If you had been living in the time of Jesus, do you think you would have felt 
worthy to be called as one of His disciples? The honest truth is that those 
twelve men were not outstanding personalities, at least most were not. Only 
three or four give evidence of gifts of leadership. In fact they were not 
called to be "leaders." They were called to be witnesses. And it doesn't take a 
great personality to be a witness!
Among the three or four who were leaders is John. When we read his sweet, 
gentle, gracious three letters written near the end of his life, we can't 
imagine what he was like at first. We read that at first he was harsh, 
boisterous, ambitious, combative, critical, impetuous, outspoken, proud, 
resentful, revengeful, self-assertive, violent in spirit. (Where did I get 
those phrases? All in the Index!). That's the kind of man that John was when 
the Lord invited him to leave his fishing business and follow Him in that 
special 3-year "university training" course.

Some four or five times in his Gospel, John speaks of himself as "the disciple 
whom Jesus loved" (13:23; 19:26; 20:2; 21:20). Sounds strange. Was he boasting, 
telling everybody that he (John) was sort of "teacher's pet"? If so, how do you 
think the other disciples felt? Didn't Jesus love them too? (Of course they may 
all have been dead by the time John wrote his Gospel; but that wouldn't forgive 
his apparent arrogance.)

This had bothered me a long time. Then I remembered: the word John used when he 
said Jesus loved him was agape; and agape is the kind of love that loves bad 
people, ugly people, arrogant, harsh, rude, violent people. I think John may be 
saying, "Folks, the agape of Jesus singled me out simply because I was the most 
violent, harsh, combative, unworthy of the lot! No, he was not being proud when 
he said, speaking even after the resurrection, that he was the disciple whom 
Jesus especially loved. He meant that he was the one who needed that love the 
most! And look what it did to him. Receive that love yourself--that's all you 
can do and that's all that John did.

--Robert J. Wieland

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