Though millions of people today claim to believe in Jesus, who are attracted to Jesus, yet Jesus Himself said that many are called but few are chosen, that many will seek to enter His kingdom but will not be able. Though many claim to be Christians, there is a tremendous difference between true and false disciples. Two thousand years ago, even Jesus’ own family did not believe in Him and his own nation rejected Him and put Him to death. Even after feeding 15000 people and healing many of the sick in attendance, when He began to preach His gospel many of His disciples stopped following Him. John 6:66 says,“As a result of this many of His disciples withdrew and were not walking with Him anymore.”
Those fair weather disciples who came for the miracles but left after the message were obviously superficial. They were disciples or followers in name only. There were still the 12 however. Christ’s inner circle. And when the others left Him, Jesus turned to them and said, “You do not want to go away also, do you?” Peter, acting as spokesman answered, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have words of eternal life. We have believed and have come to know that You are the Holy One of God.” But even within the 12, Jesus said that one of them had a devil and would betray Him.
So Jesus ministry was characterized by true and false disciples. I believe much of Jesus’ teaching was to show a distinction between His followers, to separate those that followed Him for superficial reasons, and to develop true discipleship. Jesus seems to almost go out of HIs way to talk people out of following Him. Let me give you just a few examples.
To the 15000 people that had eaten the loaves and fishes that He had miraculously provided, Jesus said that they had to eat His flesh and drink His blood. At another time Jesus told those who wished to follow Him to let the dead bury the dead, and not even go to their father’s funeral. He told a rich young ruler to sell everything he had and give it to the poor and then to follow Him. At another time He told a crowd that unless they hated their father and mother and family, and even one’s own life, they could not be His disciple. Then He told them to pick up their cross and follow Him. He said in Luke 14:33 “So then, none of you can be My disciple who does not give up all his own possessions.” Jesus told others to leave their nets, their professions as fishermen, and He would make them fishers of men.
I could go on and on. Jesus called disciples to abandon all that they held dear in the world for the sake of knowing Him. I’m sure most of us would have responded to this call for drastic abandonment with the response; “you lost me at hello.” Unfortunately, this call to forsake all for Christ is not the gospel message of the modern church today. We have changed the message to be as accommodating and appealing as possible. We don’t ask for anyone to leave anything, but to come as you are. We don’t ask for any sort of personal sacrifice; but say all God wants is a relationship with you because He loves you so much.
If we are not careful, we find that we have redefined discipleship, if not even salvation. We are guilty of twisting the Jesus of the Bible into a 21st century hipster Christ that people are more comfortable with. Jesus becomes a non-condemning, non-controversial genie who is able to grant wishes upon our command and more importantly, places no demands upon us.
But that is not the Jesus of the Bible. Jesus never presented discipleship as being easy. The Jesus of the Bible talked about offering Himself as a human sacrifice for sin, and man’s need to repent for the forgiveness of their sins, and the people rejected Him. When He condemned religious leaders of His day as hypocrites, in response they hated Him and plotted to kill Him. So it says in 7:1 that Jesus avoided going to Judea, which was the seat of religious authority in Israel, because He knew that they wanted Him dead.
His home by the way was in a small city called Capernaum, in Galilee, which had a population of about 1500 people. We can assume that it was the family home. And so about six months after the feeding of the multitudes on the shore of the Sea of Galilee, His brothers come to Him and said, “Leave here and go into Judea, so that Your disciples also may see Your works which You are doing. For no one does anything in secret when he himself seeks to be known publicly. If You do these things, show Yourself to the world.”
From a logical perspective, what they said seemed to make sense. It seemed to be good advice for how to raise up a ministry, or in Jesus’ case, how to get everyone to believe that you are the Messiah. But their motive was not really in the best interests of the kingdom of God. The underlying motivation for their comments is found in vs.5, “For not even His brothers were believing in Him.” So at this point, even His own brothers were not true disciples. They were perhaps willing to benefit from their relationship with Him if in fact He could pull off some sort of coup in the geopolitical realm. But in fact they did not really believe that their own brother was the Messiah, much less the Son of God.
In chapter 6, you will remember, the crowds were taken back by Jesus claiming to have come down out of heaven, and they said in vs. 42, “Is not this Jesus, the son of Joseph, whose father and mother we know? How does He now say, ‘I have come down out of heaven’?” And now in chapter 7, you have His brother’s agreeing with the crowd. After all, they had grown up in the same house with Him. They shared the same parents, or so they thought. How could He have come down from heaven?
Matthew’s gospel identifies His brothers. Matt. 13:54-58 “He came to His hometown and began teaching them in their synagogue, so that they were astonished, and said, “Where did this man get this wisdom and these miraculous powers? Is not this the carpenter’s son? Is not His mother called Mary, and His brothers, James and Joseph and Simon and Judas? And His sisters, are they not all with us? Where then did this man get all these things?” And they took offense at Him. But Jesus said to them, ‘A prophet is not without honor except in his hometown and in his own household. And He did not do many miracles there because of their unbelief.”
So from that text we know that the people in Jesus’ hometown didn’t believe He was the Messiah. And in John 7 we learn that even His brothers didn’t believe in Him. That explains why they say, “IF you do these things show them to the world.” They didn’t even believe that He had done any real miracles.
There is a parallel here in the life of Joseph from the Old Testament. Joseph was hated by his brothers, because they were jealous of him. And so they scorned him and eventually plotted for his death. Jesus’ brothers did not actually kill him, but they did reject Him and really wanted Him to get out of their lives. He was an irratation to them. And in like manner, Jesus’ greater brethren, meaning the family of the Jewish nation plotted His death.
But the Bible does indicate that Jesus’ actual brothers did eventually come to believe in Him, even as Joseph’s brothers eventually came to bow down before him. But it was not until after Christ’s resurrection according to Acts 1:14. Tradition tells us that Simon became a servant of the church for many years. And James became the author of the book of James, the leader of the church in Jerusalem, and a martyr for the faith. He describes himself in his epistle as “James a servant of God and the Lord Jesus Christ,” establishing Jesus as Lord, Messiah and equal with God. Jude, the author of the book of Jude, describes himself also as a servant of Jesus Christ. And he writes about looking for the mercy of the Lord Jesus Christ for eternal life. So His brothers eventually come to recognize Him as the Son of God, but at this stage they are filled with contempt and scorn for Him. Though they could claim to have a relationship with Him, yet they could not claim true discipleship.
Their suggestions are indicative of false disciples as well. They basically are espousing the dogma of modern Christian evangelism; that if you are successful, if you have a big crowd, then you must be doing something right. That’s why they wanted Him to go to Judea. Why hide out in the backwoods of Galilee when the big crowds and the success was in Judea. If you’re really the Messiah you are going to have to become popular with the multitudes and accepted by everyone. But notice that’s not Jesus’ plan for taking over the world. In chapter 6 Jesus spent about 2 days teaching the 15000 people. But many of them deserted Him afterwards when they found out the cost of discipleship. So for the next 6 months Jesus spent all His time primarily with just 12 guys – discipling them. That was His plan for establishing the kingdom of God in the world.
Jesus’ commission is the same for us today; Matt. 28:19-20 “Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” The command is not go into football stadiums and attract a huge crowd. Nor to organize giant crusades and get a lot of people to walk the aisle and repeat a prayer. But to make disciples, and teach them, notice that, teach them, to observe all that I commanded you. Attracting a crowd is easy if you have enough money. But making disciples is hard work. It takes time. It’s not done in a single outreach. It’s not done in a short term mission trip. It’s a long term affair. It’s teaching disciples to be doers of the word and not just hearers, not just superficial disciples.
Now the reason for His brother’s suggestion to go to Judea is because it was the time of the Feast of booths, or feast of tabernacles. There were three feasts which Jewish men were required to go to Jerusalem to celebrate. The feast of tabernacles was one of those feasts, which lasted 7 days. From a human perspective, it would have been a great opportunity for Jesus to appear before every able bodied man in Israel and start doing some miracles and show everyone that He was indeed the Messiah.
That’s another indication of false disciples, by the way. They are attracted by signs and wonders. Great crusades happen in our country all the time which claim to be visited by signs and wonders. One happened a few years ago in Los Angeles, the city of the angels. And one of the organizers of that event claimed to see a giant golden angel up in the sky above the stadium as he was driving in on the freeway. Their whole program was about signs and wonders. One speaker proclaimed that everyone there was going to be able to walk behind someone afterwards and know everything about that person. I guess that is what they consider a word of knowledge. There were people who were acting “drunk in spirit” all over the auditorium, falling down and laughing uncontrollably.
But the Bible warns about such signs and wonders as a means of leading people into a false discipleship. Matt. 24:24 says, “For false Christs and false prophets will arise and will show great signs and wonders, so as to mislead, if possible, even the elect.” Jesus rebuked others who followed Him for seeking signs and wonders in John 4:48 Jesus said, “Unless you people see signs and wonders, you simply will not believe.” And Paul warned in 2 Thess. 2:9 about “the one whose coming is in accord with the activity of Satan, with all power and signs and false wonders, and with all the deception of wickedness for those who perish, because they did not receive the love of the truth so as to be saved.”
Jesus is not interested in accommodating man’s agenda, even if it’s His own family members who are pushing it. So He responds, “My time is not yet here, but your time is always opportune. The world cannot hate you, but it hates Me because I testify of it, that its deeds are evil. Go up to the feast yourselves; I do not go up to this feast because My time has not yet fully come.”
There are a couple of points that need to be made concerning this important statement. First of all, God has His own timetable and agenda, and we need to be aligned with it, rather than trying to get God to accommodate ours. Jesus had an appointed time that He was going to go into Jerusalem and present Himself as the Messiah. It would be 6 months later at the Passover Feast. At that time, Jesus rides into Jerusalem on a donkey and the crowds celebrate His coming as the Messiah, the son of David. A week later, He is crucified as the lamb slain for the salvation of the world. That is the timing of God, and Jesus is in full agreement with that plan. This was the plan of God before the foundation of the world. And though it doesn’t look like it to His brothers or His disciples, all is going according to God’s plan.
Listen, I’ve said before that there is no safer place to be than in the will of God, and there is no safe place outside of the will of God. It should be a great comfort to us to know that we are in the will of God, so that even when it seems like everything is going wrong, we can trust that God is in control, and He has a plan and things are going according to His plan. If you are going to be a disciple of Christ, then you have to get in tune with the timing of God, and then trust in His sovereignty to accomplish His will in HIs time. All our anxiety is usually because we have a different timetable and different expectations than God has.
Trusting God is hard work. Faith is hard work. The idea that faith is easy is contrary to scripture. It’s hard to walk by faith and not by sight. I heard a story that illustrates trust. It’s setting is back in the day when televisions still required antennas on rooftops. Something that has gone by the wayside in the digital age. But this man was up on his roof fixing his television antenna when he slipped and began to slide down toward the gutters. He tried to catch himself, but he went over the edge. He managed to grab hold of the rain gutter as he dropped, and he hung there, suspended two stories in the air. He didn’t want to look down, and in his desperation he cried out. “Oh, God help me!” And a voice replied, “I am ready to help you.” And he said, “Tell me what to do.” The voice asked. “Do you trust me?” He said, “Yes, I trust you.” The voice said. “All right then. Let go.” And the man asked, “Is there anybody else up there who can help me?” Trusting God isn’t always easy. Letting go of things we depend upon though is fundamental to really trusting in God.
Secondly, if you are on God’s timetable, doing God’s will, then you are in opposition to the world, and the world is going to hate you. True disciples are hated by the world. But contrarily, false disciples love the world, and so the world does not hate them. Now why is this true? Well, because if you are a true disciple, then you are in agreement with what Jesus said, “it hates Me because I testify of it, that its deeds are evil.” That’s it. We call sin, evil. And we testify that their deeds are evil.
Let me tell you something that you need to really understand. This is the defining point of true disciples versus false disciples. The defining point between true and false disciples is their deeds. Don’t get me wrong. You are not saved by works, you are saved by grace. But don’t get Jesus wrong either. He said, you shall know them by their fruits. The most damning statement of Jesus was toward false disciples, found in Matthew 7:20-23 “So then, you will know them by their fruits. Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father who is in heaven will enter. Many will say to Me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name, and in Your name cast out demons, and in Your name perform many miracles?’ And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; DEPART FROM ME, YOU WHO PRACTICE LAWLESSNESS.’”
So their fruits are the deeds that they did. But notice that they did signs and wonders. They even cast out demons and performed many miracles. They named the name of Jesus. And yet they were not true disciples because they practiced sin.
Now that is exactly what Jesus accused the Jews of in vs.19. He said to them, “Did not Moses give you the Law, and yet none of you carries out the Law? Why do you seek to kill Me?” They claimed the righteousness of the law, but they did not carry out the law. They sought to kill Him, in opposition to the law.
Their hatred of Jesus was equal to murder, and so it beget a plot to murder Him, which was eventually fulfilled. So if you are a true disciple of Christ, then the world will hate you. That really is the irony of the seeker friendly church model, isn’t it? That we would try to ingratiate ourselves to those who really hate what we stand for. Because what we stand for is the truth of God’s Word which declares sin as evil, and defines it by God’s law.
So Jesus did eventually go up to the Feast of Tabernacles, but secretly. That means that He did not enter into Jerusalem with a big fanfare. His family would have been part of a large caravan, and His coming would have been with thousands of pilgrims, which would have probably instigated some sort of great political, religious rally to make Him King. But He was not interested in their agenda, He was interested in fulfilling God’s agenda. So He shows up midweek, without fanfare, and when they find Him, He is teaching in the temple.
But notice that there was grumbling going on amongst the people concerning Him. Vs.12, ‘There was much grumbling among the crowds concerning Him; some were saying, “He is a good man’; others were saying, ‘No, on the contrary, He leads the people astray.’ Yet no one was speaking openly of Him for fear of the Jews.”
Notice that neither of those comments are the marks of true disciples. Jesus was not just a good man. Either He was God incarnate, or He was a lunatic. Most of the world’s false religions say that Jesus was a good man. But they fail to believe that He is God. That He is alive, having risen from the dead and ascended into heaven. And as such their belief is of no avail. Believing that Jesus is a good man will not save you. Of course, the other half of the people were under the influence of the religious leaders who were saying that He was a deceiver. But neither group were professing saving faith, and neither group spoke openly about Him for fear of the Jews. That word Jews is used of the religious Jewish leaders. They feared being ostracized, or kicked out of the temple because of any allegiance to Christ.
I believe the day is already here when being a true disciple of Christ will bring persecution in the social arena, when saying that certain deeds are sinful will cost you your job, or mean you are sued for everything you have and then some, or even thrown in jail. That day is here.
So Jesus starts teaching in the temple. And the Jews hearing Him, ask in astonishment, “How has this man become learned, having never been educated?” This is the great thing about preaching the Word of God. It’s the wisdom of God. The Holy Spirit working in us, in conjunction with the Word of God, teaches us the things of God, so that we have the wisdom of God. You want wisdom? Read the Word of God. 1Cor. 1:25 says, “the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men.
Notice Jesus says in John 7:16-17 “My teaching is not Mine, but His who sent Me. If anyone is willing to do His will, he will know of the teaching, whether it is of God or whether I speak from Myself.” Jesus spoke the words of God. When He rebuked the devil in the wilderness, He quoted from the Word of God. This is the habit of Jesus when He preached. And in the same manner I believe it’s a good idea for preachers to preach the Word of God. Jesus goes on to say, “He who speaks from himself seeks his own glory; but He who is seeking the glory of the One who sent Him, He is true, and there is no unrighteousness in Him.” We have a lot of glory seeking preachers out there today who speak in order to glorify themselves. They speak to gain a crowd, to please people, to entertain people. And they fail to preach the full counsel of God. Jesus testified that people’s sin was evil. He preached the Word of God in it’s fullness. Only when man is convinced of His sin does he come to know his need for a Savior. And only when man has come to know Jesus as His Savior will he come to serve Jesus as Lord.
But here is the key Jesus gives us in those passages regarding true discipleship. He says, “If anyone is willing to do His will, that is the Father’s will, he will recognize the teaching is of God.” (my paraphrase) Here is the key to true discipleship. You first have to come to a point of being willing to submit and obey the will of God, and when you do that, when you obey, then God will reveal more truth to you. This is the principle I have mentioned so many times, that of progressive revelation. When you are obedient to the light God has shown you thus far, then He will reveal more to you. God’s word is a lamp unto your feet and a light unto your path. That means it’s walking revelation. As you walk out the truth in obedience, God will continue to lead you. Too many people want to see the light at the end of the tunnel before they start to walk. That’s not discipleship. Believe and obey. Trust and obey, for there’s no other way.
Well, there is more to this message that Jesus gives during the Feast, but it will have to wait for next Sunday. In the meantime, I believe that you have been given enough light to start to be obedient to the light you have. I hope that you will prove to be a disciple this week by your deeds and not just your claims on Christianity. I hope that you are indeed a true disciple. If not, then today is the appointed day of salvation. Salvation is simply believing all that Jesus claimed He was, that He was the bread of life which came down out of heaven, that men might eat of Him and receive eternal life. To eat of Him is to receive Him, as Savior and Lord. To be willing to forsake the world, even all that life offers, in exchange for eternal life. To be willing to take up your cross and follow Him. True discipleship is not without a cost. But the reward is worth it all. As Jesus said later in this sermon, “If anyone is thirsty, let him come to Me and drink. He who believes in Me, as the Scripture said, ‘From his innermost being will flow rivers of living water.’”