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The Power of His PresenceDaily DevotionsFrom the Writings of Ray Stedman |
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The Drama Of RedemptionJuly 2ndREAD: John 13:3-5
There can be little doubt that in this passage Jesus is deliberately working out a parable for the instruction of His disciples. He is dramatizing for them the truth of His own ministry, of His own redemptive mercy. He is showing them by this means what He had come into the world to do. You can trace the parallel in the events that John records: First, Jesus rose from supper, just as He had previously risen from His throne of glory. Then He laid aside His garments. Paul tells us that He laid aside His glory when He came into the world in the incarnate state. He laid aside the exercise of His own deity. He did not come to act as God; He came to act as man indwelt by God (see Philippians 2:5-11). And Jesus wrapped Himself with a towel, just as Paul also records that He "[took] the very nature of a servant" and "humbled himself and became obedient to death" (Philippians 2:7-8). So here He humbles Himself, taking the role of a slave, girding Himself with a towel. Then "he poured water into a basin," just as in a few hours He was to pour out His own blood in death, the blood that would be for the cleansing of human defilement, of human guilt of every kind and source, So He pours water into the basin as a picture of that. Then He "began to wash his disciples' feet, drying them with the towel that was wrapped around him," picturing the very act of applying the cleansing of His own blood to human lives. And if you skip to verse 12, you have the end of the parable. "When he had finished washing their feet, he put on his clothes and returned to his place," just as the writer of Hebrews records for us that "after he had provided purification for sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty in heaven" (Hebrews 1:3). Thus, you have this remarkable, beautiful parable worked out for us, teaching us the meaning of Jesus' whole ministry.
This daily devotion was inspired by one of Ray's sermons. Please read
"Servant Authority" (or listen to the audio file
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