THE FIRST DISCIPLES
“Again on the morrow John was
standing, and two of his disciples; and he looked
upon Jesus as He walked, and saith, Behold, the Lamb
of God! And the two disciples heard him speak,
and they followed Jesus. And Jesus turned,
and beheld them following, and saith unto them,
What seek ye? And they said unto Him, Rabbi (which
is to say, being interpreted, Master), where abidest
Thou? He saith unto them, Come, and ye shall
see. They came therefore and saw where He abode;
and they abode with Him that day: it was about
the tenth hour. One of the two that heard
John speak, and followed Him, was Andrew, Simon
Peter’s brother. He findeth first his own
brother Simon, and saith unto him, We have found
the Messiah (which is, being interpreted, Christ).
He brought him unto Jesus. Jesus looked upon
him, and said, Thou art Simon the son of John:
thou shalt be called Cephas (which is by interpretation,
Peter). On the morrow he was minded to go
forth into Galilee, and he findeth Philip: and
Jesus saith unto him, Follow Me. Now Philip
was from Bethsaida, of the city of Andrew and
Peter. Philip findeth Nathanael, and saith unto
him, We have found Him, of whom Moses in the law,
and the prophets, did write, Jesus of Nazareth,
the son of Joseph. And Nathanael said unto
him, Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?
Philip saith unto him, Come and see. Jesus
saw Nathanael coming to Him, and saith of him,
Behold, an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile!
Nathanael saith unto Him, Whence knowest thou
me? Jesus answered and said unto him, Before
Philip called thee, when thou wast under the fig tree,
I saw thee. Nathanael answered him, Rabbi,
Thou art the Son of God; Thou art King of Israel.
Jesus answered and said unto him, Because I said
unto thee, I saw thee underneath the fig tree, believest
thou? thou shalt see greater things than these.
And He saith unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto
you, Ye shall see the heaven opened, and the angels
of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man.” JOHN
-51.
In the prosecution of his purpose
to tell how the Incarnate Word manifested His glory
to men, John proceeds to give one or two instances
of the eagerness with which prepared souls welcomed
Him, and of the instinctive perception with which
true and open minds confessed Him Son of God and King
of Israel. This paragraph is the continuation
of that which begins at ver. 19 with the general
title, “This is the witness of John.”
We are now introduced to some of the results of John’s
witness, and are shown that Christ is King, not only
by official proclamation, but by the free choice of
men. These instances here cited are but the first
among countless numbers who in every generation have
felt and owned the majesty of Christ, and who have
felt irresistibly drawn to Him by a unique affinity.
In the spell which His personality laid upon these
first disciples, in the uninvited yet cordial and assured
acknowledgments of His dignity which they felt drawn
to make, we see much that is significant and illustrative
of the allegiance He evokes from age to age in humble
and open-minded men.
In proceeding to gather to Himself
subjects who might enter into His purposes and loyally
serve Him, Jesus shows a singularly many-sided adaptability
and inexhaustible originality in dealing with men.
Each of the five disciples here introduced is individually
dealt with. “The finding of the one was
not the finding of the other. For John and Andrew
there was the talk with Jesus through the hours of
that never-to-be-forgotten evening; for Simon, the
heart-searching word, convincing him he was known
and his future read off; for Philip, a peremptory
command; and for Nathanael, a gracious courtesy disarming
him of prejudice, assuring him of a perfect sympathy
in the breast of the Lord. Thus there are those
who seek Christ, those who are brought by others to
Christ, those whom Christ seeks for Himself, those
who come without doubts, and those who come with doubts."
The two men who enjoyed the signal
distinction of leading the way in owning the majesty
and attaching themselves to the person of Christ were
Andrew and probably John who wrote this Gospel.
The writer, indeed, does not name himself, but this
is in accordance with his habit. The suppression
of the name is an indication that he himself was the
disciple spoken of, since had it been another he could
have had no scruple in mentioning his name. We
know also that the families of Zebedee and Jonah were
partners in trade, and it was likely that the young
men of the families would go in company to visit the
Baptist when the fishing was slack. These two
young men had already attached themselves to the Baptist;
had not merely passed through the fashionable ceremony
of baptism, and returned home to talk about it, but
were laid hold of by John’s teaching and character,
and had resolved to wait with him till the predicted
Deliverer should appear.
And at length the day came when the
master whom they trusted as God’s prophet suddenly
checked them in their walk, laid his hand breathlessly
upon them, and gazing at a passing figure, said, “Behold,
the Lamb of God!” There in actual bodily presence
was He for whom all ages of their people had longed;
there within sound of their voice was He who could
take away their sin, lift off the burden and the trouble
of life, and let them know the blessedness of living.
We are ever ready to think it was easy for those who
saw Christ to follow Him. Could we read His sympathy
and truthfulness in His face, could we hear His words
addressed directly to ourselves, could we ask our
own questions and have from Him personal guidance,
we fancy faith would be easy. And no doubt there
is a greater benediction pronounced on those who “have
not seen, and yet have believed.” Still,
the advantage is not wholly theirs who saw the Lord
growing up among other boys, learning His trade with
ordinary lads, clothed in the dress of a working man.
The brothers of Jesus found it hard to believe.
Besides, in giving the allegiance of the Spirit, and
forming eternal alliance, it is well that the true
affinities of our spirit be not disturbed by material
and sensible appearances.
These two men, however, felt the spell,
and “followed Jesus” representatives
of all those who, scarcely knowing what they do or
what they intend, are yet drawn by a mysterious attraction
to keep within sight of Him of whom they have ever
been hearing, and whom all ages have sought, but who
now for the first time stands clear before their sight.
Without a word to their teacher or to one another,
silent with wonder and excitement, they eagerly follow
the passing figure. So does enquiry begin with
many a soul. He who is much spoken of by all,
but of whom few have personal knowledge, suddenly assumes
a reality they scarcely were looking for. It
is no longer the hearing of the ear, but now, whispers
the soul, mine eye seeth Him. The soul for the
first time feels as if some action were demanded of
it; it can no longer just sit and listen to descriptions
of Christ, it must arise on its own account, and for
itself seek further knowledge of this unique Person.
“Then Jesus turned and saw them
following,” turned probably because
He heard them following, for He suffers none to follow
in vain. Sometimes it may seem as if He did;
sometimes it may seem as if the best years of life
were spent in following, and all to no purpose.
It is not so. If some have spent years in following,
and cannot yet say that Christ has turned and made
them conscious that He is responding to their search,
this is because in their path lie many obstacles, all
of which must be thoroughly cleared away. And
no man should grudge the time and the toil that is
spent on honestly clearing away whatever prevents a
perfect cohesion to this eternal Friend.
The question put by Jesus to the following
disciples, “What seek ye?” was the first
breath of the winnowing fan which the Baptist had warned
them the Messiah would use. It was not the gruff
interrogation of one who would not have his retirement
invaded, nor his own thoughts interrupted, but a kindly
invitation to open their minds to Him. It was
meant to help them to understand their own purposes,
and to ascertain what they expected in following Jesus.
“What seek ye?” Have you any object deeper
than mere curiosity? For Christ desires to be
followed intelligently, or not at all. At all
times He used the winnowing fan to blow away the chaff
of the great crowds that followed Him, and leave the
few immovably resolute souls. So many follow because
a crowd streams after Him and carries them with it;
so many follow because it is a fashion, and they have
no opinion of their own; so many follow experimentally,
and drop off at the first difficulty; so many follow
under misapprehension, and with mistaken expectations.
Some who came to Him with great expectations left
in shame and sorrow; some who thought to make use
of Him for party ends left Him in anger when they found
themselves unmasked; and one who thought skilfully
to use Him for the gratification of His own selfish
worldliness, discovered that there was no surer path
to eternal ruin. Christ turns away none for mere
slowness in apprehending what He is and what He does
for sinful men. But by this question He reminds
us that the vague and mysterious attraction which,
like a hidden magnet, draws men to Him, must be exchanged
for a clear understanding at least of what we ourselves
need and expect to receive from Him. He will
turn from none who, in response to His question, can
truly say, We seek God, we seek holiness, we seek service
with Thee, we seek Thyself.
The answer which these men returned
to the question of Jesus was the answer of men who
scarce knew their own minds, and were suddenly confused
by being thus addressed. They therefore reply,
as men thus confused commonly reply, by asking another
question, “Rabbi, where dwellest Thou?”
Their concern was about Him, and so far the answer
was good; but it implied that they were willing to
leave Him with only such information as might enable
them to visit Him at some future time, and so far
the answer was not the best. Still their shyness
was natural, and not without reason. They had
felt how the Baptist searched their soul, and of this
new Teacher the Baptist himself had said he was not
worthy to loose his sandal-thong. To find themselves
face to face with this greatest person, the Messiah,
was a trying experience indeed. The danger at
this point is hesitation. Many persons fail at
this point from a native reluctance to commit themselves,
to feel pledged, to accept permanent responsibilities
and bind themselves with indissoluble ties. They
are past the stage of merely keeping Christ in view,
but very little past it. The closer dealings
they have had with Him have as yet led to nothing.
Their fate hangs in the balance.
Out of this condition our Lord delivers
these two men by His irresistible invitation, “Come
and see.” And well for them it was that
He did so, for next day He left that part of the country,
and the mere knowledge of His lodging by the Jordan
would have availed them nothing; a warning to all
who put themselves off with learning more about salvation
before they accept it. An eagerness in acquiring
knowledge about Christ may as effectually as
any other pursuit retard us in making acquaintance
with Him. It is mere trifling to be always enquiring
about One who is Himself with us; the way to secure
that we shall have Him when we need Him is to go with
Him now. How can we expect our difficulties to
be removed while we do not adopt the one method God
recognises as effectual for this purpose, fellowship
with Christ? Why enquire longer about the way
of salvation, and where we may find it at a future
time? Christ offers His friendship now, “Come
with Me, now,” He says, “and for yourself
enter My dwelling as a welcome friend.”
Can the friendship of Christ do us harm, or retard
us in any good thing? May we not most reasonably
fear that hesitation now may put Christ beyond our
reach? We cannot tell what new influences may
enter our life and set an impassable gulf between
us and religion.
Sixty years after, when one of these
men wrote this Gospel, he remembered as if it had
been yesterday the very hour of the day when he followed
Jesus into His house. His whole life seemed to
date from that hour; as well it might, for what could
mark a human life more deeply and lift it more surely
to permanent altitude than an evening with Jesus?
They felt that at last they had found a Friend with
human sympathies and Divine intelligence. How
eagerly must these men who had of late been thinking
much of new problems, have laid all their difficulties
before this master-mind, that seemed at once to comprehend
all truth, and to appreciate the little obstacles
that staggered them. What boundless regions of
thought would His questions open up, and how entirely
new an aspect would life assume under the light He
shed upon it.
The astonished satisfaction they found
in their first intercourse with Christ is shown in
the bursting enthusiasm with which Andrew sought out
his brother Simon, and summarily announced, “We
have found the Christ.” That is how the
Gospel is propagated. The closer the tie, the
more emphatic the testimony. It is what brother
says to brother, husband to wife, parent to child,
friend to friend, far more than what preacher says
to hearer, that carries in it irresistible persuasive
power. When the truth of the utterance is vouched
for by the obvious gladness and purity of the life;
when the finding of the Christ is obviously as real
as the finding of a better situation and as satisfying
as promotion in life, then conviction will be carried
with the announcement. And he who, like Andrew,
can do little himself, may, by his simple testimony
and honest life, bring to Christ a Simon who may become
a conspicuous power for good. The mother whose
influence is confined to the four walls of her own
house may lodge Christian principle in the heart of
a son, who may give it currency in one form or other
to the remotest corner of the earth.
The language in which Andrew announced
to Simon his great fortune was simple, but, in Jewish
lips, most pregnant. “We have found the
Christ!” What his people had lived and longed
for through all past ages, “I have found”
and known. The perfect deliverance and joy which
God was to bring by dwelling with His people, this
at last had come. Taught to believe that all
evil and disappointment and thwarting were but temporary,
the Jew had waited for the true life of man a
life in the presence and favour and fellowship of
the Highest. This was to come in the Messiah,
and Andrew had found this. He had entered into
life all darkness and shadow were gone;
the light shone round him, making all things bright,
and piercing into eternity with clear radiance.
The words with which Jesus welcomes
Simon are remarkable: “Thou art Simon,
son of John: thou shalt be called Cephas.”
This greeting yields its meaning when we recall the
character of the person addressed. Simon was
hot-headed, impulsive, rash, unstable. When his
name was mentioned on the Lake of Galilee there rose
before the mind a man of generous nature, frank and
good-hearted, but a man whose uncertainty and hastiness
had brought him and his into many troubles, and with
whom, perhaps, it was well to have no very binding
connection in trade or in the family. What must
the thoughts of such a man have been when he was told
that the Messiah was present, and that the Messianic
kingdom was standing with open gates? Must he
not have felt that this might concern others, decent
steady men like Andrew, but not himself?
Must he not have felt that instead of being a strength
to the new kingdom he would prove a weakness?
Would not that happen now which so often before had
happened that any society he joined he was
sure to injure with his hasty tongue or rash hand?
Other men might enter the kingdom and serve it well,
but he must remain without.
Coming in this mood, he is greeted
with words which seem to say to him, I know the character
identified with the name “Simon, son of John;”
I know all you fear, all the remorseful thoughts that
possess you; I know how you wish now you were a man
like Andrew, and could offer yourself as a serviceable
subject of this new kingdom. But no! thou art
Simon; nothing can change that, and such as you are
you are welcome; but “thou shalt be called Rock,”
Peter. The men standing round, and knowing Simon
well, might turn away to hide a smile; but Simon knew
the Lord had found him, and uttered the very word
which could bind him for ever to Him. And the
event showed how true this appellation was. Simon
became Peter, bold to stand for the rest,
and beard the Sanhedrim. By believing that this
new King had a place for him in His kingdom, and could
give him a new character which should fit him for service,
he became a new man, strong where he had been weak,
helpful and no longer dangerous to the cause he loved.
Such are the encouragements with which
the King of men welcomes the diffident. He gives
men the consciousness that they are known; He begets
the consciousness that it is not with sin in the abstract
He takes to do, but with sinners He can name, and
whose weaknesses are known to Him. But He begets
this consciousness that we may trust Him when He gives
us assurance that a new character awaits us and a
serviceable place in His kingdom. He assures
the most despondent that for them also a useful life
is possible.
As Andrew, in the exuberant joy of
his discovery of the Messiah, had first imparted the
news to his own brother Simon, so Philip, when invited
by Jesus to accompany him to Galilee, sought to bring
with him his friend Nathanael Bartholomew (son of
Tolmai). This was one of the devout Jews who
had long been wondering who that mysterious Personage
should be of whom all the prophets had spoken, and
for whom the world waited that He might complete it.
The news that He was found seemed only too good to
be true. He had come too easily and unostentatiously,
and from so unlooked-for a quarter, “Can any
good come out of Nazareth?” Good men, as well
as others, have their narrow views and illiberal prejudices,
and mark off in their own minds as hopeless and barren
whole religions, sects, or countries out of which
God determines to bring that which is for the healing
of the nations. To rise above such prejudices
we must refuse to accept current rumours, traditional
opinions, proverbial or neat dicta which seem to settle
a matter; we must conscientiously examine for ourselves, as
Philip says, “Come and see.” He instinctively
knew how useless it was to reason with men about Christ’s
claims so long as they were not in His presence.
One look, one word from Himself will go further to
persuade a man of His majesty and love than all that
any one else can say. To make Christ known is
the best way to prove the truth of Christianity.
The shade of the fig-tree is the natural
summer-house or arbour under which Eastern families
delight to take their meals or their mid-day rest.
Nathanael had used the dense foliage of its large and
thick leaves as a screen behind which he found retirement
for devotional purposes. It is in such absolute
seclusion, retirement, and solitude that a man shows
his true self. It was here Nathanael had uttered
himself to his Father who seeth in secret; here he
had found liberty to pour out his true and deepest
cravings. His guilelessness had been proved by
his carrying into his retirement the same simple and
unreserved godliness he professed abroad. And
he is astonished to find that the eye of Jesus had
penetrated this leafy veil, and had been a witness
to his prayers and vows. He feels that he is
known best at the very point in which he had most
carefully contrived concealment, and he recognises
that no one is more likely to be the fulfiller of
his prayers than that same Person who has manifestly
been somehow present at them and heard them.
To the man of prayer a suitable promise
is given, as to the man of uncertain character a promise
fitting his need had come. Under his fig-tree
Nathanael had often been in sympathy with his forefather
Jacob in his great experience of God’s attentiveness
to prayer. When Jacob fled from home and country,
a criminal and outcast, he no doubt felt how completely
he had himself fallen into the pit he had digged.
Instead of the comforts of a well-provided household,
he had to lie down like a wild beast with nothing
between him and the earth, with nothing between him
and the sky, with nothing but an evil conscience to
speak to him, and no face near save the haunting faces
of those he had wronged. A more miserable, remorseful,
abandoned-looking creature rarely lay down to sleep;
but before he rose he had learned that God knew where
he was, and was with him; that on that spot which
he had chosen as a hiding, because no one could find
him, and scarcely his own dog track him to it, he was
waited for and met with a loving welcome by Him whom
he had chiefly wronged. He saw heaven opened,
and that from the lowest, most forlorn spot of earth
to the highest and brightest point of heaven there
is a close connection and an easy, friendly communication.
If Jesus, thought Nathanael, could reopen heaven in
that style, He would be worthy of the name of King
of Israel. But he is now to learn that He will
do far more; that henceforth it was to be no visionary
ladder, swept away by the dawn, which was to lead
up to heaven, but that in Jesus God Himself is permanently
made over to us; that He, in His one, visible person,
unites heaven and earth, God and man; that there is
an ever-living union between the highest height of
heaven and the lowest depth of earth. Profound
and wide as the humanity of Christ, to the most forgotten
and remote outcast, to the most sunken and despairing
of men, do God’s love and care and helpfulness
now come; high and glorious as the divinity of Christ
may the hopes of all men now rise. He who understands
the Incarnation of the Son of God has a surer ground
of faith, and a richer hope and a straighter access
to heaven, than if the ladder of Jacob stood at his
bed-head and God’s angels were ministering to
him.