God's Love for Humanity
Speaker:
Andrew Fountain
Date:
Sun, 2019-10-20 - John 3:16 is probably the best known verse in the Bible, but it has a hidden depth and richness that makes it (and the rest of the passage) well worth studying.
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Sermon Outline - God’s Love for Humanity
John 3:16–38
- For this how much God loved the world: he gave the Son, the One and Only,
- so that everyone who believes in him will not perish but have eternal life.
- For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world,
- but that the world should be saved through him.
- The one who believes in him is not condemned.
The one who does not believe has been condemned already,
- because they have not believed in the name of the One and Only Son of God.
- because they have not believed in the name of the One and Only Son of God.
- Now this how judging works:
- that the light has come into the world
- and people loved the darkness rather than the light,
- because their deeds were evil.
- For everyone who does evil deeds hates the light and does not come to the light,
- so that their deeds will not be exposed.
- But the one who practices the truth comes to the light,
- so that it may be plainly evident that their deeds have been done in God.
- so that it may be plainly evident that their deeds have been done in God.
- After this, Jesus and his disciples came into the Judean countryside,
and there he spent time with them and was baptizing. - John was also baptizing at Aenon near Salim, because water was plentiful there, and people were coming to him and being baptized.
- (For John had not yet been thrown into prison.)
- Now a dispute came about between some of John’s disciples and a certain Jew concerning ceremonial washing.
- So they came to John and said to him,
“Rabbi, the one who was with you on the other side of the Jordan River, about whom you testified — see, he is baptizing, and everyone is flocking to him!”
- John replied,
“No one can receive anything unless it has been given to them from heaven. - You yourselves can testify that I said,
- ‘I am not the Messiah,’ but rather, ‘I have been sent before him.’
- The one who has the bride is the bridegroom.
- The friend of the bridegroom, who stands by and listens for him,
- rejoices greatly when he hears the bridegroom’s voice.
- This then is my joy, and it is complete.
- The friend of the bridegroom, who stands by and listens for him,
- He must become more important while I become less important.”
- The one who comes from above is superior to all.
- The one who is from the earth belongs to the earth and speaks about earthly things.
The one who comes from heaven is superior to all. - He testifies about what he has seen and heard, but no one accepts his testimony.
- The one who has accepted his testimony has confirmed clearly that God is truthful.
- For the one whom God has sent speaks the words of God,
- for he gives him the Spirit without measure.
- The Father loves the Son and has placed all things under his authority.
- The one who believes in the Son has eternal life.
The one who does not trust the Son will not see life,
- but God’s wrath remains on them.
NET
Comments
- Three panels: teaching, story, and then back to teaching
- —18. Come back to this shortly
- These three verses hang together
- The word “condemn” appears 3 times
- This is going to be unpacked now:
- —21. “Now this is how judging/condemning works
- —30 Now we come to the story part
- Woven into the tapestry of the 1st 18 verses of John (prologue)
- —26. The story starts in an odd way:
- We are not told who it was, or what it was about, but just “ceremonial washing”
- Remember the water turned into wine? The water pots originally were for “ceremonial washing” —exactly the same word
- This is the Jesus who upset the ceremonies in the Temple, and said his body would replace the temple
- I think there is a growing sense of disturbance at what Jesus is saying
- But here is the problem: “everyone is flocking to him”
- We can accept you John, because although you are challenging our sin, you are not turning the world upside down
- John was the last of the O.T. prophets
- —30. The friend of the bridegroom
- These are beautiful words. The last words of John the Baptist recorded in John’s gospel
- I think the whole point of them is the context: John the B. is the old order, the Old covenant
- And rather than clinging to the old, they should see it as a friend of the bridegroom
- The whole purpose of Moses was to point to Jesus
- The whole purpose of sacrificing lambs was to point to the true sacrifice
- The whold of the Old Testament is the “friend of the bridegroom”
- Don’t cling to the old “ceremonial washing” when you have the new
- Yesterday I was at an event that was in a building used by an Anglican church
- There were pictures of their ceremonies, all the priests dressed up for elaborate rituals
- They probably love Jesus, but we are in an age where reality has replaced the ritual
- We are only given two very simple symbols by Jesus: breaking bread, and baptism
- That is because the bridegroom has come, and we can enjoy him directly.
- We, God’s people, are the bride of Jesus
- The wedding will be at his return, but we can already get to know the bridegroom
- —33 back to teaching
- I don’t think it is John the Baptist speaking here because we are back to using John’s wording, which
- Jesus’ authority to clear away the old law (the earthly things) and replace them with himself
- —35. One of the Jewish writings from the time, that we have discovered, talks about God measuring out the Spirit to the prophets
- They were all given a limited measure.
- Neatly rounds off the section.
- Perfectly matches v.16–18
- As we have seen, John is usually very intentional about marking the start and end of his stories
- So that’s why I had to take a larger chunk today.
2. Focus in on 16–21
- It gives Jesus name as a very empatic title: The son, The One and only.
- Unique person. Abraham had two sons, Isaac & Ishmael. This word is used of Isaac because he was the special, unique, irreplacable carrier of the promises God made to Abraham.
- We are God’s son’s and daughters, but not like Jesus
- It does not mean Jesus was “born”, it is a metaphor, a picture to help us understand the relationship
- World is better translated “humanity” because it does not mean the physical world, but all human beings.
- But what is this about “condemned already” in v.18
- Doesn’t that sound a bit rough?
- Here is the most importand thing to get to understand these 6 verses
- The world is already hopelessly broken and heading for destruction
- God’s love is in the context of this desperate situation
- Read v.16–19 again in that light
- This is how much!
- “so loved” does not quite capture the force of the origial Greek
- This is the measure of the extent of God’s love —that hie gave his Son, his One and only unique Son
- I am so moved by this. This is the main point of the verse—the incredible extent of God’s love
- How can we explain it?
- I am so moved!
- Imagine you are clinging to the Titanic as it is going down
- and a big rowing boat appears, with a man shouting “let go of that and trust us or you will die”
- You don’t day “that’s not a nice man—very bossy and condemning” —he has risked his life!
- The warnings in these verses are not to put you down, but to describe reality!
- If you’re a follower of Jesus
20–21 —note it is not balanced—the good is done by God. The point is not being good, but choice to be washed
- I was praying to Jesus about this passage and asking what he had for me personally in them
- I felt drawn to v.20–21
- I had the impression of Jesus saying “Andrew, would you let me shine my light into you right now?”
- I agreed, and became aware of a couple of things that were not very nice inside
- I decided to label them as wrong, and ban them.
- It was a surprising and interesting process.
- I am going to challenge all of us to do that right now
Updated on 2019-10-13 by Andrew Fountain
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