Yes, and I think you are touching something profoundly beautiful about the relationship between the Father and the Son. 😊
When we read John 17 carefully, Jesus is not only revealing the Father’s heart toward believers. He is also revealing His own heart.
Consider His words:
“Father, I desire that they also whom You gave Me may be with Me where I am, that they may behold My glory which You have given Me; for You loved Me before the foundation of the world.”
— John 17:24
Notice the language. Jesus does not merely say, “Father, save them.” He says, “I desire that they be with Me.”
This is the language of affection, fellowship, delight, and shared joy.
💖 The Son Delights to Bring Us to the Father
Throughout John’s Gospel, Jesus constantly points to the Father:
“He who has seen Me has seen the Father.”
— John 14:9
“I always do those things that please Him.”
— John 8:29
“My food is to do the will of Him who sent Me.”
— John 4:34
The Son’s joy is in the Father’s glory.
Yet at the same time, the Father has decreed:
“That all should honor the Son just as they honor the Father.”
— John 5:23
The Father’s joy is in the Son’s glory.
So there is a holy “movement” within the Trinity where the Father delights in exalting the Son and the Son delights in glorifying the Father.
🔄 A Circle of Eternal Delight
You described it as a full circle, and that is remarkably close to what Scripture reveals.
Jesus says:
“Father, glorify Your Son, that Your Son also may glorify You.”
— John 17:1
Not:
“Glorify Me instead of You.”
Nor:
“I will glorify You instead of Myself.”
Rather:
“Glorify Your Son so that the Son may glorify You.”
The glory flows in both directions.
The Father loves the Son.
The Son loves the Father.
The Father glorifies the Son.
The Son glorifies the Father.
The Spirit glorifies the Son (John 16:14).
And redeemed humanity is graciously invited into that fellowship.
👑 The Astonishing Part
What is staggering is that Jesus does not seem jealous of sharing His joy with redeemed people.
A human king might fear rivals.
A human celebrity might fear being overshadowed.
A human leader might protect his position.
But Jesus says:
“The glory which You gave Me I have given them.”
— John 17:22
And:
“The love with which You loved Me may be in them, and I in them.”
— John 17:26
The Son is not diminished by bringing many sons to glory.
“For both He who sanctifies and those who are being sanctified are all of one, for which reason He is not ashamed to call them brethren.”
— Hebrews 2:11
Not ashamed.
That phrase is breathtaking.
✨ Why This Does Not Threaten the Son
Perhaps the deepest reason is that divine love is not competitive.
Among fallen humans, someone else’s success can feel like our loss.
But within God there is no insecurity, envy, fear, deficiency, or need.
The Father loses nothing by glorifying the Son.
The Son loses nothing by glorifying the Father.
And the Son loses nothing by bringing redeemed humanity into His inheritance.
In fact, Isaiah foresaw this:
“He shall see the labor of His soul, and be satisfied.”
— Isaiah 53:11
The redeemed are not an interruption of Christ’s joy.
They are part of the joy set before Him.
“Who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross.”
— Hebrews 12:2
🌟 The Final Wonder
What makes John 17 so moving is that Jesus is speaking on the eve of the Cross.
He knows betrayal is hours away.
He knows scourging, mocking, abandonment, and crucifixion are near.
Yet what occupies His heart is not merely escaping suffering.
It is this desire:
“Father, I desire that they also whom You gave Me may be with Me where I am…”
— John 17:24
The Son’s heart is already reaching beyond the Cross to the day when the redeemed will stand before Him and see His glory.
And when they see His glory, they will discover that all the glory they behold in the Son ultimately points back to the Father.
Then the circle is complete:
The Father delights in the Son.
The Son delights in the Father.
The redeemed delight in the Son.
And through the Son, the redeemed delight in the Father.
As Jesus Himself prayed:
“That they all may be one, as You, Father, are in Me, and I in You; that they also may be one in Us.”
— John 17:21
Not merely near the fellowship.
Not merely observing the fellowship.
But brought into it. 😊👑❤️