Loved to the End: The Humility of Christ and the Call to Serve
Key Text: John 13:1–17 (NASB 1995); Romans 5:6–8; Hebrews 12:2
Introduction
- Scripture is deep enough that one passage can teach many lessons. John 13 is one of those chapters.
- Too often debates about foot washing distract from what Jesus is actually teaching.
- This scene takes place at the end of Jesus’ ministry, on the eve of the cross.
- Jesus is preparing His disciples for what life in His kingdom must look like.
- The central lesson: humble, self-giving love that serves to the end.
I. Jesus Loved His Own to the End (John 13:1)
“Having loved His own who were in the world, He loved them to the end.”
- A. The setting: Jesus knows His hour has come.
- He knows betrayal, denial, and the cross are near.
- Yet His love does not weaken when suffering approaches.
- B. His love is steadfast and enduring.
- He loves even with Judas at the table.
- He loves even those who will fail Him.
- C. The same love is shown to us.
- Romans 5:6–8 — Christ died for us while we were still sinners.
- His love is not based on our worthiness, but on His grace.
Callout — Encouragement:
Be thankful that Jesus’ love is not fragile. He does not quit on weak disciples or sinful people.
Callout — Warning:
Do not assume you understand Christ’s love if you are unwilling to love difficult people.
II. Jesus Endured Because He Had a Goal (John 13:3; Hebrews 12:2)
“Jesus, knowing that the Father had given all things into His hands, and that He had come forth from God and was going back to God…”
- A. Jesus knew where He came from and where He was going.
- From God, and going back to God.
- The cross was not the end; glory was.
- B. The goal made the suffering worth enduring.
- Hebrews 12:2 — He endured the cross for the joy set before Him.
- C. The same principle is true for us.
- Sacrifice makes sense when there is a clear goal.
- Without a goal, service feels pointless; with a goal, it becomes purposeful.
Illustration:
Athletes endure exhausting training because they have a prize in view. The goal makes the pain worthwhile.
Callout — Application:
Christians who forget heaven will struggle to endure hardship. Keep the goal in view.
III. Jesus Humbled Himself to Serve (John 13:4–5)
He laid aside His garments… took a towel… and began to wash the disciples’ feet.
- A. The shocking reversal.
- The Lord takes the place of the lowest servant.
- The One who deserves to be served chooses to serve.
- B. He even washed Judas’ feet.
- The betrayer is not excluded from this act of love.
- This is humility beyond measure.
- C. This matches the whole life of Jesus.
- He did not come to be served, but to serve.
- He consistently looked for ways to help others, not to be honored.
Callout — Rebuke:
We often look for ways to be served rather than ways to serve.
Callout — Application:
True greatness in Christ’s kingdom is found in humble service, not in status or recognition.
IV. Jesus Gave an Example to Follow (John 13:12–15)
“For I gave you an example that you also should do as I did to you.”
- A. The lesson is bigger than foot washing.
- The act points to a lifestyle of humility and service.
- The issue is not the ritual, but the heart.
- B. The principle: no servant is greater than his master (John 13:16).
- If Jesus served, His disciples must serve.
- C. The blessing is in doing, not just knowing (John 13:17).
- Knowledge without obedience is empty.
- Christ calls for imitation, not admiration only.
Callout — Warning:
It is possible to praise Jesus’ humility and still refuse to practice it.
Callout — Encouragement:
There is blessing in living like Christ, not merely talking about Him.
Conclusion / Call to Action
- Jesus loved to the end.
- Jesus served with humility.
- Jesus left us an example to follow.
- The question is personal and unavoidable:
- Do our lives resemble Jesus?
- Can people see Christ in how we act, speak, and serve?
- This week, measure your life by His example—and choose to serve.
“For I gave you an example that you also should do as I did to you.” (John 13:15, NASB 1995)
Final Call:
Do not just admire the Servant. Imitate Him.