Share This Episode
Moody Church Hour Pastor Philip Miller Logo

The Hour

Moody Church Hour / Pastor Philip Miller
The Truth Network Radio
December 7, 2025 1:00 am

The Hour

Moody Church Hour / Pastor Philip Miller

00:00 / 00:00
On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 293 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


December 7, 2025 1:00 am

Jesus' public ministry culminates in four vivid portraits of himself: the king of Israel, the savior of the world, the son of glory, and the word of life. These portraits reveal Jesus' humble and triumphant nature, his role in drawing nations to himself, and his endorsement by the Father. As Jesus prepares to face the cross, he offers a final appeal for people to believe in him and receive eternal life.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:
Science, Scripture & Salvation Podcast Logo
Science, Scripture & Salvation
John Morris
A New Beginning Podcast Logo
A New Beginning
Greg Laurie
Moody Church Hour Podcast Logo
Moody Church Hour
Pastor Philip Miller
Renewing Your Mind Podcast Logo
Renewing Your Mind
R.C. Sproul
Truth Talk Podcast Logo
Truth Talk
Stu Epperson

John chapter 12 gives us four vivid portraits of Jesus at the end of his public ministry. These portraits are unmistakably vivid to ensure that everyone may know just who this Jesus really is. We'll see him as the king of Israel, the savior of the world, the son of glory, and the word of life. Stay with us. From Chicago, this is The Moody Church Hour, a weekly broadcast of worship and teaching with Pastor Philip Miller.

Today, another in a long series of messages from the Gospel of John, a series we're calling Loved by Jesus. Our focus, the hour. Here now is Pastor Philip, along with worship leader Tim Stafford and Assistant Pastor Bossuet Reyes.

Well hey everybody and welcome to The Moody Church. We're so glad you're here with us today. In the passage we're going to look at today, there's a great line. It says, Sir, we would see Jesus. Show Jesus to us.

And that's our prayer, isn't it? When we gather, we are gathering and we want to see Jesus.

So let's pray and ask that we would see Jesus today. Let's pray together. Father, we pray those very words that we would see Jesus today. That you would open the eyes of our hearts, that we would behold him and not another, that we would see him in all of his glory, and that we would be changed today. We pray this in the matchless name of Jesus.

Amen and amen. See the little baby there wrapped up in a manger on fresh each morning See him in the temple Talking with the elders Little marvel that is laying down Let me hear you Amen Amen Marching in Jerusalem Over palm branches In abundance thunder amen Amen Amen Amen Amen Amen See at the garden Praying to His Father in deepest sorrow Amen Amen Let before Parliament Then they crucified Him Hallelujah And yours forever Ever You choose the power and raise them high. You choose the weak and make them strong. You heal our brokenness inside and give us light. The same love that set the candies free.

The same love that opened eyes to see. Is called a song by name. You are called a song by name. The same God that spread the hand and fire. The same God that was crucified.

Is called a song by name. You are called a song by name. You're calling, you're calling, you're calling us to the cross. You're calling, you're calling, you're calling us to the cross. You're calling, you're calling, you're calling us to the cross.

You're calling, you're calling, you're calling us to the cross. The same love that set the Catholics free, the same love that broken eyes to see. Just calling us all by name. You are calling us all by name, the same God that's Where the heavens fire the same God that was crucified is called a fall by name. You are calling a fall by name You're calling, you're calling, you're calling us to the cross You're calling, you're calling You're calling us to the cross She called the little child and had him stand among them and he said I tell you the truth.

Unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. Therefore, whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. Jesus said that if I first I should come to him No one else can stand as fine I should come to him Jesus said that if I am weak I should come to him No one else can be my strength. I should come to Him for the Lord is good and faithful, He will keep us day and night. We can always come to Jesus, Jesus strong and Jesus.

I should come to Him No one else can hear us. She should come to Him for the Lord is good and faithful, He will keep us faith and night. We can always come to Jesus, Jesus strong. Jesus said that I am lost, He will come to me and He surely on that cross He will come to me. For the Lord is good and baby, He will keep us day and night We can always come to Jesus Jesus strong and love For the Lord is good and baby He will keep us day and night We can always come to Jesus Jesus strong and come Jesus strong and God Who is Jesus to you?

I don't know, maybe in your equation of life there has been things that have sneaked in. They're subtracting for Everything that God has for you from His glory. Why not laying them down? Let the Holy Spirit recalibrate your life and just put Jesus at the center of all. I'll tell you, you won't miss a thing.

When Jesus is at the center. When he's your all in all. Who is Jesus to you? Jesus be the sanctor Be my source be my light Jesus Jesus be the center Be my home be my song Jesus be the flood in my heart Be the wind in these sisters Be the reason that I Jesus, Jesus Jesus be the Semitor, be my source, be my life, Jesus, be the fire, be the heart be the win in these silence. Be the reason that I live Jesus, Jesus be the fire in my life.

Be the living in these sales be the reason that I live Jesus Jesus Jesus be the center be my source be my life Jesus be my source be my life Jesus be my source be my life Jesus Jesus Jesus. Thank you. Where's next time? Give me this give me this love me. When I come to die, oh when I come.

To come where I give me cheese, give me cheese to make the Lord give me cheese when I want to see and when I see the soul.

Now there are 21 chapters in the book of John, the Gospel of John. The first 11 cover the first two and a half years of Jesus' life. And the last ten chapters cover the final week. And that's hard to believe, but it's almost 50-50, and half of the book is dedicated to one week in the life of Jesus. It is, of course, the most important week in the history of the universe.

As Jesus lays down his life, and takes it back up. Again. And he does this, of course, to save the entire world, including us.

Now in chapter 12, we turn the corner into officially what is called Holy Week. We will be together today in John chapter 12, verses 12 down to 50. A lot of ground to cover. But what John's gonna give us here in this chapter is four vivid portraits of Jesus. For vivid portraits.

Of Jesus. This is the very last of Jesus' public ministry that is recorded for us. In the Gospel of John. And these four portraits that come in quick succession here are unmistakably vivid. pictures of Jesus so that everyone would know Who this Jesus really is as he is about to go to the cross.

And these are portraits.

So they're from perspective, just like you would go to a gallery and see maybe paintings or portraits, and you would see not only the image of the individual, but the perspective, the insights of the artist that would be laced through in the portrait. And so we're going to see these four portraits today. Let me give them to you up front and we'll walk through them each in sequence. The first portrait is of the king of Israel. The king of Israel.

The second portrait is the savior of the world. The third portrait is the Son of Glory. And the fourth portrait is the word of life. The word of life, the king of Israel, the savior of the world, the son of glory, and the word of life. Would you bow your heads?

Let's pray together. Father, we ask now that you would come. Help us see Jesus in all of his glory. Help us to realize who in fact he is. Help us to respond to him as you would have us today.

Move in our hearts. O Holy Spirit, we pray this in Jesus' name. Amen. Amen. Our first portrait of the day here, a portrait of Jesus, is from the out-of-town guests, the crowds who had traveled to Jerusalem for the Passover feast.

This is the king of Israel. John chapter 12, verse 12. The next day, the large crowd that had come to the feast heard that Jesus was coming to Jerusalem.

So they took branches of palm trees and went out to meet him, crying out, Hosanna, blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord, even the King of Israel.

Now, every year hundreds of thousands of Jewish people in the first century would make their way in pilgrimage to Jerusalem for this holiest of weeks. This is Passover, a commemoration of God's rescue of the people of Israel from their imprisonment in the land of Egypt. and especially how they were protected by the blood of the Lamb. And Jerusalem, which normally would house some 80,000 residents on a normal day, would swell to 4 million people for Passover week. This is huge.

And it is these crowds now who are coming to meet Jesus. They've heard he's coming. They know him as the preacher, the miracle worker. The Messiah is the question, right? They know he's got power.

They know he's a powerful preacher, but Maybe he's more, maybe he's Messiah, maybe he's the promised king of old. Maybe he's the one who will restore the throne to Israel and usher in the kingdom of God. And so they grab palm branches and they sing from Psalm 118, Hosanna, blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord. Hosanna means, Lord, save now. Lord, save now.

They bless Jesus as the promised one, coming now into the city of the king in the name of the Lord. And they call him, you'll notice, the king of Israel. the king of Israel. There can be no doubt, friends. They have found their king, right?

They know who he is. and they're rolling out the red carpet. He's calmed the seas. He's given sight to the blind. He's raised the dead.

Now the question is: will he ascend the throne? Will he ascend the throne? But then Jesus does something unexpected, doesn't he? Verse 14. And Jesus found a young donkey and sat on it.

Just as it is written, Fear not, daughter of Zion. Behold, your king is coming, sitting on a donkey's colt.

Okay.

Now what on earth is Jesus doing here? You know, kings don't ride adolescent donkeys, right? Donkeys are service animals. They're pack animals. They exist for grunt work, you know, bearing burdens.

They were actually used in the first century for carrying refuse out of the city. This is not a noble beast. Kings don't ride donkeys. Kings ride beautiful, mighty, fierce war stallions. That's what they ride.

They crush down their enemies. They strike down their foes. They mow them over. They pierce them through. That's what kings do on horses.

What is Jesus doing on a donkey, huh? Even the disciples don't understand. Verse 16: his disciples did not understand these things at first. But when Jesus was glorified, then, then they remembered that these things had been written about him. and had been done to him.

So what they realized later Is that this was in fulfillment of Zechariah 9:9? Which is quoted for us, of course, in verse 15: Fear not, daughter of Zion, behold, your king is coming, sitting on a donkey's. Colt. The very next verse, if you were to go back to Zechariah, would read this way. This is verse 10.

He shall speak peace to the nations. His rule shall be from sea to sea and from the river to the ends of the earth.

So this is the king of Israel, but whose reign will be over the nations. See, Jesus rode this young donkey to make a statement. Because he is the king of Israel, right? They got that part right. But he is a king that is both greater and more humble than they could ever have expected.

This king comes not to crush his enemies. but to be crushed by his enemies. This king comes not to strike them down, but to be struck down. He comes not to mow down his enemies, but that they might mow him down. He comes not to pierce.

but to be pierced. See, friends, Jesus' kingdom comes not through dominance, not through bullying, not through saber-rattling or violence. But through self-sacrifice. Mercy. Grace.

and forgiveness. Jesus rides a donkey. A service animal. Because he is A servant. He will do the grunt work, you see.

He will bear our burdens. He will haul away our refuse. He will carry in himself the sin of the world. and he will even bear death away forever. Verse 17: The crowd that had been with him when he called Lazarus out of the tomb.

and raised him from the dead. continued to bear witness. The reason why the crowd went out to see him was because they had heard that he had done this sign.

So the Pharisees said to one another, You see, we're gaining nothing. The whole world has gone after him. Ha ha ha ha ha ha.

So that's our first portrait of Jesus, the king. of Israel. Our second portrait is made for us by some Greeks. uh Greeks who have come up for the feast. And their portrait is titled The Savior of the World, The Savior of the World.

Verse 20.

Now there were among those who went up to worship at the feast some Greeks. These are God-fearing Greeks. This is the way they kind of thought about Hellenized people.

So these are Greek citizens, Hellenistic in origin and ethnicity, who have converted to Judaism.

So they are worshipers of the one true God. They are here for this feast and observance, but they are not. Jewish in ethnicity.

Okay, so here are these Greeks, and apparently they've heard about Jesus. because verse 21, they came to Philip. Who was from Bethsaida in Galilee, and asked him, Sir, we wish to see Jesus. And Philip went and told Andrew, and Andrew, and Philip went and told Jesus. Sir, they say, we wish to see Jesus.

This is the request. We've come all this way for Passover. We've come to pay homage and commemorate the great rescue and redemption of God in history. But what we would really love to see. is Jesus.

Could we see him, please?

Now, to many of us, this might just look like a little bit of the trappings of celebrity, right? This is Jesus being well known, and he's got fans to attend to here. But there's something more going on here because it signals to Jesus something. It signals that it's time. It's time.

Look at how he responds here. Verse 23. And Jesus answered them: The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified. The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified.

Now, remember how many times we've seen this in the book of John, that Jesus says, My hour is not yet at hand. His hour is not at hand. They didn't lay hands on him because his hour had not come, right? We've heard this language, but now he says, the hour has come. What is this hour for, Jesus?

Glory. Fame, majesty, splendor. What triggers this in Jesus' mind? There's something in this, a sign. He picks up on it and he says, okay, here we go.

I think it's the fact that the nations are seeking him out. That Jesus said, Remember, if I am lifted up, I will draw all men to myself. All men, all Jews, Gentiles, anybody. The Jews have given their hosannas, and now the Greeks are coming to seek Jesus. And Jesus said, That's it, this is the moment.

It's glory time. And of course, the disciples were probably thinking, all right, let's go, let's ride this wave, let's call a press conference. Jesus is like, not so fast. Verse 24: Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies. It remains alone.

But if it dies. It bears much fruit. What are you doing, Jesus? You just, the whiplash just killed us. You were talking about glory, and now you're talking about death.

What are you doing? See, for most of us, friends, life is about survival. We resonate with Dylan Thomas's famous line: Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage, rage against the dying of the light, right? But not Jesus.

Jesus says that his dying is what will unleash life. That his life is like a grain of wheat, that if he preserves it, if he keeps it dry and safe, It will be sterile and alone. But if he relinquishes it, Lets it fall into the ground and disintegrate and die. It will bear much fruit. He says, look, a seed was made for one purpose.

One purpose and this is its hour of glory, you see. To die. To unleash all of the potential life and fruit and multiply the harvest. That's what this is for. And it is likewise, it is time for my glory.

For my death, I was born to die. My hour is here, it's come. I will lay down my life in order that I might bear much fruit. And I will reconcile in my death all peoples to myself. to the Father.

What could be more glorious than that? Verse twenty-five. Whoever loves his life will lose it. And whoever hates his life in this world will keep it. for our eternal life.

He says, look, if I were to love my life and hold on to it, keep it. Keep it for myself, avoid the cross, I lose everything, you see. I'd be disobeying my father. I would be disowning my purpose. All of humanity would be lost.

There'd be no glory in that. But if I hate my life... And I open my hand and I willingly give it up. Then I get it back. I get it back in resurrection.

I will have obeyed my father. I would fulfill my purpose. I'll redeem humanity and I'll have. Glory forever. Jesus Pathway, listen.

Jesus Pathway to Glory. goes through the cross. Jesus' pathway to glory. goes through the cross. Now.

Jesus is about to make it about us. Verse 26. If anyone serves me, He must follow me. And where I am, there will my servant be also. If anyone serves me, the Father will honour.

Him. You want to be my servant, Jesus says. Follow me. Where? Where Jesus?

Gethsemane. Gaul Gasa. The grave. and glory ever after. Because the pathway to glory always runs through the cross.

Not just for him. But for us. Everything that goes on to resurrection. must first pass through crucifixion, you see. If we are to be glorious like Jesus.

We must first pass through crucifixion. There's much in us that must die, friends. If we are to embrace the eternal life that Jesus offers, we must learn to let go of the one that we now have, you see. The spiritual dynamics of God are very consistent. Think about conversion.

We have to die to our self-sufficiency that God might resurrect dependency and life in Him. Think about forgiveness. We have to die to our bitterness that God might resurrect loving forgiveness in our hearts. Think about surrender. We have to die to our independence that we might be raised to walk in childlike faith.

Think about suffering. We have to die to our comfort in order that we might have the treasure of God's presence always. The more, listen, the more we try to hold on to this life. the more it ends up slipping through our fingers. C.S.

Lewis writes in The Joyful Christian: aim at heaven, and you will get earth thrown in. Aim at Earth. and you will get neither. Everything. that goes on to resurrection must first pass through crucifixion.

Sir, we wish to see Jesus. Do you Jesus says, oh, you will see me. You will see me in the glory of my death as I am lifted up and I draw all men to myself, including you Greeks. And you will have life. If you will follow me.

to the cross and to glory. Evermore. The second portrait is the Savior of the world. The third portrait. Is made out for us by none other than God the Father.

The Son of Glory is the title of this piece. And with suffering and death staring him in the face, now Jesus is moved in prayer, and in verse 27 he prays: Now is my soul troubled. And what shall I say? Father, save me from this hour. For this purpose I have come to this hour.

Father, glorify your Name.

So, Jesus is deeply troubled here, friends. The cross, with all of its agony and pain, and heartache and death, his heart is pounding, his palms are sweaty, he's scared at some level and yet resolved. Don't you see that? And then a voice, 28B, a voice came from heaven. This is the Father speaking.

I have glorified it. and I will glorify it again. The crowd that stood there and heard it said that it had thundered. Others said an angel had spoken to him. Jesus answered, this voice has come for your sake, not mine.

Now is the judgment of this world.

Now will the ruler of this world be cast out? And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself. He said this to show by what kind of death he was going. to die.

So now the Father adds his thunderous endorsement of the Son. You see this? The Jews have called him king of Israel. The Greeks have sought out the savior of the world.

Now the Father endorses Jesus as Son of glory.

Son of glory. There are four glories that will come about through Jesus' death that he outlines here. Number one, he says, it is the judging of the world. The judging of the world. As the world rises up in judgment of Jesus, the cross will actually stand in judgment over the world.

The second thing is the dethroning of Satan.

Now, will the ruler of this world be cast out? Jesus on the cross will break the power of sin and death and Satan and be victorious over all of them. The third glory is the lifting up of Jesus. The lifting up of Jesus. It has kind of a double meaning here.

First, it means to be lifted up in crucifixion, that this is what he means. This is the kind of death he's going to die. But it also has this idea of the exaltation of Jesus. This is the moment when he will be high and lifted up, and we will see him in his. Glory.

which leads to the fourth glory, which is the drawing of all peoples. to himself. Through the cross, friends, God will reconcile. to himself through Jesus, all peoples, all nations. Every nation, tribe, people, language, and tongue, including those Greeks.

They will see Jesus. Glory. Now, the people here can't believe that the glory of Messiah the Christ could come through something as Ignoble as death. Verse 34, as the crowd answered him, We've heard from the law that the Christ remains forever. How can you say that the Son of Man must be lifted up?

Who is the Son of Man? Look, we know that Christ the Messiah, he's got to stay forever, so, you know, he can't die. And if you're about to die, then who on earth are you, right? Verse 35.

So Jesus said to them, The light is among you for a little while longer. Walk while you have the light, lest darkness overtake you. The one who walks in the darkness does not know where he is going. While you have the light, believe in the light. that you may become sons of light.

He says, listen. I'm just here a little bit longer. You just have a final, this is the sunset. You have the final rays of light over the horizon of time. I'm about to go down.

You have the light. It's dying, but it's still there. And while you have the light, believe. Believe while you can. Come to the light, become sons, daughters of light.

I am the light. And I'm here to show you the way back home. To God. Verse thirty-sixb. When Jesus had said these things, he departed and hid himself from them.

Though he had done so many signs before them, they still did not believe in him.

So that the words spoken by the prophet Isaiah might be fulfilled. Lord, who has believed what he heard from us, and to whom has the arm of the Lord been revealed? Therefore they could not believe. For again Isaiah said, He has blinded their eyes and hardened their heart, lest they see with their eyes and understand with their heart in turn. and I would heal them.

Isaiah said these things because he saw his glory. and spoke of him.

So, John wants us to remember here, as everything is about to go down. As the people are going to wholesale, on the whole, reject the Messiah the Christ and crucify him. John wants us to remember, this is not taking God by surprise here. That no, no, no, Isaiah predicted this would happen. He saw it in advance.

Isaiah 53 foretold of the suffering of the servant who would be despised and rejected. Isaiah 6, Isaiah anticipated the hardness of people's hearts for the glory of God and the word of God revealed in their heart. Midst.

Now this is all in the overarching plan of God. Verse 42: Nevertheless, even many of the authorities believed in him. But for fear of the Pharisees, they did not confess it.

so that they would not be put out of the synagogue. For they love the glory that comes from man. more than the glory that comes from God. Indicing words.

So that's our third portrait. The Son of Glory.

Now the fourth portrait is a self-portrait. This is one made for us by Jesus. himself in his own words. And this one is titled The Word of Life. The word of life.

Verse 44. And Jesus cried out, and said, Whoever believes in me, Believes not in me, but in him who sent me. And whoever sees me, Sees him who sent me. I have come into the world. as light.

So that whoever believes in me may not remain in darkness. This is Jesus' final appeal publicly. It's a final offer of life. and light If you believe in me, Jesus says, you're actually believing in the Father. To see me is to see Him.

What again? Another crystal clear claim to the deity of Jesus. All along, he's been claiming this, right? Remember John chapter 10, verse 30? I and the Father are one.

In just a few chapters, in John 14, verse 9, he will say, Whoever has seen me has seen the Father. In his epistle, John will write this: 1 John 2, verse 23. No one who denies the Son has the Father. Whoever confesses the Son has the Father. Also, so to have Jesus is to have the Father.

To have the Father is to have Jesus. They're a package deal. You can't separate them out. And to reject the Son is to miss out on the Father. Won't you come to the light Jesus says?

I'm here shining Come to the light. Verse 47: If anyone hears my words and does not keep them, I do not judge him. For I did not come to judge the world, but to save the world. The one who rejects me and does not receive my words has a judge. The word that I have spoken will judge him on the last day.

For I've not spoken on my own authority. But the Father who sent me has himself given me a commandment. What to say? and what to speak. And I know that his commandment is eternal life.

What I say, therefore, I say, as the Father has told me. Maybe. See, when Jesus speaks, friends, it brings accountability, doesn't it? Before we were ignorant, we didn't know, but now we're responsible because we've heard. You know.

And it's doubly true in Jesus' case. Because not only does Jesus' word carry weight, it also carries the weight of the Father's authority at the same time. That's Jesus' whole point here. I'm speaking, but not on my own, with the Father's authority.

So there are now two witnesses in the one word that we are responsible to. And so this word can bring judgment on the one hand if we reject it. Or that word can bring eternal life. which is of course what the Father and the Son are all about. It's what they want.

Because friends, listen. Jesus is the living Word of God. Amen? And therefore Jesus speaks the living word of God. He is the word of life.

He is the word which is full of life. He is the word which is life. And he is the word which gives life. At His word, dead bodies are raised to life. At His word, dead souls are raised for eternity.

Remember what John 6:63 says, Jesus is speaking. The words that I have spoken to you are spirit and life. Peter responds a few verses later, Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. Life.

Don't you see? Here in the final week of Jesus' life, he puts all of his cards on the table, doesn't he? He holds nothing back. He takes out all the guesswork, and here's four vivid portraits of who I am. The king of Israel.

humble and triumphant. The Savior of the world, drawing the nations unto himself. The Son of glory endorsed by the Father himself, and the word of life, where eternity hangs on his every word. And everything. hinges on what we do with this Jesus.

So here's our takeaways. You know, sometimes things just come together. In such clarity. Such simplicity. We could put it down in a math equation, okay?

Jesus plus nothing. equals everything. Yeah. Jesus plus nothing equals everything. Do you realize that?

He's the king. He's the savior. He's the son of glory. He's the word of life. If you have Jesus, There's nothing else you really need.

Remember the words of that song? You know, you can have all this world. But give me Jesus. Amen? The second The second Flip side to that equation is this though.

Everything minus Jesus. equals nothing. Everything minus Jesus. Equals nothing. Remember, Jesus said, What profit is it to a man?

if he gains the whole world. But loses his soul. Oh. Oh, we fall into this. Here in the West, in America, where it's so easy.

to spend your whole life. chasing everything. And Jesus has the back burner. But everything minus Jesus. In the end.

Nothing. Lord, to whom shall we go? You alone. have the words of eternal life. Friends, if you were to make a portrait of Jesus, Not one of these four made for us, but if you were to make one.

Who would Jesus be to you? Who is he? to you. Who is he to you? Let's pray.

Father. There is no mistaking the clarity. of this moment. The sequence of events. That shine.

the identity of Jesus all over this Passion Week. He is our king. He is our Savior. He's the Son of Glory. is the word of life.

Everything depends on what we do with Jesus. Holy Spirit, make faith rise in our hearts. That we might see the glory. of this Jesus. for his hour has come.

May it be our hour of life. We pray this in Jesus' name. Amen. Then On today's Moody Church hour, we heard Pastor Philip Miller with another message in a series he's calling Loved by Jesus, the book of John. We heard about the hour, the beginning of the last week Jesus lived on earth.

Next time, we pause our long study in John to look into a time when Moses was holding out hope for a Redeemer. We'll begin by seeing God as the covenant keeper. We'd like you to have a brand new daily devotional in time for the new year. It's called simply Running to Win and has one verse per day with comments from both Erwin Lutzer as well as D.L. Moody.

It's yours as our thank you when you give a gift of any amount to support The Moody Church hour. For details, call 1-800-215-5001. That's 1-800-215-5001. Online, go to MoodyChurchHour.com. That's MoodyChurchHour.com or write to us at MoodyChurch Media, 1635 North La Salle Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois, 60614.

This broadcast is a ministry of The Moody Church. Um

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime