In
these verses, there are two outstanding truths emphasized:
first, that of the Father's house, and second, our Lord's
personal return for His own. We are all familiar with the
fact, I presume, that the Bible was not written in chapters
and verses. These breaks in the text were put in by editors,
and that in rather recent years, some of them as late as
the time of the Protestant Reformation. And sometimes the
chapter breaks seem to come at rather unfortunate places.
I think such is the case here. Who, for instance, beginning
to read the first verse of chapter fourteen, connects it
in his mind with our Lord's words to the Apostle Peter at
the close of chapter thirteen? And yet, there is a very real
connection. The Lord Jesus had been giving His last messages
to His disciples. He had intimated that soon they would forsake
Him and flee. He had told them that He was going away and
for the present they could not come where He was to go. And
in verse thirty-six of chapter thirteen we read:
"Simon Peter said unto him, Lord, whither goest thou?
Jesus answered him, Whither I go, thou canst not follow me
now; but thou shalt follow me afterwards."
He was going, you see, to the Father's house. He was going
home to God by way of the cross and resurrection, and Peter
could not follow immediately. But the Lord says, "Thou
shalt follow Me afterwards." Peter did not understand
that, and he said to Him:
"Lord, why cannot I follow Thee now? I will lay down
my life for Thy sake" (John 13:37).
"Jesus answered him, Wilt thou lay down thy life for
My sake? Verily, verily, I say unto thee, The cock shall
not crow till thou hast denied Me thrice" (John 13:38).
And then He immediately adds:
"Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God,
believe also in Me."
You see, the Lord Jesus is addressing these words, of course,
to all His disciples, but directly — directly — to
the disciple who was to deny Him in so short a time. And
this is surely very comforting for our hearts. Peter was
to fail the Lord — Jesus knew he would fail — but
deep in Peter's heart there was a fervent love for the Lord
Jesus. And when he said, "I will lay down my life for
Thy sake," he meant every word of it. But he did not
realize how untrustworthy his own heart was. It was a case
of the spirit being willing, but the flesh weak. And Jesus
knew something of the fearful discouragement that would roll
over the soul of Peter when he awoke to the realization of
the fact that he had been so utterly faithless in the hour
of his Master's need. In the very time that Jesus needed
someone to stand up for Him and to say boldly, "Yes,
I am one of His, and I can bear witness to the purity of
His life and to the goodness of His ways" — at
that time Peter, frightened by the soldiers gathered about,
denied any knowledge of his Saviour. And, oh, the days and
nights that would follow as he would feel that surely he
must be utterly cast off, surely the Lord could never put
any trust in him again! But if he remembered these words,
what a comfort they must have brought to his poor aching
heart! For Jesus is practically saying, "I know all
about it, Peter. I know how you are going to fail, but I
want you to know this; in My Father's house are many mansions,
and you are going to share one of those mansions with Me
some day. I am not going to permit you, Peter, to be utterly
overcome. I am not going to permit you to go into complete
apostasy. You will fall, but you will be lifted up again,
and you will share with Me a place in the many mansions."
When He says, "Let not your heart be troubled," He
does not mean, "Do not be exercised about your failure," for
He Himself sought to exercise the heart of Peter, and in
a wonderful way restored him by the Sea of Galilee later
on. But He means this: "Do not be cast down. Do not
allow the enemy of your soul to make you feel there is no
further hope, there is no opportunity for you."
I wonder if I am speaking to someone this evening who has
failed, perhaps, as Peter failed. Under the stress of circumstances
you, too, have denied your Lord, denied Him in acts if not
in words, and the adversary of your soul is saying to you
now, "It is all up with you; your case is hopeless.
You knew Christ once, but you have failed so miserably, He
would never own you again." Oh, let me assure you His
interest in you is just as deep as it ever was. If you truly
trusted Him as your Saviour, the fact that you failed so
grievously, and the fact that you mourn over it, only emphasizes
the truth that you belong to Him. Still He says, "[Return],
O backsliding children, [unto Me]; for I am married unto
you" (Jer. 3:14) — not, "I am divorced from
you." And therefore He waits for you to come back and
confess your failure and your sin, and He has promised complete
restoration, for, "If we confess our sins, he is faithful
and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness" (1 John 1:9). And some day for you,
too, there will be a place in the Father's house.
"Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe
also in Me." You see, in the days gone by before Jesus
came to them at all, the people of Israel did have faith
in the one true and living God. Now they had never seen Him,
and Jesus is saying to His disciples, "You have believed
in God when you couldn't see Him, now I am going away in
a little while and you won't be able to see Me, but I want
you to trust Me just the same as when I was here. Just as
you have believed in the unseen God through the years, I
want you to put your faith in Me, the unseen Christ, after
I have gone back to the Father." Do we have that implicit
trust and confidence in Him, realizing that He is deeply
interested in every detail of our own lives? The Word says, "Casting
all your care upon Him; for He careth for you" (1 Pet.
5:7). There is absolutely nothing that concerns His people
that He Himself is not concerned about. And therefore He
would have us put away all the stress and all the anxiety.
He says, "Be careful [anxious] for nothing; but in every
thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your
requests be made known unto God" (Phil. 4:6). "Ye
believe in God, believe also in Me."
And then He adds, "In My Father's house are many mansions." "My
Father's house," and by that of course He means Heaven,
and He is speaking of a place, a place to which He was going,
and a place into which some day He will take all His own.
I often hear people say, "Heaven is a condition rather
than a place." Heaven is both a place and a condition.
It is true we do not read a great deal about Heaven in the
Bible. Somebody has said, "Heaven is the land of no
more." We have more in the Bible about what will not
be in Heaven than about what will be there. Remember in the
book of Revelation we read that there will be no more sin,
there will be no more tears, there will be no more pain,
there will be no more sorrow, there will be no more curse,
there will be no more darkness, there will be no more distress
of any kind in the Father's house. The Father's house is
the place where Christ is, and that is the place to which
the redeemed are going.
Some of you may have thought the expression here, "In
My Father's house are many mansions," is rather peculiar.
Somehow or other, the word mansion to most of us in the United
States has an accustomed meaning that it did not originally
have. When we see a great building we call that a mansion.
But the word as originally used did not have that meaning
at all. It had rather the meaning of an apartment, as we
use that word today, a splendid apartment. So one building
might have many mansions in it. And Jesus is telling us, "In
My Father's house are many apartments, many resting-places." There
is a place, an individual place, for every one of His own,
all in that Father's house.
"If it were not so, I would have told you." What
does He mean by that? The Jews had had a belief in a heaven
of bliss after death, and Jesus said, "If you had been
wrong in that, I would have corrected you." But because
He didn't correct it but rather affirmed it, we know that
it is true, that there is a glorious home beyond the skies
for the redeemed which we shall share with Him by-and-by.
He adds, "I go to prepare a place for you." What
does He mean by that? You see the mansions are different
from what they were before He went back there. Before He
went back to the Father's house, the sin question had never
been settled. Before He went back to the Father's house,
the veil had not been rent, the blood had not been sprinkled
on the mercy-seat. So the saints of old went to Paradise
on credit. They did not have the same blessed access into
the immediate presence of God that the saints have now. We
read in the Epistle to the Hebrews that we have now come
to the spirits of just men made perfect. They were the spirits
of just men of all the centuries before the cross; God had
redeemed them and taken them to Paradise, but they were not
yet made perfect. They could not be until the precious blood
of Jesus was shed on the cross. Now having settled the sin
question, He entered into the holiest with His own blood
in antitypical fashion, sprinkled His own blood on the mercy-seat
above, and now a place is prepared in the holiest for all
of His own, and the spirits of just men of the past have
been perfected and we who believe now are perfected forever.
So we are all suited to that place to which we are going. "I
go to prepare a place for you."
And then He said, "And if I go and prepare a place for
you, I will come again, and receive you unto Myself; that
where I am, there ye may be also." Now I know that a
great many people think of this as a word in regard to death,
and of course, when a believer dies, that believer goes to
be with Christ. But we are never told in Scripture that in
the hour of death Christ comes for His people. If we may
draw an analogy from something our Lord said when He was
here on earth, we gather that that is hardly true. We are
told that a dear child of God was dying — he was a
beggar, it is true. He was an outcast, lying at the rich
man's gate, but he was a real son of Abraham. He had faith
in the God of all grace. And the beggar died, we are told,
and was carried by the angels into Abraham's bosom. Angels
carried the poor beggar — poor no longer — into
Paradise. What I rather gather from that, is that the last
ministry of angels, who are ever keeping watch over the people
of God, will be to usher them into the presence of God. He
is yonder in the Father's house, and His angels usher His
saints into His presence.
But He is speaking of something different here. Death is
the believer going to be with Christ. That is what the Scripture
tells us — "Absent from the body ... present with
the Lord" (2 Cor. 5:8); "To depart, and be with
Christ; which is far better" (Phil 1:23). But a believer
going home to be with Christ is spoken of as being unclothed,
having laid his body aside. He is there in the presence of
the Lord a glorified spirit, but he is there waiting for
his redeemed body. When the Lord Jesus fulfils that which
is spoken here in the fourteenth chapter of John, then believers
will receive their glorified bodies and will be altogether
like Him. This coming, referred to here, is developed for
us more fully in the fourth chapter of the First Epistle
to the Thessalonians. There we read in verse thirteen:
"I would not have you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning
them which are asleep"
—that is, saints whose bodies are sleeping in the graves
but whose spirits are with Christ—
"But I would not have you to be ignorant, brethren,
concerning them which are asleep, that ye sorrow not,
even as others which have no hope. For if we believe
that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which
sleep in Jesus will God bring with him. For this we say
unto you by the word of the Lord, that we which are alive
and remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not prevent
them which are asleep. For the Lord himself shall descend
from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel,
and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall
rise first: Then we which are alive and remain shall
be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet
the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the
Lord" (1 Thessalonians 4:13-17).
This is the coming our Saviour refers to when He says: "If
I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive
you unto Myself" (John 14:3). It is at that coming that
the expectation of our completed redemption will be fulfilled.
In Romans eight the Apostle Paul tells us in verse nineteen:
"For the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth
for the manifestation of the sons of God."
Verses twenty-two and twenty-three:
"For we know that the whole creation groaneth and
travaileth in pain together until now. And not only they,
but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the
Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting
for the adoption—"
What does he mean by that?
—"to wit, the redemption of our body."
Our spirits have already been redeemed, we have already received
the salvation of our souls, but we are waiting for the complete
salvation of the body, the redemption of the body at the
coming of the Lord Jesus Christ.
"For we are saved by hope: but hope that
is seen is not hope" (Rom. 8:24).
What hope is it then? The hope of the coming of our Lord.
And to this He refers again in the third chapter of the Epistle
to the Philippians, where we read in verse twenty:
"For our conversation is in heaven; from whence also
we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ: Who shall
change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto
his glorious body, according to the working whereby he is
able even to subdue all things unto himself."
This is the glorious event that will take place when the
Lord comes back again, when He comes back for us.
There is the widest difference, you see, between this and
the time when He is manifested as the Son of Man to deal
in judgment with the godless world and eventually to set
up His kingdom. This was a little secret the Lord was revealing
to these apostles that night in the upper room. In the three
Synoptic Gospels it was not mentioned. It was the Apostle
Paul who was the chosen instrument to develop it, but it
seems that the Lord Jesus, just before He went away, had
a secret welling up in His heart, as it were, which He could
not hold back any longer and He must tell them a little about
it, so He says, "I am going away, but I am going to
prepare a place for you. But if I go and prepare a place
for you, I will come again and receive you" — not, "I
will send the death angel for you," or any other angel,
but "I will come again, and receive you unto Myself,
that where I am there ye may be also."
You see, He will never be satisfied until every one of His
redeemed people is with Him in the glory in the Father's
house. His heart is yearning for that.
Now a word about the Father's house. Notice it is the Father's
house, and the Father's house is for all the Father's
children. We hear a great many strange things these days.
Some people would try to tell us that it is only the
deeply spiritual people of God that will be caught up
with the Lord Jesus at His coming. When people talk like
that, how little understanding they have of the Father's
heart! You think of a normal father or mother here on
earth, with, say, eight or ten children, and that is
quite a family, isn't it? The father's house is open
to all the children. I pity the home, and pity the children
where the father or the mother makes distinctions among
their children. I think it is a sad thing when out of
a number of children one perhaps occupies a special place
in the heart of the father and the others are held at
a distance. "Oh," but you say, "maybe
one or two are naughty children. Of course the father
couldn't love naughty children as much as he loves the
good children." Is that true? Why, even the naughty
children are so dear to the father's heart that they
give him many sleepless nights as he thinks about their
naughtiness. He loves them and truly longs to see them
all that they ought to be. There is always a welcome
for them at the father's house.
We need to remember, too, that in the Father's house above,
there is no distinction. People often say to me, "Oh,
if I can just get into Heaven and get a seat behind the door,
I shall be satisfied. I know I don't deserve anything better."
My dear friend, you don't deserve to get there at all. I
don't deserve to go there. But I am not going there because
I deserve to go, but I am going to Heaven because I have
been born again, and the Lord Jesus Christ is preparing a
place for me, and the Father's house is for all the Father's
children.
Another thing is this: There are no seats behind the door
over yonder! I wish I could say it so loudly that everybody
would get hold of it. There is nothing like that in the Word
of God. There are no distinctions in the welcome that believers
will have in the Father's house. I repeat, the Father's house
has the same welcome for all the Father's children.
You say, "Well, but doesn't the Bible indicate some
will have greater rewards than others?" Oh, yes, but
rewards have nothing to do with the welcome into the Father's
house. The rewards especially have to do with the coming
glorious kingdom, of course given in Heaven, given at the
judgment-seat of Christ, but the differences are in the kingdom.
For instance, look at the Second Epistle of Peter: "So
an entrance shall be ministered unto you abundantly into—" Into
what? Into heaven? No; it is not true that some people will
get an abundant entrance into Heaven and other folk will
not have anything like so warm and cordial a welcome. What
does it mean? It says that some people have an entrance ministered
unto them abundantly. Yes, but into what? "Into the
everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ" (2
Peter 1:11). Do not confuse, or confound, in your thinking,
the Father's house with the everlasting kingdom. The Father's
house is the home of the saints; the everlasting kingdom
is the sphere of service and rewards, where through all eternity,
first in the Millennium and then in the ages to come, we
shall be serving our blessed Lord who has prepared a place
for us in the Father's house...
The Father's house
is the home of all the Father's children. But we make our
own places in the kingdom by our own devotedness to the Lord
Jesus Christ. Do you get the difference? So there is a place
for all in the Father's house.
About the way there. Will everybody get to the Father's house?
I wish that they would. Richard Baxter used to pray, "Oh,
God, for a full Heaven and an empty hell!" But alas,
alas, many persist in rebellion against God and so that prayer
can never be answered! There is only one way to the Father's
house. And what is that way? I have had people say to me
so many times, "We are traveling different roads, but
we will all get to Heaven at last." No, no; I don't
find that in my Bible. My Bible says, "There is a way
that seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the
ways of death" (Prov. 16:25), and it warns me against
taking the broad way that leads to destruction and tells
me to take the narrow way that leads to life.
And so here Jesus says, "And whither I go ye know, and
the way ye know. Thomas saith unto Him—" Thomas
was honest and he was never afraid just to blurt out all
the truth. He said, "We don't know what You are talking
about. We have to confess we are ignorant, and we don't know
where You are going, and how can we know the way?"
Jesus said unto him — and, oh, dear friends, you get
what He said, for it is for you as well as for Thomas — "Jesus
saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no
man cometh unto the Father, but by Me" (John 14:6).
Oh, don't talk about many ways. There is only one — Jesus
is the only way. There is none other name under heaven given
among men whereby we must be saved, but the name of Jesus.
Have you come to Him? Are you trusting Him? If you are, you
are on the way to the Father's house, and now you can wait
with equally glad expectation for the hour of His return,
for He said, "If I go, I will come again, and receive
you unto Myself." When will He come? We can't tell that,
but we are waiting for Him day by day.
"I know not when the Lord will come
Or at what hour He may appear,
Whether at midnight or at morn,
Or at what season of the year.
I only know that He is near,
And that His voice I soon shall hear.
I only know that He is near,
And that His voice I soon shall hear."
Copied from Care for God's Fruit-trees and Other Messages by
H.A. Ironside. Rev. ed. New York: Loizeaux Brothers, [1945].
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