John 2:23-25
The question John is answering here is - if there were many who believed in Jesus right at the beginning, why did Jesus not there and then set up His standard and openly declare Himself?
The answer is that Jesus knew human nature only too well. He knew that there were many whose interest in Him would be short-lived. He knew that there were many who were attracted only by the sensational things He did. He knew that there were many who would have followed Him while He continued to produce miracles and wonders and signs, but who, if He had begun to talk to them about service and self-denial, if He had begun to talk to them about self-surrender to the will of God, if He had begun to talk to them about a cross and about carrying a cross, would have stared at Him with blank incomprehension and left Him on the spot.
It is a great characteristic of Jesus that He did not want followers unless they clearly knew and definitely accepted what was involved in following Him. He refused to cash in on a moment's popularity. If He had entrusted Himself to the mob in Jerusalem, they would have declared Him Messiah there and then and would have waited for the kind of material action they expected the Messiah to take. But Jesus was a leader who refused to ask anyone ever to accept Him until the full implications of that acceptance were understood. He insisted that people should know what they were doing.
Jesus knew human nature. He knew the fickleness and instability of human hearts. He knew that people can be swept away in a moment of emotion, and then back out when they discover what decision really means. He knew how human nature hungers for the spectacular. He wanted not a crowd cheering they knew not what, but a small company who knew what they were doing and who were prepared to follow to the end.
~William Barclay~
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