Christ’s Intercessory Prayer

by | Posted July 17th at 7:45am

Staying in God’s presence is not merely a psychological state of mind; it is the lived reality of Jesus’ petition in John 17. In this prayer, Jesus acts as the “Bridge” that allows a human being to dwell in the presence of a holy God.

To understand how “staying in His presence” relates to this prayer, we have to look at three specific themes Jesus emphasizes: Union, Protection, and Truth.

1. The Geometry of Presence: “In” as a Location

In John 17, Jesus uses the preposition “in” repeatedly. He prays that the believers may be “in us” (John 17:21).

2. Sanctification by Truth (The “Atmosphere” of Presence)

Jesus prays, “Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth” (John 17:17).

3. Protection from the “Evil One”

Jesus specifically asks the Father not to take us out of the world, but to “keep them from the evil one” (John 17:15).

4. The Goal: Beholding Glory

The climax of John 17 is verse 24: “Father, I desire that they also, whom you have given me, may be with me where I am, to see my glory.” John 17:24

Summary: Christ’s Intercessory Prayer

Staying in God’s presence is the active human response to the passive divine protection Jesus prayed for.

Jesus Prays (John 17) Our Response (Staying in Presence)
“Keep them in your name.” Trusting in God’s character and authority.
“That they may be one.” Maintaining the “unity of the Spirit” in the Body.
“Sanctify them in truth.” Renewing the mind and rejecting the world’s lies.
“That they may see my glory.” Consciously fixing our gaze on Christ throughout the day.

In essence, you don’t “create” God’s presence; you enter the presence that Jesus already demanded for you in John 17. The Spirit (Romans 8:28) then acts as the “inner witness” that confirms you are exactly where Jesus prayed you would be.


Article posted by Glen R. Jackman, founder of GraceProclaimed.org

Glen has optimized his eldership role to teach the full scope of the New Covenant of Jesus Christ without boundaries.
You can read his testimony.