John 18:4–11
Beloved,
there is a moment in the garden of Gethsemane that we often rush past — a moment that shines a bright light on how deeply people misunderstood Jesus, and how determined He was to correct that misunderstanding, even in His final hours. The soldiers come with lanterns and weapons, expecting trouble, expecting a chase, expecting resistance. And why? Because in their minds, shaped by the stories and hopes of centuries, the Messiah was supposed to be untouchable. A conqueror. Invincible. Surrounded by fire from heaven, defended by angels, protected by the glory of God.
But the Jesus they meet in the garden is doing something entirely different.
Scripture tells us that when they ask for Jesus of Nazareth, He steps forward and says, “I am he.” And at that moment the soldiers draw back and fall to the ground. Many have imagined a surge of divine power knocking them over. But notice: Jesus doesn’t act shocked, nor does He use the moment to escape, nor does He announce a miracle. He simply asks again, “Whom do you seek?” He stands there calmly as they pick themselves up from the dirt.
What, then, caused them to recoil?
The shield, dear friends, was not around Jesus — it was inside them. It was the shield of their own expectations. They had heard the rumors. They had heard the whispers that this Jesus might be the One, the long-awaited Deliverer. And in the minds of many, the Messiah was a figure you do not lay hands on. A figure who cannot be touched. A figure who, if provoked, calls down heavens and armies and judgment.
Jesus shatters that shield with a few simple actions.
He identifies Himself — not in glory, not in threat, but in humility. He offers no resistance. He pleads, not for His own safety, but for the safety of His disciples. He stands as a man prepared to be taken, prepared to walk the road of suffering, prepared to accept the cup the Father has given Him.
This is not the Messiah the soldiers were expecting.
This is not the Messiah the disciples were expecting.
This is not even the Messiah the religious leaders were expecting.
But this is the Messiah God sent.
And Peter’s desperate lunge with the sword only proves it further. The so-called defenders of Jesus are clumsy and untrained; the Messiah of human imagination would have legions, strategy, and invincible force. But Jesus rebukes Peter and says, “Put your sword away. Shall I not drink the cup the Father has given me?” The disciples imagine glory. Jesus embraces surrender. They imagine victory. Jesus walks into vulnerability. They imagine a kingdom won by force. Jesus brings a kingdom established by sacrifice.
So what does this teach us today?
It confronts us with a truth we often avoid:
God’s strength does not always look like our strength. God’s victory does not always look like our victory. God’s Messiah does not always look like the hero we imagine.
We want a Christ who storms our problems, crushes our enemies, and keeps us safe from suffering. But Jesus reveals a Messiah who steps into suffering, who allows Himself to be touched, bound, and led away — not because He is powerless, but because He chooses the path that will redeem the world.
And this is the astonishing heart of the Gospel:
The greatest power God ever showed was not in preventing suffering, but in entering it.
Not in calling down angels, but in refusing to.
Not in escaping death, but in conquering it from within.
In the garden, Jesus stands before armed men and shows us the strength of surrender, the courage of obedience, and the love that freely yields itself for the salvation of others. He reveals a Messiah not shaped by our fears or fantasies, but by the heart of God — a Messiah who conquers not by avoiding the cross, but by carrying it.
So when your life confronts you with moments where God does not act the way you expected… when prayers aren’t answered in the way you imagined… when the path ahead involves vulnerability, sacrifice, or pain… remember the garden.
Remember the Messiah who refused to be untouchable.
Remember the Savior who allowed Himself to be taken.
Remember the One who broke every false expectation so that the world could finally see what true divine love looks like.
And may we follow Him, not into the safety we imagine, but into the courage, humility, and obedience He lived — trusting that the cup given by the Father is the cup that leads, in the end, to resurrection.
Amen.