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Note: This blog post is part of a series titled "Jesus' Seventh Sign." To view all parts, click the link below.
John 12:27-29 says,
27 Now My soul has become troubled; and what shall I say, ‘Father, save Me from this hour?’ But for this purpose I came to this hour. 28 Father, glorify Your name.” Then a voice came out of heaven: “I have both glorified it and will glorify it again.”
After Jesus talked about His impending death, his soul was disturbed, knowing that His time of suffering was drawing near. This was only to increase, culminating in Gethsemane just before His arrest. Perhaps the truth which He had just spoken, “He who loves his life will lose it,” was the cause of this inner conflict, for such is the case with all of us. It is one thing to proclaim a principle while it is untested, but quite another when one is faced with the experience itself.
Jesus was not above such tests. As a man, He was tested in His calling, even as we are in ours. So Hebrews 4:15 says,
15 For we do not have a high priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but One who has been tempted in all things as we are, yet without sin.
Being the Example of serving and honoring the Father (John 12:26), He had to take the lead. His soul recoiled from this, but He knew that He had come to earth for this very purpose. His soul, then, had to submit to the leading of His spirit which knew the Father’s will and plan, for this was the only way to glorify His Father.
John presents this situation within the context of the seventh sign, the resurrection of Lazarus, which had brought Him to the cross. The eighth sign in John 21 would be a post-resurrection sign showing the result and outworking of the first seven. Cleansing a man from touching a dead body took seven days, but he was unclean for a full seven days (Numbers 19:14) and not fully cleansed until the eighth day.
In similar manner, one who was healed of leprosy (signifying mortality) was unclean for a full seven days and not pronounced fully clean until the eighth day (Leviticus 14:8, 10). The eighth day of Tabernacles too was a new beginning after completing seven days (Leviticus 23:36).
Therefore, the seventh sign in John’s gospel—and specifically, the cross—was a culmination of a process of cleansing us from the uncleanness of mortality and sin. These signs also foreshadowed the days it would take to fulfill the feast of Tabernacles, culminating with the glory of God manifesting in the overcomers and turning the page of world history once again.
Two Tests
John 12:28 gives a significant revelation of the Father Himself, saying, “I have both glorified it [My name] and will glorify it again.” One glorification was past; another lay ahead. However, we are given no other clue as to the meaning of this revelation, except, perhaps, in John 12:31,
31 Now judgment is upon this world; now the ruler of this world will be cast out.
Jesus had already encountered “the ruler of this world” at the start of His earthly ministry. John does not record that event, apparently because both Matthew and Luke tell the story in great detail. Yet His temptation (or testing) in the wilderness did not cast out the devil but prepared the way for Jesus to cast him out at the end of His ministry.
Even then, only legally was the devil cast down, for there was still another layer of fulfillment to take place as the law worked its way into practical earth history. On this historical level, the divine plan was revealed in the feast days, wherein the first glorification took place through the feast of Passover and the second through the feast of Tabernacles.
In other words, there were to be two comings of Christ to complete the plan. After the first, not only Jesus but we ourselves would enter into a wilderness period of 40 Jubilee cycles, wherein we would be tempted and tried in our own wilderness. Then at the fulfillment of Tabernacles, the overcomers must glorify the Father “again.” The law of the two doves and two goats makes it clear that this second work is not a death work but a living work.
Hence, the second glorification is unlike the first, for in the big picture the first set forth death of Christ while the second is resurrection that brings aionian life for the age to come.
Thunder
John 12:29, 30 says,
29 So the crowd of people who stood by and heard it [the voice from heaven] were saying that it had thundered; others were saying, “An angel has spoken to Him.” 30 Jesus answered and said, “This voice has not come for My sake, but for your sakes.”
At certain times the voice of God was heard without the benefit of understanding. At such times, the people heard a sound that was unintelligible to all but those who had ears to hear. The Israelites heard thunder at Mount Horeb as well, when God descended upon the mount to give the revelation of the law. There we read that “Moses spoke and God answered him with thunder” (Exodus 19:19). Presumably, Moses understood the words of God, while the people did not.
A few days later, the ears of the Israelites were opened partially, and they heard the Ten Commandments. Yet this was too much for them, for they were overcome with fear. Their fear again made God’s words unintelligible, for we read in Exodus 20:18,
18 All the people perceived the thunder and the lightning flashes and the sound of the trumpet and the mountain smoking; and when the people saw it, they trembled and stood at a distance. 19 Then they said to Moses, “Speak to us yourself and we will listen; but let not God speak to us, or we will die.”
Since that time, the ears of the church were closed, and men have feared to hear God’s voice. That day was later celebrated as Pentecost, whose purpose was to speak the words of God in an intelligible manner (as seen in Acts 2:6, 8, 11). But fear, however subtle, took over once again, and so two decades later Paul found it necessary to establish rules and parameters in regard to “the tongues of men and of angels” (1 Corinthians 13:1).
No gift of interpretation was needed on the day of Pentecost, but when tongues became unintelligible, interpretation was given in order to give the people understanding. Otherwise, the word of God would remain as thunder, or a trumpet or “bugle” (1 Corinthians 14:8, 9).
So when the Father spoke in John 12:28, Jesus heard the words, while the rest of the people heard only noise that sounded like thunder. It is likely that Jesus later told His disciples the precise words that the Father had spoken, thus foreshadowing the gift of interpretation that would be needed in the church.
One might wonder why God would allow the people to hear thunder, when they were yet incapable of hearing the words of the Father. In John 12:30 Jesus said that it was not for Jesus’ sake but for the sake of the people. In what way?
First, it was to let the people know that God had spoken to Jesus and that the Father was confirming His teaching. But the precise revelation was still unintelligible apart from the gift of interpretation of tongues. We see from this that there are also different levels of hearing which are dependent upon whether fear has closed one’s ears or faith has opened them.
That this hearing problem was seen later in the Corinthian church (and presumably in the other churches as well), it is clear that Pentecost has not resolved the hearing problem for many. The purpose of Pentecost is to cause us to hear the words of God distinctly and clearly, but this is not achieved by more than a few. I believe that the feast of Tabernacles is the greater feast and that the overcomers who fulfill that feast will no longer hear thunder, trumpets, or bugles when God speaks or when they read the Scriptures.
Being Lifted Up to Die
In John 12:32-34 Jesus continues, saying,
32 “And I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to Myself.” 33 But He was saying this to indicate the kind of death by which he was to die. 34 The crowd then answered Him, “We have heard out of the Law that Christ is to remain forever; and how can You say, ‘The Son of Man must be lifted up’? Who is this Son of Man?”
Jesus knew by revelation that He was to fulfill the prophecy of the serpent in the wilderness, which was lifted up on a pole (probably a cross) to bring healing to the people. He had often described His death on the cross in such terms (John 3:14, 15; 8:28). He knew that by doing so, He would “draw all men” to Himself.
By referring to the prophetic type in the days of Moses, He was explaining the prophetic meaning of that incident. However, the people had not been taught that this prophesied of the death of the Messiah. Such a thought was inconceivable to them. They saw only one appearance of the Messiah, wherein He would come and not die “into the Age” (eis ton aiona).
Hence, they had been taught “that Christ is to remain forever” (NASB). The Emphatic Diaglott reads, “We heard out of the Law that the Messiah continues to the Age.” Their hearing was yet impaired, and so the story of the serpent in the wilderness was yet “thunder” to them. They knew that it had occurred, but they did not understand the story itself.
Neither did they understand the law of the sacrifices, which laid down the principle of the “Lamb of God” who was to die for the sins of the people. Further, they did not understand the first bird that had to die to cleanse lepers, nor the first goat that had to die on the Day of Atonement to cover sin. They did not even understand the prophecy in Isaiah 53, which (to us) speaks clearly of the Messiah’s death as a sacrifice for sin.
So they assumed that the Messiah, or “Son of Man,” must certainly be someone else other than Jesus. Their question, then, was, “Who is this Son of Man?” Jesus’ answer was both obscure and revealing at the same time. John 12:35, 36 says,
35 So Jesus said to them, “For a little while longer the Light is among you. Walk while you have the Light, so that darkness will not overtake you; he who walks in the darkness does not know where he goes. 36 While you have the Light, believe in the Light, so that you may become sons of Light.” These things Jesus spoke, and He went away and hid Himself from them.
It is not likely that the people understood Jesus’ answer. The reader, however, is drawn back to John 1:8, where Jesus is identified as the Light. Jesus was soon to leave this world, but those who believed in the Light would still be able to walk without stumbling, because in them was the Holy Spirit, who was the Agent of that Light.
Recall that the previous sign took place when Jesus healed the man who had been born blind. Light had been given to him, so that he no longer walked in darkness. Even as he became one of many “sons of Light,” so also Jesus required men to believe in Him (the Light). He who did not believe in the Light was to continue walking in the darkness, not knowing where he was going. In other words, those in darkness would read the word without understanding and hear the word as though it were thunder.
This was then illustrated when Jesus “went away and hid Himself from them.” This prophesied of His ascension, when the Light was to be removed. The Judeans in particular were to be affected by this, for having rejected Him as the Messiah, the nation as a whole could not interpret the Law properly. The laws prophesying His death and resurrection remained to them as thunder.
Note: This blog post is part of a series titled "Jesus' Seventh Sign." To view all parts, click the link below.