Jubilee Life Coach: Daily Meditations
Jubilee Life Coach: Daily Meditations is a Christ-centered podcast for those who want to follow Jesus not only in belief, but in daily life.
The word Jubilee comes from the biblical Year of Jubilee, a time of release, restoration, and freedom from debt. In the fullest sense, Jesus Christ is our true Jubilee. In him, we are forgiven, set free from the debt of sin, and welcomed into the joy of God’s kingdom.
To be Christian is to be more than religious. It is to be a disciple of Jesus Christ the King—to belong to him, to listen to his voice, and to follow him with trust, love, and obedience.
Life is not merely about surviving the day or chasing success on earth. In Christ, we are called to live as citizens of heaven here and now. That means learning to walk in his presence, reflect his character, and bear witness to his kingship in the ordinary moments of everyday life.
Coaching here means a Christ-centered and gospel-driven way of helping believers grow in sanctification and spiritual fruitfulness. It is about encouragement, wisdom, reflection, and practical guidance for living faithfully before God. Not self-help, but Spirit-dependent growth. Not mere inspiration, but transformation in Christ.
Through these daily meditations, you will be invited to slow down, reflect on Scripture, fix your eyes on Jesus, and learn to live with greater freedom, faith, and joy in him.
Jubilee Life Coach: Daily Meditations
John 17:1-16
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Summary
John 17 lets us hear the prayer of Jesus on the night before the cross. He lifts up His eyes to heaven and says, “Father, the hour has come; glorify your Son that the Son may glorify you” (v. 1). The cross is now before Him. But Jesus does not speak as one defeated. He speaks as the Son who knows that through the cross the Father will be glorified and salvation will be accomplished.
Then Jesus gives one of the clearest definitions of eternal life in all of Scripture: “And this is eternal life, that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent” (v. 3). Eternal life is not merely unending existence. It is to know God through His Son.
Jesus then turns His attention to His disciples. He says, “I have manifested your name to the people whom you gave me out of the world” (v. 6). They belong to the Father, and the Father has given them to the Son. Jesus has given them the Father’s word, and because of that, the world now hates them. Still, Jesus does not ask that they be taken out of the world. He prays, “Holy Father, keep them in your name” (v. 11), and again, “I do not ask that you take them out of the world, but that you keep them from the evil one” (v. 15).
Meditation
I am amazed that one truth stands at the center of this passage: Our Lord loves His people and will do everything He can to keep them. I am consoled and comforted by that fact. On the night before His suffering, Jesus prays for His disciples. They will fail. They will scatter. Peter will deny Christ. God knows, and Jesus is already interceding for them. He says,
“I have guarded them” (v. 12).
And now He asks the Father to keep them- not because they are faithful but precisely because they are weak and frail. Their future does not depend on their grip on Christ, but on His grip on them.
That is still our comfort today. We live hurried lives. Our minds are scattered. Our hearts often deny Christ. Often, we measure our security by the strength of our devotion, the clarity of our thoughts, or the consistency of our prayers. But Jesus points us somewhere deeper. He says that His people are those whom the Father has given Him. He has made the Father known to them. He has given them the Father’s word. And now He prays for their preservation.
This is why the Christian life is not first about escaping the world, but being kept by God in the middle of it. Jesus says,
“They are not of the world, just as I am not of the world” (v. 14).
And yet He does not ask that they be removed from the world. He asks that they be kept in it. So that we may live as the salt and light. We are to be witnesses of Jesus and live as disciples of Christ. That means our hope is not that life will become easy, but that Christ will hold us fast in the midst of it.
Prayer
Heavenly Father, thank you that our hope rests not in our strength, but in you. Thank you that Christ has made your name known to us, given us your word, and prayed for us. Keep us in your name. Guard us from the evil one. Help us to live in this world as those who belong to Christ. In the name of Jesus Christ, we pray. Amen.
John chapter 17 lets us hear the prayer of Jesus on the night before the cross. He lifts up his eyes to heaven and says, Father, the hour has come. Glorify your Son that the Son may glorify you. Verse 1. Now the cross is now before him, but Jesus does not speak as one defeated. He speaks as the Son who knows that through the cross the Father will be glorified and salvation will be accomplished. Then Jesus gives one of the clearest definitions of eternal life in all of Scripture, and this is eternal life, and they know you, the only true God and Jesus Christ whom you have sent. Eternal life is not merely unending existence, it is to know God through his Son. Jesus then turns his attention to his disciples. He says, I have manifested your name to the people whom you gave me out of the world. Jesus has given them the Father's word, and because of that the world now hates them. Still, Jesus does not ask that they be taken out of the world. He instead prays, Holy Father, keep them in your name, verse eleven. And again, I do not ask that you take them out of this world, but that you keep them from the evil one. I'm amazed that one truth stands at the center of this passage. Our Lord loves his people and will do everything he can do to keep them. I'm consoled and comforted by that fact. On the night before his suffering, Jesus prays for his disciples. They will fail, they will scatter, Peter will deny Christ. God knows, and Jesus is already interceding for them. He says twelve, I have guarded them. And now he asks the Father to keep them, not because they are faithful, but precisely because they are weak and frail. Their future does not depend on their grip on Christ, but on his grip on them. That is still our comfort today. We live hurried lives, our minds are scattered, our hearts often deny Christ. Often we measure our security by the strength of our devotion, the clarity of our thoughts, or the consistency of our prayers. But Jesus points us somewhere deeper. He says that his people are those whom the Father has given him. He has made the Father known to them. He has given them the Father's Word, and now He prays for their preservation. This is why the Christian life is not first about escaping the world, but being kept by God in the middle of it. Jesus says in verse fourteen, they are not of the world, just as I am not of the world. And yet he does not ask that they be removed from the world. He asks that they be kept in it, so that we may be the salt and the light, that we may be the witnesses of Jesus Christ. And that means our hope is not that life will become easy, but that Christ will hold us fast in the midst of it, as we as we live this day as disciples of Christ Jesus, looking forward to the day of the Lord. May God be with us. Let's pray. Heavenly Father, I thank you that our hope rests not in our strength, but in you. Thank you that Christ has made your name known to us, given us your word, and prayed for us. Keep us in your name. Guard us from the evil one. Help us to live in this world as those who belong to Christ. In the name of Jesus Christ we pray. Amen.