So far in our series we’ve covered Peter and Andrew, and then James and John. Each of these apostles has given us, by their life, their failures and their faith, their questions and interactions with Jesus – much to ponder. We see ourselves in them, or at least aspects of ourselves. It’s surely no accident that Jesus chose these 12 different men from various walks of life, with various personalities and qualities, as his witnesses, messengers, and the foundation of the early church.
Today we come to another natural coupling of apostles: Phillip and Nathanael (Nathanael who is also called Bartholomew). While the synoptic Gospels pair a “Bar-Tholmai” or “Son of Tholmai” with Phillip, it is in John’s Gospel that we get, perhaps the “rest of the story”, and his first name, Nathanael, is used. An apparent friend of Phillip, as the story goes. But we’ll come back to him in a moment.
If I had to characterize Phillip, briefly, I might call him, “the bringer.” For on a couple of notable occasions, he was the one who brought other people to see Jesus. He brought Nathanael along, saying, “We have found him of whom Moses in the Law and also the prophets wrote, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph.” Nathanael said to him, “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?” Philip said to him, “Come and see.”
Phillip also brought the Gentiles who famously said, “Sir, we wish to see Jesus” John 12:20-21. That little phrase, “Sir, we wish to see Jesus” is often engraved on a plaque and affixed to the inside of the pulpit, so that the Christian preacher is reminded of his true purpose in preaching. We are not here to preach ourselves, but Christ crucified. We are not hear to bloviate or opine, but to bring people to Jesus. That you might see Jesus.
So Phillip stands as a reminder and example for us that when Jesus calls people to faith, he often uses a “bringer”. Someone like Phillip, to show you, point you to Christ.
Christian parents are bringers, as they literally bring their children to Jesus at the font of Baptism, and as they teach them the word and the faith. Teachers and pastors and good Christian friends can be “bringers”, too. And those who study these things tell us that most new people come to a church not because they randomly looked you up on the internet, but because someone brought them along – a friend, a family member.
And then Phillip also figures prominently in John’s telling of the feeding of the 5000:
When Jesus looked up and saw a great crowd coming toward him, he said to Philip, “Where shall we buy bread for these people to eat?”
He asked this only to test him, for he already had in mind what he was going to do.
Philip answered him, “It would take more than half a year’s wages to buy enough bread for each one to have a bite!”
It is interesting that Jesus asks Phillip, tests Phillip of all the 12. Where shall we buy bread for all these people? Phillip, had he passed the test, might have said, “I’ll just bring them to you, Jesus, like I always do. Only you can truly provide the bread that we all need.”
Oh, and then one more appearance of Philip – he asks Jesus at the Last Supper, “Show us the Father” John 14:8-21. Here we might see that Phillip the “bringer” needs to be “brought” by Jesus to the Father. Don’t we all? But if you know Jesus, you know the Father, as John’s Gospel brings out so clearly.
May Phillip inspire us to be grateful for those whom God has placed in our life who have brought us to Jesus.
So may Phillip remind us to take those opportunities, when we have them, to invite others to “come and see”. Come to my church. Come with me. And bring them along.
If Phillip the “Bringer” or the ambassador, then Nathanael is perhaps the skeptic. As a cynical member of Generation X, I can identify with this guy. Or perhaps we could go with the moniker Jesus gives Nathanael - the “True Israelite”
Most of what we can say about Nathanael (Bartholomew) comes from this reading, his calling, in John 1. Jesus praises him as a “true Israelite in whom there is nothing false”. Not that he was without sin, but perhaps that he was a) a true believer b) a “straight shooter”. He said what he thought, good or bad, right or wrong.
Like Peter, Thomas, and really all of the apostles, he both falters and shines. His famous rhetorical question of skepticism, “can anything good come from Nazareth?” is quickly answered by Jesus. With just a flash of apparent divine knowledge, Jesus convinces Nathanael enough that he is, in fact, the Christ.
Nathanael comes around quickly, from skepticism to faith. And he speaks that faith in a three-fold confession of Christ, “Rabbi, you are the Son of God; you are the king of Israel.”
He calls him Rabbi – his teacher. He calls him the Son of God, no small insight there. And he calls him the King of Israel. As with many of our confessions of faith, we often say the words before we appreciate their full weight and meaning. And Nathanael, with the other apostles, would spend the next several years learning just what he means by his confession, just who this Rabbai, this Son of God, this King of Israel really is.
Jesus accepts Nathanael’s confession, and then goes on to describe himself as Jacob’s Ladder, the very stairway to heaven. For a “true Israelite” who knew well his Old Testament, the message wouldn’t be lost on Nathanael.
This true Israelite who know well the first man named “Israel”, and the story of his vision. Jacob’s vision of that stairway was a comfort to him as he was about to go on the journey of his life. It was a reminder of God’s abiding presence with him, and his access to heaven itself by faith.
Jesus interprets, and clarifies. He, Jesus, is the ladder of Jacob, the stairway to heaven, the connection between man and God, the one who opens heaven to us, brings us to the Father, transfers us from the kingdom of darkness to the kingdom of light.
So Phillip the bringer meets Jesus who brings us to the Father. And Nathanael the true Israelite in whom there is nothing false meets the true Israel, the one who is the Way, the Truth and the Life.
May it also be so for us. Brought to Jesus, true to Jesus. Believing in and confessing Jesus, who brings us to the Father, not by our works, not even by a ladder or stairway, but by himself and his cross. Heaven and earth are brought together in him. Holy God and sinful man are brought together by his reconciling blood. And disciples are made. And Christians are sent and privileged to confess his truth and bring others to “come and see”. In Jesus’ Name. Amen.

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