"Ye Are Gods" (John 10:34)
Walk by the Spirit
"Ye Are Gods" (John
10:34)
Joe R. Price
In
the last year of Jesus’ life during the Feast of Dedication (present-day
Hanukkah), unbelieving individuals confronted him and demanded of him a
plain declaration that he was the Christ (John 10:22-24). Like ravenous
wolves the Jewish rulers had encircled him, ready to pounce upon their prey
(v. 24).
The Context
Jesus was surrounded
by unbelievers. They had seen his miraculous works and their results (i.e.,
the healing of the man ill for 38 years, John 5:2-18; sight restored to the
man born blind, John 9:1-34), but still they did not believe on him. His
works and his words had provided ample proof of his claims (John 5:36;
10:25). A further demonstration of his power would no doubt be casting
pearls before swine (Matt. 7:6). They had made up their minds. They were
looking for a reason to put Jesus to death.
His Sheep
Their failure to
believe in Christ made it clear that they were not his sheep (John 10:26).
They were not his disciples. Jesus made a contrast between his sheep and the
unbelieving Jewish leaders in John 10:27-28. By so doing, he specifically
stated the blessings of being his sheep. His sheep hear the voice of Christ
(consequently, he knows them, John 10:14). They follow the words of Christ
(consequently, he gives them eternal life, John 10:10). As a result, they
shall never perish (no one shall snatch them out of the hand of Christ).
Jesus taught that
human salvation rests upon the pillars of man’s faith and God’s grace (John
10:27-29; Eph. 2:8-9). Jesus rejected the Calvinistic doctrines of
unconditional election and the perseverance of the saints. If the conditions
of verse 27 are not obeyed, the blessings of verses 28-29 will not follow.
As one hears and obeys the voice of Christ (the gospel) he receives the
security of his soul that the Son and the Father provide. The Jewish rulers
did not hear his voice nor did they follow him. Therefore, they did not have
any true confidence of salvation. Because of their unbelief, Jesus implied
that they would die in their sins (cf. John 8:23-24).
“I
And The Father Are One”
Jesus claimed to
possess the same power as the Father when he claimed power to give eternal
life and to protect his sheep from danger (vv. 28-29). This mutual
protective power illustrated his unity with the Father. As Lenski observes,
“To snatch them out his hand is the same as snatching them out of the
Father’s hand.” So, what his enemies were pressing him for they now receive.
Jesus uttered a clear and decisive statement of his divine nature by
affirming, “I and the Father are one.” His works proceeded out of the Father
and testified of his unity with the Father’s purposes and power (John 10:32;
cf. 8:42).
To claim the same
power as the, Father was to claim oneness with the Father (John 10:29-30).
The Jews immediately saw such a claim as blasphemous and tried to stone
Jesus (John 10:31). They did not misunderstand what Jesus said. They simply
did not believe him. They knew Jesus was “making himself God” (John 10:33).
Jesus declared for
himself equality (sameness) with God (cf. John 5:17-18). They considered his
words to be blasphemous because they had rejected the evidence — his works —
which proved him to be divine. They thought he was just a man. So, they
charged him with blasphemy and considered him worthy of death (John 10:33).
Think of it! A man making himself God (v. 33)! Yet, the very works he did
showed his declaration to be true (John 10:32; 5:36; 10:25, 38). Jesus is
more than just a man. He is also God (John 1:1-3, 14). Had they believed his
works, they would have readily received his words (John 10:37-38).
“Ye
Are Gods”
The Jews were
completely intolerant of Jesus’ claim of Godhood. Jesus continued his
defense by exposing their inconsistency through an appeal to the authority
of Scripture. “Is it not writ-ten in your law, I said, Ye are gods? If he
called them gods, unto whom the word of God came (and the scripture cannot
be broken), say ye of him, whom the Father sanctified and sent into the
world, Thou blasphemest; because I said, I am the Son of God?” (John
10:34-36).
The Jews accepted the
statement from their own law that described God’s appointed judges among his
people as “gods” (Psa. 82:6). Jesus reminds his opponents of this (it is
significant to note that he says the book of Psalms belonged to their “law”
(cf. Rom. 3:19, 10-18). Jesus stated what his Jewish opponents conceded.
Namely, that it stood written in the law (i.e., it was firmly established by
the binding nature of God’s law) that God said of men, “Ye are gods” (John
10:34-35).
Then, Jesus affirmed
the authoritative force of Scripture by saying, “The scripture cannot be
broken” (John 10:35). Inspired scripture cannot be deprived of its binding
authority by the whims of men. All individuals are obligated to harmonize
their beliefs and practices to the authority of God’s writings (2 Tim.
3:16-17; 1 Cor. 14:37; Col. 3:17).
Not only did the Jews
reject the evidence of Jesus’ works, in their charge of blasphemy they also
failed to respect the authority of Scripture. In Psalms 82:6, the judges of
Israel were called “gods” because of their representative position of
authority and responsibility among the people. These judges were God’s
representatives, charged with executing fair and impartial judgments in
Israel (82:2-4). To go before the judges was to go before God (cf. Exod.
21:6; 22:8-9, 28), for they were charged with rendering God’s judgments
(Deut. 1:16-17). The 82nd Psalm depicts God rebuking these “gods” (the
unjust judges) for their corruption of justice. Because they failed to judge
righteously, God would now judge them (82:1, 7-8). Even so, because of their
God-given position of power, the psalmist called the unrighteous judges
“gods.” (Please note, these “gods” are on the earth judging among the poor,
fatherless and needy, vv. 2-4. God’s judgment would be executed on “the
earth,” v. 8. The Mormon explanation that this passage proves their doctrine
of many gods is without contextual support, cf. 1 Cor. 8:4-6.)
The Jews had never
considered the statement from Psalms 82:6 as blasphemous, even though it
depicts unrighteous men as “gods.” Yet they were charging Jesus (whose words
and works showed that he was approved by God) with blasphemy because he
said, “I am the Son of God” (10:36). That which had been written in their
law must be accepted by them as authoritative (“the scripture cannot be
broken”). Butler observes, “How then could the Jews have the right to accuse
Jesus of blasphemy when He says, `I am the Son of God ...’ especially since
all of His miraculous works indicate that He has been sanctified and sent
into the world by the Father” (Paul Butler, The Gospel of John 127). The
Jews were not being consistent in their reasoning. Since God’s law called
unrighteous men “gods” because they had been sent by God to execute his
judgments in Israel, the righteous Jesus was not blaspheming when he
identified himself as one with the Father. Jesus argues from the lesser to
the greater here. The Father had set him apart and sent him into the world
with a far greater work than the judges of Israel received. Jesus’ works
proved he was from the Father. He was righteous in every way. Truly, he is
the Son of God (John 10:36).
Conclusion
“I
and the Father are one” is equivalent to saying “I am the Son of God” (v.
30, 36). This was a clear declaration of deity by Jesus and the Jews took it
as such (v. 33). Only in a representative sense have men ever been called
“gods.” However, one has lived among us who was more than just man. Jesus
was God in the flesh (John 1:14; Col. 2:9). His works confirm it. His words
attest to it. He has power to save and to protect your soul. Do you believe
it? Are you his sheep?
Guardian of Truth
XL: 3 p. 6-7 February 1, 1996
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Walk by the Spirit
Joe R. Price
I say
then: Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh.
For the flesh lusts against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh;
and these are contrary to one another, so that you do not do the things that
you wish.” (Gal. 5:16-17)
Each of us chooses to
either live spiritual lives or to satisfy the flesh. Just as Jesus said we
cannot serve two masters, the apostle teaches that we cannot walk (live) by
the Spirit and after the flesh at the same time. They are opposite
tendencies which produce opposite fruit. The works of the flesh will keep
its bearer out of the kingdom of heaven, while the fruit of the Spirit
evidences kingdom citizenship (Gal. 5:19-23).
To walk “by the
Spirit” means to live by the word of the truth of the gospel that the Holy
Spirit has revealed to us (cf. Gal. 3:1-5; 5:18, 25). We will bear the
“fruit of the Spirit” in our lives when we obey the truth – “walk by the
Spirit” (Gal. 5:22-23).
To accomplish this
walk one must willingly subject himself to “the things of the Spirit” (Rom.
8:5-8). Let us heartily renew our minds and conform to the will of God
instead of the world (Rom. 12:2). May we more diligently “crucify the flesh
with the passions and the lusts thereof” (Gal. 5:24) as we live in
subjection to the gospel of Christ.
As you make daily
decisions that affect your life, be sure to consider how those decisions
affect your soul’s salvation. Are you walking by the Spirit or after the
flesh?
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Created by Chuck Sibbing.
08/16/2008
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