Nathaniel Discovers Jacob's
Ladder John 1:43-51
Emotion is not objective, it
is subjective, and it is going to vary from person to person. Personality
varies from person to person and each person is going to respond and react a little
differently at the point of salvation, depending on their personality, their
circumstances and background. One of the problems we see in Christianity is
that everybody seems to want to put everybody else in a mould: ‘T went through
this experience when I was saved and you should too. So if you don’t feel like
I did, if you are not excited or do this or do that or behave in this manner,
then maybe you weren’t truly saved.’ So we always have people who want to put
other people in a box and have everybody follow the same type of pattern. But
as we see in this chapter each of the disciples has a vastly different
personality. God reaches all kinds of people, and people have different
experiences and different emotions, different things happen at the time of
salvation, and each one is going to respond in his own way. So we should never
try to put people in some kind of mould or confuse personality issues with
doctrinal issues.
So we come to then fourth
day. We will meet Nathanael and Jesus will reveal
through His sense of humour His deity to Nathanael.
By our calculation this is on Sunday, three days before the wedding in
John
John
John
John
John
To get the other part of the
background we go to Genesis 28:11 NASB “He came to a certain place
and spent the night there, because the sun had set; and he took one of the
stones of the place and put it under his head, and lay down in that place.[12]
He had a dream, and behold, a ladder was set on the earth with its top reaching
to heaven; and behold, the angels of God were ascending and descending on it.”
The ladder is a means of transportation between earth, the domain of mankind,
and heaven the residence of God. The result is given in verse 13: “And behold,
the LORD stood above it and said, ‘I am the LORD, the God of your father Abraham and the God of Isaac;
the land on which you lie, I will give it to you and to your descendants’.” God
reaffirms to Jacob the covenant He has made with Abraham and Isaac. It is a
reaffirmation of the Abrahamic covenant.
Then to
the third part of the puzzle.
Genesis 32:24 NASB “Then Jacob was left alone, and a man wrestled
with him until daybreak.” We later learn that this is not a man,
this is the angel of the Lord. So Jacob is wrestling with God all night long in
this major wrestling match. [25] “When he [the angel of the Lord] saw that he
had not prevailed against him, he touched the socket of his thigh; so the
socket of Jacob’s thigh was dislocated while he wrestled with him. [26] Then he
[the angel of the Lord] said, ‘Let me go, for the dawn is breaking.’ But he
[Jacob] said, ‘I will not let you go unless you bless me’. [27] So he said to
him, ‘What is your name?’ And he said, ‘Jacob’. [28] He said, ‘Your name shall
no longer be Jacob, but
Back in John chapter one,
Jesus sees Nathanael coming. Most of the time in the
New Testament the descendants of Abraham are called Jews, they are rarely
called Israelites. So when Jesus looks at Nathanael
He says: “Behold and Israelite.” Jacob became
John
The scenario: Nathanael is sitting under a fig tree as a rabbinical
student, preparing for the Passover by meditating on the Jacob’s dream passage.
The Jacob’s dream passage focuses on the bridge that will develop between man
on earth and God in heaven. This is related to the Passover. It is a passage in
its prophetic significance looking forward to the coming of the King, the
Messiah, down the ladder, to provide fellowship and communion between heaven
and earth. So the implication here is that Nathanael
is meditating on this passage in the life of his progenitor, Jacob. He
understands the whole meaning of Jacob as the deceiver, the dolos, and he understands the nature of
regeneration and the shift from Jacob as the deceiver to Jacob the one who
wrestled with God and who became a prince with God.
So with all of this
background, when Jesus says this and is using this wordplay, it calls all of
this to mind and Nathanael sits there and says, Only
God could know all of this and put it all together. In this very terse manner,
using these allusions to Scripture, Jesus lets Nathanael
know that he knows everything that there is to know about him, and that he is
the fulfilment of the prophecy that is given there in Genesis, the Jacob’s
ladder dream. Nathanael had questions. He wanted to
know who the Messiah was. He needed answers to his intellectual questions and
wasn’t going to be satisfied simply because Philip came along and said they had
found the Messiah, he wanted hard evidence. Today there are very few places
where we can take people to find hard evidence of the truth of Christianity. We
live in an era when people live more on emotions and excitement and going some
place so that they can have their emotions stirred up and feel good than going
some place where they can learn the truth of Scripture and have their
intellectual questions about life answered. This is because we have divorced
the spiritual life today from the intellectual life. What has happened across
the board is that we no longer think that reason has anything to do with our
relationship with God. This is not new, it is
something that has been a problem with Christianity throughout the 20th
century.
J. Greshem
Machem was a famous defender of orthodox Christianity
around the turn of the century. He had an incredible mind. He knew 10 or 12
different ancient languages and wrote numerous book
defending Christianity against the attacks from liberal theology. In his
address to
“Our whole system o school and college
education is so constituted as to keep religion and culture as far apart as
possible, ignoring the question of the relationship between them. On five or
six days of the week we are engaged in the acquisition of knowledge, and from
this activity the study of religion is banished. We study natural science
without considering its bearing or lack of bearing on theology or revelation.
We study Greek without ever opening the New Testament. We study history,
carefully avoiding the greatest of historical movements ushered in by the
teaching of Jesus. In philosophy the vital importance of the study of religion
could not be entirely ignored but was kept as far as possible in the
background. On Sundays, on the other hand, we have religious instruction that
calls for little exercise of the intellect. Careful preparations for Sunday
school lessons in the same sense as for Latin or mathematical
studies is unknown. Religions seemed to be something that had only to do
with the emotions and the will, leaving the intellect to secular studies. What
wonder that after such training we begin to think that religion and culture as
belonging to two entirely separate compartments of the soul and their union as
involving the destruction of both.
To remedy
the problem a man can believe only what he holds to be true. We are Christians
because we hold Christianity to be true, but other men hold Christianity to be
false. Who is right? That question can only be settled by an examination and
comparisons of the reason adduced on both sides. It is true that one of the
ground s for our beliefs is an inward experience we cannot share, that great
experience begun by conviction of sin and conversion and continued by communion
with God is an experience that other men do not possess and upon which we
cannot therefore directly base an argument. But if our position is correct we
ought at least to be able to show the other man that his reasons are
inconclusive, and that involves careful study of both sides of the question.
Furthermore, the field of Christianity is the world. The Christian cannot be
satisfied as long as any human activity is opposed to Christianity or out of
all connection with Christianity. Christianity must pervade not merely all
nations but all of human thought. The Christian therefore cannot be indifferent
to any branch of earnest human endeavour. It must all be brought into some
relation to the gospel. It must all be studied either in order to demonstrated as false or else to make it useful in advancing
the
The
missionary movement is the great religious movement of our day. Now it is true
that men must be brought to Christ one by one. There are no labour-saving
devices in evangelism, it is all His work. And yet it would be a great mistake
to suppose that all men are equally well prepared to receive the gospel. It is
true that the decisive thing is the regenerative power of God. That can
overcome all lack of preparation and the absence of that makes the best
preparation useless. Yet it is a matter of fact, God usually exerts that power
in connection with certain prior conditions of the human mind, and it should be
ours to create so far as we can with the help of God those favourable
conditions for the reception of the gospel. False ideas are the greatest
obstacles to the reception of the gospel. We may preach with all the fervour of
the reformer and yet succeed in only reaching the straggler here or there. We
cannot permit the whole collective thought of the nation or the world to be
controlled by ideas which by then resistless force of logic prevents
Christianity from being regarded as nothing more than a harmless illusion.
Under these circumstances, what God desires us to do is to destroy these
obstacles at its roots.”
That is our job as
believers. According to 2 Corinthians 5 we are to tear down fortresses,
intellectual thought that has been erected against the truth of the gospel. And
that is what Philip is willing to do. When Nathanael
says, “Can any good thing come out of
When Nathanael
is confronted with the truth of who Jesus is, he says [49]: “Rabbi, You are the
Son of God; You are the King of Israel.”
John
Notice how John organized
the material of these four days. Nathanael represents
the Jewish remnant, the Jewish remanent that is without deceit, that is true
Israel of Israel. In the next chapter we see the wedding. The wedding feast in
Scripture is always used to portray the Millennial
kingdom, the Messianic kingdom. Prior to Nathanael on
the day before there was Andrew and John witnessing to Peter and James. That is
a picture of the witnessing of the church age. Prior to that
was John the Baptist, the Old Testament prophet, who is a picture of the role
of the prophet in history. So how has John organized his material here?
There is a symbolic or typological value to this. First of all, there is John
the Baptist representing the Old Testament prophets. Then the two witnesses who
represent the church age, the witnesses of the church age in the angelic
conflict. Then the remnant—Nathanael
representing true
In this chapter John has
given us 14 different titles of Jesus Christ. Verse 1, he is the Logos, the
Word; that he is God. He tells us that he is the light of men, v.4. He is the
begotten of the Father, v. 9. In vv. 14, 15 he is the one grater than John the
Baptist. In v. 18 the second person of the Trinity is called the only-begotten
God. In v. 23 He is identified as Yahweh,
Jehovah. In vv. 19, 38 he is called
the Lamb of God. In v. 33 He is the one who will baptise with the Holy Spirit.
In v. 34 He is called the Son of God. In v. 38 he is called rabbi or teacher.
Then in v. 41 He is the Messiah. In v. 45 He is the one who fulfils all the Old
Testament prophecies. In v. 49 He is the King of Israel. In v. 51 He is the Son
of Man. In this chapter John gives us an incredible amount of information about
our Lord and Saviour and introduces His public ministry.