1010 - When the Light Shines
Friends: Where in the Gospels does Jesus say, “I am God”? If you know how to read scripture, Jesus says it all over the place. Blessings! Bob
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Spirituality
Column #1010
March
24, 2026
Common
Christianity / Uncommon Commentary
When
the Light Shines
By
Bob Walters
“I
did tell you, but you do not believe.” – Jesus,
People
who want to argue with the Bible but know very little about the Bible love to
point out that, with approximate and dismissive faux-authoritative commitment,
that, “Jesus never says he is God.”
I
guess that is a way, or at least an attempt, to de-tune a Christian’s faith and
buttress one’s own rejection of the Bible’s authority, but it is a silly point.
Jesus clearly identifies himself, in various ways, as God’s son throughout the
Gospels in both word and deed. But, it is true, Jesus was not wearing an “I Am God
the Messiah Christ” nametag.
My
longtime Bible mentor George Bebawi often made the good yet simple point that
Jesus didn’t come to broadcast his own glory, but God’s. And that Jesus didn’t come
to display his power, but “being found in human form, he humbled himself by
becoming obedient to the point of death” (Philippians 2:8). The initiating
economy of our salvation is faith in the identity of Christ, not billboards and
sales pitches.
In
our own hearts, with the collaboration of the Holy Spirit, we must arrive at
the personal decision that the New Testament’s evidence provides the truth we
need to accept God’s offer, through Jesus, of restored and eternal relationship
with God.
Jesus
wasn’t expected, his mission was hidden, his offer fantastical, and his
identity was key to all who might believe in him. Old Testament prophesies predicted his
arrival and mission, but they were veiled from the hearts and minds of most
Jewish leaders. They saw God through the lens of obedience to the Law, not
obedience to the faithful presence of Christ. They were entirely in the dark as
to the proposition of Jesus.
The
Pharisees in Jerusalem ask Jesus, “How long will you keep us in suspense? If
you are the Christ, tell us plainly” (John 10:24, the verse prior to the
one cited above).
Obligingly
but cryptically, Jesus talks of his voice and his sheep and his promise of imperishable
eternal life, and says, “I and the father are one” (v30). And then, “the
father is in me, and I am in the father” v38).
That
seems pretty plain, but the lights do not come on. They will only “get it” when they believe,
and they don’t believe. They picked up stones to stone him.
This
story is the precursor to The Death of Lazarus in John 11, where Jesus tarries
four days then dangerously plans to return to Judea to “awaken” the dead
Lazarus despite threats to his own life. Jesus rebuts the warnings of his
disciples by noting, in John 11:9-10, “a man who walks by day will not
stumble … when he walks by night he stumbles, for he has no light.”
On
the one hand, this verse is Jesus saying man has twelve hours of daylight to
accomplish his tasks. He has time to fulfill God’s work, but no time to waste. It
also harkens to the “I Am” statement of Jesus – one of seven in the Gospel – in
John 8:12, “I am the light of the world.
Anyone who follows me will not walk in darkness.”
A
Jew hearing the words “I Am,” should know it references the name God
revealed to Moses in Exodus 3:14-15, “I Am Who I Am.” There were those
who believed, but even their faith was tested when Jesus was soon arrested and
crucified.
Jesus
knew his identity would have to be shown, not debated. The Pharisees were
enraged when word of the very dead Lazarus, at Jesus’s beckoning, departed the
tomb very much alive. It set in motion the Pharisees’ plot to have Jesus killed,
which led to the cross, which led to the empty tomb, which led to light available
to all mankind.
Walters
(rlwcom@aol.com)
figures Lazarus was revived two weeks before Easter.
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