Summary: #16 in series. Jesus defends himself against charges of violating the Sabbath by making three extraordinary claims about who He is.

A Study of the Book of John

“That You May Believe”

Sermon # 16

“The Claims of Jesus”

John 5:16-30

In his book, “Loving God,” Charles Colson tells about a Russian Jewish doctor by the name of Boris Nicholayevich Kornfeld, a Russian Jewish doctor who was sentenced to a most inhuman Russian prison for a minor political crime in the 1950s. Because he was a physician he did receive some privileges in the prison in return for treating other prisoners. Still he suffered much abuse. His treatment would have in fact been unbearable except that he developed a friendship with another prisoner who through the quality of his witness brought Kornfeld a commitment to Christ.

Kornfeld felt a great inner freedom. He had a patient, a cancer patient, who was awaiting surgery. Kornfeld shared with him what Christ had done in his own life. Kornfeld was so enthusiastic about this change in his own life, that he caught the patient’s attention in spite of his brief lapses brought on by the medicine. Late into the night, the doctor stayed with his patient, sharing with him the unsearchable riches of Christ. Later that night someone slipped into the doctor’s quarters and brutally beat him to death. From a human standpoint that should be the end of the story, but, it is not.

The patient recovered from his surgery, but he was a changed man. Because of Kornfeld’s testimony, he became a Christian--and what a Christian he became. His name--Alexander Solzhenitszyn, who not only won the Nobel prize for Literature in 1970, but even more importantly became one of the world’s most influential voices for Christ.

Kornfeld and Solzhenitsyn both learned that the claims of Christ were never meant to merely become another piece of jewelry or become something to adorn our car bumpers. The claims of Christ were always meant to make radical changes in the lives of those around us; changes as radical as the claims themselves found in John chapter five.

Earlier in Chapter five Jesus has healed the lame man on the Sabbath (5:8-9) and the religious leaders are incensed because the Sabbath has been violated. As we observed in the previous sermon, the religious leaders are not concerned about the lame man – they do no even acknowledge that he has been healed – let alone rejoice over it. Their only concern is that the rules concerning the Sabbath have been broken. After determining that Jesus was the one who healed the man, the religious leaders confront Jesus about violating the Sabbath, He replied in verse seventeen, that He was only doing what the Father was doing. “But Jesus answered them, "My Father has been working until now, and I have been working." (18) Therefore the Jews sought all the more to kill Him, because He not only broke the Sabbath, but also said that God was His Father, making Himself equal with God.”

Jesus defends His actions by pointing out that He is mere imitating His father. Jesus states that God’s creative and sustaining work upon which the world depends has never ceased nor will it. He says, “My Father is working and I am working too!”

The Jews immediately grasp what he was saying. Jesus is stating He is equal with God. The religious leaders did not reject Christ because they did not understand who he claimed to be, they understood perfectly, and rejected him because of these claims. The religious leaders changed their charge against Jesus from “breaking the Sabbath” to “blasphemy” because Jesus claimed to be God. Liberal theologians who claim that Jesus never claimed to be God have to skip right over passages like this one.

Notice that John does not tell us that from this point on the Jewish authorities are trying to kill Jesus, it says for this reason “the Jews were trying even harder to kill Him.” The authorities have already determined that he must be put to death. This incident only provided them with added incentive for doing it as soon as possible.

In response to the challenge by the religious leaders Jesus makes three claims about who He is.

First, Jesus Claims Equality With The Father. - He Is The Son Of God. (5:19-20)

“Then Jesus answered and said to them, “Most assuredly, I say to you, the Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He sees the Father do; for whatever He does, the Son also does in like manner. (20) For the Father loves the Son, and shows Him all things that He Himself does; and He will show Him greater works than these, that you may marvel.”

The first statement that Jesus makes is an assertion that everything that the God the Father does, He does, and everything He does is also done by the Father. The only possible conclusion is not lost on the religious leaders and is that Jesus is claiming to be God.

For not only is the God “the” Father, God is “His” Father. Today we more or less take it for granted that God is to be spoken of as “Father” but this was not the way it was in the first century. Jews would sometimes refer to God as “the Father” but they would usually add something like “in heaven” to make it clear they were not being too familiar. But when Jesus uses the term “my Father” it was a claim to special intimacy and the Jews recognized it as such. Jesus is claiming a relationship to the Father which cannot be applied to any other being in the universe; He is only begotten Son of God.

Jesus turns their accusations on its head. Their accusation was; “How can you dare to presume to act and speak as if you were God!” Jesus turns the accusation around to say, “If I am God, how it is possible for me to act and speak in any other way?”

Jesus Claims Equality With The Father and…

Secondly, Jesus Claims Power To Give Life. (5:21, 24-26)

Beyond His claim that he is equal with the Father, He claims that as the Son of God He is the giver of life. (v. 21) “For as the Father raises the dead and gives life to them, even so the Son gives life to whom He will.”

The Old Testament clearly teaches that only God could give life or raise the dead to new life. In Deut. 32:39 we read, “Now see that I, even I, am He, And there is no God besides Me; I kill and I make alive; I wound and I heal; Nor is there any who can deliver from My hand.”

1 Sam. 2:6 states, “The LORD kills and makes alive; He brings down to the grave and brings up.”

The ability to give life is the prerogative of deity. Consequently when Jesus claims to be able to give life also he is clearly claiming to be God.

Verses twenty four–twenty six state, “Most assuredly, I say to you, he who hears My word and believes in Him who sent Me has everlasting life, and shall not come into judgment, but has passed from death into life. (25) Most assuredly, I say to you, the hour is coming, and now is, when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God; and those who hear will live. (26) For as the Father has life in Himself, so He has granted the Son to have life in Himself.”

Verse twenty-four contains words of great peace and assurance, because it speaks of everlasting life as a present possession. Salvation is not just something we can have in the future; it is something that we can have now. How??

In Romans 10:17 the Apostle Paul states, that one must hear and believe, “So then faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.” Earlier in Romans 10:9-10 the Apostle Paul wrote, “If you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised him from the dead, you will be saved. (10) For with the heart one believes unto righteousness, and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.”

In verse twenty-four of our text, Jesus says the person who believes “has eternal life.” The tenses of the verbs indicate that when a person enters into this process, it remains theirs. A believer need not be uncertain about whether they have eternal life for as John says in 1 John 5:13, “These things I have written to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life…” Salvation is something we can know we possess!

Some believe that to be saved means to be able to pinpoint the moment of salvation, and for some this is possible. But not for all. I like what the great old preacher G. Campbell Morgan said on the subject. Years ago he was preaching in Tennessee and during the sermon he stated, “By no means can every Christian remember the time when he was born again.” At the end of the sermon someone challenged his statement and Morgan turned to then and asked, “Are you alive?” The man replied, “Of course I am!” Morgan then asked, “Do you remember when you were born?” The man said, “No, but I know that I am living.” Morgan replied,

“Exactly, some Christians may not remember the exact moment of their new birth. But they are spiritually alive and know it, and that is what counts.” You can know that you have eternal life. [R Kent Hughes. John: That You Might Believe. (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 1999) p. 165]

Jesus Claims Power To Give Life and …

Third, Jesus Claims The Authority To Judge. (vv. 22, 27-30)

“For the Father judges no one, but has committed all judgment to the Son, (23) that all should honor the Son just as they honor the Father. He who does not honor the Son does not honor the Father who sent Him.”

Jesus was claiming that he would exercise a function that the Jews universally held belongs to God alone.

In verses twenty-seven to thirty Jesus says, The God the Father has “… given Him authority to execute judgment also, because He is the Son of Man. (28) Do not marvel at this; for the hour is coming in which all who are in the graves will hear His voice (29) and come forth—those who have done good, to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil, to the resurrection of condemn-ation. (30) I can of Myself do nothing. As I hear, I judge; and My judgment is righteous, because I do not seek My own will but the will of the Father who sent Me.”

There are three crystal clear facts that these verses tell us regarding eternity.

•There is definitely life after death.

Jesus is teaching that physical death is not the end of existence. Life here on earth is not the complete span for man, beyond this life there is another different existence which one cannot avoid.

•Every one will be affected by it.

Verse twenty-eight says, “…all who are

in the graves” this means “all” without exception.

•All mankind will fall into two and only two categories.

Death is not the end, all will stand before God; with judgment unto life for those who have a personal relationship with Christ and judgment unto condemnation for those who do not. When some who have yet to place their trust in Christ hear of this judgment, they still refuse to believe, saying things like, “I don’t believe a God of love would condemn anyone!” Others state that all they ask of God is justice. But I pity the person who is satisfied with justice when mercy is available.

Christian author C. S. Lewis wrote the

great series, of books entitled “The

Chronicles of Narnia,” and in the last book in the series called “The Last Battle” he creatively describes to us what our hope is and what eternity will be like. At the end of Lewis’ book “The Last Battle,” Aslan the Lion (who is the character of Jesus) tells Peter, Edmund, and Lucy there has been a railroad accident and they are dead. Here is how the text goes: “And as he [Aslan] spoke he no longer looked to them like a lion; but the things that began to happen after that were so great and beautiful that I cannot write them. And for us this is the end of all the stories, and we can most truly say that they all lived happily ever after. But for them it was only the beginning of the real story. All their life in this world and all their adventures in Narnia had only been the cover and title page: now at last they were beginning Chapter One of the Great Story which no one on earth has read: which goes on forever: in which every chapter is better than the one before.” [C.S. Lewis, The Last Battle]

By the authority of his voice of Jesus will

call believers forth into a new life; a life of which our existence on earth was merely the first chapter.

Conclusion

It is clear from the text who Jesus claims to be! The two most important questions you will ever answer are these;

•Is Jesus right about who He claims to be?

•If He is right, what have you done about it?

“The Claims of Jesus”

John 5:16-30

Jesus makes three claims about who He is.

First, Jesus Claims _________ With The Father. (5:19-20)

Secondly, Jesus Claims The Power To Give ________. (5:21, 24-26)

Third, Jesus Claims The Authority To _________. (5: 22, 27-30)

•There is definitely _____ after death.

•Everyone will be _________ by it.

•Mankind will fall into two and only two categories.

The two most important questions you will ever answer are these;

•Is Jesus right about who He claims to be?

•If He is right, what have you done about it?