A Life of Joy with Jesus from John “The Humility of a Servant” John 13:12-17

    D. L. Moody was a well-known Protestant preacher, from the 1800s, after whom the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago was named. He once said, “The measure of a man is not how many servants he has, but how many men he serves.”

    This year, we are studying through the Gospel of John monthly under the theme: “A life of joy with Jesus from John.” In this study, so far, we have seen that if we want to live a life of joy, we need to:

    Listen to Him – John 1.

    Submit to Him – John 3.

    Honor Him – John 5.

    Suffer for Him – John 7.

    Follow Him – John 10.

    Trust Him – John 11.

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    As you can see already, our study this morning is going to focus on having the humility of Jesus so that, in order to live a life of joy with Jesus, we must serve others.

    Twice the Gospel accounts state that Jesus was hungry (Matt. 4:2; 21:18) and He had nothing of His own to eat. The Bible says that Jesus lived off the gifts of those who loved Him (Luke 8:3; John 13:29). Jesus is the one who blesses our crops with a harvest but He did not miraculously take away His own hunger pains.

    Jesus covered almost 3/4 of the earth’s surface with water but He told the woman at the well, “I am thirsty” (John 4:7). Jesus had no horse or donkey to ride on during His ministry. He walked in sandals that probably had little arch support. He, perhaps, saw a fox run into his own den, perhaps saw a bird flying into its nest, but Jesus said, “Foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests, but I do not have a place to lay my head” (Matt. 8:20). 

    During the temptations in the wilderness, the angels of His heavenly Father came and ministered to Jesus (Matt. 4:11). It was these same angels who had worshipped Jesus throughout eternity, who stood at His right hand, ready to be sent to do whatever their Master commanded! 

    But when Jesus came to earth, He came to be the “servant of servants.” He had been, throughout all eternity, equal with the Father in His nature and in His abilities. But He poured Himself out, He emptied Himself and took on the form of a slave. Jesus humbled Himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even the death of the cross (Phil. 2:5-8).

    It was this Jesus, whom the angels had praised from the moment of their own creation, through millennia of human history, who now picks up a towel and washes the feet of His followers.

    As we consider how to live a life of joy with Jesus from John, tomorrow we consider the example of our Master in “The Humility of a Servant…” from John 13.

Paul Holland

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