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Well, good morning, everyone.
Welcome to Free Grace Baptist Church. Just a few announcements
before we get going. The first is that this week,
Saturday, will be the theological exam for myself. That's happening
at 10 o'clock here at the church, 10 o'clock Saturday morning.
All are welcome to come for that. And then, Lord willing, the installation
service will be then on Sunday. That's gonna be a joint service
with the Surrey Church. They are gonna come here. Pastor
Mike will be a part of the installation there. So that is the 29th. That
is gonna begin at four o'clock in the afternoon, not our typical
five o'clock time, four o'clock. So note that, please. A reminder
for members of Free Grace to get your ballots in to Pastor
Butler or to one of the deacons, or you can put it in the offering
box at the back there. So just a reminder for that.
And then the last is that after the service next week, Sunday
afternoon, after the four o'clock p.m. service, there's gonna be
a time of fellowship up in the hall there. I believe there's
going to be some sort of a meal of sorts, but the details are
gonna come out this week. An email will be sent out on
Wednesday regarding what's going on and what to bring as well
for that. So that is everything there in regards to to our announcements. So with that, we will turn to
worship. Then you can turn in your Bibles to Psalm 19. Psalm 19 as we begin our worship. Very applicable Psalm on a day
like today when we look outside and see the beauty of the created
order. So Psalm 19, to the chief musician,
a Psalm of David. The heavens declare the glory
of God, and the firmament shows his handiwork. Day unto day utters
speech, and night unto night reveals knowledge. There is no
speech nor language where their voice is not heard. Their line
has gone out through all the earth, and their words to the
end of the world. In them he has set a tabernacle
for the sun, which is like a bridegroom coming out of his chamber, and
rejoices like a strong man to run its race. Its rising is from
one end of heaven, and its circuit to the other end, and there is
nothing hidden from its heat. The law of the Lord is perfect,
converting the soul. The testimony of the Lord is
sure, making wise the simple. The statutes of the Lord are
right, rejoicing the heart. The commandment of the Lord is
pure, enlightening the eyes. The fear of the Lord is clean,
enduring forever. The judgments of the Lord are
true and righteous altogether. More to be desired are they than
gold, yea, than much fine gold. Sweeter also than honey and the
honeycomb. Moreover, by them your servant is warned, and in
keeping them there is great reward. Who can understand his errors?
Cleanse me from secret faults. Keep back your servant also from
presumptuous sins. Let them not have dominion over
me. Then I shall be blameless, and I shall be innocent of great
transgression. Let the words of my mouth and the meditation
of my heart be acceptable in your sight, O Lord, my strength
and my Redeemer. Amen." Well, you can turn with
me in your red hymnals to number 22C, so Psalm 22C. Please, and you can stand as
we sing together. ♪ I could never bear this pain
in my heart at last ♪ ♪ Come, grace, take me, and lead me now
♪ ♪ Into the garden of your sweetest bliss ♪ ♪ The Lord no one despised ♪ ♪
He passed on through from old to young ♪ ♪ He marked his children bright ♪ ♪ His goodness made
me join the crowd ♪ ♪ And sing his praise for me ♪ ♪ With no one to give his praise
♪ ♪ He lives with the love of all souls ♪ ♪ And satisfies the
need ♪ ♪ That they shall live and praise the Lord always ♪ day. Our gracious and our loving Heavenly
Father, we come before you on this day, and Lord, we acknowledge
what the psalmist has said, that truly the heavens declare the
glory of God. And Lord, on a day like today,
as we look around at the created order, and it tells us of a great
and glorious Creator who has made all things, and Lord, we
rejoice in that, and we praise you for the created order all
around us. We praise you that that you have
made such a beautiful world that we get to enjoy. And Lord, even
though we know it is part of the fall and it is groaning and
waiting for that redemption, but yet, Lord, it is such a beautiful
world that you have made for us. And we praise you for that.
We praise you for your creation. of beauty, Lord. What a joy it
is to look around and see your creation and to praise you for
it, Lord. So we give you the glory, and
Lord, we do thank you that you have also given us your word,
Lord. The psalmist says that the heavens
declare the glory of God, but the law of the Lord is what converts
the heart, and your word, your truth, as you have revealed in
your word, is what changes the changes the heart, Lord. And
we do thank you for that special revelation that you have given
to us in your Word that tells us of the way of salvation through
your Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. And Lord, how we praise you for
the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. And Lord, I do pray that
today that your gospel would go forth as the churches gather
together and and meet for worship, that you would be glorified,
that the gospel would be proclaimed, that sinners would be saved,
and Lord, that your people would be edified and that your people
would also be built up and equipped to take that gospel to the nations
and to the world, Lord. that as we have read that the
created order speaks of your glory in all parts of the earth,
Lord, we look forward to that day where the knowledge of God
will cover the earth as the waters cover the sea. Lord, we know
that is in the consummated order of all things, but yet, Lord,
we know that your gospel is advancing and your church is marching on
and conquering out of the kingdom of darkness and transferring
your people into the kingdom of the son of your love and Lord
that you have made that promise to Abraham that in him all the
nations of the earth would be blessed and and Lord we see that
that you you that that promise coming to fruition as as the
gospel goes forth to all the nations and as people from every
tribe tongue people a nation come to to come to salvation
come to faith in in in the Savior Lord that that you that the gospel
is truly going to all the nations, and you are building your kingdom.
And Lord, how we rejoice in that, how we rejoice that we have been
called out of darkness, that we get to be part of that chosen
people of yours, Lord, that, as Peter says, we are that holy
nation, that royal priesthood, and a people of your own special
possession. How humbling that thought is
that we get to be called sons and daughters of the Most High
God, of the Creator of this universe. Lord, we say with the hymn writer,
Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound that saved a wretch like
me. Lord, what a joy that is to know that we are safe in Christ.
Lord, not because of what we have done, not by any works of
righteousness which we think we may have been able to do.
Lord, we know that we cannot do works of righteousness prior
to our salvation in Christ, but that our salvation is based solely
and alone on the work of the Lord Jesus Christ, that He came
to this earth, lived a perfect life in obedience to Your law,
and earned eternal life for whoever would believe in Him. Lord, we
praise You for His life. We praise You for His death on
the cross, that in our place, condemned He stood, sealed our
pardon with His blood." And hallelujah, what a Savior He is. So Lord,
I pray that as we gather together for worship today on this beautiful
day, that our hearts would be filled with love for You as the
High King of Heaven, and our hearts would be filled with a
love for the Savior and a wonder at Your amazing grace. And as
the psalmist says, what is man that You are mindful of him,
Lord, that we would would be of the same mind as the psalmist,
that what is man, that you have made us to be part of your kingdom
of heaven, Lord, so we rejoice in that. Lord, I pray that you
be with our pastor this morning as he preaches the word, that
you would fill him with your Holy Spirit. We pray that you
would equip him and and give him that unction from the Holy
Spirit to proclaim the Word of God. We pray that you would bless
him, and Lord, we do look forward for the month of rest that he
hopes to take in the next month. Lord, we just pray that that
would be a great blessing for him and a time of rest, a time
to to rest from his labor that he has labored so diligently
among us here for so long, and particularly the stresses of
the last several years. Lord, we just pray that this
would be a time of much refreshing to him and Rebecca as well. So Lord, we do. We do pray for
the power of the Holy Spirit to be here, not only for our
pastor, but for us as listening to the Word being preached. We
pray that the Spirit would open our hearts to receive these things
and apply them to our hearts, and that we would leave here
with our hearts and our lives being changed by what we hear
from your Word, Lord, that it would be a means for our continued
conformity to the image of your Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. And
Lord, we do pray for the work of the Holy Spirit in the hearts
of those who have not come to faith in the Savior. Lord, we
pray that if there are any here this morning who have not come
to Christ, that today would be the day of salvation, that as
Paul says in Corinthians, that you would be pleased to shine
a light in the dark hearts, the light of the glory of the gospel
of the Lord Jesus Christ, and that they would see Christ as
the only way of salvation, that they would see Him, as He says
in His words, with open arms, saying, Come unto me, all you
that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. So
Lord, we do pray that your Spirit would work mightily in the hearts
of of unregenerate sinners this morning here among us. And Lord,
we do pray for our fellow churches as well that we associate with.
We think of the church in Surrey. We pray for Pastor Mike and and
your blessing upon him this morning as he preaches. We pray your
blessing upon the church as a whole there, and we thank you for your
goodness to them. We just pray that you would continue
to bless them, that they would continue to grow, not only in
number, Lord, but in the grace and knowledge of the Lord Jesus
Christ through the faithful ministry of our brother there in Surrey. Lord, we do. We do pray for the
group in Vernon as well. We thank you for that group there
and for the resolve to see a church planted there in the very near
future. And Lord, we are excited about
the next several weeks as things come together in that regard,
Lord. We just praise you for your goodness and your grace,
your provision, Lord, in so many ways there. And we just praise
you and we thank you, Lord, for your hand of direction and your
leading and guiding in these things. Lord, we just pray that
this week that you would bless all that has to take place going
forward with the vote, with the exam, and if it is part of your
will, Lord, the installation next week, we just pray that
your will be done, that you be glorified, and that this would
be a means for the proclamation of the gospel and the building
up of your church. in the North Okanagan there. So, Lord, we
thank you for your goodness to us in that regard. Lord, we do
pray for the church in Dryden as well. We just ask that you
be with them, bless them, and give them direction and guidance
as they look to establish a church there as well. Bless all those
who are involved with that. We pray for Dan, we pray for
Josh as they lead the group there. We just pray that you would help
them as they with all the decisions that take place there and we
just pray that if it is your will that one day, Lord, we would
see a church planted there as well, a biblically ordered church.
So Lord, we just thank you for that and we pray your blessing
on them. We pray for the church in Honduras
as well. We thank you for that church there and we pray for
the pastors there, Carlos and Luis, that you would continue
to bless them and with all the various responsibilities that
they have both within the Church and without the Church in their
daily lives. We just pray that you would bless
them and that you would use these men and the Church there to be
a beacon of hope and a beacon of light in the midst of a perverse
and crooked generation that we all find ourselves in, Lord,
but in that part of the world, that it would be a means for the Gospel
to go forward for you to conquer your people out of the kingdom
of darkness and bring them into the kingdom of the Son of your
love. Lord, we do pray your blessing on your church as a whole through
this world. Lord, we pray for those who are persecuted, those
who suffer for the name of Christ. We ask that you would strengthen
them, encourage them, and that they would constantly look to
you as the Creator, as King of kings and Lord of lords, the
one who is over all, the one that there is none over you,
Lord, that all things have been put in subjection to our Savior,
the Lord Jesus Christ, and that even though the battle still
rages on, Lord, we know that it is coming to an end and that
Christ is victorious. And so, Lord, I pray that not
only your people who are being persecuted, but all of us, Lord,
would have that focus in mind of the glory that is to come
as we enter into the new heaven and new earth where in righteousness
dwells, to be with our Saviour, for all of eternity. So, Lord,
that is the hope that we have, and I pray that our hearts would
be filled with that hope. I pray that you would bless us
as we continue in worship together, Lord, and we pray this in the
name of our Savior, your Son, the Lord Jesus. Amen. Our next
hymn, then, is, again, Psalm 130a. So you can turn to 130a
and stand as we sing together, please. I bow my head to you, I bow my
head me. and you over the sand. Our Lord and help me love with
you, and you make me your man. Always the Lord my hope is in
this world. Rest more than once and wait
for God. Our soul awaits the Lord. Awaits the hope in God the Lord. ♪ For mercy is with Him ♪ ♪ With
great redemption He will save ♪ ♪ His Israel from all sin ♪ Well, you can turn with me and
your Bibles to the book of Hebrews. We're in chapter 3. If you're
a visitor here, we go through the, consecutively read through
the New Testament in our morning worship. We are currently in
Hebrews chapter 3. We will read the entire chapter.
Hebrews chapter 3. Therefore, holy brethren, partakers
of the heavenly calling, Consider the apostle and high priest of
our confession, Christ Jesus, who was faithful to him who appointed
him, as Moses also was faithful in all his house. For this one
has been counted worthy of more glory than Moses, inasmuch as
he who built the house has more honor than the house. For every
house is built by someone, but he who built all things is God.
And Moses indeed was faithful in all his house as a servant,
for a testimony of those things which would be spoken afterward.
but Christ as a son over his own house, whose house we are
if we hold fast the confidence and the rejoicing of the hope
firm to the end. Therefore, as the Holy Spirit
says, today, if you will hear his voice, do not harden your
hearts as in the rebellion in the day of trial in the wilderness
where your fathers tested me, tried me, and saw my works 40
years. Therefore, I was angry with that
generation and said, They always go astray in their heart, and
they have not known my ways. So I swore in my wrath, they
shall not enter my rest. Beware, brethren, lest there
be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from
the living God. But exhort one another daily
while it is called today, lest any of you be hardened through
the deceitfulness of sin. For we have become partakers
of Christ if we hold the beginning of our confidence steadfast to
the end. While it is said today, if you will hear his voice, Do
not harden your hearts, as in the rebellion. For who, having
heard, rebelled? Indeed, was it not all who came
out of Egypt, led by Moses? Now with whom was he angry forty
years? Was it not with those who had
sinned, whose corpses fell in the wilderness? And to whom did
he swear that they would not enter his rest, but to those
who did not obey? So we see that they could not
enter in because of unbelief. Well, in this chapter here, we
have, well, first, in the book of Hebrews, we've seen in chapter
1 how Christ is, the author of Hebrews is telling us how Christ
is so much better than the angels. He is the Son of God, but very
God himself. And then in chapter 2, by implication,
I think he's teaching that he is so much better than Adam.
What Adam failed to do in bringing many sons to glory, Christ has
come and has brought many sons to glory. Christ is also better
than Moses. So Moses was the leader of the
people of God, but yet Moses was still the servant of God.
Christ is overall building his people, his true people. And
that's what he's saying here, is that Christ, he's building
his own house, whose house we are, if we hold fast the confidence
from rejoicing of the hope firm to the end. who are in Christ
are the building, that spiritual house Peter talks about as well,
the spiritual house of Christ, his kingdom, those who are his. But then we have this warning
here to hold fast the confidence. And it seems, as we look through
this, it seems almost conditional that if you hold the beginning
of our confidence steadfast to the end, then you get to enter
the rest. But we have to understand that's not what he's He's trying
to teach us that's not what the rest of the Bible teaches us,
that it's up to us to keep ourselves in Christ. Christ tells us very
clearly, nothing can snatch us out of His hand. When we have
been transferred out of the kingdom of darkness into His kingdom,
there's no going back. Christ keeps us there. So this
is not conditional statements here, but rather this is the
warning to examine ourselves. Do we truly believe in the Savior? Do we trust in Him? And are we
persevering to the end in faith? Now again, always remembering,
it's not up to us. It's not up to us to keep ourselves in the
covenant, but yet we have the responsibility to be diligent,
to persevere, and to be constantly looking for that, to the hope
of glory that we have, knowing where we are going to be with
Christ for all of eternity. So things to examine ourselves.
Are we in the faith? Do we trust in Christ? And again,
but there's also that warning to those who are not. who have
not believed in the Saviour. We have a very, very clear warning
here that who was the ones who were not going to enter that
rest? Those who rejected, those who did not obey, but rather
it was because of their unbelief. If you come here, if you're not
a believer in Christ, you come here, you hear us pray every
Sunday just about, you know, that those who are here who are
not saved, that today would be the day of salvation. That today,
you know, God would work in their hearts and that you would be
saved. But that does not leave you with
an excuse to sit and wait. I'm going to wait for God to
work in my heart so that, you know, so that I get saved. But
rather, very clearly told here, we are to obey, which is belief. Belief in the gospel. of our
Lord Jesus Christ, belief in him. And there's an urgency about
this passage here. Today, he tells us twice there,
today, today, hear his voice, do not harden your hearts. So
again, you come in every Sunday, every Sunday again, you know,
to reject the Savior, the harder the heart gets. So we call on
you, repent, believe the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. Then
you will be in Christ, part of that house that he is building,
that kingdom that he is building to enter eternal rest. So do not delay, but believe
on the Lord Jesus Christ. So let us pray. Well, Lord, we
thank you for your word, for the clear teachings of your word.
We thank you that we can be called the people of God, the household
of God. that is being built by the Son
of God, the Lord Jesus Christ himself. So Lord, we praise you
for that, and Lord, I do pray that if there are any here this
morning who do not believe in the Savior, that they would see
the urgency, that today, that they would believe in the Lord
Jesus Christ, and turn from any other hope that they may have
had, may have, of salvation, of earning your favor in any
way, but to know that it is only possible through the Lord Jesus
Christ, They would lay down their arms and that they would submit
to the Saviour and trust in Him in faith and for their salvation. So Lord, we do pray Your work
in the hearts and we pray this in Christ's name. Amen. Our final
hymn then before the preaching is 457. 457, and I'll ask you
to stand again as we sing, please. My beauty, all my lovelessness,
This day in mercy be, the day in joy, Shall I lift up my head. ♪ O shall I stand in my great day
♪ ♪ For whom all to Christ the Lord shall pay ♪ ♪ O ye that
saw through me to die and from sin ♪ ♪ And hear from guilt and
shame ♪ I. ♪ All my faith in Jesus ♪ ♪ And
lift that rock for me ♪ ♪ Jesus be endless praise to thee ♪ ♪
Whose boundless mercy hath for me ♪ ♪ Today again a bursting glass
of wine ♪ ♪ O let the dead now hear thy voice ♪ ♪ Now in thy
vanished walls rejoice ♪ ♪ Where beauty lives there ♪ Well, please turn with me in
your Bibles to John's Gospel. We're in John Chapter 6. John 6 is the bread of life discourse. Our Lord Jesus at the beginning
of the chapter engages in a miracle. He multiplies loaves and fish
and feeds the multitudes, and on the heels of that He teaches
them concerning His origin from the Father and the fact that
He is, in fact, the bread of life. So I want to read beginning
in chapter 6 at verse 41 to the end of the chapter, and then
our focus will be on verses 60 to 71. So verse 41 in John 6,
the Jews then complained about him because he said, I am the
bread which came down from heaven. And they said, is not this Jesus,
the son of Joseph, whose father and mother we know? How is it
then that he says, I have come down from heaven? Jesus therefore
answered and said to them, Do not murmur among yourselves.
No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws
him, and I will raise him up at the last day. It is written
in the prophets, and they shall all be taught by God. Therefore,
everyone who has heard and learned from the Father comes to me.
Not that anyone has seen the Father except he who is from
God. He has seen the Father. Most assuredly, I say to you,
he who believes in me has everlasting life. I am the bread of life. Your fathers ate the manna in
the wilderness and are dead. This is the bread which comes
down from heaven, that one may eat of it and not die. I am the
living bread which came down from heaven. If anyone eats of
this bread, he will live forever. And the bread that I shall give
is my flesh, which I shall give for the life of the world. The
Jews therefore quarreled among themselves saying, how can this
man give us his flesh to eat? Then Jesus said to them, most
assuredly I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the son
of man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. Whoever
eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life and I will raise
him up at the last day. For my flesh is food indeed and
my blood is drink indeed. He who eats my flesh and drinks
my blood abides in me and I in him. As the Living Father sent
me, and I live because of the Father, so he who feeds on me
will live because of me. This is the bread which came
down from heaven. Not as your fathers ate the manna
and are dead, he who eats this bread will live forever." These
things he said in the synagogue as he taught in Capernaum. Therefore
many of His disciples, when they heard this, said, This is a hard
saying. Who can understand it? When Jesus
knew in Himself that His disciples complained about this, He said
to them, Does this offend you? What then, if you should see
the Son of Man, ascend where He was before? It is the Spirit
who gives life, the flesh profits nothing. The words that I speak
to you are Spirit and they are life. But there are some of you
who do not believe. For Jesus knew from the beginning
who they were who did not believe and who would betray Him. And
He said, therefore I have said to you that no one can come to
Me unless it has been granted to him by My Father. From that
time many of His disciples went back and walked with Him no more.
And Jesus said to the 12, you also want to go away. But Simon
Peter answered him, Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the
words of eternal life. Also, we have come to believe
and know that you are the Christ, the son of the living God. Jesus
answered them, did I not choose you, the 12, and one of you is
a devil? He spoke of Judas Iscariot, the
son of Simon, for it was he who would betray him, being one of
the 12. Amen. Well, let us pray. Our
gracious God and Holy Father, we thank You for Your Word. We
thank You that You have not left us alone in the world, but You've
given us this written record full of glorious truth. We thank
You for the ministry of the Holy Spirit who takes these things
and makes them alive and applicable in the minds of Your people.
We pray that He would guide us and illumine us even now. Father,
we ask that You would forgive us for all of our sin and our
transgression, those things that darken our understanding and
our minds, and we pray that You would be glorified as we focus
upon Your truth. May it affect us for good. And
again, Father, may You open the eyes and the hearts of those
dead in their trespasses and sins. And may they see that Jesus
Christ is the one in whom there is salvation. There is forgiveness
to be had, a righteousness to be had through faith in that
blessed Savior for sinners. And we ask this in His wonderful
name. Amen. Well, as we've looked at
this particular passage, we've seen that the Lord Jesus has
constantly emphasized sovereignty. He's constantly emphasized depravity
in terms of the people, and he has emphasized the fact that
he alone is able to save to the uttermost all who draw nigh unto
God through him. And along the way, we have seen
their objections. We have seen their resistance,
their rebellion against the truth. And that comes to a head here
in verses 60 to 71. You have the reaction to the
Bread of Life discourse. First, you have the departure
of the Jews, and secondly, you have the devotion of the apostles. That last and concluding section,
when Jesus asks the apostles if they want to leave as well,
and Simon Peter makes that statement, To whom shall we go? You have
the words of eternal life. That is a wonderful attestation
to who Jesus is and to what he does in the lives of his people. But we'll look first at the departure
of the Jews in verses 60 to 66. And there's three things to consider
here. First, the question posed by the Jews in verse 61. Secondly, the response by our
Lord Jesus in verses 60 2 to 65, and then finally the actual
departure of the Jews in verse 66. But notice in the first place
at verse 60, therefore many of his disciples, and then again
drop down into verse 66, from that time many of his disciples
went back and walked with him no more. It's curious because
we often think of the doctrine of the perseverance of the saints,
preservation by God, those whom the Lord saves, he will not lose.
Well, in this instance, disciple is used in its most broadest
and general sense. It's the follower of a teacher.
This doesn't necessarily mean they were saved and then they
lost it, which cannot be. But they, at least for a time,
had an interest in the Savior. Some call this temporary faith.
Some call this historic faith. But this is exactly what it was.
They didn't have genuine life. They were not in Christ. They
had not believed on Him. And you can see that distinction
by their departure and by the affirmation of the apostles. To whom shall we go? You have
the words of eternal life. There is no other place that
our guilty, vile, helpless souls can find life, can find rest,
can find peace, can find safety. They speak as believers in the
Lord Jesus Christ, and we need to appreciate that. ones whom
God calls out of darkness into marvelous light. He never fumbles
them. He never loses them. The apostle
in Philippians 1 says, I'm confident of this very thing. He who began
a good work in you shall complete it unto the day of Christ. And
in Romans 8, the apostle says, there is nothing that shall separate
us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
So in verse 60 and in verse 66, again, disciples is used in its
most general and broad sense. who at least for a time followed
Jesus because they were at least for a time interested in what
he had to teach. But notice in verse 60, therefore
many of his disciples when they heard this said, this is a hard
saying, who can understand it? Now most likely the hard saying
refers to verses 53 to 58, where the Lord Jesus says, you need
to eat my flesh and you need to drink my blood. As I've explained
on several instances as we worked our way through this passage,
Jesus is not endorsing cannibalism. He is not overthrowing the book
of Leviticus and its prohibition against ingesting blood. He is
speaking metaphorically. When we look in the passage,
to eat the flesh of the Son of Man, to drink His blood means
to receive Him, to rest upon Him, to come to Him, to believe
in Him. But with reference to verses
53 to 58, you could see where this would appear to be, a hard
saying. But I think it extends even beyond
that, because they have resisted along the way. And throughout
the Bread of Life discourse, the Lord Jesus has emphasized
that He is the Bread of Life. They rejected that, they resisted
that, and yet he says it, verses 27, 33, 35, 48, 50, and 51, and then again 53 to
58. But another thing that they took
opposition to, or they rejected, was his insistence that he had
come from the Father. His origin wasn't from Nazareth. His origin is from everlasting. He is God the Word, God the Son. In the beginning was the Word.
The Word was with God and the Word was God. The Word became
flesh and dwelt among us and we beheld His glory. The glory
as of the only begotten Son who is full of grace and truth. So,
they oppose this. They thought that he was a fellow. They thought that he was on the
same footing as them. They rejected and denied his
origin from the father. So, as far as they are concerned,
this is a hard saying. Basically, includes the entirety
of the Brett O'Leif discourse. They oppose the idea of eating
his flesh and drinking his blood. They oppose the idea that he
himself was the bread of life. They oppose the idea that he
himself had been sent by the Father on this mission of redemption
wherein God the Son takes on our humanity with all the essential
properties and the common infirmities thereof, and yet without sin.
So basically, they denied Him at every step of the way. But
then look at how they say it, how they frame it. This is a
hard saying. Who can understand it? They answer
the question based on, or rather the context answers the question. If they simply would have listened
to Jesus, they wouldn't have to ask who can understand it.
According to verse 37, all that the Father gives me will come
to me. And guess what? They'll understand
it. All that the Father gives me
will come to me. Guess what? They'll believe on
the Son. They'll receive the Son. They'll
eat the flesh of the Son and drink the blood of the Son, again
metaphorically, and they'll understand it. For those who have ears to
hear, these are not hard sayings. For those who have ears to hear,
these are blessed sayings. For those who have ears to hear,
these are the most wonderful of sayings, that we have life
eternal in and through Jesus Christ the Lord, the One who
came to save His people from their sins. As well, the emphasis
on belief and then knowledge. Look at what it says. This is
a hard saying. Who can understand it? Well,
if you don't believe the gospel, you're not going to understand
it. Look at Peter's confession on behalf of the apostles in
verse 69. Also, we have come to believe
and know. That's the order, brethren. Believe
and know. There is mystery in the Christian
religion. And by mystery I don't mean blood
rites, I don't mean secret societies. I mean that the infinite is trying
to comprehend to some degree, or the finite is trying to comprehend
to some degree the infinite. So there's going to be hard things,
there's gonna be mystery, there's gonna be difficulty. How do we
reconcile that? We believe on the Lord Jesus
Christ. When our heart is right, we receive
the implanted word. When there is regeneration by
the power of the spirit, when he takes out the old stony heart
and puts in a new fleshly heart, then there is this belief and
then knowledge, this belief and then understanding. The apostle
highlights the same thing in Hebrews 11. By faith we understand
that the worlds were made by God. There are many people today
that say, well, unless I can fully exhaust every jot and diddle
in the Bible, I'm not going to believe. I'm going to be this
arrogant scientific commitment person and say that if I don't
have every answer satisfactorily or every question satisfactorily
answered, I am not going to believe. See, that's not the process.
We come to the Lord Jesus Christ, we believe on Him, and then spiritual
things make sense. See, with reference to spiritual
things and unspiritual men, it's like trying to describe color
to a blind man. They just don't get it. If you
had a blind man and you said, the green is so powerful today,
the blue of the sky, the white of the clouds, the beauty of
the world around us, I mean, they might be able to process
it to some degree and formulate a picture in their mind, but
they don't understand. They've never beheld color. It's
the same with unspiritual people. Have you ever tried to present
the gospel? You've talked to them about who God is and the
mercy of Christ and that sort of thing. It's almost like throwing
a dog a carrot. I'm not suggesting they're dogs,
but dogs don't eat carrots. It hits them on the mouth and
falls out. Perhaps you've seen that dog on Twitter, the guy,
everything he throws to his dog, whether it's a carrot or meat,
it bounces off his face and falls on the ground. It's hilarious.
I can watch that dog. It's strange, you know, what
you kind of are given to. But when it comes to dogs, they
eat meat. They don't eat vegetables. So
when you throw vegetables at them, it just, you know, glances
right off of them. It's the same with the carnal
man. It's the same with the unsaved man. It's the same with the person
that is an unbeliever. These things don't make sense.
They say stuff like this. This is a hard saying. Who can
understand it? Well, by God's grace, we can.
By God's grace, we have ingested the Son by faith. By God's grace,
we confess that He is the only begotten Son of the Father who
came into this world sinners to save. By grace, we understand. Because by grace we have believed
the gospel. And before we move on, we should
note the parallel between the people here and the people at
the time of the wilderness wanderings. Remember when God sent manna? God blessed them with that provision. And in Numbers 11, 5 and 6, guess
what they did? They complained, they whined, they said, oh it
was great to be back in Egypt. We had garlic and we had leeks
and we had melons and we had all kinds of fair, sumptuous
good things. Now we're basically ingesting
this manna and we're sick and tired of it. Not a lot changed
between that wilderness generation and their grumbling unbelief
to what we find at the time of Messiah when he comes to his
own and his own receive him not. So they grumble just like the
fathers in the wilderness had grumbled. Now notice the response
by our Lord Jesus in verses 61 to 65. There's four things that
Christ says here that I think are a bit somewhat puzzling.
get our minds wrapped around. First, the inability to understand
the ascension of the Son of Man. Second, the ignorance of the
life-giving Spirit. Third, the identification of
their real problem. And then finally, the inescapability
of a sovereign God. So look back at verse 60. This
is a hard saying. Who can understand it? Verses
61 and following, when Jesus knew in himself that his disciples
complained about this, he knew in himself, According to His
divinity, go back to chapter 2 at verse 25, John tips us and
John tells us that Jesus knew all men. John 2 verse 24, but
Jesus did not commit Himself to them because He knew all men,
and had no need that anyone should testify of man, for He knew what
was in man. And then that's exemplified in
the following sections. Notice in John 3, Nicodemus comes
to him by night, and Jesus gets right to the point. Unless a
man is born again, he shall not enter the kingdom of heaven.
He meets that woman at the well in Samaria. What does he tell
her? Go, call your husband, and come here. She says, Lord, I
don't have a husband. He says, you're right. You've
had five, and the one you're presently with isn't your husband.
He knew what was in man. Because again, in the beginning
was the Word, the Word was with God, the Word was God. And that
Word became flesh and dwelt among us. He never got rid of divinity. He never emptied himself of divine
prerogative. He never ever sacrificed or relinquished
what he'd always been. That would be an impossibility,
so Christ knows what's in man. So here in John 6 at verse 61,
Jesus knew in himself that his disciples complained about this.
So it's very intriguing how he responds. How does he answer?
Does he say, no, it's not really that hard, you're just thick-headed?
No, it's not really that hard, you're just unspiritual. That's
essentially what he does say in the emphasis here. Notice
the inability to understand the ascension of the Son of Man.
He knows what's happening, and then he questions them. The end
of verse 61. Does this offend you? This would
be symptomatic of the unbelieving Jewish response to Jesus as the
Messiah. 1 Corinthians 1, verse 23, Paul
says that the Jews seek after a sign, Greeks seek after wisdom,
but we preach Christ and Him crucified. To the Jews what?
A stumbling block. A scandal. That's the precise
language that Jesus utilizes here in verse 61. Does this offend
you? Is this a stumbling block? Does
this scandalize you? Again, carnal men. unregenerate
by the Spirit, as far as they're concerned, an emphasis on eating
his flesh, drinking his blood, the emphasis on his divine origin,
the emphasis on his ability or identity as the bread of life,
that would offend them, that would scandalize them, that would
upset them. So notice he challenges them
in verse 62. What then if you should see the
Son of Man ascend where he was before? Some apply this to the
cross. He's going to ascend to the cross.
That wouldn't really challenge them, though, because they would
be all for that. As far as they were concerned,
and this opposition is increasing in John's gospel, they're going
to be part of the rabble that say, away with him, away with
him, crucify him. Likely, he's speaking about the
ascension. After he dies, he's raised again. He appears to the disciples and
others for a period of time, and then he ascends on high.
He does so from Galilee. They're presently in Capernaum.
Capernaum is in Galilee. So likely they, these people,
some of them at least, would see him ascend back into heaven. Now in terms of this reference
that he gives us, what then if you should see the Son of Man
ascend where he was before? John Gill makes this statement. He existed before his incarnation. We know that. John 1.1, John
1.14, and he was in heaven before, not in his human nature, but
as the Word and Son of God. And he intimates that when he
had done his work and the will of his Father, for which he came
down from heaven, by the assumption of the human nature, he should
ascend up tither again, and which would be seen as it was by his
apostles, and which would prove that he came down from heaven
as he had asserted. So in verse 62, instead of backing
down, he doubles down. They've got a problem with his
assertion that he's come from the Father. And he reasserts
that he's going back to the Father. After the ascension, after the
accomplishment of redemption, after the salvation of his people,
he will ascend on high, he will lead captivity captive, and he
will give gifts to men. So again, brethren, you need
to process the way that the Lord responds to the accusation that
there are hard sayings. See, today, outside of the church,
you find that as well. Oh, it's hard sayings that the
commandments of God condemn abortion. It's hard sayings that the commandments
of God condemn euthanasia. It's a hard saying that the commandments
of God condemn sexual perversion and theft on a massive scale. It is a hard saying. So what
does the church do? The church capitulates. The church
softens. The church redefines. The church
says, oh, well, we want to be winsome, and we don't want to
offend you, so we're going to tailor our message to a God-hating
generation. Brethren, let us imitate our
blessed Savior, who, when challenged at the level of giving hard sayings,
continues with the hard sayings, continues to emphasize biblical
truth, Why? Because ultimately that's what
sinners need. They may think they want soft
sayings. They may think they want redefinition
of the commandments. They may think that, but they're
wrong. God made man in His image to
worship and to glorify Him. God made man in His image in
such a way that the knowledge of God is written on his heart,
at least to some degree. Those laws are written on his
heart to some degree. What is good for man today is
not capitulation. It is rather doubling down with
the truth of God's holy word, law, and gospel in the manner
in which the Savior does so with these people. The Son of Man
would return to heaven. Basically, he says, if you struggled
with what you've seen thus far, you ain't seen nothing yet. He's
going to die, but he's going to rise, and then he's going
to ascend back up into heaven. Notice, secondly, the ignorance
of the life-giving Spirit. Verse 63. He says, it is the
Spirit who gives life. The flesh profits nothing. The
words that I speak to you are Spirit, and they are life. So
the Spirit gives life, as we've seen in John 3. Unless a man
is born again, he shall not enter the kingdom of God. The doctrine
of appropriations applied to the Holy Spirit as the one who
brings the regeneration to bear. Specifically in chapter 3, verses
6 to 8, we see this emphasis on the Holy Spirit, likened and
paralleled with the wind. Same Greek word to show the sovereign
spirit in the salvation of sinners. And so Jesus makes that point
here. It is the spirit who gives life,
the flesh profits nothing. So there's this contrast between
the Holy Spirit and what the flesh can produce. But brethren,
it may go further into our specific context where Christ is clarifying
that he's not talking in verses 53 to 58 about actually eating
him. He is clarifying that it's the
Spirit who gives life, the flesh profits nothing. Now the human
flesh of our Lord Jesus was blessed, it was glorious, but again I
turn to John Gill. He says, the human nature of
Christ, though profitable as in union with the Son of God,
to be given for the life of His people and to be an offering
and a sacrifice for their sins, yet not as alone or as abstracted
from the divine nature. Nor would His flesh and blood,
corporeally eaten, could or should it be done, be of any avail to
eternal life. Nor is any other flesh, literally
understood, profitable of itself for life." This is a very clarifying
statement. It's the Spirit who gives life.
The flesh profits nothing. Again, this is not a denigration
of the flesh of our blessed Savior. But if it were the case that
one of them should take a bite out of Jesus physically and ingest
some of his blood, that would not have communicated the benefits
of redemption. The metaphorical use of belief
throughout the Bread of Life discourse is conspicuous. It's obvious. We come to the
Savior. We receive the Savior. We eat
His flesh. We drink His blood. All of that
is biblical shorthand, or metaphorical speaking, for belief in Him. If you are a sinner today, undone
before a holy God, the way of salvation is not to bite Jesus. The way of salvation is to believe
on Jesus, to receive Him. Look back at verse 40 in the
Discourse. Verse 40, and this is the will
of Him who sent me, that everyone who sees the Son and believes
in him, may have everlasting life, and I will raise him up
at the last day." So back to 663, it is the spirit who gives
life, the flesh profits nothing. And then he goes on to say, the
words that I speak to you are spirit and they are life. Again,
the emphasis in the context is not on the physical eating of
the body and blood, it is on belief, it is on It is on faith,
it is on looking and living. The same sort of an idea was
in John 3, when Jesus says, just as Moses lifted up the serpent
in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up. Well,
how were those bitten Israelites cured of their malady when Moses
lifted up that brazen serpent? They didn't drag themselves over.
They didn't suck the venom out of their wound. They didn't say
some incantation or hocus pocus. They looked at that brazen serpent
and they lived. The same emphasis. Look to the
Lord Jesus in faith and you will live. It is the Spirit who gives
life. The flash prophet's nothing.
The words that I speak to you are Spirit and they are life.
Again, brethren, you see his answer. He's not capitulating. He's not kowtowing. He's not
saying, oh, you poor pathetic sinner. I know I've made it a
bit difficult. I know I've said some things
that you interpret as hard saying. He doesn't do that. He doesn't
shrink back. He doesn't relax. He doesn't
say, well, you know, I'm just going to cater to my audience
where they're at. That, again, is a misuse of strategy. When Paul in 1 Corinthians 9
says we need to become all things to all men so that we might win
some, that doesn't mean cater to them in their rebellion against
God. It doesn't mean cater to them
in their gross sexual perversion. It doesn't mean cater to them
in their abortion and euthanasia or in their godless lifestyle
on a daily basis. It means befriend them to be
sure, but tell them the truth. What does a sinner most desperately
need to hear? The truth as it is in Jesus.
James 1.18, of his own will, he brought us forth by the word
of truth. If we don't have that word of
truth, we're going to perish in our sins forever. Kids and
young people, when you come to church, one of the ideas behind
this is that you listen to the word of truth so that by God's
grace you lay hold of Jesus, you believe on Him when you're
young, and hopefully you'll be spared some of the heartache
and the misery that many of us underwent prior to our conversion
to the great King. The Lord Most High has the words
of eternal life, and that's what He is stressing to them. Notice
the identification of their real problem in verse 64. There are
some of you who do not believe. That was the issue. That's why
they're hard sayings. That's why they stumble. That's
why they are scandalized, because they don't believe. And John
gives us commentary. For Jesus knew from the beginning
who they were, who did not believe, and who would betray Him. Introducing
the betrayal of Judas Iscariot. It's amplified in verses 70 and
71. It will come to full force in
John 13 in the Upper Room Discourse when the betrayer is identified.
At this point we understand that the betrayer and the betrayal
was a means by which the Son of Man would give his flesh for
the life of the world. He would be instrumental in handing
over the Son of God for basically chump change so that they could
execute him because they hated him so much. So the betrayer
is announced already here in John chapter 6, and I think it's
appropriate in this passage. For Jesus knew from the beginning
who they were who did not believe and who would betray Him. Christ
is not taken unawares. Christ is not surprised in His
earthly ministry. Christ is not shocked when it's
Judas who is betraying Him. Remember, Christ cannot divest
Himself of divinity. He cannot separate the hypostatic
union. What is true of divinity is applicable
to the person of our blessed Savior. And then notice, finally,
the inescapability of the sovereignty of God. This is where I think
a lot of people today, well, you don't like reformed theology? You don't like the emphasis on
total depravity? You don't like the emphasis on
unconditional election? What's the emphasis they really
balk at is the third point, right? The limited atonement to particular
redemption. That drives people nuts. They
go bananas. They can't stand it. They say
things like, this is a hard saying. Who can understand it? So it
would be at this point where Jesus might want to just release
the throttle a little bit. Maybe don't shove this down their
throat again. Maybe don't revisit this particular
theme again. But he does revisit this particular
theme again. He does press it down their throats,
and I'm speaking metaphorically, again. He reiterates what he's
already said in verse 65 at verse 44. So verse 65, therefore I've
said to you that no one can come to me unless it has been granted
to him by my Father. Look at verse 44, "...no one
can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him, and I
will raise him up at the last day." Positively stated in verse
36, "...but I said to you that you have seen me and do not believe.
All that the Father gives me will come to me, and the one
who comes to me I will by no means cast out." So over in verse
65, to sort of finish or summarize his response to their reaction,
he does so to explain their unbelief. He does so to show that the problem
isn't with the hard sayings. The problem is with the receptor.
The problem is with the sinner. The problem is with the one who
distorts. Our brother read Psalm 19 at the outset of worship.
Perhaps you've met the atheist before that has said, well, show
me some proof for the existence of God. Don't you want to take
him outside today and just go like this? Isn't that enough
proof? The heavens declare the glory,
the righteousness, and the majesty of God Almighty. Paul in Romans
1 tells us that the perfections of God are clearly seen through
the created order. When we look at the effect, it
leads us back to the cause. And the apostle says that's enough
data or information to damn a man forever and eternally. So the
idea isn't that there's a lack of evidence. The idea is that
man's heart is desperately wicked. It is deceitful above all things.
His receptor is wrong. He doesn't interpret the world
around him properly. And when handed a Bible, he really
doesn't get it right. He really stumbles. In fact,
a lot of real Christians stumble and fumble a lot at the level
of God's sovereign grace. So Jesus presses them in verse
65 with the doctrine of God's sovereign grace. It explains
their unbelief, and it again reaffirms that everything he
has said is in fact true, and it puts things in the proper
perspective. No one can come to the Father.
Why? Or no one can come to the Son. Why? Because of sin. See, they want to say, oh, these
are hard sayings. These are difficult. You're talking
about things that are outside of our wheelhouse. No, that's
not the problem. Brethren, those in this room
that are saved, you shouldn't have any problems with this.
Jesus' bread of life, absolutely, positively, that's great. Jesus'
origin from the Father as the only begotten Son of the Father,
absolutely, that's great. The fact that you eat his flesh
and drink his blood and you understand that metaphorically to mean believe
on him, that's great. You haven't been to Bible school,
you don't have a PhD, you haven't written books with a lot of footnotes,
and yet they're not hard sayings. So this explains why it's a hard
saying, because they, in their depravity, they're in their rebellion
against God, they can't make heads or tails out of biblical
truth. So what is the temptation for
those today? Change biblical truth. No! We follow Jesus and
press biblical truth, knowing that God uses biblical truth
for the salvation of sinners. We're cutting the sinner off
in the worst possible way by tailoring the message to him.
How do we not get that? How do we not see that? How do
we not understand that capitulating to a God-hating world is never
the right way to try to reach that God-hating world? Now notice
the departure, verse 66. From that time, many of his disciples
went back and walked with him no more. Cyril of Alexandria
says, wisdom is always hard for the unwise. Wisdom is always
hard for the unwise. Jesus is speaking wisdom to unwise
people, so what do unwise people do? They depart. He goes on to
say, and what may be thought to bring no small profit, they
often view as harmful. As far as they were concerned,
it was his problem. As far as they were concerned,
he had the issues. As far as they were concerned,
they were right in rejecting and resisting this one who claimed
to be the Messiah. As far as they were concerned,
he had evidenced himself to be sufficiently out of touch and
sufficiently out of line, and so they depart at that time.
Poole explains with reference to disciple. He says, many professors
and seeming disciples of Christ may draw back and fall from their
profession, though none that truly receive Christ shall fall
away, but be by the power of God preserved through faith unto
salvation. Makes perfect sense. No one can
come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him. Once he
draws him, secures him safely in the arms of Jesus, he doesn't
cut him off, he doesn't leave him on his own, he doesn't leave
him destitute of all saving grace. And then notice in verse 65,
the emphasis on that sovereign grace. It has been granted to
him. It has been given to Him. Salvation is not earned. Salvation
is not achieved. Salvation is not worked for because
we couldn't achieve it, we couldn't earn it, and we couldn't work
for it because we're so sinful. If God doesn't give it, there
is none to be had. That's the emphasis from Genesis
to Revelation, and these guys didn't like it. Now notice, secondly
and finally, 67 to 71, the devotion of the apostles. Notice first
our Lord's searching question. Our Lord's searching question,
or the examination of the Twelve. Verse 67, then Jesus said to
the 12, do you also want to go away? It's a legit question in
light of the defection of the others. It's a legit question
in light of an affirmation of their faith in him. And it's
a legit question in that it will ultimately bring glory to God
most high. When they confess what they confess,
this redounds to the praise and honor of our great God, right?
Because it's not them that stumbled onto this, it's not them that
discovered this in contradiction to the rest. They had been given
by the Father to the Son. They had been granted life in
the Son. They had received the blessed
gift of salvation from God Most High. So when Jesus searches
them, yeah, that affection of others is the occasion, but the
affirmation of their own faith and the stability of their own
faith in terms of their commitment to the Savior. It's a legit and
good question. Now notice the response of Peter.
Peter oftentimes speaks for the Twelve as a whole. Peter oftentimes
is the spokesman for the Apostles. He is functioning in that capacity. So verse 68, we have first a
question, and then we have an answer. Peter says in verse 68,
Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal
life. Now notice the question, Lord, to whom shall we go? It seems like he understood and
trafficked with what Jesus says in verse 63. The words that I
speak to you are spirit and they are life. So Peter understood,
along with the twelve, that it's not the physical ingestion of
the flesh and blood of the Son of Man. It is rather faith in
Him, to believe in Him, is to come to Him, it is to receive
Him, it is to know the joy of being found in Him. So Lord,
to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal
life. And when he asks that question, Lord, to whom shall we go? He's
not going to go to the Pharisees. No, no, not even for a little
time, right? Matthew 23, the Lord Jesus upbraids
the Pharisees along with the scribes because they are men
that heap upon you burdens that they themselves cannot carry.
In Matthew 11, Jesus says, come to me, all you who are weary
and heavy laden. Yes, he's talking about their
sin, but he's talking about Pharisaic religion. You think you had any
relief as a heavy laden sinner with a Pharisee as your teacher?
With a Pharisee as your master? Did you ever get to hear rest
in the Savior? You're washed in the blood? You've
been chosen by God and kept by his power? I mean, those are
soul comforting truths, aren't they? You wouldn't get them from
the Pharisee at the synagogue. So Lord, to whom shall we go?
We're not going to go to the Pharisees. We're not even going to go to
John the Baptist. John the Baptist was a great
man. In fact, Jesus says there was no one greater than John
the Baptist. At the nexus of covenantal history, John the
Baptist, an old covenant prophet, speaking in terms of glorious
things about the kingdom of God most high. But he affirmed, and
he did not deny, that he wasn't the Christ. So Peter and the
apostles aren't gonna go to the Baptist. They're not even gonna
go to Moses. They'll go to Moses for the law.
They'll go to Moses for the good things that Moses gives. They'll
go to Moses for the typology and the prophecies concerning
the coming of the son of man. But those men don't have the
words of eternal life. Lord, to whom shall we go? And
then notice the blessed response. He asks the question and then
he answers the question. You have the words of eternal
life. The all-sufficiency of Jesus
is something that the Twelve had come to see. The Twelve had
appreciated, by God's grace, they had believed the Gospel,
they knew the Son of God, they had come to Him in faith, and
now they enjoyed all of those benefits. You've heard me quote
John Gill twice in this message. I like John Gill. He's one of
my favorite commentators and theologians in the history of
the Christian church. He's a very faithful, safe guide
in terms of biblical interpretation and commentary. He's one of the
few men, maybe the only man, that wrote commentary on every
verse of the Bible. And then when he happened to
finish that, he wrote a systematic theology. Not many people on
God's earth can say, now that I have finished my commentary
on the whole Bible, I'm going to write a systematic theology.
Again, that is not paralleled in the history of Christianity.
For the most part, Gil takes you by the hand and leads you
through the text. Here's what this means, here's what he means
here, here's what he says. But every now and then, Gil has
this authorial flight of blessedness, and he does so in his comment
here. Lord, to whom shall we go? You
have the words of eternal life. Gil says, there is no other savior
but Christ to look to. No other mediator between God
and man to make use of. No other physician of value for
diseased and sin-sick souls to apply unto. No other fountain
but His blood for polluted souls to wash in and be cleansed. No
other city of refuge or stronghold for souls sensible of danger
to flee unto and be safe. No other to come to as the bread
of life, where hungry souls may be fed. No other place of rest
for those that are weary and heavy laden. Nor is there any
other where there is plenty of all grace and security from every
enemy as in Him. And therefore, to whom can they
have recourse but unto Him. Amen. Lord, to whom shall we
go? You have the words of eternal
life. In other words, there's no other
option. And praise God there's no other
option, because this is the option of options. This is the best
of the best. This is the champion, this is
the victor, this is the redeemer, this is the king and conqueror
who has come into this world, who has taken on our humanity,
who has lived for us, who has died for us, who has been raised
for us, who reigns for us, who will come back in glory to judge
the living and the dead and take us up into that heavenly Jerusalem. There is no other that has the
words of eternal life. Now notice after this the confession
of verse 69. Also we have come to believe
and know. Again, notice the emphasis. We believe and we know. Now,
what we believe in the Christian faith is not absurdity. It is
not falsehood. It is simply spiritually apprised. It is spiritually discerned.
We need the aid of the Spirit. So when I say belief then knowledge,
I don't mean some existential leap of faith out into the abyss
and then everything will just make sense. That's not it at
all. Or the Mormons who say, you know,
pray for the burning in the bosom and you'll get it. That's not
what I'm suggesting. I am telling you that when by
grace we believe the gospel, things make sense that used to
not. Things make sense that didn't
before. Things make sense in a way that
we would have never gotten had the Spirit not opened our eyes
and hearts to the truth as it is in Jesus. So also we have
come to believe and know that you are the Christ, the Son of
the living God. No accident that they confess
this. No accident that they profess
this. This is what sinners confess
who have been given by the Father to the Son, who have come to
the Son in faith, who have received Him, who have believed Him, who
have eaten His flesh and drank His blood, in a metaphorical
sense, for belief in Him. This is the legitimate confession
of faith in the Son of God who loved us and who gave himself
for us. This is how John ends his gospel. Truly Jesus did many
other signs in the presence of his disciples which are not written
in this book, but these are written that you may believe that Jesus
is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing you may have
life in his name. So, Peter asks the question,
Peter answers the question, and then Peter, on behalf of the
Twelve, expresses the confession of faith, a declaration concerning
the identity of the Savior and His power and ability to save
them. And then that brings us to confirmation
by our Lord in verse 70. Jesus answered them, did I not
choose you, the 12, and one of you is a devil? Before we get
into the and one of you is a devil, Jesus does the same thing. How
does he explain the unbelief of the Jews? Well, he does it
in verse 65. I have said to you that no one
can come to me unless it has been granted to him by my Father.
He explains the unbelief of the Jews by highlighting God's sovereignty. How does he explain the belief
of his disciples but by the same way? Highlighting God's sovereignty. Christ chose them to discipleship,
Matthew 4. Christ chose them to apostleship,
Matthew 10. Christ chose them as far as he
is God most high unto salvation vis-a-vis Ephesians 1, 4, and
5. So he explains their belief, he explains their confession,
not by, you know, applauding them, not by, good on you, you're
wiser, smarter, and brighter than the average bear. You're
much better than the rest of these, you know, this rabble,
the hoi polloi. Just like in Matthew chapter
16, when Jesus says, who do men say that I the Son of Man am?
Well, they say, well, some say this, some say this, some say
this. But then he hones in on his disciples. But who do you
say that I am? So Simon Peter says, you are the Christ, the
son of the living God. So what does Jesus do? Does he
applaud Peter? No. He pronounces him blessed.
Blessed are you, Simon Barjona. For flesh and blood did not reveal
this to you, but my Father who is in heaven." So as Christ explains
the unbelief of the Jews with the sovereignty of God, he explains
the belief of the Twelve with the sovereignty of God. But in
that explanation, he identifies, or he tells us, but one of you
is a devil. one of you is a detractor, one
of you is a defector, and again, he does this to show that he
is not caught unawares, he is not caught off guard, he's never
caught by surprise, but he does what the Father sent him to do,
fully conscious of the mission that lay before him. He knows
that there's going to be a betrayal and he announces that. Did I
not choose you, the 12, and one of you is a devil? He spoke of
Judas Iscariot, the son of Simon, for it was he who would betray
him, being one of the 12. Well, brethren, in conclusion,
just a few thoughts and then we'll go. First, the scandal
of biblical truth. I've already dealt with this.
I want to press it once more. We're not to back down from telling
the truth. That's just non-negotiable, right? I mean, why do we have
to even emphasize this anymore? Because we live in a godless
culture that has made inroads into the church. And unfortunately,
the church has adopted wokeism. The church has adopted the language
of the marketplace in such a way as to sacrifice the edge of biblical
truth. Brethren, when persons gave you
the gospel, haven't you ever rehearsed in your thoughts how
beautiful their feet were? I mean, that's what the Book
of Romans tells us. How beautiful are the feet of
those who bring the glad tidings of the gospel of peace. You don't
want somebody to tear off the edges. You don't want somebody
to make it palatable. You don't want somebody to tailor
it so that you can continue in your rebellion against God. Of
course not. Anybody conquered by sovereign
grace, anybody who has seen the truth as it is in Jesus rejoices
in the truth. Jesus in John 14 will say, I
am the way, the truth, and the life. Brethren, we don't reach
a lost and dying world by compromising the truth. We press the truth. If they say these are hard sayings,
we don't reformulate them, we don't make them softer, we don't
massage them to make them a little bit more palatable to the God-hater.
No, we press them. We don't back down. We have Martin
Luther moments where we say, here I stand, I can do no other. Unless my conscience can be shown
by the word of God to be in error, then here I stand. I can do no
other. We are living in a day and age
where there is gross rebellion. We are living in a day and age
where the very civilization itself is sliding into misery and destruction. And if we are not conscious of
this, and if we are not prepared for this, we are going to be
bested every step of the way. We speak the words of truth and
reason, and by God's grace we press them on a godless generation. Secondly, in the passage we see
the depravity of sinful man. The doctrine of depravity is
coupled with inability. No one can come unless the Father
who sent me draws him. You see that inability in 37.
You see it in 44. You see it in 65. But you see
depravity. Look at how they're treating
the Son of God. Look at how they're treating
the One who was sent from heaven as the Bread of Life to give
life to the world. They have no desire for Him whatsoever. Again, Cyril of Alexandria says,
These words are not hard, as they claim, but they raise us
up to the most exceptional thing of all, an unending, eternal
life that is free from all decay. They don't get it. They don't
see it. Why? Because they're sinners. Because
they are in Adam. And that's why, brothers and
sisters, on a Sunday morning, I encourage you to pray that
the Holy Spirit comes. That the Spirit comes on the
preaching of the Word, not just preacher, but hearer, so that
the receptor is able to receive that Word and to believe on the
Lord Jesus Christ. We don't stand up here and appeal
to your free will. Oh, come on up. Sign the card,
bow the head, raise the hand, make your decision, pray the
prayer. There's a reason we don't do
that, and John 6 is one of the reasons we don't do that. No
one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him. That's the emphasis, and the
people of God pray for the Spirit of God to come. As well, we see
the necessity of a sovereign God. If verses 37, 44, and 65
weren't in this passage, we could all be very miserable. But God
does give. God does draw. God is good. God is gracious. See, brethren,
we often focus on the what of the gospel, and we should. Life,
death, resurrection of Jesus. We need to look at the why of
the gospel from time to time. God so loved the world that he
gave his only begotten son. 2 Corinthians 5, God is in Christ,
reconciling the world to himself. The father of the prodigal, when
the boy was a long way off, runs to him, not to drive him from
the property and chasten him for his waywardness, but to fall
on him, to kiss him, to put a ring on his finger, to put a robe
on his back, to slay the fatted calf. Why? Because this son who
was dead is now alive. This son who was lost is now
found. Yes, we have the what of the
gospel, life, death, and resurrection. Let us never forget the why of
the gospel, because God so loved the world that he gave his only
begotten son. And finally, the glory of the
Savior. He is the one who comes from heaven. He is the one, John
1.1 and John 1.14, who became flesh and dwelt among us. The
eternal Son of God does that for sinners. He is the bread
of life, who gives life to the world. He is the one in whom
there is all sufficiency. Lord, to whom shall we go? You
have the words of eternal life. One more passage, Song of Solomon,
chapter 5. Song of Solomon, chapter 5. While
you're turning there, I'd like to remind you what the Song of
Solomon is all about. It's not about your marriage.
It's about God's. God to old covenant Israel, Christ
to the church. Owen says the whole book of Canticles
is designed to no other purpose, but variously to shadow forth,
to insinuate and represent the mutual love of Christ and the
Church. Blessed is he who understands
the sayings of that book and hath the experience of them in
his heart." Look at Psalm 5, verse 9. Daughters of Jerusalem ask the
Shulamite about her beloved. What is your beloved more than
another beloved, O fairest among women? What is your beloved more
than another beloved that you so charge us? The Shulamite responds,
my beloved is white and ruddy, chief among 10,000. His head
is like the finest gold, his locks are wavy and black as a
raven. His eyes are like doves by the
rivers of waters, washed with milk and fitly set. His cheeks
are like a bed of spices, banks of scented herbs. His lips are
lilies dripping liquid myrrh. His hands are rods of gold set
with beryl. His body is carved ivory inlaid
with sapphires. His legs are pillars of marble
set on bases of fine gold. His countenance is like Lebanon,
excellent as the cedars. His mouth is most sweet. Yes,
he is altogether lovely. This is my beloved. This is my
friend. Oh, daughters of Jerusalem."
That's what Peter says, isn't it? Lord, to whom shall we go?
You have the words of eternal life. And brethren, do not be
caught on a where, do not be surprised if we so describe the
Savior in that manner that it evokes the response that we find
in 6.1. Where has your beloved gone, O fairest among women? Where has your beloved turned
aside, that we may seek him with you? In other words, brethren,
when we set forth the beauty, the glory, the majesty, the all-sufficiency
and excellence of Jesus Christ, that's what this lost and dying
world needs to hear. And we trust in God to send the
Spirit to open the heart so that the persons to whom we describe
the altogether lovely and chief among 10,000 will say this, where
is he? That we may seek him too. Let us pray. Our Father in heaven,
we thank you for your word. We thank you for the response
of our Lord Jesus Christ to the Jews who departed, to the apostles
who were devoted. And God, help us to properly
and rightly see the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ, who came
down from heaven, sinners to save. And may we rejoice in your
sovereignty. May we rejoice in Father, Son,
and Spirit and that glorious work of salvation that you have
made us partakers of. God, open eyes and hearts here.
For any that are dead in their trespasses and sins, show them
that sin and show them the Christ that is able to save them from
their sins. And we pray in His most blessed
name. Amen. Well, let us sing the hymn number
568, a doxology of praise to our God, and we'll stand together
while we do so. 568. you. ♪ His Father's love and praise
shall evermore be ♪ Grace of the Lord Jesus Christ
and the love of God and the communion of the Holy Spirit be with you
all. Amen. Father, we bless you for this
beautiful day. We bless you for your sovereign
providence and for redemption by grace through faith in our
Savior. We praise you for the recent birth of Jacob Paul. We
ask God that you bless this little one, bless Andrew and Sonia as
they bring up their children in the training and admonition
of the Lord. Certainly, we witness your good
gifts to us as creatures. We witness your good gifts to
us as redeemed creatures. And may we, by grace, sanctify
the day, call it a delight, and may we find great joy in the
presence of our blessed God. And we ask these things through
Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. Well, please be seated
for a brief time of meditation.