John 3:1-21 · Jesus Teaches Nicodemus
God So Loved the World
John 3:1-21
Sermon
by Richard A. Jensen
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For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. (John 3:16)

That is John 3:16, one of the best known and often-quoted verses in the entire Bible. Martin Luther once called it the "Gospel within the Gospels." If you watch any sporting events on television, you will almost always see a banner strategically placed so the camera will include it that simply reads: "John 3:16." Some group of people has chosen this method to hold up the gospel of Jesus Christ before the eyes of this world.

John 3:16. That verse is part of the scripture reading from John 3:14-21. These verses are loaded with meaning. I am going to break this passage into three parts and make some comments on each part. Before we look at these verses, however, let me remind you of the verses that precede these.

John 3 begins with Nicodemus, a man of the Pharisees, coming to Jesus quietly at night. Jesus told Nicodemus that a person must be born anew or born again in order to see the kingdom of God. "How can one be born when one is old?" Nicodemus wondered aloud. Jesus proceeds to answer Nicodemus’ question. The verses from John 3:14-21 are part of Jesus’ answer to Nicodemus. Let us look first at John 3:14-16:

And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of man be lifted up, that whoever believes in him may have eternal life. For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.

The reference of Moses lifting up the serpent in the wilderness is a reference to Numbers 21:4-9. On their way from Egypt to the promised land the people of Israel wearied of their journey and blamed Moses for leading them to death in the wilderness. In anger, God sent fiery serpents among the people. Those bitten by the serpents died instantly. The people then confessed their lack of trust and obedience to God. Moses then prayed for the people and God told him to put a fiery serpent on a pole and lift it up before the people. Those who lifted their eyes to the bronze serpent held high by Moses were delivered from death.

Jesus then compares his own lifting from the earth, that is his death on the cross, to the lifting of the serpent. Those who lifted their eyes to the bronze serpent lived through death. Likewise, those who lift their eyes to the cross of Jesus’ exaltation will live through death. Those who believe in the lifted-up Son of God will have eternal life.

In John’s Gospel eternal life is not an extended quantity of life that begins at death. Eternal life, rather, is a new quality of life, a new kind of life. Those who believe in Jesus, those who believe in the One who was lifted high on the cross, receive the gift of eternal life. That is the answer to the question of Nicodemus. Nicodemus could not understand how a person could be born again. Jesus tells Nicodemus, Jesus tells us, that we receive a new kind of life, eternal life, when we look in faith to the lifted-up Jesus. That is how we are born again. There is no mystery here. Those who believe in Jesus Christ are born again; they are filled with eternal life.

This is incredibly good news for the human race. How can it be so? It can be so because God is a God of love. "For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life." God so loved the world! The Greek word used for love here points to the kind of love that loves another with no thought of return or reward. That is God’s kind of love for us. God does not love us because we deserve to be loved. God does not love us because God gets a reward from loving us. God just loves us. That is all. No reason. No reward. Just loves us. Loves you. Loves me. No matter who you are. No matter how you have lived your life. No matter how great your sins are. God loves you. Now. In this very instant. Believe it and it is yours. Believe it and eternal life is yours. Believe it and you are born again, born again with a new kind of life that triumphs even over death and the grave.

In John 3:17, 18, we read: For God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him. He who believes in him is not condemned; he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only Son of God.

Consider that opening line once again. "For God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the world ..." It is worth our while to pause a moment at this verse. God did not send Jesus to condemn the world. God did not send Jesus with a word of judgment. God sent Jesus that we might be saved.

I have to do some real soul-searching here. As a spokesman, as a preacher of the gospel, I am charged to bring the news of Jesus to the world. And I do it. I do it to the best of my ability. And you know what I see? I see a lot of people who hear God’s saving story through my voice, through the voice of many preachers, and simply pay no attention to it. That disturbs me. It disturbs every preacher I know. And you know what I would like to do about it, want to do about it more than anything else? I want to get angry about it, that is what. I want to tell some people off. I want to speak words of judgment to them. Sinner, I want to say, God is going to judge you. I have a whole list of different kinds of sinners that I want to speak words of judgment to. It is the same list that most every preacher has. I think you pretty well know who is on the list. I would really like to give it to them. I really would. I would like to, but I cannot.

"For God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him." God sent not the Son to condemn the world. Neither should I condemn the world. That is not God’s message. That is not the Bible’s message. That is not to be the message of this preacher, of any preacher. I would love to do it - love to condemn sinners. People love it when I do it. They cheer and applaud. They always assume, of course, that my words of condemnation are not for them. And they feel so righteous, so self-righteous I might say, when others are condemned.

No! That is not to be my message. My goal is not to allow my hearers to feel self-righteous. My words are for the unrighteous. God so loved the unrighteous, God so loved sinners, "God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life."

Judgment there shall be, but judgment is not to be my message or the Church’s message. Listen to the way John puts it. "... the one who does not believe is condemned already, because he or she has not believed in the name of the only Son of God" (John 3:18). We do not have to judge people. People judge themselves. We judge ourselves by not believing in Jesus Christ as our Savior.

The last section of our reading is John 3:19-21 and it reads as follows:

And this is the judgment, that the light has come into the world, and people loved darkness rather then light, because their deeds were evil. For every one who does evil hates the light, and does not come to the light, lest his [or her] deeds should be exposed. But the one who does what is true comes to the light, that it may be clearly seen that his [or her] deeds have been wrought in God.

The New English Bible has a very interesting and helpful translation for the beginning of verse 19. The Revised Standard Version which I quoted begins with the words: "And this is the judgment ..." The New English Bible reads rather, "This is the test ..." John has been talking about the sentence of judgment that people bring upon themselves when they fail to believe in the name of the only Son of God. The judgment test is a simple one. God’s only Son, Jesus, has come into our world as the light for all people, as God’s light shining in our world of darkness. (See John 1:4-5.) Jesus, that is, is the light of the world. (See John 8:12.) Evil people, however, hate the light. They know that the light will expose their evil deeds. God’s light shines in the darkness and evil people run for their lives. They run deeper into the darkness; they vanish into the night. That is the test. That is how evil people pronounce judgment upon themselves. They run from the light. They run from Jesus Christ.

Believers in Jesus Christ, however, freely come to the light. They come to the light because they have experienced the light, they have experienced Jesus Christ as the light of their lives.

When they come to the light, all who behold them see that their deeds are not evil at all. Their deeds, John tells us, "... have been wrought in God." Pay very careful attention to this manner of expression. Frankly, it is not what I, as a believer, want to hear. I want people to see my good deeds. I want people to see my good deeds so that I can take credit for my life of faith. "Look at my life. Look at my good deeds. Look at the ways I have helped bring light to this darkened world. Look at me!" That is what I want to be able to say. I just love to show off my deeds of light.

But I cannot do that. People who behold my deeds of the light do not see me. They see God! That is what John says. They see that my "... deeds have been wrought in God." They see what God is doing in me and through me. I have been born again through the light of Jesus Christ. I have been given a new kind of life, an eternal kind of life, through the light of Jesus Christ. Born again people live new kinds of lives. Born again people live lives that are empowered by the One who has given us birth. Born again people live lives that are transparent to the light that has been planted within us. Saint Paul puts the matter very well. "... it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me ..." (Galatians 2:20). Or we might say, it is no longer my darkness that lives but Christ’s light that dwells within me.

My new life of faith, our new life of faith, has been wrought in God. That is John’s expression. Our born again life has been wrought in God. Our enlightened deeds have been wrought in God. We are partakers in eternal life that has been wrought in God. All this has happened for us, all this has happened in us because, "God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life."

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Crucified Ruler, The, by Richard A. Jensen