He Goes to Prepare the Earth for Us. A Biblical Theological Exploration of John 14

March 21, 2025 Pastor Chris Oswald
Thesis Jesus's preparation of a place for us in John 14 is not merely about remodeling heaven but about reigning at the Father's right hand to prepare the earth for eternal habitation by converting his enemies and ultimately renewing creation itself.
Series
Type
Expository
Tone
Method
What's in this sermon

The shape of the argument

59 units across exposition, application, illustration, theological claim, and conclusion. The pastor's argument is built from these moving parts.

Pastoral correction · unit #44
"Oswald applies the lesson: don't introspect over unanswered prayer. Instead, pray the agenda. God refused Paul's request not because of Paul's failure but because the thorn served God's purposes. This is the key to understanding John 14's prayer promise."
Doctrinal loci· 11 surfaced
Eschatology · 24 Christology · 16 Soteriology · 12 Pneumatology · 9 Ecclesiology · 8 Bibliology · 3 Pastoral Theology · 3 Providence / Sovereignty · 3 Theology Proper · 3 Anthropology · 2 Sanctification · 1
Bible citations· 33
John 14:1-4 | 1 Corinthians 15 | Philippians 3:20 | Romans 8 | Revelation 5:10 | Romans 8:18-21 | 2 Peter 3:10-13 | John 14:28 | John 14:1-3 | Luke 22:67-69 | Hebrews 1:3 | Psalm 110:1 | 1 Corinthians 15:21-26 | Revelation 21:1-8 | 2 Peter 3:8-9 | Matthew 28:18-20 | John 14:12-14 | Acts 2 | John 14:13-14 | 2 Corinthians 12:7-9 | John 13 | John 14:15-17 | John 16:7-11 | John 16:12-15 | 1 Corinthians 15:10 | John 14:18-19 | Philippians 2:13 | John 14:19-23 | John 14:16-17 | John 15:5 | Revelation 21:1-5
Illustrations· 3
  1. personal story · unit #11 — Oswald quotes Jeremiah's own testimony of changing his eschatology based on better Greek exegesis. Jeremiah's scholarly correction — that 'burned up' should be 'laid bare' — shifts the text from annihilation to purification, supporting Oswald's argument.
  2. personal story · unit #14 — Oswald quotes Alcorn's testimony of shifting from an annihilation eschatology to a renewal eschatology over 15 years of study. Alcorn's personal journey reinforces that the renewal view is a product of deeper biblical engagement, not theological novelty.
  3. historical example · unit #51 — Oswald uses Paul's testimony in 1 Corinthians 15:10 to illustrate the Spirit-empowered partnership: Paul worked harder than anyone, but it was Christ in him doing the work. This is the model for all believers — we labor, but Christ does the work through us.
Theological claims· 14
  1. Our eternal future state is not disembodied — we will have glorified physical bodies like Christ's resurrected body. unit #3
  2. Our eternal home is not heaven but a renewed earth where we will dwell physically with Christ. unit #4
  3. The common belief that the earth will be annihilated is wrong but understandable, rooted in a mistranslation of 2 Peter 3. unit #8
  4. The reason Jesus's preparation has taken 2000 years is not that heaven needs remodeling, but that the earth does — specifically, it must be cleansed of sin and death. unit #17
  5. The comfort Jesus offers in John 14 is that his reign at the Father's right hand is actively preparing the new heavens and new earth by expunging his enemies. unit #28
  6. Jesus's comfort in John 14 goes beyond his sovereign authority to include his active agenda — he is not merely ruling passively but working to prepare the earth. unit #29
  7. Jesus's primary method of destroying his enemies is by converting them — moving them from enmity to sonship — which is how he prepares the earth for eternal habitation. unit #30
  8. God's choice to destroy his enemies primarily through conversion rather than immediate judgment demonstrates his mercy. unit #32
  9. The 2000-year delay in Christ's return is explained by God's patient work of converting all his elect before renewing the earth. unit #33
  10. Once all the elect are gathered, Christ will immediately renew the earth — a task far easier than converting sinners. unit #34
  11. God's two agendas are to convert all his elect across a predefined timeline and then to instantly remake the earth — but the timeline and the full number remain hidden from us. unit #36
  12. Oswald transitions back into John 14 to address a second confused passage (14:12-14) in light of the agenda framework just established. The preparatory work he's done positions him to resolve the confusion. unit #39
  13. Even the apostle Paul experienced formally refused prayers, proving that Jesus's promise in John 14:13-14 is not a blank check but is conditioned on praying according to God's agenda. unit #43
  14. The pattern throughout Scripture is that spiritual realities precede and give birth to physical realities — Jesus dwells with us spiritually now via the Spirit, which will one day manifest in physical dwelling on the new earth. unit #54
Quotations· 5
"things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been is half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life and rest in unvisited tombs" — George Eliot (unit #1)
"for as long as I can remember, I have believed that this earth and the heavens that surround it would be annihilated, totally destroyed. In other words, God was going to give up on this world, totally wipe it out and start over from scratch. I now realize that I was mistaken in my understanding and so are many others." — David Jeremiah (unit #11)
"for many years, both as a Bible student and later as a pastor, I operated under a set of assumptions about the end times and God's ultimate plan. I didn't think in terms of renewal or restoration of what God had already made. Instead, I was convinced that God intended to destroy the earth entirely to scrap his original design and purpose for creation, abandoning it as a failed experiment." — Randy Alcorn (unit #14)
"it is easier for God to create a world than to convert a sinner" — Jonathan Edwards (unit #31)
"To ask something of Jesus in Jesus name is best understood to mean or ask something For Jesus sake" — unnamed commentator (unit #41)
Read it

Full transcript

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0 · Oswald frames the sermon as an unpublished manuscript — theologically dense material written early in the week but ultimately deemed unsuitable for Sunday preaching

Sam. Hello, welcome to the Providence Podcast. My name is Chris Oswald, Senior pastor at Providence Community Church in Lenexa, Kansas. Well, today you are going to hear what was intended to be my sermon for John, chapter 14. I think I wrote this on Monday or Tuesday and once after, after writing it, realized I just didn't wasn't sure at least on Monday or Tuesday if, if I had written a sermon, the sermon. I suppose you might say that happens to me a lot. My first pass at a passage might be, well, hopefully accurate, but isn't always the thing that God reveals to me is needed for our particular congregation. So I've got a really dense, theologically dense sermon written on Monday or Tuesday and just had this kind of sense of need to go more practical. There's plenty of practical in this particular passage in John 14. So that leaves me with this whole 5,000 word monstrosity that I will inflict upon you in a moment.

1 · Oswald steps outside the sermon proper to share two pieces of devotional material: Newton's hymn about parting and trusting Christ's care, and Eliot's reflection on the hidden faithfulness of previous generations

Before we get to that, a couple of thoughts. One Our hymn for the day I've forgotten about my hymn Commitment and our hymn for the day is from John Newton, and it's called At Parting. For a season called to part, let us now ourselves commend to the gracious eye and heart of our ever present friend Jesus. Hear our humble prayer. Tender shepherd of thy sheep, let thy mercy and thy care all our souls in safety keep in thy strength may we be strong. Sweeten every cross and pain give us if we live ere long here to meet in peace again. Then if thou thy help afford Ebenezer's shall be reared all our souls shall praise the Lord to our poor petitions heard. This is at least partly rooted in John Newton's great affection for his people. I don't actually know the history of this particular hymn. My guess is that he wrote it upon the passing of one of his congregation members. It may not be that, but there's some kind of parting in view here, of course. And what he's doing is he's commending the grief he's feeling, the pain he's feeling in this parting, to this greater story that Jesus is taking care of us and we will ultimately meet again. I also wanted to mention a quote that I read this week from George Eliot. A man on Twitter named Josh Doss posted this, and it's from Middlemarch. George Eliot, and he writes, things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been is half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life and rest in unvisited tombs. What's he saying there? He's saying that our lives would be a lot worse if our ancestors, if many of our ancestors were not content to do the small, anonymous, basic things that actually wind up having a massively consequential effect on the good of society over time. I'll try to remember to bring that quote up again around Mother's Day. It's a perfect Mother's Day quote. It's really what a mother does.

2 · Oswald announces the sermon's strategy: before expositing John 14:1-3, he must correct widespread eschatological misconceptions that would otherwise distort the passage's meaning

Okay, now getting into John 14, we're just going to jump right in. The passage itself is centered around Jesus giving comfort to his disciples. But as I began to unpack the deeper theology at work in this passage, I realized that I really couldn't just jump right into it without dealing with some misconceptions that Christians typically walk around with. And so let me clear up a few things. This is all rooted in Jesus's first statement in John 14. Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God. Believe also in me. In my Father's house are many rooms. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also, and you know the way to where I'm going.

3 · Oswald refutes the first misconception: that the eternal state is disembodied

Another reason why this didn't make it to Sunday is that my understanding of what Jesus is doing is a bit on the elaborate side. I know for sure that what I'm going to tell you is true. Biblically. I am not confident, not entirely confident that what I'm telling you is exactly what Jesus is talking about. This is a bit of one of those Dunning Kruger kind of moments where the more you lean into a passage, the less you're sure about what you're seeing here. So I'm going to give you my best take on sort of why Jesus going is a comfort for us. And in order to do that, I have to deal with some misconceptions that a lot of Christians carry around. And the first misconception is that our eternal future state is disembodied, which is wrong. We won't be mere spirits floating around. Remember, Jesus remains incarnate in heaven. He has a body in heaven, and he won't be the only one with a body. Rather, as Paul teaches us in Philippians 3:20, but our citizenship is in heaven, and from it we await the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who will transform our lowly body to be like his glorious body, by the power that enables him even to subject all things to himself. And you can see this discussed again in 1st Corinthians 15 and Romans 8. So let's make sure we understand that our eternal future involves physicality.

4 · Oswald introduces and refutes the second misconception: that heaven is our eternal home

The second misconception is a little bit. A little bit more common, I suppose, and my take on it is perhaps a little bit more controversial. The second misconception is that our eternal home is in heaven, and this is incorrect. We will dwell physically with Christ on earth.

5 · Oswald provides scriptural warrant for the earth-centered eschatology from Revelation 5:10, which explicitly states believers will reign on the earth

Revelation 5:10. You have made them a kingdom and priests to serve our God, and they will reign upon the earth. So when Jesus says he will prepare a place for us, I think he has something rather earthy in mind, and I will work that out more as we continue into this passage.

Where this fits

Recent preaching context

The three sermons immediately preceding this one in the preaching schedule.

Mar 15, 2025
Jesus uniquely accomplishes what David could not—dying for rebels while remaining on the throne—demonstrating the gospel's power to reconcile justice and mercy.
Mar 19, 2025
Pride is uniquely disqualifying in parenting because parenting, like pastoring, depends entirely on God's supernatural blessing, and God does not bless pride—therefore parents must actively pursue humility to avoid rendering their entire labor vain.
March 21 · This sermon
He Goes to Prepare the Earth for Us. A Biblical Theological Exploration of John 14
Jesus's preparation of a place for us in John 14 is not merely about remodeling heaven but about reigning at the Father's right hand to prepare the earth for eternal habitation by converting his enemies and ultimately renewing creation itself.
Take it further

Discuss · apply · pray

Small-group discussion

6 questions for your group this week

  1. In John 14:1-4, Jesus promises to prepare a place for his disciples. What do you think most people in our culture imagine when they hear the word 'heaven'? How does the sermon's claim that our eternal home is a renewed earth—not a disembodied existence in the clouds—challenge or reshape that picture?
    Revelation 21:1-8
    → If we'll have glorified physical bodies on a physical earth, what does that tell us about God's original design for creation? Why do you think that matters?
  2. The sermon argues that Jesus's preparation has taken 2,000 years not because heaven needs remodeling, but because the earth must be cleansed of sin and death. What does that claim mean, practically speaking? What is Jesus actually doing during this waiting period?
    2 Peter 3:8-9
  3. According to the sermon, Jesus's primary method of 'preparing the earth' is by converting enemies into sons and daughters—moving people from enmity with God to relationship with him. Why would conversion be a more effective way to prepare the earth than immediate judgment? What does this reveal about God's character?
    1 Corinthians 15:21-26
    → How does this understanding of Christ's agenda change the way you see your own evangelism or witness?
  4. The sermon claims that the delay in Christ's return is explained by God's patient work of converting all his elect before renewing the earth. How does this statement sit with you? Does it comfort you, trouble you, or both? Why?
    Romans 8:18-21
  5. The sermon identifies us—the church—as part of Christ's 'Earth Renewal Task Force,' partnered with him in his agenda through the Great Commission. What would it look like for you to live this week with that identity in mind? How might your choices, conversations, or pursuits shift if you truly believed your faithful obedience contributes to the preparation of the new creation?
    Matthew 28:18-20
    → Can you name one specific area where you're tempted to live as though this world doesn't matter, or as though your actions are spiritually insignificant?
  6. The sermon emphasizes that Jesus's promise to answer our prayers (John 14:13-14) is not a blank check but is conditioned on praying 'according to God's agenda.' The sermon notes that even Paul experienced formally refused prayers. What's the difference between praying with confidence in God's promises and praying with presumption? How can we grow in aligning our prayers with God's purposes rather than our own desires?
    John 14:13-14
Draft · pending review
Daily readings · Monday–Friday

5-day reading plan

This week we trace Christ's active preparation of the new heavens and new earth—from the physical resurrection that guarantees our embodied future, through the cosmic renewal we await, to our present partnership in his earth-preparation agenda through the Great Commission.

Monday 1 Corinthians 15:21-26

Paul's logic here is foundational: Christ's physical resurrection is the firstfruits and guarantee of ours. We are not destined for ethereal souls floating in heaven, but for bodies as real, as tangible, as Christ's own risen flesh. This is the bedrock upon which Jesus's promise to prepare a place for us makes sense—He prepares a real home for real, embodied people.

Tuesday Revelation 21:1-8

Notice John's vision: the new Jerusalem comes *down* from heaven to the renewed earth; God dwells *with* us, not we with Him in some disembodied realm above. This is the culmination of Christ's preparation—not escape from creation, but its restoration. We inherit the earth remade, the very cosmos Christ is actively renewing through His reign.

Wednesday 2 Peter 3:10-13

Peter's language of fire and dissolution has often been misread as annihilation, but it speaks of purification and transformation—like refiner's fire burning away dross. The delay in Christ's return corresponds to the immense work required: sin must be expunged, death must be defeated, creation itself must be renewed. This is why Christ's 2000-year reign matters; it is the era of earth-preparation.

Thursday Matthew 28:18-20

Jesus does not give us the Great Commission as a mere spiritual exercise, but as participation in His cosmic restoration work. As we go, teach, and make disciples, we are converting sinners—transforming enemies into sons and daughters. We are partners in the very agenda that prepares the earth for renewal: the gathering of all the elect into the kingdom of God.

Friday Romans 8:18-21

Paul reminds us that creation itself waits in eager expectation for the revealing of God's sons and daughters. Our obedience, our faithful witness, our conversion of the lost—these are not futile gestures in a dying cosmos. They are the very means by which Christ prepares the earth for dwelling. We are not merely waiting for renewal; we are agents of it, and every prayer aligned with God's purposes hastens the day of His return.

Draft · pending review
Pray together this week

Prayer for Earth-Making Grace

Father, we stand amazed at the vision of your redemptive agenda — that you are not merely ruling from heaven but actively preparing a renewed earth where we will dwell with Christ in glorified bodies, in physical presence, forever. We confess that we have often thought of our eternal hope as escape from this world rather than restoration of it, and we have consequently lived with a diminished sense of the physical reality you are bringing to pass. Forgive us for the poverty of our imagination about your renewal of all things, and for the ways this false hope has weakened our witness and our zeal (Romans 8:18–21).

But the gospel humbles and restores us: Christ has already risen with a glorified body and ascended to the Father's right hand, where he reigns as the firstfruits of the renewal you are bringing. By his resurrection, he has conquered death itself; by his present reign, he is converting enemies into sons and daughters, gathering all his elect, and preparing the earth through the very work of redemption we witness in the gospel (1 Corinthians 15:21–26). The 2000-year delay is not divine hesitation but divine mercy — patient work to bring all the chosen to salvation before the final renewal comes.

Grant us, we pray, the grace to see ourselves as partners in this earth-preparation task. Help us to pray according to your agenda, not merely our preferences, so that our intercessions align with your purposes of conversion and glory (John 14:13–14). Make us faithful in the Great Commission, filling the earth with the knowledge of your glory, that we might contribute meaningfully to the renewal you are actively bringing. Give us joy in this labor, knowing that every act of gospel witness, every demonstration of godliness, and every prayer prayed in faith participates in your grand work of preparing the new heavens and new earth.

To you, Father, through your Son Jesus Christ, in the power of your Holy Spirit, be glory and dominion until he comes and makes all things new. Amen.

Draft · pending review
Sunday-evening family table

What Is Jesus Building for Us?

For the parent

This prompt anchors in the sermon's central image: Jesus preparing a physical home for us on a renewed earth, not a disembodied heaven. The goal is to help kids grasp that our eternal future is concrete and embodied, not ethereal — and to connect that hope to how we live now.

In the sermon, we heard that Jesus is preparing a real, physical home for us — a new earth where we'll have bodies like His resurrection body, and we'll live with Him forever. If you could describe what that home might be like, what's one thing you hope will be there? And how does knowing Jesus is preparing that for us change the way you want to live right now?
works for ages 8+
Draft · pending review
Couples · three questions over coffee

Christ Prepares All Things for Us

  1. What did you hear about Jesus's work over these past 2000 years that surprised you or shifted how you think about his return and our future home?
  2. How does the truth that Christ is actively preparing a renewed earth—not a disembodied heaven—change the way we talk together about our eternal hope and what we're living for now?
  3. What is one way Christ's patient conversion of his enemies (rather than immediate judgment) moves you to pray differently for someone in your life who doesn't yet know him?
Draft · pending review
Memory verse this week

John 14:1-3

Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me. In my Father's house are many rooms. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also.

Why this verse: This passage is the theological anchor of the entire sermon—it establishes that Christ is actively preparing an eternal dwelling place for us and promises His return to gather us there. Understanding what Jesus means by 'prepare a place' (not a disembodied heaven but a renewed earth where we will dwell physically) unlocks the comfort of John 14 and the hope that sustains believers through the 2000-year interim.

Draft · pending review
Where this was preached

About the church

Providence Community Church
Lenexa, KS
Sundays · 10:00 AM
About us · What we believe
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# Providence Community Church

A church preaching expository sermons through the books of the Bible.

## Sermons
- [The Story of Absalom and the Problem of Evil (2025-03-15)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2025/03/the-story-of-absalom-and-the-problem-of-evil)
- [The Christian Leader as Both Lion and Lamb (2025-03-16)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2025/03/the-christian-leader-as-both-lion-and-lamb)
- [Pride in Parenting (2025-03-19)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2025/03/pride-in-parenting)
- [He Goes to Prepare the Earth for Us. A Biblical Theological Exploration of John 14 (2025-03-21)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2025/03/he-goes-to-prepare-the-earth-for-us-a-biblical-theological-exploration-of-john-14)

## About
- [About the church](/about)
- [Plan a visit](/visit)

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