Tuesday, February 24, 2026

John 5:30-40

John 5:30-40:

In this portion of Jesus’ defense of His divine authority, the Lord declares that He can do nothing on His own initiative; His judgments are perfectly just because He seeks only the will of the Father who sent Him (v. 30). 

He then presents four irrefutable witnesses to His identity and mission: 

(1) John the Baptist, a “burning and shining lamp” whose testimony the people briefly welcomed (vv. 33-35); 

(2) the mighty works the Father gave Him to accomplish, which visibly demonstrate that the Father sent Him (v. 36); 

(3) the Father Himself, whose voice and form the unbelieving leaders had never truly received (vv. 37-38); and 

(4) the Scriptures, which the religious leaders diligently searched because they thought they possessed eternal life in them—yet those very Scriptures bear witness to Jesus, and the leaders refused to come to Him that they might have life (vv. 39-40).


Reflection:

These verses richly nourish the understanding of the Christian life by displaying the glory of the triune God and exposing the poverty of self-reliant religion.

First, Jesus’ absolute submission to the Father (“I seek not my own will but the will of him who sent me”) models the very heart of godly living. 

This is not mere moral example but a display of the eternal, harmonious submission within the Godhead that believers are graciously invited to imitate by the power of the Spirit. 

Daily Christian obedience is never autonomous; it is joyful dependence upon the sovereign God who has written our names in the Lamb’s book of life.

Second, the abundance of witnesses—prophetic, miraculous, paternal, and scriptural—reminds us that God has not left His people without clear testimony. 

Scripture is sufficient and self-authenticating; here Jesus Himself teaches that the whole Bible is a testimony to Him. 

For the believer, this means every page of the Old Testament, every promise and type, every command and warning, is meant to drive us to Christ. Bible study that stops short of Christ is not true piety but the very error Jesus rebukes.

Third, the tragic words “you refuse to come to me that you may have life” (v. 40) lay bare the depth of human depravity. 

Even with the Scriptures in their hands and miracles before their eyes, the leaders would not come. 

This is the doctrine of total inability in plain view: apart from the regenerating work of the Holy Spirit, no one seeks Christ. 

Yet the same passage comforts us with the certainty that those who do come have been drawn by the Father (cf. John 6:44, 65). 

The Christian life, therefore, is never self-generated; it is the fruit of sovereign grace.

For daily devotion, these verses press two simple, soul-searching questions upon us:

•  Am I reading Scripture to find life in it, or to be led by it to the living Christ?

•  Am I living in the happy submission of the Son, or still clutching at my own will?https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1a69ozzyQ1o049_09XJ3bFTvxwBwIdik3

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