Hindsight – John 12:12-19

DON’T BE CONFUSED by setbacks. Life wins.

The 2015 Super Bowl was an amazing game. Did you watch it? Like many other west-coasters I was rooting for Seattle. Late in the fourth quarter, it looked like Seattle’s top-team-two-years-in-a-row dream was dead. Then they scored two touchdowns in less than a minute, and after one of the most amazing catches in football history, they found themselves at the two yard line, ready to score the winning touchdown. I’m sure the Seahawk players were preparing a Gatorade shower for coach Carroll at that point.

That is how it was for Jesus and His team of twelve as He fulfilled prophesy and rode a donkey through a cheering throng in Jerusalem. He had recently raised Lazarus from the dead, and His support had reached a tipping point. It football terms, it was first and goal. Judas thought Jesus should run the ball up the middle. But much to Judas’s dismay, Jesus passed and was intercepted. Forget the Gatorade. Forget the new government. Forget winning.

At first his disciples did not understand all this. Only after Jesus was glorified did they realize that these things had been written about him and that they had done these things to him (John 12:16).

What was done to Jesus in the next few days fulfilled scriptural prophesies in great detail. All twelve disciples must have missed the prophetic message in Isaiah 53. “He was oppressed and treated harshly…his life was cut short in midstream. He had done no wrong But he was buried like a criminal; he was put in a rich mans grave (Isaiah 53:7-9, nlt).

It looked like death won. (Sorry for the analogy, New England fans.) The truth is, however, that first century game was rigged. Indeed, after the Lord’s resurrection the disciples realized that last second interception from hell had been part of God’s plan. Heaven allowed Satan to think that he had won, and the Lord’s disciples to think they had lost. At this point, of course, the football analogy breaks down. A replay of the 2015 Super Bowl will not change who won. But Christ’s resurrection changes everything.

God’s amazing plan is summed up in the old hymn Crown Him with Many Crowns: “…Who came eternal life to bring and lives that death may die.” His death killed my death. Yes, death may have won a battle that dark day, but Life won the war.

 

Life Challenge: Can you think of one negative situation you’re dealing with where it looks like death is winning? Remember, Easter says “Life wins!”

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