Showing posts with label John 3:16. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John 3:16. Show all posts

Thursday, December 24, 2015

Whosoever!

Something
To Think About
The Great Opportunity:



“For this is how God loved the world: He gave* his one and only Son, so that  [whosoever]  believes in him will not perish but have eternal life." 
(John 3:16, New Living Translation)


I put the old King James word, "whosoever," in the Bible quotation above.  The word has a bit of a lawyer-ly sound to it, doesn't it?  The word is found 183 times in the King James Translation.  The more recent translations often take the "so" out and simply translate the word "whoever."  I can hear someone looking disinterested, about now, and saying, "Whatever."
Whosoever or whoever is not deserving of a verbal shrug.  The word expresses a marvelous and precious truth.  Actually the Greek word in John 3:16 is a different one than the one translated whoever in some other verses.  The particular word used here is translated every, oreveryone in other places.  I saw a couple of translations that attempted to capture that nuance.  The New Revised Standard Version is one:  "
so that everyone who believes in him. . . ."
In the the realm of Theology there are those who tend to emphasize God's control, Calvinists, and those who place greater emphasis on man's responsibility to do the right thing, Arminians.  Churches and families have split over the differences between the two.  My intention is to give you something to think about, not reason to fight, so let me see if I can put this in terms that both sides can agree on.  To be extra safe, I'll quote from the ultimate authority, the Lord Jesus Christ Himself.  ". . . the one who comes to Me I will certainly not cast out"  (John 6:47)  We'll leave the question as to why some believe and others do not for another time.  (Just reading the verse in its entiretywill help answer that.)  What is clear is that anyone who is inclined to believe--who feels the draw of the Holy Spirit in their heart toward faith in Jesus, the Savior of the world, can believe and the person who believes "will not perish but have eternal life."

At the end of most every STTA you find a link to a page that has a whole bunch of material to let you know more about the application of the Good News to your heart and life.  Today is no exception.  Whosoever is interested will something worthwhile there.  


 It's Something to Think About.

Merry Christmas.
Find out more about this greatest of all gifts, here.  It's available to whosoever.

Monday, December 21, 2015

God so loved . . .

Something
To Think About
God's Love:



“For this is how God loved the world: He gave* his one and only Son, so that everyone who believes in him will not perish but have eternal life."  (John 3:16, New Living Translation)

You probably memorized the verse from the King James or another translation that begins something like, "For God so loved the world."  That's a good translation, but I'm afraid it is open to our going the wrong way with it.  If we aren't careful we import emotions into the verse that are more appropriately associated with a young man in love, than with the God of the universe. 
"I just couldn't help myself."  or, "I know I really shouldn't, but I love her so much that I bought her the necklace/bracelet/ring/new car anyhow.  We look at those words "so loved," and we are apt to think of God looking at a group of beings that He finds so adorable that He just can't help Himself.  He just has to find a way to make their salvation possible, even if it costs Him the life of His Son.  
Yes, God does love the world.  John 3:16 speaks of the people who make up the world.  Men and women, young and old, rich and poor, people of every ethnicity, language, nationality, and condition are loved by our great God, but it is not because of any loveliness on our part.  In fact the Bible makes clear that we are really quite unlovely in God's sight.  The Apostle Paul gives a devastating summary of what we look like to God in Romans 3.  It's not pretty.  
Nor does God ever argue with Himself.  I can't speak with authority about you--though I have my suspicions--but I debate myself all the time.  I guess that guarantees that I always lose.  Am I going to get up or punch snooze?  Take a shower or just put on more deodorant?  Be quite or give that person a piece of my mind?  Can I get by without shaving?  Another piece of cake?  Ride the exercise bike?  Often the better (I hope) part of me argues the lesser contingent in my head into submission; I do the right thing, but I'm whining, or worse, the whole time.  God has no such internal conflicts.  What He does He does with His entire being.  There never was a time that what He wills to do was not His plan and there never will be a time when He will regret what He does.  God loves not because He finds the one on whom He bestows His love to be worthy of His love; He loves because He islove.  Our worthiness or unworthiness is not the issue.  The truth is we are unworthy.  It was "while we were yet sinners," and, while we were still weak" that God, "show[ed] His love for us," and "Christ died for us."  (Romans 5:6-8)
That word "so" in John 3 16 answers a question:  What was the extent of God's love?" or, "What is the demonstration of His love?"  Here is the answer, "that He gave His only begotten Son."
Rejoice with me in this greatest of all Christmas gifts, and stay tuned.  There is more to come.

 It's Something to Think About..

Find out more about this greatest of all gifts, here.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

It's Not Fair!

"It's not fair!"  You don't actually find the words in the text, but they would certainly make an excellent sidebar to the story the Lord told.  A landowner needed people to work on his farm.  He went to the place where the day laborers gathered and hired a group, telling them he would pay them the standard rate.  At various times during the day he returned to the manpower facility and hired more workers.  There was no contract, he simply told them, "whatever is right I will give you."  The workers had to trust him to do right.  The last batch of workers he hired showed up at the farm just one hour before quitting time.  
At the end of the day the employer lined up his workers.  He first paid those who had only worked an hour.  They must have been overjoyed when they received a full-day's pay.  The average day-laborer of the time lived a hand to mouth existence.  What they could earn in a day was sufficient to support life for a day.  These men, because no one had hired them in the morning, faced the prospect of a hungry night, but here it was: a whole day's pay!  Those who had worked all day, observing that the workers who had barely broken a sweat were paid a day's wage, naturally figured that they would be paid more.  No wonder when they were paid the same they "grumbled at the land owner."   
You read it for yourself.  It is a story of grace.  What the workers took home was not determined by how hard or long they worked, but by the graciousness of the landowner.  "Is it not lawful for me to do what I wish with what is my own? Or is your eye envious because I am generous?"
Inherent in the concept of grace is unfairness-or at least the perception thereof.  If you are getting more than you earned that is wonderful.  If you perceive that you are not getting a fair shake . . .
People look at a passage of scripture like John 3:16
, the passage we are looking at this Sunday morning at CBC, with its "whosoever believeth," and say "That's not fair.  You mean to tell me that this person with all the bad things-really bad things-they have done can be forgiven just by their believing?"   Yes, that is what I mean.  It appears to me that is what Jesus meant when he told the thief on the cross "Today you will be with me in Paradise."  (Luke 23:43) Or what Paul said to the Philippian jailer in reply to his question about salvation, "Believe in the Lord Jesus and you will be saved, and your household."  (Acts 16:31)

It's not fair, but it is wonderful.
Stay tuned.

It's STTA.