I recently reflected on the below article by
Ray Hollenbach, a Chicagoan, writes about faith and culture and think
its good. You can check out his work at studentsofjesus.com
I
hate bumper stickers, even when I agree with them. How can anything
important be reduced to so few words? Our media soaked, marketing driven
age has generated a sound-bite generation. We have been trained to
reduce life and death thoughts into catch phrases and slogans.
It’s even true in the church, where for the last 60 years the most
popular verse in the Bible has been John 3:16, “For God so loved the
world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him
shall not perish but have eternal life.”
It’s
been the go-to verse for outreach because it speaks of God’s sacrificial
love, our need for faith, and the promise of eternal life. I’m in favor
of all those things--they are all true. Still, there is a danger in
quoting John 3:16 apart from the gospel of the Kingdom of God. It
reduces the good news to something Jesus never intended.
It’s time to stop using John 3:16 apart from the gospel of the Kingdom
of God.
If Jesus commissioned us to announce the Kingdom and make disciples of
the King, we should give people the full story. Anything less is
dishonest. John 3:16 isn’t even the full story of the conversation
between Jesus and Nicodemus. Why have we tried to shrink the Kingdom
call into those 26 words?
Here are four drawbacks of shrinking the gospel into John 3:16:
Our use of John 3:16 means we have distorted God’s love, and his call
for us to love in return.
Make no mistake: God is love. Who could be against love--especially the
perfect love of the Father? But the love of God goes beyond his
sacrifice and empowers us to respond. His love teaches us to love. His
love is modeled in the life of Jesus--not just his death. Most
important, when we use John 3:16 for outreach we fail to communicate the
first and greatest commandment, that we should love the Lord our God
with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength.
Our use of John 3:16 means we have distorted the life-changing
responsibility of belief.
Faith is vital to our entry into the Kingdom of God, but in our day
“belief” has been reduced to “agreement.” True faith is a dangerous,
life-changing force that causes us to die to ourselves and the old way
of life. True faith causes us to count our lives as lost for the sake of
gaining God’s Kingdom. The “faith” presented in the bumper-sticker
application of John 3:16 asks simply for the nodding of our heads.
Our use of John 3:16 means we have traded the promise of God’s vast
Kingdom for simply living a long time.
I’m so glad I will live forever. I’ve bet my eternal destiny on the
life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. Yet when we reduce the gospel to
everlasting life, we have presented a false reward. Imagine someone who
attained everlasting life apart from the love of God or transformation
into Christlikeness--what would this do to someone’s soul? What if we
got to live forever but didn’t like the life we got to live? Jesus has a
different definition of eternal life than simply beating death: “Now
this is eternal life: that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus
Christ, whom you have sent.” (John 17:3) Eternal life is relationship
with our Creator, knowing him and being known by him. To be present with
God is to leave this life behind.
Finally, our use of John 3:16 means we have failed to make disciples.
The Great Commission has become the Great Omission.
We have taken the methods of salesmanship and used them for an
evangelism that misrepresents the gospel Jesus announced. It is a
bait-and-switch, without the call to switch. We should ask ourselves
what kind of disciples have we made. For the last 60 years in North
America the answer is that we have fallen short of the Lord’s commission
to us. What if we chose Matthew 11:28-30 for their outreach verse
instead of John 3:16? What kind of disciples could we make? Or Luke
9:57-62? Or the entire Sermon on the Mount? He calls us to come and
follow.
It's not a drive-by gospel. The Kingdom of God doesn’t fit on a bumper
sticker.
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