For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten
Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.
For many people John 3:16 is their favorite verse in the Bible. It owes its
familiarity and appreciation to the fact that it is a short, simple declaration
from God full of great news. And who doesn’t like to receive good news? The
good news from God is pointed straight toward you no matter who you are. The
message is easy to grasp. It starts with God and it ends with eternal life;
which is exactly how we will break it down and illustrate it. We will walk
through the verse in four parts. The first part is about God. The second part
reveals what He has done for us. The third deals with our response to what He
has done. And finally, the fourth part details the awesome results that occur
when you respond to Him. God has made you a promise. There is no better topic
to examine than this promise. So, let’s begin!
For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten
Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.
For God… When talking about spiritual realities, the place to start is with
God. And one of the most important things to know about God is that He is holy.
…. For the Lord our God is holy. (Psalm. 99:9) Holiness can be illustrated by
light in which God is light and in Him there is no darkness at all. To be holy
means being perfectly pure and having no blemish. It also involves being unique
or set apart. God is both unique and pure because He is set apart from all
evil. Holiness also involves being righteous and just. God loves what is right
and demands rightness. When rightness observes evil it triggers a sense of
indignation or anger. God has a righteous anger towards evil, and because He is
just, consequences occur. To help us better understand His rightness God gave
10 commandments. These commandments not only show us God’s holiness; they also
show us something about ourselves. Put simply, we are not perfect and do not
measure up to His holiness. To be perfect means you have satisfied a righteous
standard. For example, the commandments tell us that we are not to lie—not
ever. We are not to steal—anything. We are not to lust in our hearts. We are
not to dishonour our parents. Because God is holy, we are not to take His name
in vain. These commandments serve as a mirror. They reveal that we have
violated His standards—repeatedly.
Moral perfection is required to enter God’s holy presence.
And all of us have failed. This failure is called sin. For all have sinned and
fall short of the glory of God. (Romans 3:23) We have all lost our moral purity
and have no means to get it back. Like a red wine stain on a white shirt, sin
has left a permanent mark on our lives. We cannot get back to perfection. God’s
commandments also reveal the qualities that make for good relationships,
qualities like honesty, integrity, and respect. Because God is holy, He is
deeply uncomfortable with even the smallest sins—they are just as repulsive to
Him as some horrible crime would be to you. This leads God to separate from
those who are guilty—which is all of us. A natural barrier stands between what
is clean and what is unclean. Your iniquities have separated you from your God.
(Isaiah 59:2) God’s justice demands a consequence to fall upon all guilty
offenders. God has always made it clear to us that the consequence for sin is
death. Death means separation. All sinners, meaning everybody, deserve to be
separated from God, both relationally and judicially. For the wages of sin is
death. (Romans 6:23a) Apart from some remedy, this separation will last forever
in a place called Hell. This certainly does not sound like good news. Just
wait, it gets a whole lot better! But in order for us to appreciate the good
news it is necessary to understand this bad news. After all, we typically will
not embrace a remedy unless we first see that there is a problem.
For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten
Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.
so loved the world… We, as the guilty party, are not in a position to fix this
problem of separation from God. But God is. And He did. The remedy starts in
the heart of God where inexplicably we see His great love toward us. God says
He loves the world which means He loves you, not in some impersonal way (“God
loves all the trees and puppies and you too”), but in an intensely personal and
unconditional way. His love for you is specific and very real. We all know that
love can often be phony and be expressed with empty words. Real love is
demonstrated with actions. The good news is that God’s love for you has already
been clearly demonstrated, proving that God loves you as you are, not as you
should be. that He gave His only begotten Son… The demonstration of God’s love
is connected to Jesus Christ, God’s Son. Jesus came from the holy and perfect
side of the barrier and entered into our fallen and unholy world. He lived an
amazing life, teaching thousands about God, demonstrating great compassion,
healing people, and performing miracles. But it is not His life that tells His
story. It is His death. You see, Jesus, falsely accused, was willing to die on
a cross as if He was a guilty criminal or sinner. But He wasn’t. You and I are
the guilty ones, the sinners. While on that cross, God chose to pour out on His
Son all the wrath that we deserve as guilty sinners.
It is as if you were standing on a railroad track
completely unaware of a speeding train about to hit you. At the last moment
Jesus pushes you to safety while He Himself absorbs the hit. The train? That
was God’s righteous anger heading straight toward you because of your offensive
sin. Jesus acted as your substitute. He absorbed God’s wrath that was supposed
to have landed on you. Sin has bankrupted you before God leaving you in need of
someone else to pay your debt. As substitutes go, Jesus is the only valid
option you have. You see, to have your sins successfully paid by another, that
person needs to be holy, without any sin, and without any guilt. This means you
need to find a perfect and sinless person and get them to willingly trade their
perfection for your sin and death. Hopeless as this appears, there is one
person who is both qualified and willing to make that trade and you don’t have
to find him, He has already found you! Why was a perfect God willing to die for
imperfect and undeserving sinners? Because He loves us. And by doing so, it was
the remarkable demonstration of His love. But God demonstrates His own love
toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. (Romans
5:8) Just before Jesus died on the cross He said, “It is finished,” which
carries the idea of “paid in full.” It is as if He wrote a check on your behalf
when He gave up His life. The wages of sin is death, and Jesus died on your
behalf. After His death Jesus was buried. Three days later He miraculously
resurrected from the dead. God intended this resurrection to serve as notice to
the world that He has accepted the substitutionary payment Jesus made for all
humanity and that His justice is forever satisfied against all sin. The check
Jesus wrote has cleared! The legal claim against you and your sin has been
officially settled. This is not true for a few, it is true for everyone: But we
see Jesus . . . that He, by the grace of God might taste death for everyone.”
(Hebrews 2:9) Forty days later Jesus Christ ascended back into Heaven and the
holy side of the barrier. The good news is that He has paved the way for all of
us to cross over as well. The significance of His story centers on His death
and resurrection. His story is often called “the gospel,” meaning “good news,”
a message summed up in the following verses: For I delivered to you first of
all that which I also received: that Christ died for our sins according to the
Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He rose again the third day
according to the Scriptures. (1 Corinthians 15:3-4) The cross is the action
that demonstrates God’s love. The next time you see a cross may it remind you
that God loves you so much that He would rather die than be without you.
For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten
Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.
that whoever believes in Him… So how is it that we can be with Him? The answer
starts with God who, because of His love, chose to send His Son into our world.
The answer continues with the Lord Jesus who chose, through His death, to break
down the barrier between us and God and pave the way that brings us to God. And
now the answer finishes with you and me and whether we choose to believe in
Him, this Jesus who gave Himself for us. A major strength of a relationship
lies in the choice. When two people get married, they voluntarily choose to do
so and that choice brings meaning to their connection. Love will respect another’s
choice. God loves you and with His love He appeals to you but He does not
force; God’s love invites. God allows each one of us to decide which payment
plan we prefer with regards to our sin. Will you claim the full payment that
Jesus has already made for you? Or will you choose to make your own payments
that involve eternal separation from God? The way you claim Jesus’ completed
payment made on your behalf is to simply believe. Your faith is the one
condition God requires—it is how you cash the check. Faith means to be
persuaded so as to trust. God has demonstrated His love to you by giving His
Son. Hopefully, you become persuaded that Jesus has died for you and that He
has successfully paid your sin debt. Then you personally trust in Him,
understanding that He is the remedy for your problem. He is the one that brings
you to God.
For Christ also suffered once for sins, the just for the
unjust, that He might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh but made
alive by the Spirit (1 Peter 3:18). Faith alone in Jesus Christ is the one,
simple condition. God’s plan is simple and free because its foundation is
grace. For by grace, you have been saved through faith, and that not of
yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast.
(Ephesians 2:8-9) Grace means undeserved favor. If something is by grace, then
it is totally, 100-percent unearned. Our salvation from being separated from
God forever is by grace, and it is received only through faith. Faith in what?
Faith in what Jesus did for you. The verse goes on to spell out two things that
you should not put your faith or confidence in. These two things should never
be trusted to help get across the barrier and into Heaven. What are they? The
first one is “yourselves.” You are the problem. God is the remedy. When a
person is drowning in the water, they do not trust themselves. They yell,
“Help!” When you lose your moral purity there is nothing you can do to regain
it. We are defiled which is why Isaiah says: But we are all like an unclean
thing, and all our righteousness’s are like filthy rags. (Isaiah 64:6) The
second thing you should never rely on to get into Heaven is your works. These
works include your good moral decisions and all the nice things you have done
to help others. They also include works that occur in a church such as giving
money, various rituals, baptism, saying a prayer, making commitments to God, or
coming forward. Faith in Jesus means you have let go of everything that you
once thought would help you gain entrance into Heaven and have grabbed hold of
Jesus alone. He brings you to God.
These two things (“works” and “yourselves”) will never help
you get into Heaven because if they did, they would give you a reason to boast.
And boasting in what you have done runs contrary to grace. Remember, because
you are guilty, you will never deserve eternal life. It is always by grace and
it will always depend on what Jesus did, not what you do. In light of this, one
might ask, “But isn’t faith a work?” The answer is no. Faith is trusting in
Another’s work which was done on your behalf. There is no work you can add to
improve the situation. As Jesus said, “It is finished.” But to him who does not
work but believes on Him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is accounted for
righteousness. (Romans 4:5) There is one more thing to point out in Ephesians
2:8-9. It says salvation “is the gift of God.” This is good news! A gift is
free to the receiver though it cost the giver a price. A gift is unconditional
and is never taken back. Once received, it is yours. God, based on the price
paid by Jesus, is offering you a free gift called eternal life. It is yours for
the taking! And once you take it, it is always and forever yours. But should
you choose to never receive this gift please realize that grace rejected is
grace forfeited. A true gift comes with no strings attached. Once you receive
it, it is yours no matter what you do with it. Imagine someone gave you the
latest smartphone as a free gift. What can you do with a smartphone? You can
text, email, take pictures, take videos, listen to music, look at maps, surf
the internet, use social media sites, make voice recordings, use tons of
different apps, and oh yeah, even use it for phone calls! But what if you take
it home and put it under a table leg to level the table? Is it still your
phone? Yes. It is yours to keep. But are you enjoying all the benefits of the
phone? No. You are missing out on some good things. But the phone remains
yours. It was a gift. How you are using it may not make sense, but it is still
yours.
This is what God says salvation and having eternal life is
like. Possessing eternal life has great benefits and an awesome upside
potential. The life is always yours. If you do not take advantage of its
potential, it is to your disadvantage. You will not enjoy the intended
benefits, but the gift (eternal life) remains yours.
For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten
Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.
should not perish but have everlasting life. God made a tremendous promise to
the world in John 3:16. We saw the basis of the promise: He gave His only Son.
We saw the condition to receive the promise: belief in His Son. But what did He
actually promise? God has promised you two things. The first is that you will
not perish, and the second is that you will have everlasting life. The
resurrected Jesus is alive and the giver of eternal life. To be separated from
God for all eternity would be to perish. This was never God’s intention, which
explains why He paid such a price to rescue you. It also shows how greatly He
values you. God’s promise that you will never perish is the remedy that you so
desperately need. A promise is giving a guarantee which means God’s integrity
is on the line. Because God is holy, His promise is guaranteed! The verse
continues by saying that when you believe you will have everlasting life. You
do not receive this in the future, like after you die, but you have it in the
present, like right now. And how long does eternal life last? Forever! This new
life can be your possession today, tomorrow, and for all eternity. This means
that you can know, with certainty, right now, that you have risk free,
guaranteed eternal life. God wants you to know this.
These things I have written to you who believe in the name
of the Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life. (1 John 5:13)
It is clear that God wants you to know for sure that you have eternal life. In
order to be sure, it must be secure. The reality is that you can never lose
this new life. If there was something you could do to lose it, then the verse
we just read could never be true because there would always be the possibility
that you might do something to jeopardize it. However, by its very nature, this
life is eternal. You cannot have eternal life for three years and then no
longer have it because then it would be “three years life”, not “eternal life.”
Furthermore, God has promised anyone who believes in the Son of God that they
will never perish. If you could lose your salvation, then you would perish, and
God’s promise would be a lie. We saw that salvation is said to be a gift, and
gifts are not taken back. If a gift is yanked back because of bad behavior,
then it really wasn’t a gift at all, but rather it was a reward for good
behavior. If the gift of salvation was taken back because of bad behavior then
it is as if God is saying that you can keep your eternal life but only if you
earned it. But that would be a condition of works and directly contradict
grace. The good news is that the gift will never be taken back. It is yours
forever! We saw that salvation is said to be by grace which means it can never
be earned. It is never based on your performance or works. It is based on Christ’s
performance and His work. This is why He receives all the glory. Your
possession of eternal life cannot be jeopardized by your sins. Jesus has
already died for your sins, even future ones. Remember, “It is finished.” God
has laid all your sins upon Jesus, and He says the case is closed. Future sins
cannot condemn you. Can you see why this is called good news?
In this next verse notice the guarantee of Jesus: Most
assuredly, I say to you, he who hears My word and believes in Him who sent Me
has everlasting life, and shall not come into judgment, but has passed from
death into life. (John 5:24) Jesus is restating the promise of John 3:16 with
different wording. As you read the verse ask yourself: Have you heard God’s
words? Have you been persuaded so as to believe in Jesus whom God sent? If so,
what will you not come into in the future? And what has already happened in the
present? If you have believed, you will not come into future judgment and you
have already passed from death into life. You have crossed over the barrier,
and you will never go back! Your eternal destiny has changed. Jesus declares
this as fact, something that has already happened, something you know to be
true, something you can stand upon. How did this occur? By faith. If you have
believed, you have been born again and have a new identity and status as a
child of God. But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become
children of God, to those who believe in His name. (John 1:12) If you have
believed, what a precious reality to know for sure that you have, right now,
eternal life and will one day go to Heaven. You don’t deserve it, but through
Jesus, you possess it. God is not mad at you nor are you under His wrath.
Instead, you are now His child and possess His life. You may be a faithful
child or a rebellious child who will be corrected, but you are a child of God
today, tomorrow, and forever. Imagine the difference knowing this can make in
your daily life. You can be motivated by love and your secure relationship
Imagine the difference knowing this can make in your daily
life. You can be motivated by love and your secure relationship 15 with God
instead of by fear. You have the assurance of belonging instead of ever
wondering. You are no longer separated, but together. You are known and loved.
This is how God wants you to live! John 3:16 starts with God and ends with
eternal life. We trust you have received this life and possess it today. That
indeed would be good news! Thanks for reading.
By Kurt Witzig,
Copyright 2015, Grace Gospel Press
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