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Robert Hawker

John 14:24

John 14:24
Robert Hawker August, 28 2016 3 min read
730 Articles 1 Sermon 30 Books
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August, 28 2016
Robert Hawker
Robert Hawker 3 min read
730 articles 1 sermons 30 books
What does the Bible say about the teachings of Jesus?

Jesus' teachings are a direct reflection of the Father's words and intentions, showing His love and mercy to His people.

In John 14:24, Jesus emphasizes the divine origin of His teachings by declaring that the words He speaks are not His own but come from the Father. This profound statement reveals that everything Jesus did during His earthly ministry was aimed at demonstrating the heart of the Father toward His people. The fullness of the character and love of God is encapsulated in Christ, making Him the ultimate mediator between God and man. As believers, understanding that the blessings we receive through Jesus originate from the Father enhances the sweetness of these gifts, as they are expressions of divine love and grace.

Moreover, this understanding deepens our appreciation for the relationship between the Father and the Son. Jesus, being fully God and fully man, embodies all the grace and truth of God, showing us the nature of the Father in every act of kindness, mercy, and redemptive work He performs. Every blessing that flows from Christ to believers is ultimately rooted in the Father's love, demonstrating that our communion with the Father is exclusively through the Son. This connection not only enriches our faith but also assures us that in knowing and seeing the Son, we know and see the Father as well.

John 14:24

How do we know Jesus is the mediator between God and man?

Jesus' role as mediator is confirmed by His divine nature and fulfilling God's plan for redemption.

The mediatorial role of Jesus is deeply woven into the fabric of Scripture, particularly emphasized in John 14:24, where He manifests the Father's authority in His teachings. As the Son of God, Jesus fully reveals the Father's heart, embodying both His love and justice. Through His life, death, and resurrection, Jesus opened the way for us to commune with the Father, making it clear that no one can come to the Father except through Him (John 14:6).

This unique and essential role of Jesus as our mediator signifies that He stands between humanity and God, bridging the gap created by sin. By offering Himself as the perfect sacrifice, He fulfilled the requirements of God’s law while demonstrating divine grace. This mediatory function is not merely transactional but relational, as it invites believers into an intimate relationship with the Father through the Son. Understanding Jesus as the mediator illuminates our faith and reliance on Him for access to God’s presence, reinforcing the glory of God's salvation plan and our dependence on His grace.

John 14:24, John 14:6

Why is understanding the Father's love through Jesus important for Christians?

Understanding the Father's love through Jesus deepens our relationship with God and enriches our faith.

For Christians, grasping the nature of the Father's love as revealed through Jesus is crucial for fostering a deeper spiritual life. John 14:24 emphasizes that Jesus speaks the Father's words, showcasing His unwavering love and active engagement with humanity. This understanding transforms our perception of God, portraying Him not as distant or indifferent but as intimately involved in our redemption. Knowing that every blessing we receive is grounded in the Father's love communicated through the Son enriches our gratitude and worship.

Furthermore, recognizing Jesus as the gateway to experiencing the Father's love helps ensure that our faith is not based on mere ritual or doctrine but on a vibrant and personal relationship with God. It assures us that we can approach God not through our own merits but through the righteousness of Christ. This deep-seated assurance fosters confidence in our prayers, encouragement in our struggles, and joy in our blessings. Ultimately, it leads us to live lives that reflect the love we have received, compelling us to extend that love to others, thus fulfilling the very essence of our Christian calling.

John 14:24

"The word which ye hear is not mine, but the Father's which sent me."—John xiv. 24.

— John 14:24

My soul, hast thou ever fully and thoroughly considered that sweet and precious teaching of thy Lord, which, as Mediator, when upon earth, in all his discourses and conversations with his disciples, he was perpetually shewing them? I mean, that all he was, and all he had; and all he dispensed, were the blessings and gifts of his Father, in him, to his people. If thou hast been meditating upon this most blessed point of the gospel ever so fully and closely, it will still afford new glories for every renewed attention to it; and therefore, sit down this delightful summer's evening, and take another view of it. Jesus comes to his people in his Father's name, and he saith in this charming scripture, that his very words are not his, but the Father's; so much of the heart of the Father is in Christ, and in all of Christ, in all he saith, and in all he hath done. So that what is Jesus doing, in all his ministry upon earth, yea, in all his sovereignty now in heaven, but shewing to his redeemed, the Father, and the Father's love, and grace, and mercy, towards his people in him? Did he not then come forth from the bosom of the Father full of grace and truth, as if to unfold to us what passed in the heart of the Father, of love and mercy towards his people, in the wonders of redemption? And is not Jesus now, in every renewed manifestation, teaching his redeemed the same? If all that the Father hath are our Jesus's, and all the fulness of the Godhead bodily dwelleth in him; surely we ought never to receive any of his good and blessed gifts without acknowledging the Father's love in them. And would not this make every blessing doubly sweet and increasingly precious? If Jesus himself be the gift of the Father, shah I not enjoy the Father in all that Jesus bestows? And as I can have no immediate communion with the Father but by him, will not the mercies gather a blessedness, and a value, in coming to my poor soul through Jesus's hands, as the bountiful dispenser of them? Yea, shah I not find a savour, which otherwise could never have been known, in receiving them in and from Jesus; convinced, as I am, that none cometh to the Father, but by him; and but for his opening a new and living way by his blood, never should I have known the Father's love, or the Redeemer's grace? Dear Lord Jesus! do thou give me, by thy blessed Spirit, ever to keep in remembrance these most precious things. So shall I truly enjoy both thy person and thy gifts. And then I shall not, like the apostle, pray for a sight of the Father distinct from thee; for I shall then be perfectly satisfied and convinced, that in seeing thee, I see the Father also; and from henceforth, that I know him, and have seen him. "Thanks be unto God for his unspeakable gift."

From Poor Man's Evening Portions by Robert Hawker.
Robert Hawker
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