What Will You Do With Jesus
My kingdom is not of this
world … You say that I am a king. For this purpose I
was born and for this purpose I have come into the world—to bear witness to the
truth. Everyone who is of the truth listens to my voice.
John 18:36-37
What will you do with Jesus? On
the morning of what is now known as the first Good Friday, the Jewish religious
authorities took Jesus to continue His trial before Pontius Pilate
, the Roman governor. We can see in the details of the Gospel accounts
how God sovereignly orchestrated all of these events. The Jews’ determination
to secure Christ’s death by crucifixion would actually fulfill God’s plan from
eternity. God had also planned Christ’s interaction with Pilate. As they stood
before one another, Pilate asked significant questions about Jesus’ identity
and authority. These questions formed an examination with eternal
ramifications—an examination we all must make. Consider how the hymn writer
puts it:
Jesus is standing in Pilate’s hall—
Friendless, forsaken,
betrayed by all;
Hearken! What meant the
sudden call?
What will you do with Jesus?
Pilate believed he was
holding an examination on a purely intellectual, natural level. But answering
the question “Who is Jesus?” is always a spiritual, supernatural matter. Jesus
wasn’t a political king, as Pilate believed, but the heavenly King. He essentially
told Pilate, My kingdom doesn’t find
its origin in this world. The concern of My kingdom is the spiritual
transformation that is brought about in the hearts of My people. The reason why
I was born as a King was to testify to God’s truth. But Pilate, blind
in his unbelief, had already made up his mind. Jaded and disdainful, he sought
to avoid the fundamental question we all must ask: “What will I do with Jesus?”
But in trying not to answer, he nevertheless gave his answer: I shall
reject His claim on me and His rule over me, and therefore His offer to rescue
me.
What will you do with Jesus?
Neutral you cannot be;
Someday your heart will be
asking,
“What will He do with me?”
Neutral you cannot be. You
will either live under Jesus’ rule or you will not. So do not close your Bible
in the morning and then live as though this world and its concerns and kings
are all that is or all that matters. Do not proceed as though Jesus has no
place or interest in your life in this world. He stood friendless and forsaken
before Pilate so that you might be welcomed as His friend into His eternal
kingdom. There is no option of neutrality—but why would we want there to be?