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Scripture Text (NRSV)

 

John 3:14-21

 

3:14 And just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up,

3:15 that whoever believes in him may have eternal life.

3:16 "For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life.

3:17 "Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.

3:18 Those who believe in him are not condemned; but those who do not believe are condemned already, because they have not believed in the name of the only Son of God.

3:19 And this is the judgment, that the light has come into the world, and people loved darkness rather than light because their deeds were evil.

3:20 For all who do evil hate the light and do not come to the light, so that their deeds may not be exposed.

3:21 But those who do what is true come to the light, so that it may be clearly seen that their deeds have been done in God."

 

Comments:

 

This theme of light really is of great importance to John. It is as if he expects people to be very slow to understand and he must use this themes a thousand different ways so we will finally see the light and know that Jesus is the light.


Does a lack of comments mean that it is easier for us to picutre the poison snakes from Numberrs than it is to see the cross lifted high. Does it mean to me that \i see the poison and concentrate on it to the point that \i do not lift up my head to see the cross? \A challenge to think about.. retired USAF Chaplain


"Hair of the dog"? The wilderness wanderers stare at a representation of death and pain and find healing. We stare at a Roman killing apparatus, the cross and find life! There goes God again, making something out of nothing...Maybe Joseph's words to his brothers come back into play here too, "What you meant for evil God has made for good". bc in MT


Talk about making something out of nothing! Our lectionary group enjoyed noticing how this happens in both the Old Testament and New Testament lessons for this Sunday. NOw who in the world would think that after spending a good bit of time and energy stepping carefully around dreaded and dangerous snakes, one would find spiritual insight and renewal in looking up at an image which mirrors the very terror they have been living with? But then, isn't the cross like that? A dreaded instrument of torure and punishment, it becomes a symbol of our hope in the very one who died upon it...for us. Rev. She in NC


A few random thoughts while preparing for Sunday: Snakes. They are everywhere. Back in the Old Testament book of exodus, the people of Israel ran into snakes in their desert travels. But they weren't the last ones to do so. The snakes are still with us, but today they are often walking on two legs. We meet them in our workplaces, in our neighborhoods, in political life, and even sometimes within the close circle of our own family and friends. Have you ever been bitten by a snake of the two-legged variety? I have, and I'd be very surprised if I were the only person listening who could say that. In my family we had a great-uncle David a couple of generations back, whom we would all just rather forget about. But I'll bet I'm not alone. It may be that some of you might also have a two-legged snake or two slithering around your family tree. ... But more to the point: There are even more devious snakes at large, and they are the kind that I find, not out there, but rather in here. In my own mind, my own heart, my own conscience. ... Snakes. They lie low in the grass and they sneak up on us unawares. Some of them bite, some draw blood, some spread poison and leave wounds. Snakes like that are not to be trusted. They make our lives miserable. ... Now I'm actually an animal lover, and I'm sure there are others among us who would want to protest that snakes are important in God's world, and are an essential part of our natural environment. Well, I agree. That's true, of course. But poor beast! The snake has somehow become a biblical and literary symbol, too. Beginning in Genesis, where the serpent embodied all that is evil, and tempted Adam and Eve into sin, snakes have acquired a larger-than-life identity in our culture. ... The snake stands not only for Satan and sin, but also for everything that causes woundedness in our lives. Each one of us has an area of need in our lives; and when we are injured at those vulnerable points, we say that the experience is like getting a snake bite. It's painful. ... -AL, Lexington, KY


The light that John refers to here in vs 19 is like a searchlight that reaches out to bring light so that one can see in the dark. It is as John refers to earlier, "The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness does not overcome it." This light is a verdict handed down tht the light has come and some people hate that light because they would rather not face it, but look into the darkness instead. I'm rambling here, but it is early. Joy


It's interesting to me how this passage starts off by saying: "all you have to do is believe" and then ends up talking about deeds having been done in God. I never saw that in this context. I have to admit that as a good Protestant I have preached this passage in light of the first emphasis of belief in Jesus and ignoring the second aspect of deeds. Or is belief in Jesus itself supposed to be a deed done in God? Sorry about the confusion; just trying to make sense of it. . . Chuck


Snakes...historically and in the Old testament snakes negative symbols but what about the positive symbols...in matriarchal times they were a sign of healing.Marian


 I was reminded that the healing emblem for the medical profession is the symbol of the snake intwined on the staff... same image for this weeks' Hebrew Bible reading and the gospel. Sacred images infusing the secular ...which reminds me, stream of consciously, of the annual Red Mass at St Louis Cathedral New Orleans for the Louisianna legal profession....Kairos


Saved by grace...

Deeds are the evidence for salvation...

Does that work (no pun intended)?

Rick in Va


I recently saw the movie "The Green Mile". I can not help but think of it as I read this text. John Coffee(and I am not spelling it right) was what we used to call in the '60's a "Christ-figure" innocently dying so that others might live - even too long. He was a healer. He saw injustice. The film maker used the contrast of dark and light through out the movie. How do we use this example without revealing the ending for those who have not seen it? The electric chair and cross work. I need to sharpen the example of a man who usually did only good but was executed. There was one scene in which he uses violence to destroy evil. If others of you have seen "THe Green Mile" I would enjoy dialogue about using it as an example or metaphor for this week's Gospel.

Caroline in CT/USA


John Coffee's (just like the drink) death provided no salvation. He provided salvation through helping and healing others. To that extent, yes, I saw him as a Christ-figure.

Light exposing the deeds of darkness: what about the contrast of John Coffee and the sadistic guard? Who was really in darkness? As well, this particular guard's threat to expose the deeds of the other guards.

The movie served for me to illustrate the sacredness of life and how horrible it is to lose it. Great movie. John near Pitts


Thanks, The Green Mile does provide a great framework for the themes of this week's scripture. Manzel


Yes, light and darkness are central to the gospel of John. In the Green Mile, there are many contrasts of light and darkness but also of life and death. Life itself is enlightened, glorified and shown to be sacred yet death too is revered as a good part of creation. Each execution was horrible, tragic and just plane wrong. Even stomping on a mouse was an atrocity. That very scene made all life seem more sacred. But death, in its own time was to be welcomed and there John Coffy was ahead of us. We need not try to make John Coffy more into the image of Jesus but in appreciateing John Coffy we have a new depth of understanding Jesus. The inoscence of John Coffey and his abscence of malice in contrast to reputation or public personan is so striking. One cannot help but love John Coffy for his purity of heart, his abscence of malace. Yet this giant image on the silver screne is but a flickering candle in comparison to the radiant Son- shine of the one Crusified for us who could say from the cross, "father forgive them for they know not what they do" ! Manzel


Insightful Friends—

I see here a fun twist on the old expression "hotter than Hell." Apparently, the place of heat and light is in the presence of Christ. This would fit with the portrayal of the innermost circle of Hell in Dante’s Inferno. There, Satan is forever imprisoned in a mountain of ice which never melts because it is so far removed from the light and heat of Christ’s presence.

Have you ever been in a place where the light is too bright? About 30 years ago, when I was an Explorer Scout, our High Adventure Post used to do 3 or 4 survival training outings per year. One of them was out in California’s high desert. In the summer. One of the first orders of business was to either find or construct some shade. The heat of so much direct sunlight was unbearable. Though it was years ago, I vividly remember the experience of seeing myself under such stark, searching light. My skin was either too burnt or too pasty. My body seemed too thin and puny (sigh, those were the days). My face, reflected in the pocket mirror (useful for signaling or shaving), was streaked with dried sweat and grime. My features seemed misshapen and misaligned. All in all, under that broad expanse of light and heat, I was profoundly aware of just how small and inadequate I was, how ill-equipped I was to handle the simple task of surviving in that bright, unrelenting light.

There were, of course, other fears in the darkness. Most of the denizens of the desert are nocturnal. But there again, my greatest, deepest fear arose from the light–– this time from the light of myriad stars. Under the light of those stars, light that had traveled billions of miles to fill up my desert night, I felt utterly worthless and insignificant. And there, at the age of 17, completely exposed and stripped of all pretensions, is when I really heard the sheer power of God’s Good News, proclaimed by Jesus, whispered by the Holy Spirit: "Yes, you are a small, insignificant, flawed little creature. And I love you more than you can begin to imagine."

"And this is the judgment. Light has come into the world, but the people preferred darkness." Small wonder. Light shows us just how flawed and helpless we are. The desert did not judge me, nor the blazing sun, nor the night sky. I judged myself by their light and was found wanting. So it is, I think, with that last judgment. And yet, thanks be to God, the light came into the world not to condemn the world, but to save.

For more insight into this week’s text, I strongly recommend "The Great Divorce," by C. S. Lewis.

Blessings, Steve in Orange


As I read this passage along with the Ephesian passage, and try to put it into the Lenten perspective (esp. self-examination), it is the word "grace" that keeps jumping out at me. Grace is always there. The snake that Moses lifted up in the desert was there for the people to see. The cross of Christ is there, now, for us to see. Grace is there. Forgiveness is there. Before we even ask, we are forgiven. But, we must turn away from the world (flesh) to see it. We must accept God's grace. It is there for the taking. Pastor Mark in IL


For Lent I'm doing a series of services called "Pressure Points (felt needs) of Life." For this Sunday, the topic is "The Long Journey--when life/job/marriage gets boring."

I'll point out that the journey for Israel made no sense whatever. A journey that should have lasted 3 months lasted 40 years. What must have been the frustrations of the people as they struggled with their feelings of faith, loyalty, heritage???!!!

In our society, we have what we call "mid-life crises." That's when we've lived 40 years, and when we think we should have the feeling of satisfaction and fulfillment, we feel empty and meaningless. And we think if we had a different job, a different wife, a sports car, we'd feel better. Those are the snakes that can kill us! Destroy our very reason for living!

But right in the middle of that struggle for meaning and fulfillment is that sign of God's love: the cross. It's the sign of death, but to us a sign of life. In the middle of our pain, our boredom, our lot in life comes the message that Jesus is the one who hung between earth and heaven to join us to our God. From the perspective of the cross, we see things differently. There's a divine perspective. A God-view of life. A God-purpose for our struggles and pains.

In January we visited our son in Phoenix and saw our 4-month old granddaughter for the first time. I'll never forget the feeling when I picked her up and the first thing she did was give me a great big smile! This old grandpa heart did a million flips! It was then that I realized why I was patient with my son when he was growing up. God was using me to build character and strength in my children so that they could pass it on to theirs.

It's easy to get lost in the wilderness, and to feel like there's no point. But there is. Some day we'll see it! Looking to the sign of love will keep us faithful and focused, and will give us the strength to persevere.

Clarence in Iowa


A couple of early week thoughts.

When I was a child, one of my important task around the house was to hold the light. My father, a very patient man, was not much of a Mr. fixit. As he would struggle to repair things I was often brought in to hold a flashlight for him. (I heard a comedian comment not long ago that if they had invented those snake lights that shine where you point them he'd have never met his father) I was young and easily distacted, and I remember the light wandering with my eyes on occassion around the room and away from the project at hand. I can still hear the harrummmph from under the sink or the hood of the car as my Dad encouraged me to return the light.

I learned that when a person wants the light nothing else will do.

As a newly wed, I had not yet adjusted to sharing my life with another. On a few occassions my morning person happiness and the light I turned on with a happy "Good Morning !!" were met with a very similar harrrummmppphh from my dazed and unhapy bride.

Again, when people do not want the light - they really do not want it!

I am also intersted in looking at the way God takes the cause of our pain and often transforms itr - by grace - into a sign of redemption.

More as we bake our way through the week. New York Sheepdog


Adam Clarke's commentary on N.T. on v 16

Such a love as that which induced God to give his only begotten son to die for the world could not be described: Jesus Christ does not attempt it. He has put an eternity of meaning in the particle, "so" and left a subject for everlasting contemplation, wonder, and praise, to angels and to men. The same evangelist uses a similar mode of expression, 1 John 3:1: Behold, WHAT MANNER of love the Father hath bestowed upon us.


Adam Clarke on v 17:

For God sent not, etc.—It was the opinion of the Jews that the Gentiles, whom they often term the world and nations of the world, were to be destroyed in the days of the Messiah. Christ corrects this false opinion; and teaches here a contrary doctrine. God, by giving his Son, and publishing his design in giving him, shows that he purposes the salvation, not the destruction, of the world—the Gentile people: nevertheless, those who will not receive the salvation he had provided for them, whether Jews or Gentiles, must necessarily perish; for this plain reason, There is but one remedy, and they refuse to apply it.

Clarence in Iowa


Adam Clarke on the pericope:

This is the end of our Lord’s discourse to Nicodemus; and though we are not informed here of any good effects produced by it, yet we learn from other scriptures that it had produced the most blessed effects in his mind, and that from this time he became a disciple of Christ. He publicly defended our Lord in the Sanhedrin, of which he was probably a member, John 7:50, and, with Joseph of Arimathea, gave him an honorable funeral, John 19:39, when all his bosom friends had deserted him.

Clarence in Iowa


It strikes me a little odd that with Nicodemus expressing such interest in spiritual things, Jesus did not call him to be one of the disciples.

Clarence in Iowa


As Clarence noted, this piece is a part of Jesus' discourse to Nicodemus, who came to Jesus by night. In chapter 19, when Joseph asks for the body of Jesus, it is noted that he was "a disciple of Jesus, though a secret one" (19:38). Vs. 39 also notes that Nicodemus first came to Jesus by night. Could this discussion of light and darkness be directed at Nicodemus (and other secret disciples) who has "seen the light" but will not live in the light? Seems like an often repeated theme in human history. We know God, we know of God's salvation, we believe in God, but we continue to stuggle with allowing God to rule in our lives. While Nicodemus and Joseph may have hidden their discipleship publicly, they were faithful privately. Too often in today's society, we are public with our discipleship (church, language, jewlry, t-shirts), but our faith is hidden, even from ourselves. I see two actions of Christianity: seeing the light and living in the light. If we want to put this in theological terms, it may be liken to salvation and santification. This leads us right back to the earlier conversation of works vs. grace. We are saved by grace that in our sanctification we may do good works.

Just some rambling thoughts...JRinBigD


I am interested in seeing how we respond to what has become the sacharinne sentimentality surrounding John 3:16.

This passage of scripture is part of Jesus' response to the question, "How can this be?" How can one be born anew. Simple answer: Believe that the light has come into the world for our salvation.

My working title for this week's sermon is "This littlle light of ...ours."

Sun City Rev


Sacharinne sentimentality . . . a tough challenge, since I am preaching from John 3:16 as well. Two challenges I have found:

1. "World" is kosmos in the Greek, and I don't think it's a stretch in the translation to insist that the emotional interpretation of "God loved *me* so much . . ." is way too small. Over in the discussion section they are refering to The Green Mile, and the image of John Coffee feeling everyone's emotions makes for a good image of God loving the world.

2. At the end of the verse, "perish" is in the aorist, and "have" eternal life is in the present. From my word search through John (using Hermeneutika, an excellent computer Bible program that let me search on the Greek root and print the results in English), both of these distinctives are relatively consistent through the gospel. So the death we suffer is past, present, and future, and the eternal life is now--today. I haven't figured out how to illustrate this well yet, but it draws us away from a focus on what happens when we die.

I'll be (briefly) walking through the verse, phrase by phrase, as a sermon outline.


Thanks for the good thoughts again this week. While reading Raymond Brown again on this text i was taken back when he stated that "the best attested readings" suggested the definite article "the" only Son rather than "his" only Son in v.16. Is there anything to this? Not that it would affect my preaching on this text, but sometimes these seemingly little things are there. Deke of the North


v 14 again re-emphasizes the significance of covenant history breaking forth in the life of Jesus. This recapitulation faith vision opening up the present to the past or the past to the present is especially needed in this age of information explosion, future shock, dead tradition, and institutional emptiness because of the contemporary eschatological milieu wherein the chaos of change victimizes. We need the "serpent wisdom" especially in Jesus the Christ to bring the new being/life which is victorious over death. We need to see clearly the cause of our dead being. We need to see the serpent Jesus bearing our death as his own especially in the Sacrament of Holy Communion. PaideiaSCO in north GA mts.


A member of my congregation asked people where he worked,"Who said..Jn 3:16?" it has been taken out of context so much, that almost no one knew. i am going back and including nicodemus (i'll be out of town on father's day). we imagined how the pharisees used to stay up late at night discussing scripture and theology (before T.V.) and could "see" nicodemus coming in from the dark, into the light.

didn't the hebrew people have to acknowledge their sin before they pled for help from the snakes? They admitted they had turned against God, and now God provided a way for them to turn to God and gaze upon life. a lenten theme seems to be that in confessing our turning away from God, we can turn to the cross, the symbol of our salvation, of life.

when you come in to the light, the streaks and dirt show, only then do you realize the need to clean.

thanks for your comments. blessings, rachel in tn.ms