We are thinking about the words of Jesus to the Pharisees after the healing of the invalid man at the Pool of Bethesda. In our last two daily devotionals, we have looked at four claims by Jesus of equality with the Father; let’s now look at the fifth and final in John 5:
5) Christ is Equal with God in His Honor (John 5:23).
23that all may honor the Son just as they honor the Father. He who does not honor the Son does not honor the Father, who sent him. 24"I tell you the truth, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over from death to life (John 5:23-24).
Jesus claimed equality in honor with the Father, saying that if we do not honor the Son, we do not honor the Father. The Jews He spoke to who claimed to love God but opposed Christ were tools on the side of God's enemy (John 8:44).
Those standing around Christ and listening to His statements of equality with God had three options to believe about Christ, just as we do. The three options are: 1) He was a good teacher but self-deceived and delusional. 2) He was a deliberate liar. 3) He is Who He said He is, i.e., God in the flesh, come to earth. Let's look at all three:
1) The first option is that He was deceived, delusional, insane, and mentally ill. It reminds me of the story of the British prime minister, Maggie Thatcher. In serving the government, she visited a mental hospital to check on the level of health care the residents were receiving. She introduced herself to one of the patients as the prime minister. Thinking she was a new patient, the man replied, "I understand. Many people, when they first arrive here, believe they are the prime minister." People who are mentally ill often suffer from delusion. We would not refer to someone who suffers from delusion as a good teacher! The common belief that Christ was just a deluded good teacher is out of the question. If He was deceived and deluded, He was not a good teacher.
2) The second option is that He was a liar and knew it. In this case, He was an evil man working for Satan to deceive people deliberately. If that was true, what about His many miracles given as signs? How could He heal all sicknesses, raise the dead, cast out demons, and create bread out of thin air? If God was not with Him, how could He do all this, along with His power over nature, e.g., controlling the wind and the waves on the Sea of Galilee? (Mark 4:39)
3) The third option is that He really is Who He said He is, i.e., God of very God becoming a man to win our redemption as a man. There are no other options; we must believe one of them. Even the foremost teacher in the country at that time, Nicodemus, said of Christ, “We know that you are a teacher who has come from God. For no one could perform the signs you are doing if God were not with him” (John 3:2). I trust that you have concluded that He is who He says He is.
In verse 24 of the passage at the top of the page, the Lord Jesus clearly states the qualifications for receiving an impartation of life from God. It is hearing God's Word and responding to what he believes. An individual who responds to the Gospel has eternal life. It is not something that happens when a person passes from this world but something that begins in the present time. Believers do not need to fear the judgment, for their sin has already been judged at the cross of Christ. Upon believing, one has crossed over from a condition of death to that of new life (v. 24). Keith Thomas.
This meditation is a shortened version of the in-depth study: Jesus the Life-Giver.