By David R. Tullock
John 17:1-11
If you could gather
in one room all the people who have made a major contribution in your life,
what would you like for them to know? What would you tell them? How would
you thank them for their interest in you? What would you like for them to say
to you? It’s an interesting thought, isn’t it?
I think I know what I would like for them to say to me. I hope that
they would stand and say, “Well done! You have made us proud of you.” For
me, the hard part is what do I say to them? Assuming you had lived a fulfilling
life, what would you say was the secret? It really is essential to know the
answer to that question. What is the secret to a fulfilling life?
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I was called by a long time friend last week. She was in the hospital,
dying, and she wanted me to come and see here. As she talked, she directly
asked me, “How do I get ready to die? I’ve never done this before.” So we
sat there and talked about her sons and her grandchildren and the practical
things like the funeral and her wills, and her belongings. She knew that all
of her bases were covered. I asked her what she has told her family. In her
direct way, she said, “I have told them that I love them, and I am glad I have
had the privilege of knowing them. I hope they can say the same about me.”
Then we talked about the obvious. “Peggy, how have you come to this
point ready to die?” She said, “I’ve lived a long, good life, and I’ve done
everything I’ve set out to do and then some. I know I’m forgiven for my failures,
and I know where I’m going.”
You may have watched the episode of ER
when Dr. Mark Greene died. The scene in the show that was most poignant to
me was when he was sitting in a rocker, holding his infant daughter, and it
was obvious that death for him was imminent. I asked Cristy, “Do you know what
I would probably do if I knew that I was dying tonight?” She said, “You would
probably be sitting right there, holding David Isaac, and watching ER.”
This is what Jesus is doing for us in this text. He is making it
clear to us that we can know what makes life fulfilling, no matter what the
circumstances. In fact, he explicitly says, “This is eternal life . . . ”
We all have life. We are all breathing, functioning human beings. We
see life all around us in nature, in others, in faces. But what does Jesus
mean with the adjective, eternal. We have diminished the word if we consider
it to mean longevity. For many, if life, lived like it is, is eternal, never
ending, then what is the attraction of that? Living day in and day out is a
never-ending grind then death as the end would be a blessing, not a curse.
If life is in the midst of poverty, and life like that is never ending, why
would anyone hope to live forever. If life is in the midst of violence and
fear, why would anyone desire to live forever with that kind of pain. Surely,
Jesus is not just talking longevity when he says life is supposed to be eternal.
Jesus says that there is a qualitative dimension to life.