10/17/2025
What are the works and miracles we do in the name of Jesus? Are they greater than those He was able to do, or by lacking are we a disappointment to ourselves, and God? To get to the root of this particular scripture we must explore our belief, understanding, and ability to pray effectively. And we must also look deeper into the wording of this passage of scripture… does it imply we will be more able than Christ was, or simply that we will carry on those things He was doing in His life to a new height?
“"Truly, truly, I say to you, whoever believes in me will also do the works that I do; and greater works than these will he do, because I am going to the Father.”
John 14:12 ESV
I have heard this scripture taught many times, and each time it was taught in the same manner... “Jesus says that we can not only do what He did, but we can do greater things than He did.” But, before we disappoint ourselves, let me give you an alternative view of this verse; one I think is more than valid.
Jesus first says that we must believe in Him, and that when we do we will do the works that he does. This goes back to not only believing that Jesus is the Messiah, but that He is the Son of God, and more than that... He is in God... doing the works of God.
“Do you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father is in me? The words that I say to you I do not speak on my own authority, but the Father who dwells in me does his works.”
John 14:10 ESV
Whoops!!!! You are probably saying to yourself... “That is a really different from how I pray for things to be! I ask for those things, those miracles that I desire! Are you telling me that I should pray for those things that God would want done in and through me?” And the answer to this question is “Yes!”
When we believe in Jesus we do more than just acknowledge his existence and who He is; we begin to change into Him, and this means that our own will diminishes and the will of God replaces it as the focus of our lives. Just as Jesus asked us to believe that He was in the Father, and the Father in Him... we need to ask ourselves if that is true of us as well.
So back to how we pray... when we pray we are reconciling our will with God’s. We tell Him how we would like things to be... “heal me Father”, and He tells us what His will is for us and asks us to join Him in it. What if, during our prayer for healing, His voice said “Not right now” or “That is not my plan for you”? What if, after praying until our sweat became drops of blood, God was adamant that we should not be healed? Could you say as Jesus did “Your will not mine be done” and then walk calmly in it?
This is what it means to believe in Jesus. It isn’t using our belief to do those things we desire, but rather, it is placing the Father’s will above our own, and doing those things that He wills. The man within Jesus would have gone straightway to Lazarus when He heard of his illness, but Jesus the Son of God did His Father’s will and waited two days... Lazarus died, and Jesus wept. Then, in the fullness of the Father’s will, Lazarus was raised from the dead for all to see.
Do we pray for our will to be done without consideration for God’s will, or do we ask God to consider our heart’s desire as He tells us of His will? Our Father wants to give us our heart’s desire, and if it isn’t contrary to His will then that is what will happen. The problem comes when we lose trust in the fact that God hears us, and that His will is ultimately working for our betterment and good. Sometimes we become so determined and rooted in our own will that our intransigence makes us unable to hear God’s voice in the matter, or keeps us from participating in His will altogether.
So, how do we pray? Do we believe in Jesus and know that He is in us and we in Him, or do we just know who He is? Until we can wait two days before going to Lazarus. Until we can weep at the death of our will and yet in our sorrow do God’s will instead. Then we really don’t believe... do we?
This leads us to the second part of this scripture, the part, we have been taught as meaning we can perform greater miracles than Jesus! What does this really mean? If Jesus raised one man from the dead I will be able to raise two? If Jesus returned the sight of one blind man I will be able to return the sight of many? The key to this isn’t in what I will do, but “He” will do. Read the scripture again and pay attention to Jesus’ words... “greater works than these will he do”.
If Jesus is in God and God is in Jesus, and if we are in Jesus and Jesus in us, then God will continue to work His miracles and will do so through us. This verse isn’t saying that we will be greater than Jesus, it is a promise that as Jesus goes to be with God He anoints us spirituality, and we continue where He left off. This is a promise that God’s work and His will are to continue as promised through us! God has greater things planned for us... not greater than Jesus... greater than what He has previously shown us. We serve a living God and He is active in us today... can you hear him? Can you feel Him? Can you accept His will when you are in prayer? Can you live and obey His will without wavering?
“He said to them, “It is not for you to know times or seasons that the Father has fixed by his own authority. But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth.”
Acts 1:7-8 ESV
Prayer:
Father, I thank you for your good and perfect will. I thank you for revealing your will to me as I kneel before you in prayer, and for my belief that your will is perfect and ultimately providing goodness, and what is best for me and others. Holy Father, I am limited in my vision, but you know the beginning from the end. I can see only as far as you allow me to safely see, but you Father can see every twist and turn of the road that lies before me. I trust in your will and ask that you strengthen me in my resolve to live within it. When your will is not mine, may it always supersede my own, and may I go willingly and joyfully into it. Help me Father to not only accept your will, but to be at peace in it. Help me to be quietly resolved and determined to stand before the Pontius Pilots in my life and live out your will without fear; comforted and cradled in your arms. Give me the faith to truly believe in Jesus Christ, and in so doing to join Him in You. Praised be your name Holy Father, and I pray that your will, not mine, be done.
Amen!
Rich Forbes