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I Corinthians: Introduction and Outline

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Introduction

Corinth was a strategically located Roman city on the main land route between East and West and was the crossroads for several sea routes. Corinth was famous for its intellectual and material prosperity and was honored with being the capitol of Achaia. It also became famous for its corruption. As Guthrie says, “Its name became a byword for profligacy.”1

Paul began his ministry in Corinth on his second missionary journey under much opposition (Acts 18:6-17), but he was able to convert several influential people and consequently remained for about one and a half years in Corinth.2

He left Corinth and traveled to Ephesus. The city’s corruption had its influence on the church and Paul heard of the problems and divisions in the church. It is from Ephesus that he wrote and sent this letter to Corinth in about 53 A.D.

Purpose

Paul’s purposes for writing the Corinthians were several. His first purpose was to deal with several moral problems and the divisions that had formed as people had divided into fan-clubs and were proclaiming themselves followers of Paul, Apollos, Peter or Christ (1:10). His second reason was to deal with several questions that had been asked in a letter the Corinthians had sent to him (7:1). A third purpose that appears throughout the book is Paul’s defense of his apostolic authority.3

All of these issues can be related to a problem with pride, and thus in 1:27-29 we have what may be the thesis statement of the book:

. . . but God has chosen the foolish things of the world to shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of the world to shame the things which are strong, and the base things of the world and the despised, God has chosen, the things that are not, that He might nullify the things that are, that no man should boast before God (1 Cor. 1:27-29).

Paul will develop this idea in several different ways to deal with their root problem of pride. They had their eyes on external things like eloquence, social status, ascetic practices, etc. and Paul explains that those things mean nothing in God’s kingdom.

Outline and
Argument of the Book

I. Introduction 1:1-9

Paul’s introduction is distinct from introductions to his other epistles in that he fails to commend these believers. One might compare his thankfulness for the Roman and Ephesian Christians’ faith (Rom. 1:8; Eph. 1:1) and the Philippians’ participation in the gospel (Phil. 1:5). Only the epistle to the Galatians starts off with less warmth than this one. (That may be because the issue in Galatians is justification by faith and their very salvation was threatened.) Instead he elaborates on their position and blessings in Christ and His faithfulness to confirm them to the end. It might even be considered amazing that Paul is able to be thankful for the grace of God because it was their abuse of that grace that caused all these problems he is writing about. He is able to be thankful that they are not lacking in any spiritual gifts, although they are not using them for edification of the body.4

II. Reproof of Their Sin

    A. Divisions in the Church 1:10-4:21
      1. The Problem Stated 1:10-17

Paul had heard that the Corinthian believers had divided into groups and were holding up various leaders as being superior to the others. There were those that followed Paul, who had founded the church. Others followed the eloquent Apollos (Acts 18:24). Some thought that Peter was the best, perhaps because he had been with Jesus. And perhaps the worst of all, at least because they were the most self-righteous, there were those who claimed they were superior because they followed Christ or were servants of Christ (cf. 2 Cor. 11:23).

      2. Reasons for the Problem 1:18-2:16

Of course this problem is one of the most blatant and destructive examples of what was discussed as the theme of the book. The Corinthians were focused on external methods of measurement for spirituality. The specific reason for the divisions was that the Corinthians were placing their faith in the wisdom of men. Paul points out that the wisdom of men is foolishness to God (1:25) and their faith should be in the power of God (2:5), not the power of men.

Paul’s argument is that they have misunderstood the very nature of the gospel. In the next three paragraphs he shows them first, that the very idea of a crucified Messiah is foolish (1:18-25), second, that God chose them though they did not deserve it (1:26-31) and third, look how God used him, Paul, in his weakness (2:1-5).5

Because the Corinthians were pursuing wisdom, Paul concludes chapter 2 by asserting that what he is about to discuss is wisdom. It is the wisdom of God, and only the spiritual will be able to understand it.

      3. Results of the Problem
        a. Immaturity 3:1-9

Paul continues his thought on spirituality and he shows that they are not spiritual. One result of the divisions was carnality and stunted spiritual growth (3:1-2).

        b. Loss of Rewards 3:10-23

Paul shows that another result is the loss of rewards. While living in a carnal state, any good performed by man will be considered wood, hay and straw (3:12) and will be burned up (3:15) at the judgment seat of Christ.

        c. Judging of Others 4:3

Because they were focused on the external, they had set up extra-biblical standards of comparison. Paul points out that what counts with God is the heart and only God knows the heart and motivation. What men see on the outside is not an accurate barometer of the heart.

      4. The Solution to the Problem 4:1-21

Within this next section are two ideas. One is Paul’s defense of his apostolic authority, and the other idea is the solution to their problem.

First, we see that Paul discusses stewardship. The Greek word oikonomov implies accountability and delegated authority.6 This fits nicely with Paul’s defense of his ministry. Paul is accountable to God, so their judgmental spirit does not affect him. God will judge him. And second, although Paul is weak and unimpressive in his own flesh (4:9-13), God has seen fit to use him, and he is backed by the authority of God.

Second we see principles that will heal their divisions. One solution was to stop passing judgment on others. What God requires is faithfulness (4:2) and only God can judge the heart (4:5).

Another solution was to stop being arrogant (4:6). These examples (of watering and sowing 3:6, being God’s fellow-workers 3:9, being a servant and steward 4:1) that Paul had “figuratively applied” (4:6) to himself and Apollos were to make a point: Paul and Apollos were only channels of God. The Corinthians, on the other hand, were exalting themselves over the Word.7

Paul further explains the futility of following men because these leaders that they were exalting were actually weak, despised, persecuted and without honor (4:10-13). It is also interesting to consider that this is why God was able to use them as leaders in the first place. Therefore, the Corinthians are urged to imitate Paul (4:16).

The test, Paul says, is not in their arrogant speech (4:19), but whether or not they are leading powerful lives through the Spirit’s power. And with this thought he moves to deal with other problems which show they are not living through the Spirit’s power.

    B. Lack of Discipline in the Church 5:1-13

Paul had also received reports that there was immorality in the church, and what was worse, they had not dealt with the offender (5:1-2).

In 5:3-8 Paul explains that they need to remove the immoral person from the church for discipline because if left in their midst, he would corrupt the rest of the body.

In a previous letter (5:9) Paul had told them not to associate with immoral people and they had obviously misunderstood. He was not referring to unbelievers as they would have no witness should they isolate themselves (5:10). He was referring to immoral people in the church because they would corrupt the church and weaken its testimony. There has been some confusion over the phrase “so-called brother” in 5:11 with some taking this to mean a person who is not really a brother (in Christ). However, the translation “so-called” is an unfortunate and inaccurate one. It is better translated “with anyone who bears the name brother.” Paul is not casting doubt on the offender’s salvation.8

    C. Litigation in the Body 6:1-8

In the last section Paul corrected a misunderstanding and showed that the Corinthians were to judge those inside the church and not those on the outside. He now shows that church members should not go outside the body and let outsiders judge the church members.9

The Corinthians pride and occupation with social status was evident by their disputes before the legal authorities. They were only concerned about themselves and who came out on top, and it was ruining their testimony before unbelievers (6:6).

Paul’s argument is that since they would some day even judge angels (6:3), they ought to be able to settle disputes among themselves. They were certainly not living according to their full potential.10

He then asks them, if they were to set up a court of their own, would they place an incompetent judge on the bench? The obvious answer is “no.” So why do they subject themselves to the judgment of those who are of no account in the church.11

Paul also points out that there were actually no winners in these suits because “they had incurred a far greater loss in their disobedience to the Word of God”12 as it was not God’s will that they defraud one another.

    D. Lack of Purity 6:9-20

Paul had dealt with the problem of incest and their inability to judge the offender in 5:1-13. That led to a discussion of having unbelievers judge church members (6:1-8), but Paul returns to his topic of sexual immorality. Evidently some of the Corinthians were going to prostitutes and they were probably appealing their right to do so because of their liberty in Christ, but they had a false view of Christian freedom.13

Paul’s response is that their liberty is limited by whether or not it is profitable and whether or not it will enslave (vs. 12). And as is typical in Ancient Near Eastern literature, he deals with these things in reverse order—enslavement and then profitability.

Perhaps Paul is dealing with a couple of the common arguments the Corinthians were using to justify their immorality. The first one is related to the enslavement idea. The phrase “food is for the stomach and the stomach for food” in vs. 13 may mean they were giving the analogy that, just like one eats when he is hungry, so one also fulfills sexual desires. After all, both are natural physical desires. But Paul points out that the body is not to be used for immorality, but to serve God. Certainly, hunger and sexual desire are normal but you can abuse both and we are not to always give in to them. It is possible that Paul has in mind that one actually becomes enslaved to the power or enchantment of the prostitute as opposed to Christ.14

Paul then turns to the concept of profitability (6:14-20). He points out that our bodies no longer belong to us but to Christ. And we should not do anything to harm them. Paul explains that being joined to a prostitute is actually harmful to the body, and we have responsibility to take care of our bodies as they are the temple of the Holy Spirit (6:19).

III. Reply to Their Questions

It is evident from the way Paul introduces the next few sections of the letter that he is responding to questions that the Corinthians had asked him in a letter they had sent him previously.

    A. Concerning Marriage 7:1-40

It would be helpful if we had the exact questions that the Corinthians had asked Paul, but all we know is that some concerned celibacy and marriage. Paul deals with these first as they are related to the preceding section.

      1. Celibacy 7:1-9, 25-40

Evidently there were all types in the Corinthian church, and in contrast to the preceding group, some of the Corinthians had ascetic tendencies and thought that celibacy should be practiced by believers.15 Paul concedes that it is indeed good to be celibate (7:1,6), and he wished that all men could have that special gift, as he did (7:7), so they could devote fulltime service to God (7:34), but it was certainly not the norm and it was certainly not commanded (7:6,25). In addition, if one without the gift were to attempt to remain celibate, it might be more than they could maintain and it might lead to immorality (7:9).16

There is also a possibility that the participation in immorality by some married people had led them to abandon their marital duties to their spouses, or there could have been a unilateral decision by one spouse to practice abstinence, and Paul deals with that issue.17 Certainly, these actions were self-centered and not done with a view to ministering to the other spouse.

      2. Divorce 7:10-24

Paul also deals with the situation where a believer is married to an unbeliever. In the previous section and the next section, he does not give a command, but here he does and adds that it is not his, but it is the Lord’s command. God does not want the believer to leave their mate because God’s will is not divorce. Instead, they should live with them and try to win them over to Christ.

Paul adds that whatever circumstance you were in when you became a Christian, remain in them. Christianity is not designed to take us out of the world. It is to help us live in it. Paul may also have added this section, with his mention of circumcision, because he recognized the tendency of certain factions to exert “pressure to conform to old religious ways in order to gain prestige, a common failing of the Corinthians.”18 The tendency is to place too much emphasis on social status. That is unimportant in God’s eyes.

These topics relate back to the main argument of the book which is to point out that the Corinthians pridefully had their eyes on externals.

    B. Concerning Meat Sacrificed to Idols 8:1-11:1

Paul continues his argument that the Corinthians placed too much emphasis on external practices by dealing with certain taboos some of the Corinthians had concerning food. He devotes much time to this issue and gives principles that should be our guide in all questionable things.

Some of the Corinthians thought that it was wrong to eat meat sacrificed to idols. They were certain that the pagan gods had somehow contaminated the meat and this would offend God. Others knew it didn’t matter as there was only one God. They may even have been proud of their knowledge and were flaunting their freedom. Paul’s point is that the one with Knowledge must practice Love and abstain. Because, just like one cannot reason logically to alleviate a child’s fear of the dark, in the same way some of these Christians were too immature to understand the logic of grace and Christian liberty.19

Paul then gives his own actions as an example to further his argument: His insistence on supporting himself by working while in Corinth demonstrated that although his apostleship gave him a position of social prominence, he did not exercise it (9:1-18). As already seen, social status was a major problem with the Corinthians. They needed to follow Paul’s example of humility. Paul also demonstrated the principle of love when he became a Jew to the Jews in order to win Jews; and a Gentile to the Gentiles in order that he might win Gentiles; and to the weak he became weak (9:19-22).

Paul concludes this section by warning them that, although it is permissible to eat the meat sacrificed to idols (unless it offends your brother), it is not permissible to partake in the religious feasts given in that deity’s honor (10:14-22). And he urges them to only partake in those things which edify and glorify God (10:23-33).

    C. Concerning Public Worship 11:2-14:40

After dealing with the abuse of their liberty and forbidding the Corinthians to partake in pagan religious activities, Paul deals with three problems within the Corinthian church worship services. The Corinthians’ worship services also demonstrated their problem with pride and self-centeredness.

      1. The Role of Women 11:2-16

Perhaps this topic is necessary because some women were overstepping their freedom. Because of their new ontological equality in Christ (Gal 3:8) some women were forgetting their functionally subjective role to men. They evidently were prophesying or praying and not covering their head which was the normal practice of the church (11:16). Wayne House points out that Paul’s argument is this: “Even as Christ has a head, who is God, so the woman has a head, namely, man. She is to take that into account when she prophesies lest she dishonor man…and her own dignity.”20

      2. The Lord's Supper 11:17-34

Others were abusing the Lord’s Supper. Instead of the ordinance being a time of remembrance of Christ, worship to God and unity among the saints, the Corinthians were “pigging out” and getting drunk. Certainly the factions in the church contributed to the abuses because they were not even waiting until all were together to partake of the elements. Hence, Paul’s comment that “one is hungry and another is drunk” in vs. 21.

So Paul reminds them of the significance of the Lord’s Supper and the dire consequences of participating while out of fellowship (11:30), and he concludes by exhorting them to examine their lives for sin (11:28,31) and to partake of the Lord’s Supper as a unified body as it was designed (11:33).

      3. The Use of Spiritual Gifts 12:1-14:40

The third area of concern was over their misuse and emphasis on certain spiritual gifts, specifically tongues. Tongues had become the prominent gift and those that were able to speak in tongues felt more spiritual than those that could not. Consequently Paul devotes a great deal of space to the topic of tongues at the end of the section.

        a. Spiritual Gifts 12:

Paul begins his argument with a confusing section (vss. 1-3) that seems unrelated to the rest of the discussion on spiritual gifts and tongues. Some see this as emphasizing a testing the spirit behind inspired utterances such as tongues. 21 Others see it as indicative of false teachers in their midst.22 But Gordon Fee relates it to the entire section as follows:

The presence of the Spirit in power and gifts makes it easy for God’s people to think of the power and gifts as the real evidence of the Spirit’s presence. Not so for Paul. The ultimate criterion of the Spirit’s activity is the exaltation of Jesus as Lord. Whatever takes away from that, even if they be legitimate expressions of the Spirit, begins to move away from Christ to a more pagan fascination with spiritual activity as an end in itself.23

This certainly fits with Paul’s argument against the Corinthians’ emphasis on external methods comparison.

Paul then shows through an analogy with the human body that all the spiritual gifts are important. The Corinthians preferred the “showy” gifts, which made the individual look spiritual. But Paul reminds them of the principle, which he has repeated often in the book, that God prefers the weak and humble and insignificant of the world, because they do not depend on their own ability, but on God’s power (cf. 1:26-29; 4:9-13; 12:23-24). Paul also shows that diversity is necessary for the proper function of the body (12:17).

        b. Love 13:

Central to this section on spiritual gifts and tongues is Paul’s discussion of love. The Corinthians’ problem was self-love. They wanted to exalt themselves, and consequently, they emphasized the gifts which brought glory to themselves. But Paul points out that love does not seek its own (13:5).

In addition, Paul says “love never fails,” or perhaps more accurately, “love never ends” (13:8). This is in contrast to the spiritual gifts. Paul says they will cease. It is not clear whether Paul is saying all the gifts will cease when Christ comes (vs. 10),24 or whether Paul is saying some of the gifts are foundational gifts and will cease when the church’s foundation is laid.25 Although it is beyond the scope of this study to examine all the evidence, it is this author’s conviction that Paul is referring to the miraculous sign gifts which ceased as the church was founded and the canon completed.

        c. Tongues 14:

But these gifts had not yet ceased so Paul gives instructions about the priority and proper exercise of these gifts and especially tongues.

Paul’s argument is that although speaking in tongues is good (vs. 5), it only edifies the speaker (vs. 4). So Paul would rather that they placed their emphasis on the gift of prophesy which edified all present, as it was spoken in the tongue of the listeners (vss. 3-4). By way of illustration, Paul gives the analogy of music and concludes that as music without melody is useless (vss. 7-8), so is tongues without interpretation. It seems that the Corinthians habitually spoke in tongues without the necessary interpretation.26

Paul also points out that tongues is a sign for the unbelieving Jew (vss. 21-22) and as their regular assembly consisted of believers, they should place their emphasis on prophecy which was directed toward believers. And if an unbeliever did visit, he would still benefit from the teaching (vs. 24).

It is indicative of the Corinthians’ spiritual condition that Paul could not just give them these principles and let them apply them, and thus he concludes this section by laying down some guidelines which are less dependent on the Corinthians’ judgment vss. 26-33). That these rules were designed to bring order to the worship services is evident from the statement that “God is not a God of confusion but of peace.”

Paul returns to the discussion of the woman’s role in the worship service, and many see this as indicative that the women were being disruptive because it so closely follows his statement that God is not a God of confusion.27 However, it is possible that this command near the conclusion of the section follows Paul’s emphasis at the beginning on testing the spirit.28 Paul has just mentioned in verse 29 that others are to pass judgment on the one who prophesies, and it is not the woman’s role to pass judgment on men as it contradicts the functional headship of men over women.

Paul concludes his argument in this major section by saying that those who are spiritual should be able to follow these guidelines, and he gives two summary statements. One emphasizes prophecy over tongues because it edifies others, and the other emphasizes order in the worship service (vss. 39-40).

    D. Concerning the Resurrection 15:1-58

Paul now turns to a matter which was a crucial aspect of the gospel and foundational to their salvation.

Some of the Corinthians were denying that there would be a resurrection of the dead (15:12), but Paul points out that they had not seen the implications of that position because it led to denial of Christ’s own resurrection and thus their very salvation.29 He concludes that if this were true, and there was no life after death, then “we are of all men most to be pitied” (15:19), because the sacrifices made for Christ in this life would be for nothing.

Paul argues that Christ was raised and is actually the “first fruits” (vss. 20,23) of those who are asleep. Certainly, Christ was not the first to be raised from the dead. Elijah, Christ, Paul, etc. had raised people from the dead, but Christ was the first to be raised to a life that knows no death,30 and others would follow (vs. 23). Certainly Christ’s resurrection is the basis for our victory and our hope (vss. 51-58).

IV. Conclusion 16:1-24

Paul concludes by dealing with several practical matters:

    A. Giving 16:1-4

Paul writes concerning the collection of money for the church in Jerusalem. He gives a guideline for giving on a regular basis on the first day of the week (16:2).

    B. Paul's Visit 16:5-9

Paul plans to visit them again and spend time ministering to them for an extended period.

    C. Treatment of Timothy and Apollos 16:10-12

He also deals with the Corinthians’ attitude towards Timothy and Apollos. With all the divisions in the church it was certainly not easy to minister to this congregation. It is specifically stated that Apollos did not want to return (16:12) at least until the exhortations in this letter had been received and applied. And one can assume that Timothy probably had similar concerns. Thus Paul exhorts the Corinthians to treat these men properly who are doing God’s work.

    D. Greetings and Benediction 16:13-24

From this section we can conclude that the three men mentioned, Stephanus, Fortunatus and Achaicus probably brought news of and the letter from Corinth.

Finally, Paul concludes by sending his greetings to the saints in Corinth.

Summary

The Corinthian church had many problems, and most of them were the result of pride and placing so much emphasis on social status. Their divisions, lack of church discipline, lawsuits, abuse of Christian liberty and over-emphasis of the gift of tongues, all illustrate this root problem. While Paul dealt with these problems separately, perhaps the pinnacle of Paul’s argument is in chapter 13 where he emphasizes the importance of love. Love of others is incompatible with pride and is to be the fundamental principle that guides all actions.

Bibliography

Fee, Gordon, The First Epistle to the Corinthians, The New International Commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1987).

Guthrie, Donald, New Testament Introduction, Rev. ed. (Downers Grove, Illinois: Intervarsity Press, 1990).

House, H. Wayne, “Should a Woman Prophesy or Preach before Men?” Bibliothecra Sacra (April-June, 1988).

House, H. Wayne, “The Speaking of Women and the Prohibition of the Law,” Bibliothecra Sacra (July-September, 1988).

Hughes, Robert B., First Corinthians (Chicago: Moody Press, 1985).

Lowery, David K., “1 Corinthians,” The Bible Knowledge Commentary, ed. John F. Walvoord and Roy B. Zuck, (Wheaton: Victor Books, 1983).

Morris, Leon, The First Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians, Tyndale New Testament Commentaries (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1985).

New American Standard Translation (Chicago: Moody Press, 1978).

Wiersbe, Warren, Be Wise (Wheaton: Victor Books, 1988).

Wilkin, Bob, “The So-Called So-Called Brother,” Grace Evangelical Society News Letter, Oct. 1991.


1 Donald Guthrie, New Testament Introduction, Rev. ed. (Downers Grove, Illinois: Intervarsity Press, 1990), p. 432.

2 David K. Lowery, “1 Corinthians,” The Bible Knowledge Commentary, ed. Walvoord and Zuck, NT ed. (Wheaton: Victor Books, 1983), p. 506.

3 Gordon Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians, The New International Commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1987), p. 11. Gordon Fee sees this as the main purpose.

4 Ibid., p. 39.

5 Ibid., p. 67.

6 Ibid., p. 159.

7 Robert B. Hughes, First Corinthians (Chicago: Moody Press, 1985), p. 55-56.

8 Bob Wilkin, “The So-Called So-Called Brother,” Grace Evangelical Society News, Vol. 6, No. 10, Oct. 1991, pp. 2-3.

9 Gordon Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians, p. 228.

10 Warren Wiersbe, Be Wise (Wheaton: Victor Books, 1988), p. 68.

11 Leon Morris, The First Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians, Tyndale New Testament Commentaries (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1985), p. 92.

12 Warren Wiersbe, Be Wise, p. 69.

13 Ibid., p. 71.

14 Gordon Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians, p. 252-53.

15 Leon Morris, The First Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians, p. 101.

16 David K. Lowrey, “1 Corinthians,” The Bible Knowledge Commentary, p. 517.

17 Ibid., p. 517.

18 Robert B. Hughes, First Corinthians, p. 80.

19 Warren Wiersbe, Be Wise, p. 88-89.

20 H. Wayne House, “Should a Woman Prophesy or Preach before Men?” Bibliothecra Sacra (April-June, 1988), p. 151.

21 Leon Morris, The First Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians, p. 165.

22 David K. Lowery, “1 Corinthians,” The Bible Knowledge Commentary, p. 532-33.

23 Gordon Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians, p. 582.

24 Ibid., p. 643-44. Charismatics obviously prefer this interpretation as it contributes to their argument that tongues is valid in this age.

25 David K. Lowery, “1 Corinthians,” The Bible Knowledge Ccommentary, p. 536.

26 Ibid., p. 539.

27 Ibid., p. 541.

28 Although the section on public worship (12:1-14:40) may not be structured chiastically (that deserves futher study), it is certainly characteristic of Jewish literature for the writer to begin and end on similar or related topics. That may be the case here.

29 Robert Hughes, First Corinthians, p. 139.

30 Leon Morris, The First Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians, p. 209.

Related Topics: Introductions, Arguments, Outlines

Thematic-Structural Analysis Of 1 John 3:6, 9, 5:18 for the Problem Of Sinlessness

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I. Introduction

Although sanctification is one of the most crucial components in the biblical doctrine of salvation in the Christological and pneumatological context, it has generated many theological controversies and debates, especially regarding the relationship between the believer and sin. The promise of freedom from the persistently robust control of sin seems to be unrealistic in the real life experience of the believer, so some affirm that it is impossible to attain such a sinless perfection in real life,1 while some others deny this affirmation.2

Particularly, the First Epistle of John presents a seemingly irresolvable contradiction regarding sinlessness.3 On one hand, the author unequivocally affirms that sin is a reality in the Christian life. Therefore, one who denies the existence of sin in his life is self-deceived and misrepresents God (1:6, 8, 10). The conscience of a believer condemns him on account of his sin (3:20) and sin can be obviously observed among the believers (5:16). If believers confess their sins, they are consistently being forgiven (1:9) because of the propitiatory work of Christ (2:2). On the other hand, the Epistle also presents absolute denials of sin for those who abide in Christ and are born of God (3:6, 9; 5:18). Furthermore, those who commit sin are not among God’s family, but are rather “of the devil” (3:8).

Many scholars agree that John may not see any necessary conflict between his statements regarding sinlessness and the actual existence of sin, for John did not make any attempt to explain this contradictory tension.4 However, there have been many interpretative attempts to explain the enigma through the Church history.5 The goal of the paper is to present major scholarly discussions which have tried to solve this dilemma and to suggest an appropriate solution by thematic-structural analysis. Although thematic-structural analysis has been recently developed in relation to text-linguistics, hence rarely applied to the biblical studies, this analysis would be a valuable tool for interpretation of the Bible. After thematic-structural analysis of the given passages, the theological implication of sinlessness on sanctification will be explored.

II. Interpretation of 1 John 3:6, 9 and 5:8

1. Criticism of the major interpretations of 1 John 3:6, 9 and 5:8.

Among numerous scholarly discussions to solve the present dilemma are five main interpretations. The first is a grammatical approach, which is also called “tense solution”. The primary focus of this approach is upon the aspectual consideration of the present tense of the verbs in 3:6, 9 and 5:18. Its proponents have emphasized the habitual force of the present tense6: πᾶς ὁ ἐν αὐτῷ μένων οὐχ ἁμαρτάνει (3:6), πᾶς ὁ γεγεννημένος ἐκ τοῦ θεοῦ ἁμαρτίαν οὐ ποιεῖ…, καὶ οὐ δύναται ἁμαρτάνειν, ὅτι ἐκ τοῦ θεοῦ γεγέννηται (3:9) and οἴδαμεν ὅτι πᾶς ὁ γεγεννημένος ἐκ τοῦ θεοῦ οὐχ ἁμαρτάνει (5:18). NIV translates these verses as follows, reflecting this approach: “No one who lives in him keeps on sinning” (3:6); “No one who is born of God will continue to sin…he cannot go on sinning” (3:9); “We know that anyone born of God does not continue to sin” (5:18).

According to this view, the believer may commit some acts of sin, but perpetual sin is not characteristic of a believer because the direction of the believer’s life is toward godliness. Yet this interpretation carries a few difficulties. John also uses the present tense in 5:16 which cites the sins of believers, “If any man sees his brother commit a sin which is not unto death.” Had the present tense of 5:16 been used in a “habitual” sense, believer would go on sinning, so it would lead contradictory conclusion.7 Similarly, John uses the present tense in 1:8 (“If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us”). If the present tense of 3:9 were habitual, that of 1:8 would be habitual where the present tense stands.8 C. H. Dodd comments, “It is legitimate to doubt whether the reader could be expected to grasp so subtle a doctrine simply upon the basis of a precise distinction of tenses without further guidance…the apparent contradiction is probably not to be eliminated (though it may be qualified) by grammatical subtlety.”9 Furthermore, B. M. Fanning considers the present tense of 1 John 3:9 in “generic gnomic sense” rather than “customary”. He defines that the use of the present tense in generic statements describes “something that is true any time rather than a universal statement that is true all the time”.10 Actually, this grammatical approach generates a contradiction, failing to provide a satisfactory solution to the current problem.

Second, the Wesleyans insist that believers cannot commit willful and deliberate sin. D. W. Mills cites J. H. A. Ebrard’s statement, “One who is born of God cannot willfully, and against his better knowledge and conscience, do that which is sin; he cannot love, and cherish, and entertain sin…To the regenerate man is it a thing impossible-by his very nature-…to withstand and run counter to the commandments of God knowingly and with deliberate will.”11 Wesley categorized sin in a dualistic way: “proper sin” and “improper sin”. According to him, a proper sin is a voluntary transgression of a known law, while an improper sin is of a non-moral nature, such as ignorance, error or infirmities.12 It is true that in the Epistle, John presents two kinds of sin: “sin leading into death” and “sin not leading into death” (5:16-17). The Wesleyans connect these two kinds of sin in the Epistle with the concept of “proper sin” and “improper sin”. La Rondelle states that “a mortal sin” is hopeless because a man has radically broken with God (proper voluntary sin) and “sin which is not mortal” can be forgiven (improper ignorant sin).13

Yet I. H. Marshall properly points out three difficulties to the view. He comments, “One is that by itself it is an inadequate solution to the problems of the text. Wesley himself has to admit that even saintly people (he cites David and Peter) could commit gross, deliberate sins, and therefore he has to admit that, even with this limited definition of sin, the text represents an ideal rather than something that is universally true of all believers. The second difficulty is that it is notoriously difficult to distinguish between voluntary and involuntary transgressions; we can never be sure that even our best deeds are entirely free from selfish motives, or that our errors were in no way due to our own fault. And, third, the crucial objection is that there is no indication that John is working with such a limited definition of the term sin. He is talking about all sin.”14 According to the approach, the entire sanctification of the Wesleyan does not refer to freedom from all sin, but only from consciously deliberate sins or from the commission of “known sins”.15 Moreover, D. M. Scholer points out that even in the “sin leading into death” of 5:16, there is no clear distinction between deliberate sin and inadvertent sin, while insisting that “sin leading into death” refers to the unbeliever’s sin, but “sin not leading into death” the believer’s sin, similar to J. R. W. Stott’s view.16 Although what “sin leading into death” refers to is unclear, the passage of 1 John 5:16-17 does not seem to endorse any dualistic distinction about sin.

Third, it is from the Gnostic context where there were two different theological conclusions within Gnosticism, which were reflected respectively in 1:8-10 and 3:6, 9. J. R. W. Stott proposed the idea that Gnosticism led its adherents to different conclusions. He comments,

Some (among Gnosticists) supposed that their possession of gnosis has made them perfect; others maintained that sin did not matter because it could not harm the enlightened. Both positions are morally perverse. The first is blind to sin and denies its existence; the second is indifferent to sin and denies its gravity. To the first John declares the universality of sin, even in the Christian; to deny sin is to be a liar. To the second he declares the incompatibility of sin in the Christian; to commit sin is to be of the devil. It is in order to confound these particular views of his opponents that John states the Christian position in such categorical terms.17

It has been said that Gnosticism was a serious adversary against the Johannine community. Stott’s suggestion, however, is greatly dependent on subjectivity of the historical Sitz im Leben because there is no supporting evidence that John was arguing with two different Gnostic groups in his Epistle. S. Kubo well summarizes the difficulty of the view, “Actually as we have seen it is very difficult to make this kind of subtle division among the heretics. In fact, even Dodd’s description does not make a clear-cut distinction. The heretics described in 1 John are quite homogeneous and it is not necessary for our interpretation of these verses to require distinctions among them.”18

Fourth, it is based on a hypothesis about two different kinds of perfectionism. According to J. Bogart, the statement of 1 John 1:8, 10 is based on a Gnostic anthropology, which had been treated as heretical, but that of 1 John 3:6, 9 derives from the Gospel of John, and has been regarded as orthodox.19 The orthodox sinlessness is qualified in that only those who are born of God and abide in Christ are regarded as sinless. The sacrificial death of Christ makes this possible (2:1). Bogart argues that since John’s orthodox perfectionism is not found anywhere else in the New Testament except for the Johannine literature, heretical perfectionism did not evolve from John, but was introduced into the Johannine community either by the Johannine Christians who accepted Gnostic tenets or an influx of pro-Gnostic converts.20 It may be true that Gnosticism, like the Johannine community, also held some theological concepts such as “sinlessness”, and “anointing one”.21 Although this hypothesis is widely accepted by numerous scholars like E. Kasemann, H. Conzelmann, W. Meeks and J. L. Houldon, it is doubtful whether orthodox perfectionism can be found in the Gospel of John as Bogart claims.22 R. Alan Culpepper comments, “A decision on this issue is made difficult by the evidence Bogart adduces which shows that such a belief would not be out of place in John (e.g., the believers are “clean” and have passed from death into life) and by the fact that John never addresses the issue directly. He neither affirms nor denies “orthodox” perfectionism even though at times it may be implied. The gospel (of John) simply does not deal with the issue of sin within the community except perhaps in John 15:1-10, where the allegory and accompanying exhortation imply that believers may sin.”23 Furthermore, although Bogart assumes that the Johannine community had suffered from an influx of pro-Gnostic gentiles who had never accepted the basic biblical doctrines of God and man, 24 he does not present any evidence to his assumption.25

Finally, the fifth approach is that the concept of sinlessness in 1 John is based on the eschatological setting of the Epistle. According to this view, John refers to the ideal futuristic character of believers in 3:6 and 9. I. H. Marshall states, “What he is describing here is the eschatological reality, the possibility that is open to believers, which is both a fact (“he cannot sin”) and conditional (“if he lives in him”). It is a reality which is continually threatened by the tensions of living in the sinful world, and yet one which is capable of being realized by faith.”26 As a matter of fact, the expectation for a sinless state has been strongly endorsed not only by the Old Testament (especially, in the prophetic writings) but also by some extra-biblical documents such as Targums, the Jewish apocalyptic writings, and the Dead Sea scrolls.27 This hypothesis is most convincing even though some scholars have suggested that the passages of 3:6 and 9 are not written in a futuristic sense, but in a realistic sense. 28

Through the evaluation above, we recognize that the five major views have offered the strengths as well as weaknesses. In the next section, two valuable structural analyses of the Epistle will be introduced and evaluated; it might be valuable for further discussion of the exegetical, thematic-structural analysis of 1 John 3:6, 9 and 5:18 in order to deal with this problem properly.

2. Evaluation of the two structural analyses on 1 John.

As scholars have admitted, the structural analysis of 1 John is notorious for its difficulty. No single proposal has attained a consensus, and the diversified scholarly opinions have led some to despair of even attempting such a quest.29 Nevertheless, it would be still proper that the present writer examines two insightful and popular structures of the Epistle, and then propose a new structure by combining the strengths from the two structures. The first is R. Law’s structure, which has gained much popularity and is considered a classical view. The second is R. Longare’s structure, which is based on the text-linguistic consideration.

Law’s structure has primarily focused on a cyclic pattern according to the consistently repeated themes at ever higher levels of discussion.30

Law’s Thematic Structure

Prologue. 1:1-4.

1. First Cycle (1:5-2:28)

The Christian Life as fellowship with God, tested by Righteousness (1:8-2:6), Love (2:7-17), and Belief (2:18-28)

2. Second Cycle (2:29-4:6)

Divine sonship tested by Righteousness (2:29-3:10a), Love (3:10b-24a), and Belief (3:24b-4:6)

3. Third Cycle (4:7-5:21)

Closer correlation of Love (4:7-5:3a) and Belief (5:3b-21)

The structure persuasively describes that three major themes (righteousness, love, and belief) are repeated in the Epistle because some repetitions of a few phrases such as “abide in me”, “do righteousness”, “eternal life”, and “keep the commandment” are easily found in the Epistle. However, the major weakness of this structure is that the repetition breaks down in the third cycle, in which we cannot find the theme of righteousness.31 Nevertheless, Law’s thematic structure shows at the very least the existence of cyclic patterns of the major themes in the Epistle.

Longacre’s structure is based on current text-linguistics which is “an analysis of language features that draws its explanation, not from within the sentence or word (i.e., the factors involved are not syntactic or morphological), but extrasententially (from the linguistic and wider context)”.32 In his study, Longacre pays attention to distribution of the performative verbs, especially, the verb “to write” because, as he believes, its distribution breaks the linear string of the paragraph down into introduction, body, and conclusion.33

Longacre’s Text-Linguistic Structure34

I. Introduction (1:1-2:29)

A. 1:1-4   Opening Paragraph: Expository Structure

B. 1:5-10  Expository Coordinate Paragraph

C. 2:1-6   Hortatory Reason Paragraph

D. 2:7-11  Expository Cyclic Antithetical Paragraph

E. 2:12-17 Ethical Peak: Hortatory Simple Paragraph

F. 2:18-27 Doctrinal Peak: Hortatory Coordinate Paragraph

G. 2:28-29 Hortatory Reason Paragraph

II. Body (3:1-5:12)

A. 3:1-6   Hortatory Amplification Paragraph

B. 3:7-12  Hortatory Comment Paragraph

C. 3:13-18 Hortatory Amplification Paragraph

D. 3:19-24 Expository Antithetical Paragraph

E. 4:1-6   Doctrinal Peak: Hortatory Evidence Paragraph

F. 4:7-21  Ethical Peak

1. 4:7-10  Hortatory Reason Paragraph

2. 4:11-21 Hortatory Amplification Paragraph

G. 5:1-12  Post Peak: Expository Evidence Paragraph

III. Closure (5:13-21) Expository Coordinate Paragraph

With this structure, Longacre concludes that the Epistle is fundamentally not an expository but a hortatory discourse with dual peaks: an ethical peak and a doctrinal peak.35 His conclusion brings a new interpretation about 1 John 3:6 and 9 that the statements “No one commits sin” and “He cannot sin” should be treated as hortatory. He comments regarding 1 John 3:6 and 9, “These are mitigated commands such as ‘a good American votes faithfully in every election’ or ‘a responsible father keeps his children from running the streets late at night’. In general, these commands are general ethical considerations.”36 According to his view, 1 John 3:9 implies that the one who is born of God does sin, although John wishes him not to sin; therefore, John urges him not to sin.

Longacre’s text-linguistic analysis provides a lucid and well-reasoned structure, but it contains some difficulties. First, he places ethical and doctrinal peaks, respectively, in the introduction and the body. A “peak” is defined as “points of cumulative development” in paragraph discourse, marked by “heightened vividness” such as shift of tense.37 Since 1 John 2:12-17 presents the frequent repetition of the verb “to write” and the tense of the verb shifts from the present to the aorist, Langacre considers 2:12-17 an ethical peak. Yet the two ethical peaks in the introduction and in the body refer to entirely different themes, while two doctrinal peaks in the introduction and the body have the similar theme, i.e., warning against the antichrist.

Second, in 2:28, Longacre suggests that the καὶ νῦν structure is used as a summary marker.38 Most commentators, however, considers it a transitional marker which opens a new section.39 Among other passages in the Gospel of John (4:18, 23; 5:25; 11:22; 14:29; 17:5) and the Johannine Epistles (1 John 2:18; 4:3; 2 John 1:5) which shows the καὶ νῦν structure, in most cases except for John 14:29, this structure refers to the temporal aspect (“and now”), particularly, both 1 John 2:18 and 4:3 refer to eschatological time. It is likely that the καὶ νῦν structure of John 14:29 (“And now I have told you before it takes place, so that when it does take place, you may believe”) is understood as a summary marker— until now is a better translation because of the perfect tense and of the conclusion of Jesus’ sermon. Yet it is unlikely that the καὶ νῦν structure in 1 John 2:28 is used as a summary maker like that of John 14:29 because of many differences. In John 14:29-31, there is no additional information, whereas in 1 John 2:28-29 new information (“is born of Him”) is introduced, and connects directly to the next paragraph. Furthermore, the structure of 1 John 2:28 is not only transitional, but also temporal for two reasons: firstly, it includes the eschatological notion (“when he appears”), and secondly, all verses of the Epistle with this structure also refer to eschatological time. Therefore, it is safe to conclude that the καὶ νῦν structure of 2:28 is both transitional and temporal, rather than functioning as a summary marker, as Longacre has insisted.

Third, Longacre considers 1 John 3:9 to be a mitigated command such as “a responsible father cannot keep his children away from his eyes late at night”. According to him, the two statements of 3:9 (“He who is born of God does not practice sin” and “He cannot sin because he is born of God”) are undifferentiated because both maintain a proverbial nuance. The context, however, does not support Longacre’s proposal since the Johannine community had been under severe suffering from their opponents. It is impossible to imagine that John wrote his Epistle with a mild proverbial nuance to those who were experiencing suffering daily. In spite of these weaknesses, Longacre’s text-linguistic structure well depicts the significance of discourse markers in a larger unit beyond the sentence level.

Although Law’s and Longacre’s structures have shown some difficulties, both benefit us understanding the structure of 1 John in light of the repeated themes and division markers. Now the present writer would like to reorganize the structure of 1 John 3:6, 9 and 5:18 by combining these two methods: thematic (like R. Law) and structural analysis (like R. Longacre).

3. The structural comparison between 3:6, 9 and 5:18.

Before analyzing the structure of 3:6, 9 and 5:18, we need to decide the structural boundaries of 3:6, 9 and 5:18 in light of the major theme. For achieving this purpose, it is necessary to find out the major theme in the passages.

a. What is His seed? It is obvious that “His seed” is the main them in 3:9 because it derives from its chiastic structure as follows:

Chiastic Structure of 1 John 3:9

A πᾶς ὁ γεγεννημένος ἐκ τοῦ θεοῦ

Everyone who is born of God

B ἁμαρτίαν οὐ ποιεῖ,

does not commit sin

C ὅτι σπέρμα αὐτοῦ ἐν αὐτῷ μένει,

because His seed abides in him

B καὶ οὐ δύναται ἁμαρτάνειν,

and he cannot sin

A ὅτι ἐκ τοῦ θεοῦ γεγέννηται.

because he is born of God

It has been the subject of much debate regarding what “His seed” refers to. Among many five interpretations are worth noting.40 First, “seed” refers to Christ as God’s heir. Yet Christ is never called the seed of God in the New Testament. Contextually introducing Christ as the seed of God is too sudden. In addition, if the seed of God refers to Christ, the definite article would be necessary.

Second, “seed” indicates the “Word of God”. Similar to the first view, no verse in Johannine literature associates it with begetting of the Christian.41 Moreover, in the New Testament, the term σπορά is referred to the Word of God (Luke 8:11; 1 Peter 1:23), but the term σπέρμα used in the Epistle is never related to it .42

Third, “seed” represents the “Holy Spirit”. This is the most popular view. The Spirit is clearly shown as a major factor involving with the begetting of the Christians in the Johannine writings (John 3:5). In 1 John 2:27 the “anointing” refers to the Spirit and in 3:24 and 4:13 “divine abiding” is also associated with the Spirit. Like the first two views, however, the Spirit is never called the seed of God in the New Testament.

Fourth, “seed” signifies the “divine principle of life” or “new nature of the believer” generally.43 I. H. Marshall comments, “John is using the metaphor of a seed planted in the heart which produces new life, just as in Jesus’ parable of the sower the seed planted in receptive soil is the Word of God which ‘grows’ into eternal life.”44 Marshall does not want to push this metaphor too far, but his proposal, however, makes “seed of God” too generalize by combining the Word of God, the Spirit, and the divine principle of life.

Fifth, “seed” symbolizes “offspring” in general. In Jesus’ parable of tares and wheat (Matthew 13:24-30) the word σπέρμα is used. Together with 1 John 3:9, the Matthew passage is the only place to use σπέρμα metaphorically in the New Testament. Especially, Matthew 13:38 is worth noting, “The field is the world, and the good seed means the sons of the kingdom; the weeds are the sons of the evil one.” In fact the Matthew passage shows good similarities to 1 John 3. Like the Matthew passage, 1 John 3:1-17 is talking about the dualistic division between the children of God and of the devil in light of the story of Cain and Abel. Judith M. Lieu comments, “That story was developed in Jewish exegesis where Cain is the offspring of the devil, and where, being evil, he kills his righteous brother, Abel, after a dispute about the justice of God. The ‘seed’ theme belongs to the Cain story already in the biblical text (Gen 3:17; 4:25); since Eve greets Seth on his birth as ‘another seed’…The point in 1 John 3:9 may be that God’s seed is to be found not in Cain and his contemporary ‘followers,’ but in those of God’s choices, who have been born of him.”45 These two passages are not identical, however. In Matthew 13:38 the “good seed” represents the children of God, but in 1 John 3:9, strictly speaking, the “seed of God” should not refer to the children of God. Rather, it refers to something in the believers and makes them the children of God because in the Johannine literature, the term “abide in” does not mean “to be identical,” rather it refers to the mysterious union. For example, “Abide in him (Jesus Christ)” in 1 John 2:28 does not mean that we would be Jesus, but it indicates that we have the mysterious union with Jesus. Likewise, in 1 John 3:9 “seed” does not refer to the children of God.

Then what does “seed” represent? According to the Johannine context, it may indicate “eternal life”. R. B. Brown comments, “The imagery of begetting was the corollary of the Johannine emphasis on the Christian’s possessing God’s eternal life, an image carried to the point of speaking of God’s seed.”46 He implies that the imagery of being “born again” refers to the nature of eternal life metaphorically in the Johannine literature. The nature of eternal life appears in numerous passages in 1 John: 2:25 (eternal life as God’s promise), 3:14 (gaining eternal life from death), 3:16 (eternal life does not abide in unrighteousness), 5:13 (Christians have eternal life), and 5:20 (true God is eternal life). In 1 John, eternal life is portrayed as earthly present possession of heavenly reality. This nature does perfectly fit with the concept of the “seed of God” in 1 John 3:9. Eternal life is a heavenly reality only God can retain, but that reality becomes present possession within the believers. Thus, 1 John 5:13 clearly says, “You (believer) have (present tense) eternal life now.”

b. Thematic-structural analysis of 1 John 3:6, 9 and 5:18. As discussed just above, based on the major theme, “eternal life” to which “seed of God” refers 1 John 3:9, the present writer would like to propose the thematic-structural analyses of two boundary units (2:24-3:17 and 5:13-21).

Thematic-Structural Analysis of 2:24-3:17

.

Thematic-Structural Analysis of 5:13-21

These two structures shown above are derived from thematic and text-linguistic considerations. As already mentioned, thematic analysis is to determine thematic boundaries from the discussion of the “seed of God”, while text-linguistic analysis brings some divisions within the thematic boundaries. For example, 1 John 2:24 is established as the beginning point of the boundaries because verse 24 (ὑμεῖς ὃ ἠκούσατε ἀπ᾿ ἀρχῆς, ἐν ὑμῖν μενέτω.) provides a new paragraph from the position of two words: ὑμεῖς and μενέτω. Literally it would be translated, “Let what you have heard from the beginning remain in you.” Contextually the word ὑμεῖς is either nominative (subject) or vocative (emphatic address).47 Regardless of whatever syntactic function it may take, it has emphatic significance because it emphatically begins a new unit with the renewal of an object.48 John’s usage of the imperative verb μενέτω supports this emphatic force since John starts new units by imperatives in many cases. This imperative verb at the end of the sentence is a focal point which “either has not been established or needs to be reestablished” in the discourse.49 In the Johannine literary context, the imperative verb seems to be reestablished for the further discussion. Another example would be 3:10, which can be considered a transitional verse because of the two discourse markers (ἐν τούτῳ in 3:10 and the distribution of the verb οἴδα) which make vv. 11-17 as a single unit. As a matter of fact, these two considerations (thematic and linguistic) are quite beneficial to us to figure out the structure of a given passage.

Now let us pay attention to the structures of 2:24-3:17 and 5:13-21. The passage of 2:24-3:17 represents some synonymous (2:29-3:1; 3:5, 9, 10, 14-15) and antithetic parallels (3:3-4, 6, 7-8), a chiastic structure (3:9), and also an inclusio structure (2:25 and 3:15) according to the main theme, “eternal life”. We can also observe two major cyclic thematic developments. The first one is a consecutive process of first doctrinal, second doctrinal, and ethical development. Each development shows the parallel structure because ABCD, A*B*C*D*, and A**B**C**D** structures are repeated according to the progress. The structure of A and B (or A* and B*, or A** and B**) shows an antithetic parallelism. It is worthy to note that both A and A* have the motive of “just as he is” except for the A** structure in 3:14. Since this motive is quite important, it will be discussed in details in the following section. C, C* and C** show the redemptive works of Jesus, the Son of God, and D, D* and D** demonstrate the faithfulness of the believer as a result of what Jesus had done in C, C* and C**.

The second thematic development divides the critical theme, “eternal life” into three stages: promise stage, doctrinal and ethical stage. In the promise stage, “eternal life” is emphasized only in an eschatological sense, but in the ethical stage, it appears in a real life setting. This development clearly shows a process of how a heavenly reality becomes earthly present possession.

The passage of 5:13-21 presents some parallel structures with that of 2:24-3:17 in that it shows an inclusio structure of “eternal life”, theme of “confidence” and also ABCD structure, even though the order of ABCD is a little different. In 5:13-21, John explains how a believer preserves “eternal life” with other believers by intercessory prayer. If so, 5:13-21 seems to be further development from 2:24-3:17 because it is obvious that John develops the theme of “eternal life” from the personal aspect in chapter 2 to the communal aspect in chapter 5.

4. Interpretation of 1 John 3:6, 9 and 5:18.

Until now we have discussed the thematic-structural consideration for the two passages (2:24-3:17 and 5:13-21). Now, let us turn our attention to three problematic verses (3:6, 9 and 5:18), based on the two structures discussed above. Here, it is worth noting that in the first structure (2:24-3:17), three verses (3:2, 3, 7) indicate “just as he is”. It is evident that “he” refers to Christ in association with “I am” saying unique to the Gospel of John. M. M. Thompson comments, “As the ‘I am’ statements especially in chapter 8 reveal, Jesus claims to share in Gods eternal existence. He has life in himself (5:26), and the power to lay down his life and to take it again (10:17-18). He also has the power to give life to those who keep his word (8:51; 17:2), thus exercising the unique life-giving prerogative of God…These claims resonate with what is perhaps the central theme of the Gospel: that Jesus has and mediates eternal life.”50 Thompson’s observation fits quite well with 1 John 3:16 and 5:16. In John 8:58, Jesus claimed, “Before Abraham was, I am.” In the passage of 1 John 3:2, John declares the same eternal existence of Jesus Christ toward the eschatological future. 1 John 3:3 and 7 emphasize the eternal, unchangeable, perfect righteousness of Jesus. In this sense, the concept of “just he is” is closely connected to the central theme, “eternal life” in its nature, and also provides the standard of the Christian perfection.

Now we need to raise a question. Does the current possession of eternal life include its activation in the present life? In other words, do we now have eternal life? If so, are we now tasting eternal life? The answer is assertive in the Johannine context because the expression “abide in” refers not only to possession, but also to activation by the mysterious union with Christ. The notion that we have eternal life means we are also living eternal life. Then, does this mean that a Christian does not die? Is this denial to the human fate? This question is the same as the main inquiry of this paper, i.e., is the statement that a Christian does not sin a denial to his real life?

The Epistle does not negate the real life of Christians. Rather, it emphasizes the eternally changed nature of the Christian life through the mysterious union with Christ. Although a Christian dies, he will be alive with the Second Coming of Christ. Thus, John insists that the believers are tasting eternal life, divine reality. It provides hope and confidence in which the believers overcome shrinking away from God (2:28-3:3). Based on this confidence, as John does, the believers could have the foundation to declare, “We cannot die.” Likewise, the believer surely sins (1:6-10), but Christ has already accomplished the redemptive work for the believers (3:5, 8). His work provided the believers a new identity. Furthermore, his perfect righteousness became the standard for the believers to reach. The believers will eventually attain perfect righteousness like Christ with his appearance. Based on this hope, the believers can have confidence and they can further taste a heavenly reality called sinlessness in their present lives in two ways: the first way is personal confession (1:9), and the second is prayer of the believers for other sinning believers (5:16). For John, sinning is serious, but not critical. Yet repentance is crucial. John considers repentance to be the sinless process of the believers. Based on confidence that the believers are in the sinless process, tasting sinlessness, and will eventually reach to the perfect state of sinlessness, John proclaims, “Believers cannot sin” (3:9). The passage of 5:13-21 also confirms this.

In summary, in the passage of 1 John, John explains two unchangeable foundations for confidence of all the believers: “eternal life” as the promise for the eschatological hope and the redemptive work of Christ. By faith, eternal life becomes a present reality, but not yet with its complete form. Therefore, John manifests that the believers are tasting eternal life and will perfect eternal life eventually. According to his logic, believers cannot die. Likewise, John further develops his argument on sinlessness. Believers are tasting sinlessness now and will perfect sinlessness. Thus, he confirms that believers cannot sin. In this sense, the passages of 3:6, 9 and 5:18 are closer to exhortation, but R. Longacre is wrong in considering them as mitigated commands. Rather, these are very strong, serious urges not to sin with a nuance such as “We ought not to sin.”

III. Conclusion

This paper examines the problem of sinlessness, focusing on 1 John 3:6, 9 and 5:18 in light of thematic-structural analysis. The discussion of 3:6, 9 and 5:18 provides quite a valuable sanctification model. According to the Epistle, a heavenly reality such as “eternal life” and “sinlessness” already becomes possessed and activated in the present lives of the believers, but is not fully completed until the appearance of Christ. John did not ignore the real life of the believers; he fully understood their sinful nature (1:6-10). Nevertheless, John focused more on the absolute state (from the motive of “just as Jesus is”) of perfect sinlessness, which the believer will eventually attain. On the basis of Christ-redeemed confidence, (2:1-2; 3:5, 8; 16; 5:20) he proclaimed the sinlessness of the believers with a hortatory, but forcefully urging tone.

John urged that the believers should live as if they were sinless and the foundation of this sinlessness is from the past redemptive work of Christ and future eschatological hope. Johns focus was more on realized eschatological aspect, but based on the already/not yet eschatology regarding the problem of sinlessness.


1 B. B. Warfield, Perfectionism (ed. Samuel G. Craig; Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House, 1958) 32. Basically, he rejected every kind of perfectionism by criticizing not only perfectionism of the ‘Wesleyan perspective’ but also that of the ‘Higher Life Movement,’ and of the ‘Keswick perspective’. He comments, “Perfectionism is impossible in the presence of a profound sense of sin.” See also Anthony A. Hoekema, ‘The Reformed Perspective’ in Five Views: 61-97.

2 R. Newton Flew, The Idea of Perfection in Christian Theology: A Historical Study of The Christian Ideal for The Present Life (London: Oxford University Press, 1934) 313-341. Melvin E. Dieter, “The Wesleyan Perspective” in Five Views on Sanctification (ed. Stanley N. Gundry; Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 1987) 11-46.

3 Harry C. Swadling, ‘Sin and Sinlessness in 1 John,’ Scottish Journal of Theology 35 (1982) 205-211, esp. 205.

4 R. E. Brown, The Epistles of John (AB 30; New York: Doubleday, 1982) 413. He comments, “We should never assume that ancient authors were stupid or illogical and could not see difficulties, especially within the same brief piece of writing.” Also refer to R. Schnackenberg, The Johannine Epistles: A Commentary, trans. Reginald and Ilse Fuller (New York: Crossroad, 1992) 254-79.

5 It is helpful to look at some commentaries which overview several approaches for this problem. For example, R. B. Brown presents seven suggestions: 1) two different writers’ redaction; 2) two different groups of adversaries; 3) specific kinds of sin; 4) special or elite Christians; 5) habitual sin; 6) two different levels (real level and ideal level); 7) two different texts (eschatological text and kerugmatik text). Similarly, John R. W. Stott also summarizes seven different approaches to this problem: 1) specific sins; 2) different conceptions of sin; 3) old nature and new nature in the believer; 4) idealistic view; 5) relatively realistic view; 6) willful and deliberate sin; 7) habitual and persistent sin. The commentaries of I. H. Marshall and of S. S. Smalley are also helpful. R. E. Brown, Epistles 413-15; John R. W. Stott, The Letters of John (Tyndale NTC; Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans, 1988) 134-40; I. H. Marshall, The Epistles of John (NICNT; Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans, 1978) 178-184; Stephen S. Smalley, 1, 2, 3 John (WBC 51; Waco, TX: Word, 1984) 159-163.

6 This view has gained much popularity. It has been popular especially among the British Bible scholars, many Bible teachers, and conservative commentators. Among the major proponents of this theory are W. Barclay, F. C. Cook, L. Morris, H. A. Ironside, E. Palmer, J. Boice, F. L. Fisher, R. C. H. Lenski, A. T. Robertson, M. Zerwick, and G. E. Radd. For more detailed information, see Donald W. Mills, ‘The Concept of Sinlessness in 1 John in Relation to Johannine Eschatology’ (Ph. D diss., Westminster Theological Seminary, 1998) 267-69.

7 Marshall, Epistles 180.

8 Sakae Kubo, ‘1 John 3:9: Absolute or Habitual?’ Andrew University Seminary Studies 7 (1969) 47-56, esp. 51.

9 C. H. Dodd, The Johannine Epistles (The Moffatt NT Commentary; New York: Harper & Row, 1946) 79-80. Similarly, M. Silva, God, Language, and Scripture (FCI 6; Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 1990) 111-18. M. Silva comments, “No reasonable writer would seek to express a major point by leaning on a subtle grammatical distinction-especially if it is not a point not otherwise clear from the whole context.”

10 Buist M. Fanning, Verbal Aspect in New Testament Greek (Oxford: Clarendon, 1990) 209.

11 Mills, Sinlessness 248, fn. 102.

12 H. K. La Rondelle, Perfection and Perfectionism (AUMSR 3; Berrien Springs, Michigan: Andrew University Press, 1979) 318. And also refer to Melvin E. Dieter, ‘The Wesleyan Perspective’ in Five Views 11-46, esp. 23.

13 La Rondelle, Perfection 235.

14 Marshall, Epistles 179.

15 Warfield, Perfectionism 351.

16 David M. Scholer, “Sin Within and Sin Without: An Interpretation of 1 John 5:16-17” in Current Issues in Biblical and Patristic Interpretation (ed. Gerald F. Hawthorne; Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans, 1975) 230-246. John Stott and I. H. Marshall generally agree with the view of Scholer, whereas R. E. Brown rejects it by insisting that the nonbelievers have been the former brothers, the secessionists throughout 1 John. He proposed that ‘sin unto death’ is the sin of those who went out away from the believer. Brown, Epistles 618; Stott, Epistles 190-92; Marshall, Epistles 248-50.

17 Stott, Epistles 130. C. H. Dodd generally agrees with John Stott. Dodd, Epistles 80-81.

18 S. Kubo, “1 John 3:9” 47-56, esp. 56. R. E. Brown agrees with Kubo’s opinion. Brown comments, “There is only one detective set of adversaries.” See Brown, Epistles 415.

19 John Bogart, Orthodox and Heretical Perfectionism in the Johannine Community as Evident in the First Epistle of John (SBLDS 33; Missoula: Scholars Press, 1977) 123-41. See also R. Alan Culpepper’s critique of it, “Orthodox and Heretical Perfectionism in the Johannine Community as Evident in the First Epistle of John”, review of John Bogart, Orthodox and Heretical Perfectionism in the Johannine Community in JBL 97 (1978) 601-02. Similarly to the view of John Bogart, R. E. Brown insists that there are two kinds of perfectionism. R. E. Brown, The Community of the Beloved Disciple (New York: Paulist Press, 1979) 104-05.

20 Bogart, Orthodox 134-135.

21 Some documents like the Gospel of Mary, the Gospel of Thomas, and the Gospel of Truth which were heavily influenced by Gnosticism, have shown these concepts. These concepts also appear in the Johannine Epistles. Refer to Mills, “Sinlessness” 27-29.

22 Culpepper, “Review” 601-601.

23 Culpepper, “Review” 601-02.

24 Bogart, Orthodox 135.

25 Brown, Community 127.

26 Marshall, Epistles 182-83.

27 Mills discusses this view in chapters 2-4 in his dissertation. Mills, “Sinlessness” 59-212. See also for detail argument, Brown, Epistles 414-15; Smalley, Epistles 161.

28 Stott, Epistles 136-37.

29 Marshall, Epistles 22-27. In his commentary, I. H. Marshall introduces seven different structures about the First Epistle of John.

30 Robert Law, The Tests of Life: A Study of the First Epistle of St. John (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1909) 1-24.

31 Marshall, Epistles 22.

32 Stephen H. Levinsohn, Discourse Features of New Testament Greek: A Course book on the Information Structure of New Testament Greek (Dallas, TX: SIL International, 2000) 8.

33 R. E. Longacre, “Toward an Exegesis of 1 John Based on the Discourse Analysis of the Greek Text” in Linguistics and New Testament Interpretation: Essays on Discourse Analysis (eds. David Alan Black, Katharine Barnwell, and Stephen Levinsohn; Nashville, Tennessee: Broadman Press, 1992) 271-86.

34 R. E. Longacre, “Exhortation and Mitigation in the Greek Text of the First Epistle of John,” Selected Technical Articles Related to Translation 9 (1984) 3-44, esp. 20.

35 Longacre, “Toward an Exegesis of 1 John” 271-86.

36 Longacre, “Exhortation and Mitigation” 3-44, esp. 20.

37 R. E. Longacre, The Grammar of Discourse (2nd edn; New York: Plenum Press, 1983) 33-48.

38 Longacre, “Toward an Exegesis of 1 John” 271-86, esp. 279-80.

39 Brown, Epistles 379; Marshall, Epistles 165. Some commentators such as R. Law, C. H. Dodd, and A. E. Brooke agree that this structure is functioned as an opening marker.

40 R. E. Brown has introduced the main arguments of a few major interpretations and their proponents in details. Brown, Epistles 408-411.

41 Brown, Epistles 408-411.

42 This result is done from the Bible Works software research program.

43 Marshall, Epistles 186, fn. 38.

44 Marshall, Epistles 186.

45 Judith M. Lieu, The Theology of the Johannine Epistles (NTT; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991) 35 and also “What was From the Beginning: Scripture and Tradition in the Johannine Epistles” NTS 39 (1993) 467-72. In her article, she proposes an ‘offspring’ view. She comments, “Yet within the tradition just explored it is clear that the ‘seed’ refers not (as usually suggested) to the word of God, or even to the Holy Spirit which protects the believer from sin; instead it recalls the theme within the Genesis narratives just explored of the seed of the woman and the ‘other seed’ which Eve acknowledges in the birth of Seth. This means that for 1 John the believer, like Seth, either carries the ‘seed’ of God’s promise or is the ‘seed,’ in contrast to those who like Cain are the children of the devil.”

46 Brown, Epistles 422.

47 Daniel B. Wallace, Greek Grammar Beyond the Basics: An Exegetical Syntax of the New Testament (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 1996) 36-72.

48 Levinsohn, Discourse 7-28.

49 Levinsohn, Discourse 16.

50 M. M. Thompson, “Gospel of John” in Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels (ed. Joel B. Green and Scot McKnight; Downers Grove, Illinois: IVP, 1992) 368-383, esp. 377-78.

Related Topics: Hamartiology (Sin), Sanctification

Lesson 43: Rivers of Living Water—for You and from You (John 7:37-39)

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February 9, 2014

When you read Jesus’ words here, where He promises that from the innermost being of the one who believes in Him will flow rivers of living water, you have to stop and ask, “To what extent is that true of me? Since I trusted in Christ as my Savior, has it been my experience that ever-flowing, abundant rivers of living water have gushed up inside of me and flowed out of me?”

Those questions are both convicting and hope-producing. They are convicting because none of us, if we’re honest, can say, “Yes, those words nail it! That’s exactly how to describe my life since becoming a Christian!” Honesty forces me to say, “Well, there has usually been a trickle of living water, although there have been some droughts where even it has dried up. Occasionally, there has been a creek of living water. But ever-flowing, abundant rivers (plural)? It would be a stretch to describe my Christian life like that!” So Jesus’ words convict me with the barrenness of my walk with Him.

But Jesus’ words also give me hope. If my life doesn’t match His description here, it can! So can yours! This is a promise from the Son of God to all who will come to Him and drink: Out of your innermost being will flow rivers of living water. It describes, as Calvin points out (Calvin’s Commentaries [Baker], pp. 308-309), an ideal that none of us can possess perfectly in the present life because of indwelling sin and because of differing measures of faith. But it’s an ideal in which we can make progress as we walk with the Lord. We really can experience consistent fullness of joy in Him that flows from us to others. And so we should have hope because He who began the good work of salvation in us will perfect it until the day of Christ Jesus (Phil. 1:6). But we need to press on toward the goal (Phil. 3:12-16). Here is Jesus’ promise to all:

Jesus Christ blesses all who believe in Him with rivers of the living water of His Spirit so that we will bless others.

There is the promise, an implicit requirement, and the result:

1. Jesus Christ blesses all who believe in Him with rivers of the living water of His Spirit.

Note five things about this wonderful promise:

A. The person of the promise: Jesus’ claim shows Him to be God in human flesh.

To appreciate Jesus’ claim here, we need to note the setting. It is the Feast of Tabernacles (or Booths), the third important feast in the Jewish calendar (after Passover and Pentecost (or Weeks). Tabernacles was a harvest feast of thanksgiving to God. The Israelites lived in booths to remind them of God’s care for them in the wilderness, when He provided manna and water from the rock. The feast also looked forward to the final harvest and ingathering of the nations during Messiah’s kingdom.

During Jesus’ time, the feast was also characterized by a daily procession led by a priest carrying a golden pitcher of water drawn from the Pool of Siloam. The water was poured out at the base of the altar at the same time that another priest would pour out a pitcher of wine on the other side of the altar, which pointed to the future outpouring of the Holy Spirit as predicted by Isaiah (Alfred Edersheim, The Temple: Its Ministry and Services [Eerdmans], pp. 280-282). Isaiah 12:3 says, “Therefore you will joyously draw water from the springs of salvation.” And Isaiah 44:3 states, “For I will pour out water on the thirsty land and streams on the dry ground; I will pour out My Spirit on your offspring and My blessing on your descendants.”

John wants us to see that Jesus Himself is the fulfillment of the Feast of Tabernacles. In 1:14 he told us that (literally), “the Word became flesh and tabernacled among us.” Paul tells us that Jesus is the rock that supplied Israel with water in the barren desert (1 Cor. 10:4). He is also the bread of life, the fulfillment of the manna that sustained Israel in the wilderness (John 6). So now, on the last day of this feast, Jesus claims to be the source of living water to all who will come to Him and drink. In other words, He fulfills all that the feast symbolized.

The water pouring ceremony took place every day for seven days, followed by an eighth day when a holy convocation was held. Scholars disagree on whether Jesus made His offer on the seventh day, when the final pitcher was poured out, or, more likely, on the eighth day, when His offer of living water showed that He was the fulfillment of the pouring ceremony of the previous seven days. John says (7:37-38) that Jesus stood and cried out, or shouted in a loud voice, “If anyone is thirsty, let him come to Me and drink. He who believes in Me, as the Scripture said, ‘From his innermost being will flow rivers of living water.’”

That’s an astonishing claim! No mere human could make such a promise: “Come to me and drink and I’ll fulfill the Scriptures by causing rivers of living water to flow out of your innermost being!” Who, except God in human flesh, God “tabernacling” among us, could legitimately make such a claim? Note, also …

B. The breadth of the promise: Jesus’ offer is open to all.

“Anyone” is as broad as you can get! It extended to Jesus’ enemies, who were trying to kill Him. They could come and drink. It later extended to a man who described himself as the chief of sinners (1 Tim. 1:15), the apostle Paul. By giving the offer in the temple, it extended to the religious Jews, who had come to Jerusalem from all over to celebrate this feast. Even though they were going through all of the prescribed Jewish rituals, those rituals could not save them. Religious observances cannot save anyone, then or now. Everyone needs to come to Jesus and drink.

Because the Spirit inspired John to record Jesus’ words here, the offer extends to each of us. Whether you grew up in a Christian home and have always gone to church or whether you are a complete pagan or a convicted criminal, the offer is for you: Come to Jesus and drink. No one is excluded. To underscore this truth, the Bible virtually ends by repeating Jesus’ offer (Rev. 22:17): “The Spirit and the bride say, ‘Come.’ And let the one who hears say, ‘Come.’ And let the one who is thirsty come; let the one who wishes take the water of life without cost.” Note, also:

C. The condition of the promise: you must be thirsty.

Jesus cries, “If anyone is thirsty….” You have to be thirsty for God. The Bible often uses that kind of language (as we just saw in Rev. 22:17). Isaiah 55:1 proclaims, “Ho! Every one who thirsts, come to the waters; and you who have no money come, buy and eat. Come, buy wine and milk without money and without cost.” The psalmist cries out (Ps. 42:1), “As the deer pants for the water brooks, so my soul pants for You, O God.” David cries (Ps. 63:1), “O God, You are my God; I shall seek You earnestly; my soul thirsts for You, my flesh yearns for You, in a dry and weary land where there is no water.” And in Revelation 21:6b, Jesus says, “I will give to the one who thirsts from the spring of the water of life without cost.”

At first glance, being thirsty for God seems easy enough. But the problem is, because of sin people either don’t recognize their thirst or they seek to satisfy it in wrong ways. John Piper’s dad, who was an evangelist, told him that the most difficult thing was not getting people saved, but getting them lost. In other words, people don’t sense their desperate need for Christ. They don’t feel thirsty for Him. Instead, they try to quench their thirst with many wrong things. They think that success, money, fame, sexual pleasure, or other things will satisfy the inner thirst. But thirsting for things other than God and His glory is the root of all sin. J. C. Ryle observed (Expository Thoughts on the Gospels [Baker], 3:40):

The beginning of all true Christianity is to discover that we are guilty, empty, needy sinners. Till we know that we are lost, we are not in the way to be saved. The very first step toward heaven is to be thoroughly convinced that we deserve hell.

But once you recognize your thirst for God, the good news is that the offer is a free gift. You don’t have to work all your life to earn it. You don’t have to clean up your life first to qualify for it. This points to…

D. The simplicity of the promise: To receive the living water, come to Jesus and drink.

Isn’t that great! Jesus didn’t say, “If anyone is thirsty, keep digging and eventually you’ll hit water!” He didn’t say, “If anyone is thirsty, let him join the church, get baptized, take communion, do penance, give money to the church, clean up your life, and attend church every Sunday!” Jesus simply said, “If anyone is thirsty, let him come to Me and drink.” “Me” implies that it is a personal relationship with Jesus, not a bunch of religious rules or rituals.

What could be more simple? You’re outside working in the yard on a hot day and your wife comes out with a pitcher of ice cold lemonade and says, “Come and drink!” It doesn’t take a lot of effort or will power or a college degree to come to her and drink.

To come to Jesus is to come to the One who loved you so much that He came to this wicked earth and suffered the horrors of the cross to pay for your sins, if you will believe in Him. That’s what drinking of Jesus means, as the parallel comment in verse 38 makes clear: “He who believes in Me ….” (John repeats “believe” in the clarifying statement of verse 39). To receive the living water that Jesus offers, come to Him and drink, or believe in Him. Make Him your own by faith. Appropriate what He did on the cross for your sins. A river running through the desert does you no good if you don’t drink from it. If you feel thirsty, ask Jesus to satisfy your thirst with His abundant, free salvation.

So the person of the promise is Jesus, the eternal God in human flesh, who gave Himself on the cross for our sins. The breadth of the promise is as wide as humanity. The condition of the promise is that you must be spiritually thirsty. The simplicity of the promise is that all you have to do is come to Jesus and drink.

E. The supplier of the promise: The Holy Spirit dwelling in each believer supplies us with every spiritual need.

John 7:39 explains, “But this He spoke of the Spirit, whom those who believed in Him were to receive; for the Spirit was not yet given, because Jesus was not yet glorified.” The Greek text is literally, “the Spirit was not yet,” but clearly John does not mean that the Holy Spirit did not yet exist! As early as Genesis 1:2 we meet the Holy Spirit, moving over the waters in creation. There are repeated references to the Holy Spirit in the Old Testament (e.g., Ps. 51:11; Isa. 11:2; 42:1; 61:1; 63:10, 11).

Rather, John means that the Spirit was not yet manifested on earth as He would be on and after the Day of Pentecost, after Jesus was crucified, raised from the dead, and ascended into heaven (“glorified”). In the Upper Room on the night He was betrayed, Jesus said to the eleven (John 14:16-17), “I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Helper, that He may be with you forever; that is the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it does not see Him or know Him, but you know Him because He abides with you and will be in you.” (See, also, John 15:26; 16:7.)

Then, after Jesus was raised from the dead and just before He ascended, Acts 1:4-5 reports, “Gathering them together, He commanded them not to leave Jerusalem, but to wait for what the Father had promised, ‘Which,’ He said, ‘you heard of from Me; for John baptized with water, but you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days from now.’” On the Day of Pentecost, they all were baptized with the Spirit who came on them with power, they spoke in tongues, and they became powerful witnesses for Christ.

Some say that we, too, need to experience what the disciples experienced at Pentecost: Subsequent to salvation we need a dramatic experience of the baptism of the Spirit, where we receive the Spirit and speak in tongues. But that is to misunderstand that Pentecost was a one-time historical event where the risen and ascended Lord Jesus sent His Spirit to dwell with His church. If anyone would seem to lack the Holy Spirit, it would be the immature Corinthians. But Paul told them (1 Cor. 12:13), “For by one Spirit we were all baptized into one body, whether Jews or Greeks, whether slaves or free, and we were all made to drink of one Spirit.” (See, also, Gal. 3:3.)

So all believers in Jesus Christ in the church age are indwelled by the Holy Spirit. Paul wrote (Rom. 8:9), “However, you are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God dwells in you. But if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him.” The Holy Spirit is the seal of our redemption (Eph. 1:13-14; 4:30). He gives spiritual gifts to all believers (1 Cor. 12:7-11). The Spirit reveals to us the riches that God has prepared for us who love Him (1 Cor. 2:9-10), which include every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ (Eph. 1:3) and all that we need for life and godliness (2 Pet. 1:3-4).

But maybe you’re wondering, “If the Holy Spirit is living in me, then why don’t I experience the rivers of living water inside of me and flowing from me? Why is my life more accurately described as a trickle of water, not rivers?” Other Scriptures teach that …

2. We must learn to walk in the Holy Spirit to experience His fullness.

He does not control us automatically. In Galatians 5:16, Paul writes, “But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh.” He goes on to list some of the deeds of the flesh and the contrasting fruit of the Spirit. Then he repeats (5:25), “If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit.” That is, if the Holy Spirit gave us new life, then we need to rely on the Spirit step by step, day by day.

Walking is something we have to learn how to do as children. At first, we fall a lot. But after a while, we hardly think about it, unless we’re on a slippery surface. Walking is not spectacular. Paul doesn’t say, “Leap by the Spirit or fly by the Spirit.” It’s a slow, step by step process that will gradually get you where you’re going if you keep at it. To walk by the Spirit means that each day in every situation you yield yourself to Him, relying on Him to work in and through you. If during the day the flesh rears its ugly head with impure thoughts, selfishness, anger, or whatever, you immediately confess it to the Lord, turn from it, and ask the Holy Spirit to control your thoughts, words, and actions again. As you learn to walk this way consistently, slowly the fruit of the Spirit will grow in your life: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control (Gal. 5:22-23).

But, why does the Lord give us the Holy Spirit, portrayed here as “rivers of living water” flowing from our innermost being?

3. Jesus Christ blesses all who believe in Him with rivers of living water so that we will be satisfied in Him and so that we become a source of blessing to others.

A. Christ blesses us with rivers of living water so that we will be satisfied in Him.

“Innermost being” is literally, “belly.” The belly is the inner part of us that is always craving something (Phil. 3:19; this insight from A. W. Pink, Exposition of John, on monergism.com). But here, rather than craving earthly things, the implication is that our inner cravings are abundantly satisfied through the indwelling Spirit.

There are many Old Testament Scriptures that link water to God’s abundant blessing on believers (e.g. Ps. 78:15-16; Prov. 4:23; Isa. 44:3; Ezek. 36:26-27; 47:1-9; Joel 3:18; Zech. 13:1; 14:8). But D. A. Carson (The Gospel According to John [Eerdmans/Apollos], pp. 325-328) argues that when Jesus here says, “as the Scripture says,” He was referring primarily to Nehemiah 8 & 9. In Nehemiah 8, the returned remnant listens as Ezra expounded the Law and encouraged them that “the joy of the Lord is your strength” (Neh. 8:10). Then they discovered the command about the Feast of Booths and they celebrated it with great joy (8:17). Then (chap. 9), Nehemiah prays and recounts Israel’s deliverance from Egypt and their time in the wilderness, mentioning God’s provision of manna and water (9:15). He repeats (9:20), “You gave them Your good Spirit to instruct them, Your manna You did not withhold from their mouth, and You gave them water for their thirst.”

The picture is that God sustained and satisfied the needs of His people through His Spirit, even when they were in a barren land. That’s the picture Jesus uses here: Jesus supplies us with the abundant, soul-satisfying rivers of living water of His Spirit, who reveals to us the riches of Christ for our every need. We should follow George Muller’s example and begin every day by seeking to be truly at rest and happy in God (A. T. Pierson, George Muller of Bristol [Revell], p. 257; see also, p. 315). But it doesn’t end there:

B. Christ blesses us with abundant rivers of living water so that we will be a source of blessing to others.

The rivers flow out of us to others who are thirsty. The world is a barren desert, and people are dying of thirst. You and I are to be the rivers of living water that these dying people need. As they see Christ in us (the fruit of the Spirit) and want what we have, we can tell them how they can come to Jesus and drink. Lost people desperately need what only we who have believed can give them.

But the rivers should also flow from us to other believers, especially to those who may be going through a dry spell. Even Paul and Titus were refreshed by other believers (1 Cor. 16:18; 2 Cor. 7:13). As you’re filled with the Spirit and satisfied in Christ, you can overflow to those around you, beginning in your home. Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control should be flowing daily from husbands to wives and from wives to husbands, from parents to children and from children to parents. These qualities should be flowing between us in the church, even if you find a fellow believer difficult to be around.

If you only come to church to get something for yourself, you’ll be like the Dead Sea. It’s so salty that nothing can live in it because it has rivers flowing into it, but nothing flows out of it. When you come to church, come with the prayer, “Lord, fill me with your Spirit and flow out of me toward those who may be thirsty.” As you allow the rivers to flow out of you to others, you’ll discover that you’re actually more filled than before you gave out! That’s the key to preventing burnout: Be satisfied in Christ and let His fullness flow through you to others.

Conclusion

What should you do in response to Jesus’ promise here? First, honestly assess the degree to which “rivers of living water flowing from your innermost being” describes you. If it doesn’t describe you at all, then come to Jesus and drink! If you have to admit that it’s more like a trickle, then make it your priority to be satisfied daily with the riches of Christ. Walk in the Spirit and ask Him to fill you. Then get your focus off yourself and onto those you can bless. Pray that your normal experience would be that from your innermost being rivers of living water would flow to a thirsty world.

Application Questions

  1. Assess your normal experience: To what extent does “rivers of living water flowing from your innermost being” describe you?
  2. To the extent that it does not describe you, try to determine why not. Is your trust in Christ as Savior? Are there sins that keep you from this blessing? Do you feed on Him in the Word daily?
  3. Note that most of the fruit of the Spirit have a relational dimension. How can you see these qualities grow in your relationships?
  4. Walking in the Spirit seems harder and slower than a sudden, dramatic “baptism” in the Spirit. Why does the Bible command us to walk in the Spirit, but never to be baptized in the Spirit?

Copyright, Steven J. Cole, 2014, All Rights Reserved.

Unless otherwise noted, all Scripture Quotations are from the New American Standard Bible, Updated Edition © The Lockman Foundation

Related Topics: Christian Life, Pneumatology (The Holy Spirit), Spiritual Life

Lesson 42: Don’t Be Confused About Jesus! (John 7:25-36)

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February 2, 2014

A story is told of two old ladies who lived together. One summer evening they were sitting on their porch, enjoying the peaceful scene. One woman was listening to the sound of a church choir a few doors away as they practiced. The other woman was listening to the sound of the crickets chirping. The woman listening to the choir said, “Isn’t that a lovely sound?” The woman listening to the crickets replied, “Yes, and I understand that they do it by rubbing their legs together.”

Sometimes confusion can be humorous, but at other times it can be disastrous. That’s especially true when it comes to spiritual matters. Contrary to the prevailing popular view, spiritual truth is not whatever each person prefers it to be. There are not many ways to God, so that you can just pick whatever suits your fancy. Jesus was very exclusive when He said (John 14:6), “I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father but through Me.” Either He was right or He was wrong. You must decide. Spiritual truth is quite narrow. Spiritual confusion is eternally fatal!

In our text, we see different groups of religious Jews who are confused about Jesus. There is the group that John calls “the Jews” (7:1, 11, 13, 15, 35). This refers to the Jewish religious leaders, whom John also identifies as the Pharisees and chief priests, who were Sadducees (7:32). These groups were often rivals, but they viewed Jesus as a common enemy. So they joined together to try to seize Him (7:30, 44, 45). But they knew that many in the crowd liked Jesus. They also remembered Jesus’ disrupting their business by cleansing the temple. So they had to proceed cautiously.

Also, there is a larger group whom John calls “the crowd” (7:12, 20, 31, 32). This would include Jewish pilgrims who had come up to Jerusalem for the feast from all over Israel and from other countries. Many of them were not aware that the Jewish leaders were seeking to kill Jesus, so when He mentioned this, they accused Him of having a demon (7:20).

Then there is a narrower group that John calls “the people of Jerusalem” (7:25-27). They were confused both about who Jesus was and about why their religious leaders were not arresting Him. Because of misunderstanding both about the origins of the Messiah and Jesus’ origins, they concluded that He could not be the expected Messiah.

So the overall feeling of our text is that a lot of people were confused about who Jesus is. But John (20:31) wants us to know the truth about who He is so that we “believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing [we] may have life in His name.” So John is showing us that …

While there are many confused opinions about who Jesus is, your eternal destiny depends on believing the truth about Him.

1. There are many confused opinions about who Jesus is.

Some of the people of Jerusalem wondered out loud whether Jesus might really be the Christ and whether the Jewish leaders were not arresting Him because they thought that He was the Christ (7:25-26). But they quickly dismissed this idea because, as they said (7:27), “However, we know where this man is from; but whenever the Christ may come, no one knows where He is from.”

These people mistakenly thought that the Christ would suddenly come on the scene unannounced, with a dramatic flash. They may have based this on Malachi 3:1, where the Lord says, “Behold, I am going to send My messenger, and he will clear the way before Me. And the Lord, whom you seek, will suddenly come to His temple; and the messenger of the covenant, in whom you delight, behold, He is coming.” Jesus actually fulfilled that prophecy when He went into the temple and cleansed it at the beginning of His public ministry (John 2:13-16). But all these Jerusalem residents knew was that Jesus was from Nazareth and He had been around for some time, which didn’t fit their ideas of how the Christ would come and from where He would come. Others, however, knew more accurately that the Christ would come from Bethlehem (7:42; Matt. 2:4-5), but since they didn’t know that Jesus was born there, they also rejected Him as the Christ.

As we’ve seen, the crowd was confused about who Jesus was. Some said that He was a good man; others said that He led the people astray (7:12). Some in the multitude thought that He had a demon because of His comments about the Jews seeking to kill Him (7:20). In response, Jesus had told them (7:24) not to judge according to appearance, but to judge with righteous judgment. But John is showing us the general confusion that resulted from people judging Jesus superficially by appearance. Such superficial judgment resulted in misinformation, open hostility, and mocking unbelief, although many did believe (7:31).

Of course, at the heart of all confusion about Jesus Christ is the great deceiver, Satan, the enemy of all souls. One of the early deceptions that he foisted on the church was that of Arius, who taught that Jesus was the greatest of all created beings, but He is not eternal God. Although Athanasius stood firmly against Arius and the church finally adopted the Nicene Creed, affirming that Jesus is “eternally begotten of the Father, God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made, of one Being with the Father,” we still have Arianism with us today under the name of the Jehovah’s Witnesses. As if that were not bad enough, the Mormons have still a different view of Jesus, but one that denies the New Testament witness to His deity.

Other false cults talk about “the Christ within us all,” or “the Christ principle.” Liberal theologians deny the possibility of the miraculous, so they have to attribute all of Jesus’ miracles to the gullible imaginations of the apostles. They try to figure out which words attributed to Jesus in the Bible are His true words, and which were invented by the disciples or later followers. Of course, such speculations are just that—speculations based on the liberal theologians’ subjective assumptions. And then there is the confusion of the population at large, which thinks of Jesus as a great moral teacher or a religious reformer, but not as God in human flesh. But they have never carefully examined the Gospels to think about who Jesus claimed to be and who the apostles affirmed Him to be. So there is no end to the confusion about who Jesus is.

Jesus Himself warned with reference to the end times (Matt. 24:23-24, “Then if anyone says to you, ‘Behold, here is the Christ,’ or ‘There He is,’ do not believe him. For false Christs and false prophets will arise and will show great signs and wonders, so as to mislead, if possible, even the elect.” So it’s very important that we not be confused about who Jesus is. Rather,

2. We must believe the truth about who Jesus is.

We don’t know whether Jesus overheard the confusion of the people in the temple or whether He knew supernaturally what they were thinking. But He “cried out in the temple” (7:28, 29; the word refers to a loud shout, so that all would hear), “You both know Me and know where I am from; and I have not come of Myself, but He who sent Me is true, whom you do not know. I know Him, because I am from Him, and He sent Me.” Jesus’ stating that the Jews did not know God must have shocked them. The Jews prided themselves on knowing God, in contrast to the Gentiles, who worshiped many false gods.

But what does Jesus mean when He tells them, “You both know Me and know where I am from”? If they didn’t know God, how could they know Jesus and His origin? In 8:19, He tells them, “You know neither Me nor My Father; if you knew Me, you would know My Father also.” So what does Jesus mean when He tells them that they both know Him and where He is from?

It seems that Jesus was speaking with irony, so as to say, “You think that you know Me and where I’m from. I’ll grant, in a superficial sense, this is true. You know that I’m from Nazareth. You know My relatives according to the flesh. But you really don’t know Me at all, as evidenced by the fact that you don’t know God. You don’t know anything about My divine nature and My unity with the Father.” (I am combining the second and third views as explained by J. C. Ryle, Expository Thoughts on the Gospels [Baker], 3:33.) Jesus here is testifying to the truth of who He is. To know Him rightly, we must understand and believe His testimony.

A. Jesus testified that He had not come of Himself, but had been sent to earth by God.

John 7:28b-29, “I have not come of Myself, but He who sent Me is true, whom you do not know. I know Him, because I am from Him, and He sent Me.” Jesus again affirms the repeatedly stated truth that He had been sent here by the Father. As I mentioned last time, this points both to Jesus’ eternality and to His authority. There is here the additional thought that since Jesus was sent by God, He was under His providential protection.

1) To be sent by God means that Jesus is eternal.

He did not begin His existence when He was born to the virgin Mary. Jesus existed forever with the Father in glory before He came to this earth. In John 8:58, He tells the hostile Jews, “Before Abraham was, I am” (not, “I was”). They picked up on His identifying Himself with Yahweh who told Moses that His name is, “I AM” (Exod. 3:14). In John 17:5, He prays, “Now, Father, glorify Me together with Yourself, with the glory which I had with You before the world was.” Or, as John begins his Gospel (1:1), “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” Jesus is the eternal God in human flesh.

Contrary to the Arians (and Jehovah’s Witnesses), there never was a time when Jesus did not exist. When He took on human flesh, His deity was not diminished or mixed together into a hybrid form that was less than God. Witness Lee, who was the main leader of “The Local Church” sect, wrongly used the analogy of a tea bag and water to explain Jesus.* Before they come together, you have two substances, but once they come together you have a new substance, “tea-water.” Even so, he taught, Jesus is now the God-man, a hybrid of both. But that is heresy, because it confuses both Jesus’ full deity and His perfect humanity. Through the virgin birth, Jesus’ deity was not diminished or changed in any way. Rather, to His full deity, He added sinless humanity.

2) To be sent by God means that Jesus operated under the full authority of God.

He didn’t come on His own initiative or make up His own stuff. As He says in 7:16, “My teaching is not Mine, but His who sent Me.” Back in 5:19, Jesus said, “Truly, truly, I say to you, the Son can do nothing of Himself, unless it is something He sees the Father doing; for whatever the Father does, these things the Son also does in like manner.” In 5:30, He stated, “I can do nothing on My own initiative. As I hear, I judge; and My judgment is just, because I do not seek My own will, but the will of Him who sent Me.” He relayed to us exactly what the Father told Him to say. Thus to reject Jesus or His teaching is to reject the Father who sent Him. Also…

3) To be sent by God means that Jesus was under the Father’s providential protection.

In 7:30, we read, “So they were seeking to seize Him; and no man laid his hand on Him, because His hour had not yet come.” We’ve already encountered in John the concept of “Jesus’ hour” (2:4) and we will see it again (8:20; 12:23, 27; 13:1; 17:1). It refers to the cross, which was the ultimate reason that Jesus came to this earth. But the point John makes by using the phrase here is that no one could touch Jesus until the hour that the Father had providentially determined before the foundation of the earth.

We can apply the concept of being sent by God to ourselves. In John 20:21, Jesus told the disciples, “As the Father has sent Me, I also send you.” That applies to all of us who have believed in Christ. He sends us into this world as His ambassadors to appeal to unbelievers to be reconciled to God (2 Cor. 5:20). As we represent our Divine King, He assures us that He will be with us, even unto the end of the age (Matt. 28:20). As His ambassadors, we can know that He has an appointed hour for each of us and no one can touch us until that hour. For John the Baptist and for Jesus, that hour came when they were in their early thirties. For the apostle John, the hour was when he was about 90. He has a different purpose for each of us. But we can know that we will not die until the hour appointed by our sovereign King (Ps. 139:16).

B. Jesus testified that He knew God.

Although Jesus’ hearers for the most part did not know God (7:28), Jesus plainly stated (7:29), “I know Him, because I am from Him, and He sent Me.” Jesus had a unique and thorough knowledge of the Father because He is one with the Father (10:30) and He alone existed with the Father from all eternity. Thus Jesus can uniquely reveal the Father to us. As John said (1:18), “No one has seen God at any time; the only begotten God who is in the bosom of the Father, He has explained Him.”

In John 17:3, Jesus describes the essence of eternal life as knowing God: “This is eternal life, that they may know You, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom You have sent.” In Luke 10:22, Jesus makes this profound statement: “All things have been handed over to Me by My Father, and no one knows who the Son is except the Father, and who the Father is except the Son, and anyone to whom the Son wills to reveal Him.” The only way that we can know the Father is through the Son when the Son wills to reveal Him to us. Are you asking the Lord Jesus to reveal the Father to you so that you might know Him more deeply?

Jeremiah 9:23-24 declares: “Thus says the Lord, ‘Let not a wise man boast of his wisdom, and let not the mighty man boast of his might, let not a rich man boast of his riches; but let him who boasts boast of this, that he understands and knows Me, that I am the Lord who exercises lovingkindness, justice and righteousness on earth; for I delight in these things,’ declares the Lord.” Regarding unbelievers, Paul said (Eph. 4:18) that they are “darkened in their understanding, excluded from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the hardness of their heart.” But the goal of the Christian life is that (Eph. 4:13) “we all attain to the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to a mature man, to the measure of the stature which belongs to the fullness of Christ.” Or, as Paul stated his goal in life (Phil. 3:10), “that I may know Him.”

Is that your aim in life? If so, you are reading and meditating on God’s Word daily with the prayer, “Lord, reveal Yourself to me so that I may know You.” If you’ve never done so, I encourage you to read some books where godly teachers expound on the attributes of God. J. I. Packer’s Knowing God [IVP] is a classic. A. W. Tozer’s Knowledge of the Holy [Harper & Row] is short, but deep. So is A. W. Pink’s The Attributes of God [Baker]. Deeper yet (and much longer at two-volumes) is the Puritan Stephen Charnock’s The Existence and Attributes of God [Baker]. Wayne Grudem’s Systematic Theology [Zondervan] has an easy-to-read treatment of God’s attributes (as do other systematic theologies). But you will only be able to digest these books if you come to them through faith in Christ as your Savior and with the prayer that the Holy Spirit will teach you.

But I remind you that this knowledge of God is not just so that you can have a cozy “personal relationship” with Him. Knowing God will change you so that you become more like Him. This affects your relationships with others, so that the fruit of the Spirit—love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control—become more evident in your relationships with others (Gal. 5:22-23). Also, the better you know God, the more effectively you can represent Him as His ambassador to lost people. The more you have personally “tasted the kindness of the Lord” (1 Pet. 2:3), the more readily you will be able to “proclaim the excellencies of Him who has called you out of darkness into His marvelous light” (1 Pet. 2 9).

So while there are many confused opinions out there about who Jesus is, we need to believe the truth about Him, which we have in His own testimony about Himself. He was sent here by God and He knew God in a unique way. We can only know God through faith in Jesus. But the final verses of our text give us a solemn warning:

3. Your eternal destiny depends on believing in Jesus while you still have the opportunity.

In John 7:31 we read, “But many of the crowd believed in Him; and they were saying, ‘When the Christ comes, He will not perform more signs than those which this man has, will He?’” Some connect the belief of these people with those that we encountered in John 2:23-25, who believed in Jesus because of the signs that He was doing. But Jesus for His part did not entrust Himself to them. But John here does not say anything negative about their faith, although it seems to have been based on somewhat shallow reasoning: “This guy seems to be doing enough signs to qualify as the Messiah, so we’d better believe in Him.”

But it seems to me that the Lord takes most of us at a pretty shallow level and then graciously deepens our faith as we come to understand more of who He is. I committed myself to Christ as a teenager because I saw a godly couple who had a happy marriage and I thought, “If Christ can give me that kind of marriage, I need to follow Him.” That was totally self-centered and immature! But, He took me in at that point and helped me to grow. The important thing is truly to believe in Christ as Savior and Lord while you have the opportunity.

But some miss the window of opportunity and end up facing God’s awful judgment for rejecting His Son. In 7:33-34, Jesus tells the crowd that He will be with them for a little while longer, but then He would go to the one who sent Him. He knew that His hour was rapidly approaching. But then, after He was gone, they would seek Him, but not find Him. And they could not come where He had gone. They would not be able to go to heaven because they missed the day of salvation.

In typical fashion, the Jewish leaders misunderstand Jesus’ statement. In 7:35-36, they seem to be mocking when they speculate that “this man” (a demeaning way of referring to Jesus) may leave Jerusalem and go among the Greeks. Jesus does not respond to their confusion, but leaves them wondering about what He means. It’s a terrible thing to walk away from the day of salvation and then be left in your confusion about Jesus!

Conclusion

It’s kind of funny when someone is confused about a church choir making music by rubbing their legs together! But it’s really tragic when someone is confused about Jesus and rejects His testimony of who He is. God has given you a measure of light, even through this message. He says (2 Cor. 6:2), “Behold, now is ‘the acceptable time,’ behold, now is ‘the day of salvation.’” Don’t miss the opportunity to trust in Christ as your Savior and Lord today!

*I could not find the tea water illustration’s source in Lee’s writings, although in The Economy of God [Living Stream], p. 12, he mentions the mingling of Christ’s two natures. I got it from a Local Church elder who tried to defend the analogy. The Local Church now has an orthodox statement of the person of Christ, although I cannot recommend many other aspects of their teaching.

Application Questions

  1. When you try to share Christ with someone and he says, “That’s just your opinion,” what should you say?
  2. Is every Christian “sent” by God or just some (John 20:21)? What are the implications if you are sent by God?
  3. What change can you make in your current schedule so that you will grow to know Christ better in the coming year?
  4. If someone tells you that he is worried that he has missed the opportunity to trust in Christ, how would you respond?

Copyright, Steven J. Cole, 2014, All Rights Reserved.

Unless otherwise noted, all Scripture Quotations are from the New American Standard Bible, Updated Edition © The Lockman Foundation

Related Topics: Christology, Soteriology (Salvation)

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క్రైస్తవ విశ్వాసపు ప్రాథమిక సత్యాలు

This a translation into the Telugu language of the original study by Vickie Kraft. This study examines the core beliefs essential to the Christian faith—why we believe what we do about God, the Bible, the creation of mankind and subsequent Fall, Jesus Christ the Lord, our need for salvation, the Holy Spirit and the church.  

Related Topics: Basics for Christians, Curriculum, Discipleship, Faith

[క్రైస్తవ విశ్వాసపు ప్రాథమిక సత్యాలు -1] బైబిల్ - దేవుని వాక్యం

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ఉపోద్ఘాతము:

“లేఖనములు : బైబిల్ దైవావేశము తో దేవుని నుండి పలుకబడిన వాక్కు అనియు దాని మూల రచనలు దోషరహితమైనవనియు సిద్ధాంతము మరియు అనుచరణకు అంతిమ ఆధికారము కలదనియు నమ్ముచున్నాము.

‘పెరేడ్’ అనే మ్యాగజైన్ లో కార్ల్ సాగన్ అనే వ్యక్తి క్యాన్సర్ తో తన అనుభవాన్ని తెలియజేసాడు. ఆయనకు పునర్జన్మ మీద నమ్మిక లేదు. క్రైస్తవులు , ముస్లిములు , యూదులు మరియు హిందువులు ఆయన గురించి ప్రార్ధించినట్లు

తెల్పినాడు. “ దేవుడు ఉన్నట్లయితే ,ప్రార్ధన ద్వారా ఆయన ప్రణాళిక మారగలిగినదైతే నేను ఆయనకెంతో కృతజ్ఞుడిని” . కార్ల్ సాగన్ ఖగోళ శాస్త్రాన్ని చదివాడు. ఈ దినాలలో విశ్వమంతటి మీద అధికారం ఆయనకు కలదు . కాని తన విద్య సృష్టికర్త ఐన దేవునిని ఆరాధించకుండా త్రుణీకరించేలా చేసింది. అంతే కదా ! రోమా 1:18 – 20 చెప్పుచున్నది కాదా?

రోమా 1:18 20 చదవండి.

సృష్టి ద్వారా దేవుడు వున్నాడనియు ఆయన అనంత శక్తిగలవాడనియు మనము తెలుసుకోగలము. కాని దేవుడు దానికంటే మరి ఎక్కువగా తనను తను ప్రత్యక్షపరుచుకున్నాడు.

హెబ్రీయులు 1:1-2 చదవండి.

ఆయన ప్రవక్తలద్వారా తన మాటలను పలికించాడు. కాని ఆయన చివరిగా మరియు సంపూర్తిగా తన ప్రత్యక్షతను తన కుమారుని ద్వారా వెల్లడిపరిచాడు. దేవుడు ఎలా ఉంటాడో యేసు ద్వారా తెలియబడుచున్నది. ఆయన ఎలా ఆలోచించే వాడో ,ఎలా స్పందించే వాడో మరియు ఆయన కార్యములు దేవుడు వీటినన్నిటిని బైబిల్ నందు భద్రపరిచాడు. దేవుని గురించి మనమేమి విశ్వసిస్తున్నామో దానికి మూలము బైబిల్. క్రీస్తు , మానవత్వం ,రక్షణ ,పరలోకం ? మనకు గల అధికారం?

మనము ఎందుకు బైబిల్ ను విశ్వసించాలి ? మన జీవితాన్ని నియంత్రిస్తూ మనలను అధికారపూర్వకంగా నడిపిస్తున్నదనటానికి ఋజువు ఏమిటి?

బైబిల్ గ్రీకు పదమైన బిబ్లోస్ (biblos) అనగా పుస్తకము , బిబ్లియా (biblia) అనగా పుస్తకములు నుండి వచ్చినది. బైబిల్ అన్న పదం బైబిల్ లో ఎక్కడా ఉపయోగించలేదు.

బైబిల్ విశిష్టమైన దేవునివాక్యం గల పుస్తకం

బైబిల్ దేవునివాక్యం గల విశిష్టమైన పుస్తకం అనుటకు 2 ఋజువులు కలవు. అవి బాహ్యమైన మరియు అంతర్గతమైన ఋజువులు.

బాహ్యమైన ఋజువులు External evidence

1. బైబిల్ యొక్క నిరంతరత (The continuity of the Bible)

దాదాపు 40 మంది రచయితలచే సుమారు 1600 సంవత్సరాల కాలంలో రచింపబడినను అది ఒకే పుస్తకమైయున్నది కాని అనేక పుస్తకముల కూర్పు కాదు. రచయితలలో రాజులు,సామాన్యులు,తత్వజ్ఞానం కలవారు, జాలరులు, వైద్యుడు, పన్నులు వసూలు చేసే అధికారి, రాజనీతిజ్ఞులు,కవులు మరియు రైతులు వున్నారు.

ఇటలీ, గ్రీసు,బబులోను, పర్షియా మరియు ఇశ్రాయేలు మొదలైన అనేక దేశాలలో

వ్రాయబడింది. ఈ రచయితలు వేర్వేరు సాంస్కృతిక నేపధ్యం గలవారు మరియు విభిన్నమైన అనుభవాలు కలిగి వుండిరి. వారందరూ తమ తమ స్వభావాల్లో మరియు వ్యక్తిత్వాల్లో విభిన్నమైనవారు.

వారు 3 భాషలలో వ్రాశారు. పాతనిభంధన : హీబ్రూ, అరామీ భాషలలో, క్రొత్తనిభంధన : గ్రీకు భాషలో

కాని బైబిల్ విభిన్న రచయితలతో వ్రాయబడిన సంకలనం (anthology) కాదు.ఆదికాండము నుండి ప్రకటన వరకు అద్భుతమైన కొనసాగింపు మరియు ఏకత్వము కలదు.

స్వర్గాన్ని కోల్పోవుటతో ఆరంభమయ్యే ఆదికాండము స్వర్గాన్ని తిరిగిపొందే ప్రకటన

గ్రంధంతో ముగుస్తుంది. జీవవ్రుక్షానికి ద్వారాన్ని మూసివేయుట ఆదికాండములో చెప్పబడితే ,దానిని ఎప్పటికీ తెరిసివుంచడాన్ని ప్రకటనలో చూడగలము. (Geisler & Nix . Evidence that demands verdict P19)

సిద్ధాంతము క్రమమైన రీతిలో తెలియజేయబడుతూ వచ్చింది.రక్షణ గూర్చి .కా 3 లో ప్రస్తావిన్చబడగా , అనేక వాగ్ధానాల చిత్రీకరణల ద్వారా పాతనిభంధనలో రూపొందింపబడగా , సువార్తలలో సాధ్యపడింది. పత్రికలలో వివరించబడింది.ప్రకటన గ్రంథంలో మహిమకరంగా ముగించబడింది.

2. బైబిల్ ప్రత్యక్షతల విస్తృతి (The extent of biblical revelation)

బైబిల్ లోని రచనలన్నీ మానవ జ్ఞానానికి సంబంధించిన తొలిదినాల్లో అనగా రచయితలకు నూతన పరిశోధనలు తెలియక ముందే వ్రాయబడ్డాయి.కాని వారు వ్రాసిన విషయాలు తరువాతి పరిశోధనలతో విభేదించలేదు.

యెషయా 40:22 – ఆయన భూమండలము మీద ఆసీనుడైయున్నాడు.

ఇది 2800 సంవత్సరాల క్రితం వ్రాయబడింది.

యోబు 26:7 - శూన్యమండలము పైని ఉత్తర దిక్కున వున్న ఆకాశవిశాలమును ఆయన పరిచెను. శూన్యముపైని భూమిని వ్రేలాడదీసెను.

ఇది 4000 సంవత్సరాల క్రిందట వ్రాయబడింది.

పురావస్తు శాస్త్రవేత్తలు (Archeology) బైబిల్ లో చెప్పబడిన అనేక విషయాలకు ఋజువులు కనుగొన్నారు.(Hittites,Sargon)

3. బైబిల్ యొక్క ప్రచురణ మరియు ప్రభావము (Influence and Publication of Bible)

బైబిల్ వలె ఏ పుస్తకము అనేక భాషలలో ప్రచురింపబడలేదు .ఇప్పటికీ ఎక్కువగా అమ్ముడవుతున్న పుస్తకం . ఫ్రాన్స్ కు చెందిన హేతువాది Voltaire ఒక వంద సంవత్సరాల లోపు బైబిల్ అనబడే పుస్తకము మరుగునపడిపోతుంది. మరియు క్రైస్తవుల ఉనికి తుడిచివేయబడి చరిత్రలో కనుమరుగు అవుతుందని పలికాడు . కాని Voltaire చరిత్రలో కనుమరుగయ్యాడు కాని బైబిల్ ఇప్పటికీ ప్రపంచమంతా వ్యాప్తి చేయబడుతూనే వున్నది. వాస్తవానికి విచిత్రంగా Voltaire మరణించిన 50 సంవత్సరాలకు Geneva Bible Society వారు ఆయన ఉపయోగించిన press మరియి గృహాన్ని అనేక బైబిల్లను ముద్రించే స్థలంగా ఉపయోగించారు. (Evidence P23)

4.రాతప్రతుల ఆధారాలు (Manuscript evidence)

పురాతన రచనల రాతప్రతులతో పోలిస్తే క్రొత్తనిబంధనకు సంభందించి 13,౦౦౦ రాతప్రతుల భాగాలు లభ్యమైనాయి. ప్రతులు కొన్ని 2 శతాబ్ధపు కాలపు నాటివి .

Sir. Frederic Kenyon, director అండ్ principal librarian of the British museum విధంగా అన్నారు: ఏ ఇతర పురాతన గ్రంధానికి కూడా దాని వాక్యభాగానికి సరిపడిన సాక్ష్యాధారాలు లేవు. పక్షపాతము లేని (రహిత) మేధావి కూడా వాక్యభాగం సరైనది కాదు అని తిరస్కరించలేదు.

5. పక్షపాతము లేని బైబిల్ (unprejudiced authority of Bible)

ఈ మానవ రచనలు (మూలముగా) మానవుల పక్షముగా వ్రాయబడలేదు. బైబిల్ నందు ఘనతవహించిన మానవులందరి (అబ్రహాము ,మోషే ,దావీదు ,పేతురు )

పాపములు మరియు బలహీనతలు కూడా వివరించబడియున్నవి.సాతాను మరియు మానవుని(యోబు ) మధ్య జరిగిన తప్పులు మరియు పొరపాట్లు పొందుపరచబడినవి. నేటి మానవుని యొక్క స్వాభావిక ప్రవృత్తి దాని యందు నిక్షిప్తం చేయబడింది.

6. బైబిల్ యొక్క విశిష్టత (The supreme haracter of the Bible)

దేవుని యొక్క వ్యక్తిత్వాన్ని మరియు మహిమను ఆయన కుమారునిలో ప్రత్యక్షపరిచే బైబిల్ ఎంతో అతీతమైనది. మర్త్యమైన మానవుడు యేసుక్రీస్తు వంటి వ్యక్తిని ఎన్నడూ కనుగొనలేడు. మనము ప్రయత్నించి ఆయనను రూపొందించలేము. గ్రీకు పురాణాలలో వారి దేవతలు వారి యొక్క (magnified images) ప్రతిబింబాలైయున్నవి.

బి .అంతరంగిక ఋజువులు (internal evidence)

2 తిమోతి 3:16 -13 చదవండి Theopnestos = God-breathed

క్రొత్తనిబంధనలో ఇక్కడ మాత్రమే ఈ విధంగా వ్రాయబడింది.

లేఖనము దైవావేశపూరితమైనది.

ఈ దైవావేశము రచయితలకు కాదు గాని దేవుని వాక్యానికే సూచిస్తుంది. రచయిలతల పొరపాటు వలన ఏదైనా తప్పు దొర్లివుండవొచ్చును గాని దేవుడు వారి మనస్సులో తన లోప రహితమైన వాక్యాన్ని వుంచాడు. అందుచే వారు రచించిన దేవుని వాక్యం లోపరహితమైనది. మానవులైన రచయితలకు ఎలా వ్రాయాలో దేవుడు ఏవిధంగా తెలిపాడు?యాంత్రికంగా ప్రభోదించుట వలన మాత్రమే కాదు.

చదవండి 2 పేతురు 1:20-21

మానవ మాత్రులైన రచయిత ఒక పడవ లోని ప్రయాణికులను గమ్యస్థానానికి చేర్చునట్లు మానవ మాత్రులైన రచయితలు దేవునిచే గమ్యం వరకూ నడిపించారు .

దేవుడు అనేక మార్గాల ద్వారా తన వాక్యాన్ని ప్రకటించాడు.

నిర్గమ 34:27 : ఈ వాక్యములను వ్రాసికొనుము అని చెప్పినాడు.

యెహోవా వాక్కు ప్రవక్తలకు ప్రత్యక్షమాయెను. : యిర్మియా 1:2 ;హోషేయ 1:1 దర్శనములు మరియు స్వప్నములు దానియేలు 2:1;7:1 ల ద్వారా తెలియజేయబడింది.

కనుక లేఖనములు దేవుని యొక్క సంపూర్ణ అధికారాన్ని మరియు పరిపూర్ణతను తెలియజేయుచున్నవి .

ఆయన ఏ దోషము లేని మరియు లోపరహితమైనవాడు.

ప్రేరణ యొక్క విస్తృతి సమస్త లేఖనము (Extent of Inspiration—ALL Scripture)

ప్రతి యొక్క పదము సమానముగా దేవునిచే ప్రేరితమైనది. నోటిమాట ద్వారా అందించిన పదాలు మరియు సమగ్రమైన భావముతో కూడిన పదాలు . బైబిల్ దేవుని వాక్యాన్ని మాత్రమే కలిగియుండవు కాని , ఆ వాక్యము నీతో మాట్లాడుతుంది.

1 తిమోతి 5:18 – పౌలు లూకా 10 :7 ను ద్వితియోపదేశకాండము 25:4 కి వున్న సమానమైన లేఖనముగా పేర్కొన్నాడు (Graphe)

2 పేతురు 3 :15-16 – పేతురు , పౌలు యొక్క రచనలను ఇతర లేఖనభాగాలతో సమానవైనవిగా పేర్కొన్నాడు.

శబ్ద సంబంధమైన సంపూర్ణ దైవావేశము (verbal plenary inspiration)

నిర్వచనము : పరిశుద్ధాత్ముడు మానవాతీతమైన పరిచర్య ద్వారా

మానవమాత్రులైన రచయితలు లేఖనాలను వ్రాయునపుడు తమ వ్యక్తిగత ఉద్దేశాన్ని ప్రచురపరచకుండా లోపరహితమైన దేవుని ప్రత్యక్షత మానవాళికి వెల్లడియగునట్లు మౌలికమైన రచనలను పర్యవేక్షించాడు.

ఆదిమ రచనలలో మానవ రచయితలు పదాలను ఎంపిక చేసే విషయంలో దేవుని ఆత్మ వారిని నడిపించింది. అనేక పుస్తకాలు రచయిత యొక్క వ్యక్తిగత శైలి భాషాకూర్పు మరియు వారి వ్యక్తిత్వాన్ని కనపరిచే ఆలోచనలు , భావాలు , అనుమానాలు ,ప్రార్ధనలు , భయాలు మున్నగు వాటిని వెల్లడిపరుస్తాయి.

లూకా వైద్యుడు కనుక వైద్యానికి సంభందించిన విషయాలను /పదాలను ఉపయోగించాడు.

పౌలు గ్రీకు భాషలో పండితుడు కనుక గ్రీకు పద్యాలను అక్కడక్కడా ఎత్తిచెప్పాడు. (.కా 17 )

దేవుడు మానవ రచయితలను ఏర్పాటు చేశాడు.

కాని మనుష్యులు వారు వ్రాసే విషయాలను అర్ధం చేసుకోలేకపోయారు. (దానియేలు12:8-9).అయినప్పటికీ ,దేవుని నడిపింపులో వారు 66 పుస్తకాలను రచించారు .ఒక ఏకత్వము మరియు పరిశుద్ధాత్మ యొక్క స్థిరమైన ప్రత్యక్షత వారి రచనలకు తోడ్పడింది.

ధృడమైన అంతర్గత సాక్ష్యము (consistent internal testimony)

బైబిల్ లోని పాత మరియు క్రొత్త నిబంధన భాగాలూ ధృడంగా దేవుని వాక్కును వెల్లడిపరుస్తున్నాయి.

నిర్గమ 20 :1 ; ద్వితియో .కా 6 :6-9; 2 సమూయేలు 22 :31,23 :2; కీర్తనలు 19:7-11 , 11:9,11,18, 89 – 91;97 ,100 ,104-5,13౦ ; సామెతలు 30 :5-6;

యెషయ 55:10-11;22:29; మార్కు 13:31; యోహాను 2:22;5:24;అ.కా 17:11;

2 తిమోతి 2:15 ;1 పేతురు 1: 23-25; ప్రకటన 1:1-3;22:18.

యేసు యొక్క సాక్ష్యము (Testimony of Jesus)

యేసు మరియు పాతనిబంధన (Jesus and the OT)

మత్తయి 5 :18 ; యోహాను 10:35 లేఖనము విడదీయరానిది

ఆయన పాతనిబంధన నెరవేర్పుగా వచ్చాడు మత్తయి 1:22-33; 4:14 ;8:17; 12:17;15:7 ,8 ;21:4-5

కీర్తన 110:1 మరియు మత్తయి 22:43-44 ప్రతిమాట ఎంతో ఖచ్చితమైనది .

పరిశుద్ధాత్ముడు మరియు దావీదు.

లూకా 24 :27 ఆయనకు సంభందించిన లేఖనాలన్నీ ఎంతో ఖచ్చితమైనవి. యోహాను 5:39-40

క్రొత్తనిభంధన లో ప్రాముఖ్యమైన అన్ని భాగాలలో ఆయన పాతనిభంధన వాక్యాలను ఎత్తి చెప్పాడు , ముఖ్యంగా మితవాదులు (liberals) వ్యతిరేకించే పుస్తకాలనుండి ఉదా: ద్వితియోపదేశ కాండము, యోనా,దానియేలు

ద్వి.కా 6: 16 –మత్తయి 4:7 ; యోనా – మత్తయి 12:40; దానియేలు 9:27 ;12:11-మత్తయి 24:15

యేసుక్రీస్తు యొక్క వ్యక్తిత్వము మరియు సత్యాన్ని ప్రశ్నించకుండా పాతనిబంధన ప్రేరణను ప్రశ్నించుట అసాధ్యము. క్రీస్తు యొక్క నమ్మకత్వము ప్రధానమైనది. ఆయన ,”నేనే సత్యాన్ని “ అని చెప్పాడు.మితవాదులు అభ్యంతరపడినట్లుగా తన వయస్సుకు సంభందించిన వివాదాన్ని ఆయన లేక్కబెట్టలేదు.

యేసు మరియు క్రొత్తనిభంధన (Jesus and the NT)

క్రొత్తనిభంధన రచనలను యేసు ముందుగానే వెల్లడించాడు. యోహాను 14 :25 – 26 ;15:26-27 ;16:12-13

పరిశుద్ధాత్ముడు మానవమత్రులైన రచయితలకు , పాతనిభంధన రచయితలకు తోడ్పడినట్లే క్రొత్తనిభంధన రచయితలకు తోడ్పడ్డాడు .

బైబిల్ నందు యేసు యొక్క సాక్ష్యము నిర్ణయాత్మకమైనది.ఆయన దేవుడు మరియు పాపరహితుడు అని మనము నమ్మినట్లయితే ఆయన సత్యవంతుడు అని మనము విస్వసించినట్లయితే మనము లేఖనములు ఏర్పరచబడిన విధానము కూడా నిర్దిష్టమైనవి అని అంగీకరిస్తాము. మనకు ప్రతీ విషయము సంపూర్ణంగా అర్థం అవ్వాలని లేదు. అది అంత ముఖ్యం కాదు. నాకు అణుశక్తి గురించి ఏమాత్రం అర్థం కాదు.కాని దాని యొక్క శక్తిని నేను నమ్ముతాను. దాని ప్రభావాన్ని చూచాను. లేఖనముల యొక్క శక్తిని నేను అనుభవించాను. వాటి గురించి పూర్తిగా అర్థం కాకపోయినప్పటికీ!

బైబిల్ సరిగా అర్థం చేసుకునే క్రమంలో మనము గుర్తించవలసినదేమనగా లేఖనములు వెల్లడిచేసే అన్ని విషయాలు మనకు అర్థం కావు కాని బైబిల్ నందు మనకు అర్థం కాగలిగిన విషయాలను చాల అందంగా ఒక క్రమంలో పొందుపరచబడి మరియు దేవుని గూర్చి ఆయన యందలి విశ్వాసాన్ని గూర్చి ఖచ్చితంగా వెల్లడించే ఒకే ఒక్క మూలాధార గ్రంథం. దానియేలు గ్రంథం వలె నేరవేర్చబడిన ప్రవచనం,యేసు యొక్క సాక్ష్యం మరియు సర్వశక్తి మంతుడు ,సర్వజ్ఞుడైన దేవుని ఊపిరి మూలముగా ఏర్పడిన లేఖనాలు ఆయన మనలను ప్రేమిస్తూ తన కుమారుడైన ప్రభువైన యేసుక్రీస్తు ద్వారా మనలను ఆయన స్వాస్త్యముగా చేసుకున్నాడని బలంగా నమ్మునట్లు పరిశుద్ధాత్మ ఆ లేఖనాలు ఉపయోగిస్తున్నది.కనుక మనము మన విశ్వాసము మరియు నడతపై బైబిల్ కు అధికారము కలదని నమ్మవచ్చును.

బైబిల్ యొక్క అధికారం (Biblical Authority)

నిర్వచనము : దేవుని గుణ లక్షణాలను ,దేవుని చిత్తాన్ని ఖచ్చితంగా మరియు నిశ్చయంగా తెలియపరుచుటలో దైవికమైన శక్తి కలిగినది (దేవుని వాక్యము) బైబిల్.

(లేఖనాలు)బైబిల్ అధికారము కలిగినది ఎందువలనంటే

1. అవి దైవావేశము వలన కలిగినవి (దైవప్రేరితము)

2.పరిశుద్ధాత్మ ప్రేరణ ఆధికారము క్రింద ఎన్నిక చేయబడిన వ్యక్తులచే వ్రాయబడినది.

3.ఈ లేఖనములను దైవత్వములోని రెండవ వ్యక్తియైన ప్రభువైన యేసుక్రీస్తు ద్వారా నిర్ధారించబడినవి.

4.లేఖనాలు పరిశుద్ధాత్మ ప్రేరితము.(ఎఫె 6:17 ,హెబ్రీ 4 :12, 1 తిమో 4 :1). ఆత్మ ఖడ్గము ,జీవము కలిగి శక్తి కలిగిన రెండంచుల వాడిగల ఎటువంటి ఖడ్గము కంటే పదునైనది.

5.లేఖనాల గుణలక్షణాలు నిరూపింపబదినవి.

II తిమో 3 :16-17 (ఫిలిప్స్ ) మరొకసారి చదవండి.

“ దైవజనుడు సన్నద్ధుడై ప్రతి సత్కర్యమునకు పూర్ణముగా సిద్ధపడి యుండునట్లు దైవావేశము వలన కలిగిన ప్రతి లేఖనము ఉపదేశించుటకును, ఖండించుటకును , తప్పు దిద్డుటకును, నీతి యందు శిక్ష చేయుటకును ప్రయోజనకరమైయున్నది “.

ప్రామాణికత-కొలబద్ద –కొలమానం

ప్రామాణికత అనగా లేఖన భాగములను(పుస్తకములను) కొలుచుటకు వాడిన ఖచ్చితమైన కొలబద్ద.

ప్రామాణిక పుస్తకంగా చేర్చుటకైన పరీక్షలు.

1.అది అధికారులతో చెప్పబడినదా (ప్రభువు సెలవిచ్చినదేమనగా ...)

2.అది ప్రవచానాత్మకమా (దైవజనులచే వ్రాయబాడినదా ....)

3.అనుమానాలకు తావులేనిదా(అనుమానస్పదముగా వుంటే తొలగించుట )

4.శక్తితో కూడినదా? (అది జీవితములను సమూలముగా మార్చగల దివ్యశక్తి తో కూడినదా )

5.అది దేవుని ప్రజలచే పొందబడి,కూర్చబడి,చదువబడి,ఉపయోగించబడినదా ?

నూతననిభంధన అధికారమునకైన పరీక్ష

అపోస్తులలచే గుర్తింప బడి /నిర్ధరించాబడుట ప్రామాణికత పరీక్ష

అన్వయము (Application)

పై వివరాలు వాస్తవమైతే , దేవుని వాక్యం విషయంలో మన స్పందన ఏంటి ? విశ్వసించుట /నమ్ముట

మనము వాక్యాన్ని నమ్మాలి ఎందుకంటే అది దోషరహితం , నమ్మతగినది మరియు అధికారము కలిగినది.మనము విశ్వసించి నట్లయితే , దానికి విధేయత చూపేట్లు కోరుకొనాలి . దేవుని ప్రీతిపరచుటకు ఇది ఒక్కటే మార్గము..కాబట్టి వాక్యమును చదవాలి. అర్థం చేసుకోవాలి. ధ్యానించాలి.మరియు కంటస్థం చేయాలి. మన మనస్సు లేఖనాలతో సంపూర్ణంగా నింపుకోవాలి. అప్పుడు మాత్రమే వాక్యం విన్నప్పుడు మనలోని లోపాలను గుర్తించగలం. ఈ లేఖనాలు మన తలంపులకు కావలిగా వుండి రక్షిస్తాయి. దీనికోసం మనం శ్రమించాలి. ఇటువంటి క్రియలు అంత తేలికగా జరగవు. దేవుని వాక్యంతో మనం క్రమంగా అర్థవంతంగా గడిపే సమయాన్ని దొంగిలించడానికి మనకొరకు ఒక శత్రువు వున్నాడు. అయితే వాక్యాన్ని పరిశుద్ధాత్ముడు మనకు తోడుగా నిలిచి లేఖనాలను అర్థం చేసుకోనేట్లు సహాయపడతాడు. పరిశుద్ధాత్ముడు ఈ శత్రువు కన్నా గొప్పవాడు. అత్యధిక శక్తి గలవాడు. పరిశుద్ధాత్ముడు నీకు సహాయం అందించులాగు ఆయనపై ఆధారపడవలెను.

లోకం ఏమి చెప్పినప్పటికీ , దేవుని వాక్యం వలన నీతి నియమాలను ప్రవర్తనను నియంత్రించేదిగా వుండాలి. జీవితంలో ఎదురయ్యే ప్రతి పరిస్థితిలో దేవునివాక్యం పై ఆధారపడటం లేక మన సొంత ఆలోచన లేక ఇతరుల ఆలోచన ప్రకారం నడవాలని నిర్ణయం తీసుకొనే అవకాశం మనకు వుంటుంది.

ఏదైనా విషయంలో లేఖనాలచే బోధింపబడి సరిచేసికొనిన సంఘటనలు నీ జీవితంలో ఉన్నాయా? నీ జీవిత గమనాన్ని తిరిగి సరిచేసుకోన్నావా ? లేఖనాలు నిన్ను ఆ దేవుని సేవించుటకు సన్నిద్ధపరుస్తూ ప్రోత్సాహకరంగా ఉన్నాయా ?

లేఖనాలకు విరుద్ధమైన సాజిక నమ్మకాల విషయంలో నీ ఎన్నిక ఎటువైపు ?

ఉదా : గర్భ విచ్చిన్నతి , స్వలింగ సంపర్కం మొదలుగునవి.

నీ లైంగిక కోరికలను తీర్చుకొనుట లేక పరాయి వారితో వివాహేతర సంబంధాల విషయంలో నీ ఎన్నిక ఏమిటి?

కష్టమైన కుటుంబ స్నేహితుల సంబంధాల విషయంలో సరియైన నిర్ణయాలు తీసుకొనుటకు దేవుని వాక్యం ఏవిధంగా సాయ పడుతుంది ?

నీ ఉద్యోగ భాద్యతలను లేఖనాలు ఏవిధంగా ప్రభావితంచేస్తున్నాయి?

ఇతరుల తప్పుల్ని క్షమించుటలో దేవుని వాక్యం నీకెట్లు సాయపడుతుంది?

క్రీస్తులో సంపూర్ణతను సాధించుటకు లేఖనాలు ఎట్లు ఉపయోగపడుతున్నాయి ?

మన జీవితాలకు ఒక దిశ నిర్దేశకుడు , 3400 సంవత్సరములకు పైగా నమ్మకమైన వాడిని కలిగి ఉండుట ద్వారా ప్రజలందరిలో మనమెంతో ధన్యులము. బైబిల్ కు సాటిరాగల పుస్తకము ప్రపంచంలో మరొకటి లేదు.

నిత్యమూ విశ్వసించదగినది దేవుని వాక్యము మాత్రమే . అది ఎన్నడు మనలను చులకనగా ఎంచదు.నిరుత్సాహపరచదు ఎందుకంటే దేవుడు నమ్మతగినవాడు, సత్యవంతుడు .అయితే మన అనుభవంలో వాస్తవము కావాలంటే మనము వాక్యమును నమ్మి విధేయత చూపాలి. ఇది జీవితంలో సంతోషానికి ,ఆత్మీయ ఎదుగుదలకు తాళపు చెవి వంటిది.

ధ్యానానికి ప్రశ్నలు (Study Questions)

రోమా 1:18-21 వరకు చదవండి.

1. మానవ జాతికి దేవుడు తన గురించి తాను ఏమని బయలుపరుచుకున్నాడు?

1 యోహాను 5:9-12 ,యోహాను 1 :18 , హెబ్రీ 1 :1-4 చదవండి

2. మరి ఏ రెండు విధాలుగా దేవుడు తన గురించి తాను ఏమని బయలుపరచుకున్నాడు?

IIతిమోతి 3 :16,17 చదవండి.

3. బైబిల్ లో ఎంత భాగము దైవప్రేరితాలు? ఎంత భాగము మనకు ప్రయోజనకరము ? నీకు ఏదైనా సంఘటనలో బైబిల్ వాక్యాలు ఉపయోగపడిన సందర్భము కలదా ?

II పేతురు 1: 20,21 చదవండి

4. మానవులైన బైబిల్ రచయితలు ఏమి రచించాలో ఎట్లు తెలుసుకొన్నారు? దేవుడు ఉపయోగించిన పద్ధతులు ఏవి?(నిర్గ 34:27 ,యిర్మియా 1 :2, హోషేయ 1:1, దాని 2:1;8:17)?

మత్తయి 5:17,19;యోహాను 10 :35;లూకా 24 :27 చదవండి

5 .పాతనిబంధన పట్ల యేసు ప్రభువు వైఖరి ఏమిటి?ఆయన గుణ గణాలను బట్టి లేఖనాల పట్ల తన వైఖరిని తెలిసుకోనుటలో గల ప్రాముఖ్యత ఏమి?

మత్తయి 1:22,23;4:14;8:17;12:17;15:7,8 ;21:4,5 చదవండి

6. ప్రవచనాల నెరవేర్పు పాతనిబందనను ఏమని ఋజువు చేస్తున్నవి? అవి తు.చ తప్పకుండ నెరవేరుట మన విశ్వాసాన్ని ఎట్లా బలపరుస్తుంది?

యోహాను 14:25,26;15: 26,27;16:12,13 చదవండి

7.కొత్త నిబంధన ఈవిషయంలో ఎలా వ్రాయబడిందని యేసు ప్రభువు ముందుగానే చెప్పియున్నాడు ? కొత్త నిబంధన గ్రంధ మూలకర్త ఎవరు ?

ఎఫె 6:17 ;హెబ్రీ 4:12 చదవండి

8.కొన్ని వందల సంవత్సరముల క్రితము వ్రాయబడిన గ్రంధములలో కెల్లా బైబిల్ ఎట్లు భిన్నమైనది? (ఉదా : షేక్స్పియర్ రచనలు) బైబిల్ గురించి బైబిల్ ఏమని తెలియజేస్తుంది ?

9.పై వివరణ వాస్తవమైతే దేవుని అధికారం పట్ల మన వైఖరి ఎట్లుండాలి ?అది సరైనదని నమ్మగలమా ? ఎంత భాగము అది సత్యము అని అధికారముతో కూడుకొనినదని మనము ఎంచగలము . ఆ వాక్యంతో నీవు ఏమి చేస్తావు? యేహోషువ 1:8; II తిమోతి 2 :1 ; కీర్తనలు 119, 105 ; యాకోబు 1 :22 చదవండి

Translated by Ruth Vinay , ruthvinay(at)gmail.com for bible.org

Related Topics: Bibliology (The Written Word), Curriculum

Women's Ministry - Submissions Guidelines

AUTHOR SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

from Bible.org’s Women’s Leadership Team

 

If you share our ministry philosophy to provide free, trustworthy Bible study materials to the world, we invite you to submit materials for review.

 

INTRODUCTION

The vision of Bible.org, a non-profit (501c.3) organization, is to equip all people to attain the knowledge of the Son of God, to become mature in Christ, and to be competent to teach others. Our mission is to leverage the power of the Internet to provide people and ministries worldwide with universal access to the Bible and other trustworthy Bible study resources. “Ministry First” is our motto.

  • “Ministry First” is our purpose, supporting the vision of bible.org to see all people become mature followers of Jesus Christ.
  • “Ministry First” is our philosophy—our approach to the world and ministry—to which all Bible.org leaders, team members, partners and participants are challenged to adhere. It is the lens through which we evaluate everything we do.
  • “Ministry First” means that our goal is to say "yes" to any idea, opportunity or request to do ministry using Bible.org resources.
  • “Ministry First” is our practice of introducing innovative methods, practices and approaches that put ministry ahead of profits.
  • “Ministry First” is our passion, and it is infectious. We pray that you will desire to join us in seeking "Ministry First."

The mission of Bible.org Women is to provide trustworthy resources, proven training materials, and biblical encouragement to women so that they walk more closely with God and expand their influence for Christ.

BENEFITS TO AUTHOR

Because of the great number of visitors to Bible.org, established and “undiscovered” authors alike are provided with broad visibility.

  • The Bible.org website has over 3 million visitors per month. Most are in church ministry, are Bible teachers, or are serious Bible students.
  • About one third of the visitors are women.
  • Our website users come from over 175 different countries.
  • You will find Bible.org on the first few Google listings for many biblical and theological topics such as “Bible studies,” “Bible study,” “Bible,” etc. (Try it!)
  • Free access to over 40,000 pages of sermons and other Bible study resources is provided to the world on Bible.org.
  • There are around 750 resources on the site which have been translated into one or more of 28 foreign languages. Most translation work is performed by volunteers for use in foreign ministry settings and then posted on Bible.org.

Bible.org may also seek your permission and choose to offer your published materials on our online store. An equitable arrangement regarding sales proceeds will be negotiated with the author. Bible.org uses profits from online sales to support the ongoing work of the ministry and the publishing operation.

KEY THOUGHT

Bible.org’s Ministry First publishing model is based on building relationships with appropriate authors (pastors, teachers, professors, students of the Word, etc.) who desire to share their resources with the world for free online access and use. If you will share your gifts of teaching through Bible.org’s global online ministry, then where applicable, we would like to reciprocate by promoting and selling your materials. The more free resources you post on Bible.org, the more global visibility Bible.org can potentially provide for both your ministry and your related products and services if applicable and appropriate.

Please keep in mind that only materials considered “trustworthy” by the Bible.org staff will be offered on the online store.

You may elect to be available to your reader by e-mail through Bible.org.

The reader would not have your personal e-mail address, but a message would be forwarded to you. You would have the reader’s e-mail address and could reply. Bible.org requests that blind copies (bcc) of the author's response to Bible.org e-mail be directed to Bible.org's Executive Director. This information helps us understand the people we serve, and provides an evaluation tool for knowing how we may improve our service.

The author will be provided with feedback received by Bible.org staff members.

EXPECTATIONS BY BIBLE.ORG

Our reviewers have high standards regarding author’s abilities, writing style and theological orthodoxy in essential matters. Only 1-2% of the submissions we receive are accepted for posting. Some examples of reasons for not accepting an article include:

  • Not orthodox (meaning the submission does not reflect mainstream evangelical theology)
  • Not well-written or appropriately developed
  • Not theologically or biblically sound
  • Not appropriately written for the intended audience (weak scholarship, etc.)
  • Not needed in terms of content appropriateness for determined purposes
  • Author has not demonstrated appropriate background experience or expertise in the topic
  • Author has failed on a personal spiritual level to be a qualified biblical teacher (living in unreconciled sin, under church discipline, etc.)

Where applicable, biblical references should be cited by book, chapter, and verse.

Reference sources should be cited in footnotes or endnotes, and a bibliography should be provided.

For standard spelling, consult Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, 11th Edition.

All materials supplied by the author and posted on Bible.org cannot be posted on any other websites except the author’s own ministry website without permission from Bible.org.

Regarding previously published materials, the author must get appropriate permissions to post on Bible.org. It is assumed the author has full legal rights to any material submitted to Bible.org for use and posting. The author will retain any copyrights they own, but Bible.org would own the rights to post online and use for their ministry purposes without restriction.

Materials posted on Bible.org may not be withdrawn by the author. Search engines and personal downloads will have captured the materials and it is not our policy to reclaim them. See specific details here.

After review, materials will not be returned unless specifically requested and then only at the author’s expense.

PROCEDURES

First of all, please review the Bible.org Doctrinal Statement. Please submit only if you agree with the Doctrinal Statement.

Materials should be formatted according to the instructions found on the Formatting Guidelines page.

A copy of the Submission Agreement (found here) signed by the author must be on file at Bible.org. Please print out and complete a copy of the agreement and mail it to: Women's Leadership Team, Bible.org, @ our office. Our contact address is located here.

Materials should be submitted to [email protected]. Articles will not be reviewed unless the completed Submission Agreement accompanies the materials.

The author should expect an opinion from the reviewers within 2-4 weeks after receipt. We will try to review sooner, but it could be even later. We are a ministry and therefore only have certain resources to draw upon at any given time. Bible.org is mostly a volunteer organization.

Bible.org does not guarantee the author will be notified when materials are posted on Bible.org. However, it is easy to search “By Author” in the primary/homepage navbar section to see if your name is listed. We will, however, strive to be a good ministry partner and communicate with you when your materials are accepted and posted.

THANK YOU – We consider it a blessing that you believe the ministry of Bible.org is worthy of your consideration. We take every submission seriously and before the Lord will seek to be faithful to His service as we consider your submission.

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