their life feels like a treadmill. Constantly moving but going nowhere. Always busy but producing nothing. Something is missing in our lives.

Some of us are “life-tired.” That’s a new word that our German friends have coined. There are many languages that have really profound words for expressing a feeling we can’t quite put into words. The German language often combines two words to make one new concept. And that’s what German speakers have done to create a word that literally translates as “life-tired.”

I think a lot of us can relate to the idea of being “life-tired.” In the Farsi language (which is spoken in Iran), there is a word that means “to practice holding sadness.” It conveys the idea of just carrying sadness all the time, like a burden you can’t put down.  And there’s a Russian word that refers to “. . . a sensation of great spiritual anguish, often without any specific cause.” (5)

It may take us a lifetime to pronounce any of these words in the original language, but we can instantly relate to their meaning. Something is missing in our lives. And there is nothing we can do, nothing we can buy, no earthly substitute that can fill that sense of longing. “. . . We would like to see Jesus.”

We would like to see him because some of us have never experienced the peace that Christ brings.

We need something to give our lives not only meaning, but also new vitality.  We are empty, and we are bored.  And because we are empty and bored, we have no vitality, no zest, no drive. There is an energy crisis in our lives, and it has nothing to do with oil or nuclear power.  It has to do with that inner emptiness.  We are tired, listless, and apathetic.  What we need is a new heart.  Not a donated or man-made heart, but the heart that Jeremiah spoke of—a heart that only seeing Jesus can give.

William Gibson wrote the book Mass for the Dead to honor his parents and their devotion to their children. In the book, Gibson tells how he grieved his mother and wanted so badly to understand the secret of her faith, which strengthened her in life and gave her peace and courage to face her death.

So he took his mother’s gold-rimmed glasses and faded prayer book and sat in her favorite chair. He opened the prayer book because he wanted to hear what she had heard. He put on her glasses because he wanted to see what she had seen. He sat in her place of prayer and devotion because he wanted to feel what she had felt. He wanted to experience what had so deeply centered and empowered her. Nothing happened though. It did not work. That is not too surprising. He needed a faith of his own—not his mother’s faith. (6)

William Gibson needed to see Jesus. That’s what he was missing. It wasn’t the chair or the prayer book or the glasses that shaped his mother’s character or brought her such peace. It was her relationship with Jesus. Gibson’s mother saw Jesus, and that truth shone from her life in such a way that it caused her son to crave that same experience.

That’s what all of us need--to see Jesus and to know that he is real and that he is with us in life’s trials and turmoil.

Pastor John Jewell tells of a man named Charles who was lying in a hospital bed near death.  Anyone who knew Charles would tell you he was not a nice man. He drank too much. He treated his wife and children badly. So the nursing staff was a little surprised when Charles asked for a chaplain.

Charles asked the chaplain to pray for him.

“What do you want to say to God?” the chaplain asked.

“Tell God I’m sorry for the way my life has turned out,” Charles said. “Tell him that I am sorry for the way I treated my wife and kids, and that I’ve always loved them.”

“Sure, I can do that,” the chaplain said. “Is there anything else?”

Charles hesitated. “Tell God that I know I have no right to ask this—but I would like to be able to live with him.”

And the chaplain bowed his head and prayed and told God everything that Charles had said. The next morning when he came to visit, the nursing staff told him that Charles had passed away in the night. (7)

Charles nearly missed seeing Jesus, but it’s never too late if that is the desire of a person’s heart.

Jesus came to show us that one day we can live with God. And we don’t have to deserve it. Before the creation of the world, God planned to give His life on the cross to guarantee it. No matter how much of a disaster our lives may seem to be, there is one who offers us more grace, more peace, more love than we could ever exhaust in a million lifetimes. “Sir, we would like to see Jesus.”

We want to see Jesus so that we may obtain new meaning, new vitality, new possibilities, and the blessed assurance that we are never alone.

My friends, Jesus is the Way.  He is the Truth.  He is the Life.  No wonder we all long to see him, and we can see him.  Through the eyes of faith, we can perceive him in our midst. He is here.  He is available to us today.  To all who would receive him, he is here.  Let us take new hope, new courage, let us commit ourselves anew to his work, for we have beheld his glory: the glory as of the only begotten son of the Father. 

As someone has so beautifully said, “Christianity is not a philosophy Jesus came to teach.  It is a life Jesus came to impart.”  Won’t you receive the life that he has to give?


1. https://www.charitybuzz.com/categories/virtual-experiences/catalog_items?exclude_filter_if_no_result=true.

2. When real life is better than fantasy!” by Carly Stern for DailyMail.com January 23, 2019, https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-6624449/People-share-happy-stories-meeting-nice-celebrities.html. 

3. “Crazy moments when celebs went undercover to surprise their fans” by Carmela Ferro, TheList.com. https://www.thelist.com/56741/crazy-moments-celebs-went-undercover-surprise-fans/?utm_campaign=clip.

4. Elyse Fitzpatrick, Because He Loves Me (Crossway, 2010), pp. 87-91. Davis, Barry L., 52 Topical Sermons, Volume 1 (Pulpit Outlines) (p. 125). GodSpeed Publishing. Kindle Edition.

5. “18 Words for Sadness that Don’t Exist in English” by JR Thorpe, February 24, 2020. Bustle.com, https://www.bustle.com/p/18-words-for-sadness-depression-that-dont-exist-in-english-7260841.

6. Maxie Dunnam, That’s What the Man Said (Nashville: Upper Room Books, 1989).

7. “Equal Pay for Unequal Work,” John Jewell, 1999. http://www.lectionarysermons.com/Sep99@19.html

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching First Quarter Sermons, by King Duncan