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Octavius Winslow

John 17:10

John 17:10
Octavius Winslow July, 13 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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July, 13 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about the unity of the Father and the Son?

The Bible emphasizes the essential unity of the Father and the Son, particularly as seen in John 17:10.

In John 17:10, Jesus expresses His unity with the Father concerning the church, stating, 'All mine are yours, and yours are mine.' This profound statement highlights that no mere creature could claim such a conjunction of interest without blaspheming, demonstrating the unique divine essence shared between the Father and the Son. This unity extends not only to their nature but also to their love for the church, reinforcing the theological understanding that the love of the Father and the love of the Son are equal in degree and nature. Moreover, the mutual interest they express signifies a perfect oneness in purpose and intention towards the redemption and care of God's people.

John 17:10

Why is the love of the Father and the Son important for Christians?

The love of the Father and the Son assures Christians of their salvation and the nature of God's affection towards them.

Understanding the love of the Father and the Son is crucial for Christians as it assures them of the constancy and depth of God's commitment to their salvation. The love displayed by Jesus during His earthly ministry, including His compassion and sacrifices, is a reflection of the Father's love. When Jesus states, 'He that has seen me has seen the Father,' it illustrates that knowing Christ equips believers to understand the love and character of God. This revelation is vital, as it underscores that the same love which motivated the Son's sacrifice is equally shared by the Father, creating a firm foundation for faith and hope in believers. Recognizing this divine unity in love enriches the believer's relationship with God.

John 14:9, 2 Corinthians 5:19, 1 John 4:9

How do we know that God loves the church?

The love of God for the church is manifested through Christ's sacrifice, as stated in John 17:10.

God's love for the church is profoundly demonstrated through the incarnation and sacrificial death of Jesus Christ. In John 17:10, Jesus speaks of the inseparable bond between Him and the Father, which underlines their joint affection towards His people. This love was not merely abstract; it involves action and sacrifice, evidenced in Christ's suffering for the sins of humanity and His intercession on behalf of believers. Furthermore, scriptural assertions such as 'God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto Himself' (2 Corinthians 5:19) confirm that God actively seeks to establish a relationship with humanity through His profound love. Through the personal experiences of Christ's compassion and sacrifices, believers are assured of a deep-rooted love that seeks to secure their eternal salvation.

John 17:10, 2 Corinthians 5:19, 1 John 4:9-10

“And all mine are your, and your are mine; and I am glorified in them.”

— John 17:10

The manifested glory of Christ in His church is clearly and manifestly stated in the sublime prayer of our Lord. Addressing His Father, He claims with Him—what no mere creature could do—a conjunction of interest in the church, based upon an essential unity of nature. What angel in heaven could adopt this language, what creature on earth could present this claim—"All your are mine"? It would be an act of the most daring presumption; it would be the very inspiration of blasphemy: but when our Lord asserts it—asserts it, too, in a solemn prayer addressed on the eve of His death to His Father—what does it prove, but that a unity of property in the church involves a unity of essence in being? There could be no perfect oneness of the Father and the Son in any single object, but as it sprang from a oneness of nature. The mutual interest, then, which Christ thus claims with His Father refers in this instance specifically to the church of God. And it is delightful here to trace the perfect equality of love towards the church, as of perfect identity of interest in the church. We are sometimes tempted to doubt the perfect sameness, as to degree, of the Father's love with the Son's love; that, because Jesus died, and intercedes, the mind thus used to familiarize itself with Him more especially, associating Him with all its comforting, soothing, hallowing views and enjoyments, we are liable to be beguiled into the belief that His love must transcend in its strength and intensity the love of the Father. But not so. The Father's love is of perfect equality in degree, as it is in nature, with the Son's love; and this may with equal truth be affirmed of the "love of the Spirit." "He that has seen me," says Jesus, "has seen the Father." Then he that has seen the melting, overpowering expressions of the Redeemer's love—he that has seen Him pouring out His deep compassion over the miseries of a suffering world—he that has seen His affectionate gentleness towards His disciples—he that has seen Him weep at the grave of Lazarus—he that has followed Him to the garden of Gethsemane, to the judgment-hall of Pilate, and from thence to the cross of Calvary—has seen in every step which He trod, and in every act which He performed, a type of the deep, deep love which the Father bears towards His people. He that has thus seen the Son's love, has seen the Father's love. Oh, sweet to think, the love that travailed—the love that toiled—the love that wept—the love that bled—the love that died, is the same love, in its nature and intensity, which is deep-welled in the heart of the TRIUNE GOD, and is pledged to secure the everlasting salvation of the church. "God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto Himself." "In this was manifested the love of God toward us, because that God sent His only begotten Son into the world, that we might live through Him."

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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