Simon Peter then, having a sword, drew it and struck the high priest’s slave, and cut off his right ear; and the slave’s name was Malchus. So Jesus said to Peter, “Put the sword into the sheath; the cup which the Father has given Me, shall I not drink it?” (John 18:10-11).
As we study the scriptures and follow the life that Jesus lived here on Earth, we not only get to see the sinless life that he lived, but it is evident that His desires were always perfectly aligned with the will of the Father.
In John chapter 18 we see the scene where Judas has betrayed Jesus and brought Roman soldiers to come and arrest Him. Jesus is confronted by the Roman soldiers and tells them exactly who He was. This is what needed to happen in order to fulfill the word which had been prophesied before Him and Jesus knew that. Peter, however, had another plan in mind. Understandably, Peter loved Jesus and did not want Him to be arrested so he drew a sword and cut of the ear of one of the Roman soldiers. Jesus immediately tell Peter to put His sword away and says to him, “the cup which the Father has given Me, shall I not drink it?”
Jesus understood something that many of those who follow Him have a difficult time fully grasping. The Father’s will is going to be accomplished regardless of what we do and our desire should be that it would be accomplished regardless of how we feel about the process. Jesus’ situation is unique obviously because He is one with the Father, so ultimately His will and the Father’s will is the same. However, do we not have the one true son of God living in all of us as His followers? Should not we seek to drink the cup that the Father has given us? I do not simply mean the knowledge we have that Jesus has the ultimate victory and that we will be in heaven with Him one day where He is glorified forever, but I mean that we should seek to drink the cup that He gives us in every moment of our lives.
In Peter’s case, we can see that he does not want Jesus to be taken so he takes matters into his own hands. I think that we often do the same thing, possibly without even realizing it. God has a unique plan that he is using us to work out. He does not need us, but He wants us! However, it seems that many times we are, as many American’s would say, “dealt a certain hand” that we would rather not have been dealt. Instead of seeking the Father in how he might be using this circumstance for His will, we may try to react in our own “wisdom” or seek Him for an outcome that is, without a second thought, our own desire. It may be difficult and we may be tempted with many different emotions challenging us to crave the outcome we desire. This is why it is so important for us to seek the Father’s will through the Holy Spirit. Through the seeking of the Holy Spirit’s guidance in our lives, our minds can be renewed and we begin to realize more readily what the Father’s will is for us and our circumstances. He truly loves us and the things that He is working out in our lives are truly for our own good (Romans 8:28). Let us always seek the will of the Father!
