Introduction
We come now to the final events in Jesus’ first coming—His  arrest, His trial(s), His crucifixion, and His resurrection. All four gospels spend a disproportionate  amount of space to these events (John devotes almost 20%) in order to emphasize  that this is the most important part of Jesus’ life.
This morning we look at John’s eye-witness account of Jesus’  arrest(read 18:1-11a). Most people  (including many Christians) view Jesus’ arrest as the outcome of Him being outwitted  by Judas (18:2), or of being overtaken by superior forces (18:3), or of just being  in the wrong place at the wrong time.  But John gives a very different explanation.
  Jesus was not outwitted. He knew what was coming (18:4;  13:21ff.), so He could have easily eluded this “trap” as He had done many times  previously. He deliberately went to the  garden because He knew Judas would bring the soldiers there.
  Jesus was not taken  against His will by superior forces. He  “went forth” (18:4; exerchomai) to  meet them rather than hiding or running away or just standing there. He could have easily overwhelmed them (18:6; imagine  how gingerly the soldiers arrested Him; see also Matt.26:53,54). He rejected Peter’s attempts to resist  (18:10,11a; eye-witness account [“the slave’s name was Malchus”]; Jesus heals  Malchus [Lk.22:51]). Rather, Jesus  allowed Himself to be taken. 
  Why did Jesus do this?  Not because He was a sick masochist (“I love the pain and the shame”),  or because He was a resigned fatalist (“I’m trapped in the bad karma from my  previous life”). Jesus tells us why (read  18:11b). He did it because the Father  asked Him to “drink this cup,” and because He freely chose to drink it. “Cup” is obviously used here in a figurative  sense and is connected to His arrest.  What was this “cup,” and why did Jesus’ Father ask Him to drink it?
The “cup”
Whatever it was, Jesus was deeply distressed about the prospect  of drinking it (quote Matt.26:38; Lk.22:44), and He prayed three  times to avoid drinking it if at all possible (Matt.26:42-44).
  Most people assume Jesus was referring to the terrible  mistreatment by people to which His arrest would lead—being betrayed and  abandoned by His disciples, and the three humiliating and unjust trials, and  the terrible scourging, and the “excruciating” agony of crucifixion. 
  These things may have been part of the “cup”—but they were  definitely not the main part. The “cup”  was an Old Testament term referring to experiencing God’s wrath (read Isa.51:17;  Jer.25:15; 49:12). This was the  “cup”—that Jesus who never sinned, who was completely righteous, who had always  been in perfect loving communion with the Father—was being asked to experience not  only the withdrawal of His Father’s love, but also the outpouring of His wrath.
Why would the Father ask Jesus to drink this “cup?” And why would Jesus voluntarily drink  it? There is no rational way to react  neutrally to 18:11. Either the God of the Bible is a sadistic monster and/or Jesus is a  pathetic masochist, or there is some  problem so desperate that only this drastic measure can rectify it (e.g., E.R.  DOCTOR’S MEASURES WITH CARDIAC ARREST PATIENT).  The Bible insists that it is the latter rather than the former. The desperate problem is in us, and the  drastic measure required to rectify it was Jesus drinking the “cup.”
  Our desperate problem is our sin—our true moral guilt before  God because our rebellion against Him.  If think of sin at all, we tend to think of it horizontally—hurting  another human being. But sin is always  primarily vertical—cosmic treason against God who is infinitely righteous and  the rightful Ruler of our lives. We  think of sin superficially—doing something that hurts another human. But sin is every decision in our dark hearts  to ignore God, to live for ourselves rather than to love God and live for His  glory. We think of the consequences of  sin as psychological and sociological—feeling guilty, or hurting another  person’s feelings, or losing a relationship, or even going to jail. But the main consequence of sin is God’s righteous  wrath and condemnation (quote Rom.2:5).
  We are aghast that God would judge nice people like us, which  only shows how little we understand of what God is like and how sinful we are. The angels (who see God and us more clearly) are  also aghast—but they are aghast that the God doesn’t judge us the moment we sin. They are aghast that He would be so  forbearing with us. Most of all, they  are aghast that He would be willing to judge His Son for us, and that His Son  would voluntarily receive His Father’s judgment for us! This is the “cup” that the Father gave His  Son to drink, the “cup” that the Son chose drink—for us (read Gal.3:13),  because there is no other way a  righteous God can forgive and accept sinful people who deserve His judgment. 
  Seen this way, the “cup” is the ultimate expression of God’s love (read Jn.3:16). Our situation is desperate; we deserve to  perish under God’s judgment because of our sin.  But God is His love wants to spare us from His judgment, so He took the  ultimate drastic measure—He gave His Son to bear our judgment, to drink the  “cup” for us. Because Jesus “drank our  cup,” we can forever escape the “cup” of God’s judgment and be guaranteed of  eternal life with God. The only  condition is that we believe, that we entrust ourselves to Jesus as the One who  drank our “cup.” It is a wonderful thing  to make this decision. It is a wonderful  thing to know that you are completely exempt from God’s judgment, complete  secure in God’s love. Have you made this  decision?
Now we understand why Jesus allowed Himself to be  arrested. Now let’s consider what else  we can learn from this event His arrest once we have believed in Him...
Responding victoriously to adversity
Jesus shows us here how to respond victoriously to adversity. He went through this ordeal with His eyes  wide open to its pain and difficulty, yet He did so with confidence and with  hope. How did He do this? Most Christians say (consciously or  subconsciously): “He could do this because He was God—but I am not God, so it  is not possible for me to do this.” But  the Bible gives a very different answer to this question.
  It affirms that Jesus was God, but it insists that He was God-incarnate  (DEFINE), and that He went through this He as a human. He did not use His “God powers” to endure this ordeal any more than He used  them to avoid it.
  Rather, He trusted His Father to uphold Him through this ordeal  (16:32). More specifically, He responded  victoriously because of what He “knew” from His Father. Three different times in this context John notes  what Jesus “knew” (show “knowing” in (18:4; 13:1,3). This “knowing” means that He understood certain  predictions and promises made to Him in the Old Testament, and that He trusted  this knowledge over contrary voices, thoughts and feelings. 
  The implication is that we can respond victoriously to  adversity if we know and trust the predictions and promises God makes to us. This is why Paul says that in the midst of  terrible adversity we can “overwhelmingly conquer” through Christ (quote Rom.8:37).
What did Jesus “know?”  John refers to three things:
  First, Jesus knew “all the things that were coming upon Him” (18:4). Many passages in the Old Testament (like  Isa.42,49,50,53) predicted the sufferings that would come upon Him. Knowing beforehand that these sufferings were  coming helped Him to endure them. 
  
    We know the same thing. We  may not know what specific adversities are coming our way, God has told us that  they are coming for all who follow Jesus.  Not just the normal adversities of living in a fallen world, but  additional adversities from living in a spiritually hostile world. Virtually every New Testament book makes this  prediction (refer to Jn. 15:18-20; 16:33; Acts14:22;  2Tim.3:12; 1Pet.4:1).  This knowledge is not meant to scare or depress us; it is meant to arm  us (quote 1Pet.4:12)!  “Forewarned is forearmed.” We  don’t have to be like our culture, which naively expects life to be basically  free of adversity. Then, when adversity  strikes, the blow is harder because they didn’t expect it. Sadly, many Christians react this way. But when we know what God predicts, we expect  adversity, and this knowledge is a crucial part of responding victoriously to  it when it comes. But it is not  enough. By itself, this could lead only  to stoicism or even cynicism. We also  need to know what God promises us during adversity...
  
  Second, Jesus knew that “the Father had given all things into  His hands” (13:3). This doesn’t mean  that He was authorized to use His “God powers” to avoid arrest, trial,  scourging and crucifixion. It means that  the Father promised to sovereignly work through these events to accomplish His  plan to make Jesus the Savior of the world.  No one and nothing could stop the Father from doing this. This is the greatest irony in history: Jesus’  enemies (including Satan) did their utmost here to defeat God’s plan, but God  worked through their very opposition to accomplish His plan! Jesus knew this promise (paraphrase  Isa.52:14,15), and His trust in it enabled Him to respond not as a victim  but as a Victor.
  
    We know the same thing. Though  our adversities don’t forgive people’s sins, God is still sovereign over all of them and He promises to work  through all of them to accomplish His  plan for us (i.e., make us more like Christ) and through us (i.e., advance the  gospel) – read Rom.8:28. No one  and nothing can stop God from doing this!  So we can say with Joseph” You meant it for evil, but God meant it for  good” (Gen.50:20). Because of this  promise, we need never be victims. But  there is more...
  
  Thirdly, Jesus knew that “He had come forth from the Father and  that He was going back to the Father” (13:1,3).  The Old Testament promised that after He drank the cup, He would be back  in the Father’s presence, exalted forever (paraphrase Isa.53:10). Because He knew and trusted this promise,  “for the joy set before Him, He  endured the cross, despising the shame” (Heb.12:2). This strengthened Him against despair so that  he endured this ordeal with hope.
  
    We know the same thing. Though  we are not returning to the Father, we know that we are going to the  Father. We know that after our  adversities we will come into the Father’s presence forever. And as we focus on this promise and trust it,  it cuts our adversities down to size (Rom.8:17,18). Like a mother in labor, we don’t enjoy our  sufferings—but because we know that every suffering brings us closer to this  “birth,” we do not despair and persevere in hope (Rom.8:22,25).
  
How are you responding to the adversity in your life  (EXAMPLES)? Are you shocked, or are you  ready? Do you view yourself as a victim,  or are you confident in the hands of your Father? Are you hopeless, or are you “in labor?” Your answer will tell you about what “knowledge”  you’re operating on. You can learn what  Jesus “knew,” and you can focus on it and trust it like Jesus did. And as you do this, He will enable you through  this “knowledge” to respond victoriously!
Conclusion
SUMMARIZE the thesis and the above three things we know.
DISCUSSION: How can we  help one another stay focused on this knowledge?