HE WILL GATHER, WHO HE GAVE The clear insights found in John's gospel can be clearly seen in both John and Matthew message (Matthew 25 and 26). This message centers on the divine orchestration of salvation, emphasizing God's sovereign act of giving—both the Father giving people to the Son and the Son giving eternal life to them—throughout Scripture, particularly in John 17. It highlights how this giving is not a mere theological abstraction but a living reality woven into history, from the Old Testament's prophetic foreshadowing in Jeremiah and Caiaphas's unwitting prophecy, to the cross where Jesus, as the second Adam, fulfilled God's purpose by dying for the children of God scattered across time. The preacher underscores that God's plan, though obscured by human ignorance and resistance—seen in figures like Pilate and Caiaphas—was always designed to gather all believers into one body, reconciling them through Christ's propitiation and glorifying them through His resurrection. The message calls believers to recognize their identity as part of God's eternal family business, inherited through grace, and to live as witnesses to the truth that Jesus is the only way, the only propitiation, and the only hope for all who are given to Him. Truth: John 17; John 11:47–52; John 18:12–14; John 10; John 12:23–26; Hebrews 2; 1 Corinthians 2; Acts 2–4; Matthew 25–26 "ALL RIGHT, WELL, LET'S GET IN IT…" All right, well, let's get in it. Amen. Any news? Anything? Anything? Anything struck you as you've been walking through these last couple days—John 17, 18, 19—or you can be anywhere else. Y'all know how we do. It don't have to be in John. We just want to hear what God's been dealing