Apr 15, 2026
5 min read
It’s a simple question—but when Jesus asks it in John 1:38, it cuts deeper than most of us expect. These are the first recorded words of Jesus at the beginning of His public ministry. Instead of opening with a sermon, miracle, or command, He asks a question that still echoes today: What do you want?
At first glance, it may seem casual. But it’s deeply intentional.
Jesus doesn’t begin by telling them what to do—He begins by uncovering why they’re there.
It’s similar to a doctor’s visit. You don’t walk in and immediately receive a prescription. The doctor first asks, “What’s going on?” Without identifying the issue, the solution can’t be applied.
Jesus works the same way spiritually.
Before He gives direction, He diagnoses desire.
And that’s where things get uncomfortable.
If we’re honest, people follow Jesus for different reasons:
These aren’t wrong—but they’re incomplete.
You can follow Jesus for many reasons, but only one will sustain you when faith becomes costly: wanting Him above everything else.
Jesus isn’t just interested in your presence—He cares about your motive.
In Matthew 6:33, Jesus addresses people consumed with everyday needs—food, clothing, security. He doesn’t dismiss those needs but reframes their priority:
“Seek first the kingdom of God…”
In other words:
Don’t make the benefits the goal—make God the goal.
Everything else flows from there.
Jesus starts with desire, not behavior.
You can fake devotion for a season—but you can’t fake desire forever. Eventually, what you truly want will show up in how you live.
Ask yourself:
Do you want relief… or do you want Him?
That’s the dividing line.
In John 1, the disciples don’t answer Jesus directly. He asks, “What do you want?” and they reply, “Rabbi, where are you staying?”
It feels like a deflection—and it’s relatable.
Jesus asks something deep, and we respond with something safe.
Why? Because honest answers require surrender.
To truly say, “I want You,” means letting go of control, expectations, and outcomes.
Instead of correcting them, Jesus responds with grace:
“Come… and you will see.”
It’s an invitation.
You may come to Jesus wanting answers—but if you stay with Him long enough, you’ll realize:
He is the answer.
Your life doesn’t move in the direction of your intentions—it moves in the direction of your desires.
You begin to reorder your life around Him.
Many people start following Jesus for what He can do:
But when following Him requires surrender, obedience, and sacrifice, they drift away.
Not because Jesus failed them—but because they never truly wanted Him.
They wanted the outcome, not the relationship.
In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus prays:
“Father, if it’s possible, take this cup from me… yet not what I will, but what You will.”
Even when He desired relief, His deeper desire was obedience to the Father.
That’s the difference.
Psalm 63 expresses it powerfully:
“I thirst for You… my whole being longs for You in a dry and weary land.”
This isn’t casual faith—it’s deep spiritual hunger.
The question still stands.
Not the quick, polished answer—but the honest one.
Because Jesus is still asking:
And how you answer will shape everything that follows.
In John 1:38, Jesus asks His first recorded question: “What do you want?” It reveals that He is more interested in our motives than just our actions. The question invites deeper reflection on why we follow Him.
Jesus focuses on desire because it shapes direction. Before giving guidance, He addresses the heart. What you truly want will ultimately determine how you live and follow Him.
No, it’s not wrong to seek peace, help, or provision. However, Jesus teaches that the priority should be seeking Him first. When He becomes the goal, everything else falls into the right place.
To truly want Jesus means valuing who He is more than what He can give. It involves surrender, trust, and a desire for relationship over results.
Many people begin following Jesus for what He can do for them. But when faith requires sacrifice or obedience, they drift away—not because Jesus failed them, but because their desires were misplaced.
You can discover your true desires by asking honest questions:
Your consistent choices reveal your deepest desires.
Desire drives commitment. When your desire is rooted in Jesus, it leads to spiritual growth, transformation, and a deeper relationship with God.
“Come and see” is an invitation to experience Him personally. Instead of giving immediate answers, Jesus invites people into relationship—where understanding grows over time.