Many years ago I used to work in downtown Chicago. Since I lived in one of the city’s many suburbs, I would take a commuter train to and from work. When I would leave work to return home, I would go to the massive train station where numerous trains were lined up on dozens of tracks. It was very important that I would get on the correct train. If I didn’t, I would end up miles from where I wanted to be. The trains looked very similar, but only one was the correct train. The same would be if I were to take a bus home. Only the correct bus would get me to my destination. Contrary to the popular saying that all roads lead to heaven, there is only one way to heaven. As we look into our Gospel passage today, we will see what that one way is.
Our Scripture is part of the Upper Room discourse, a series of final teachings that the Lord gave His disciples on the night that He was betrayed. The disciples were rather shaken at this time, as Jesus had just predicted His betrayal (John 13:21), Judas had abruptly left, Peter was told that he would deny Jesus, and He said that He was going away. Jesus proceeded to comfort the troubled disciples by revealing three foundational truths - He is preparing a real place for believers, He is the exclusive way to the Father, and He is the full revelation of the Father because He is truly God.
Jesus begins by telling us to not be troubled, agitated or shaken by what is happening in the world (vs. 1). When circumstances shake us, Jesus calls us to trust His character, not our understanding. Here He places faith in Himself on the same level as faith in God, an implicit claim to deity.
Next He gives us one of the most comforting promises in the Bible (vs. 2-3). Jesus promises His believers that He has prepared a place for them in heaven. Heaven is not a vague spiritual state. It is a prepared, permanent home for us, a real place, not just something symbolic. Jesus has a place prepared for each one of us in heaven. Our home here on earth might be quite humble, it may not be secure from month to month, it may have leaks and be drafty, too hot or too cold. However, we can trust that the place that Jesus has for us will be perfect for us. Jesus gave this promise and we can believe it, and wait confidently for that day.
Jesus said that we would know the way to where He was going. Thomas then asked Him a question, that if we didn’t know where He was going, how could we know the way (vs. 4-5). He wasn’t doubting, but seeking clarity. His question set the stage for one of the most important statements that Jesus ever made. He clearly stated that He is the way, the truth, and the life, and that no one can come to God except through Him (vs. 6). This is exclusive - there is no other path that leads to God. Jesus doesn’t just show us the way, He is the way. Salvation is through Jesus alone, by grace alone, through faith alone. No other religion or faith can give us a valid path to truth or salvation. Jesus is the only way.
Every major religion claims it is the only way, but only one can be right. Absolute truth is absolute. When religious truths conflict with each other, only one can be correct. Even a cursory study of the various religions show that the Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu, and various pagan gods are different in character and purpose. We are not all worshiping the same God. These other religions are taking their members in a completely different, and wrong direction, rather than to heaven. Only Jesus will get us to heaven. Jesus took our place for the punishment of sin by suffering and dying on the cross so that we can have eternal life. Apart from Jesus and His saving work on the cross there is no way home to God. Look to the cross, and it will lead you home to God.
Philip then asked Jesus to show them the Father. The Savior responded that those who see Him have seen the Father (vs. 7-9). Jesus is not merely a representative of God, He is God in the flesh (John 1:1, 14; Colossians 1:15). Jesus is the visible expression of the invisible God. If we want to understand God’s heart, look at Jesus. Everything that He did was an exact representation of His Father.
The last verses of this passage show the unity of the Father and the Son (vs. 10-11). Jesus’ words are the Father’s words. His works are the Father’s works. God the Father is in Jesus, and He is in the Father. They share the same divine nature.
In closing we see one of the clearest affirmations that Jesus is fully God. They share one divine essence while remaining distinct Persons. We also read the truth that salvation is exclusively through Jesus. There is no other way. When our heart is troubled, we need to anchor our faith in Jesus’ character. We can be comforted with His promises of His peace, especially knowing that He has a place prepared personally for us in heaven.