1011 - Friends, Partners, and Heirs
Friends: Christian faith is about relationship with God the Father Almighty through faith in His Son Jesus. That wasn’t immediately evident to the disciples. Have a prayerful Holy Week; Easter is next Sunday. Blessings ...
(PS: From our auto racing days, Janine Vogrin Doyle (The Bean on our IMS pit note crew; her dad Jim ran the STP Indy Car program) has survived cancer and needs help. Her GoFundMe page is https://gofund.me/e7ca07427.)
Spirituality Column #1011
March
31, 2026
Common
Christianity / Uncommon Commentary
Friends,
Partners, and Heirs
By
Bob Walters
“Ask
whatever you wish, and it will be given to you.” – Jesus, John 15:7
“The
Father will give you whatever you ask in my name.” – Jesus, John 15:16
“This
is my command: Love each other.” – Jesus, John 15:17
These
familiar verses from “The Vine” passage in the Gospel of John track the final
teachings of Jesus to the Disciples after the Last Supper and before His crucifixion.
On
what we now traditionally call “Maundy Thursday,” Jesus and the 11 remaining
disciples – traitorous Judas has already left to inform the Pharisees of
Jesus’s whereabouts – depart their Passover meal out a back door and walk
through dark Jerusalem toward the Garden of Gethsemane.
John
chapters 15, 16, and 17, a story recorded only in the fourth Gospel, chronicle
Jesus’s encouragement, warnings, and instructions to the confused and soon to
be bewildered disciples who believe Jesus to be the Son of God, but have yet to
comprehend the meaning of His impending departure / death / return.
Jesus
doesn’t tell them to behave better; he emphasizes his and their identity. Jesus
locks in on the generosity and goodness of God: “He will give you whatever
you ask” (v7,16). But they don’t understand what they will be asking
for. Jesus tells them they are no longer
slaves, but his friends (v14), because He has “made the Father known to
them” (v15). Jesus insists going forward they must work together because
they will need each other and be partners to complete the task assigned to
them.
The
task? Preach Jesus’s message of grace and salvation to the world. Be His
partners – and each other’s – in telling the greatest story ever told of how
the Son of God came into humanity to heal our sins and restore our loving,
eternal relationship with the Father of all things; to tell how Jesus died in
loving obedience to His Father but rose in loving glory to seal the truth of
His mission and heal the mortal wound of our sin.
Jesus
is preaching a New Covenant of faith for all mankind, not of Law for the Jews. Repentance
means not just physical obedience, but learning a new way of thinking about
life and God; it is a new way of love and redemption. It is a gift the world will not immediately understand;
a gift from a God/man it hates. It is a gift that shows humanity the reality of
God, and that gift that says our own lives have purpose as we glorify and are
glorified with God. That is what Jesus did; that is the gift God sent.
We
are not detached bystanders in our Christian lives today. “If you obey my
commands you will remain in my love … as I have obeyed and remain in the
Father’s love” (vv9-10). I believe that we, like the disciples, are chosen participants,
though I have no idea why this one is chosen and “gets it,” and this one isn’t,
and doesn’t.
All
we can do is preach truth, share love, obey in faith, and trust God’s plan. I
often think how opaque were Jesus’s claims and instructions as he spoke to
Jews, Pharisees, and gentiles. It seems the only beings who understood exactly
who Jesus was and the power He had were the demons who feared Him, not the humans
whom He loved and came to save. Many humans still do not understand our part in
the story.
We
want God and Jesus to do stuff for us; doesn’t Jesus say, twice in this
passage, “Ask and it will be given to you”? What we are to ask, as
friends, partners, and heirs of the magnificent ministry of Christ, is how to best
preach, share, and witness this precious word of life. It is for God’s eternal
glory, and for joy in our worldly life.
On
Easter we celebrate our own salvation, sure. But our joy is being on the team.
Walters
(rlwcom@aol.com)
notes, “Gethsemane” means “a place that crushes olives.” Jesus, the Messiah anointed
one, with olive oil, was crushed for our sins.