“Let Not Your Heart Be Troubled”
      
      
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        “Believe Me that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me: or else
      
      
        believe Me for the very works’ sake.” Their faith might safely rest on
      
      
        the evidence given in Christ’s works, works that no man, of himself,
      
      
        ever had done, or ever could do. Christ’s work testified to His divinity.
      
      
        Through Him the Father had been revealed.
      
      
        If the disciples believed this vital connection between the Father
      
      
        and the Son, their faith would not forsake them when they saw Christ’s
      
      
        suffering and death to save a perishing world. Christ was seeking
      
      
        to lead them from their low condition of faith to the experience they
      
      
        might receive if they truly realized what He was,—God in human flesh.
      
      
        He desired them to see that their faith must lead up to God, and be
      
      
        anchored there. How earnestly and perseveringly our compassionate
      
      
        Saviour sought to prepare His disciples for the storm of temptation
      
      
        that was soon to beat upon them. He would have them hid with Him
      
      
        in God.
      
      
        As Christ was speaking these words, the glory of God was shining
      
      
        from His countenance, and all present felt a sacred awe as they listened
      
      
        with rapt attention to His words. Their hearts were more decidedly
      
      
        drawn to Him; and as they were drawn to Christ in greater love, they
      
      
        were drawn to one another. They felt that heaven was very near, and
      
      
        that the words to which they listened were a message to them from
      
      
        their heavenly Father.
      
      
        “Verily, verily, I say unto you,” Christ continued, “He that believeth
      
      
        on Me, the works that I do shall he do also.” The Saviour was deeply
      
      
        anxious for His disciples to understand for what purpose His divinity
      
      
        was united to humanity. He came to the world to display the glory
      
      
        of God, that man might be uplifted by its restoring power. God was
      
      
        manifested in Him that He might be manifested in them. Jesus revealed
      
      
        no qualities, and exercised no powers, that men may not have through
      
      
        faith in Him. His perfect humanity is that which all His followers may
      
      
        possess, if they will be in subjection to God as He was.
      
      
        “And greater works than these shall he do; because I go unto My
      
      
        Father.” By this Christ did not mean that the disciples’ work would
      
      
        be of a more exalted character than His, but that it would have greater
      
      
        extent. He did not refer merely to miracle working, but to all that
      
      
        would take place under the working of the Holy Spirit.
      
      
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        After the Lord’s ascension, the disciples realized the fulfillment of
      
      
        His promise. The scenes of the crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension