3 Min Read

John 3:16 may or may not be the most familiar verse in all of Scripture, but it is surely one of the most abused and least understood. The verse is so well known that the reference alone is thought by some to be a sufficient proclamation of the gospel.

Arminians extract the phrase "God so loved the world" from its context and use it as an argument for universal atonement, meaning Christ's death made redemption possible for all. More extreme universalists push the same argument even further. They claim the verse proves that God loves everyone exactly the same, and that all will be saved—as if John 3:16 negated all the biblical warnings of condemnation for the wicked.

To think like that is to miss the point completely. The immediate context gives the necessary balance: "Whoever does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only Son of God" (v. 18). Surely, that is a truth that needs to be proclaimed to our generation with at least as much passion and urgency as the message of God's love and mercy.

Moreover, John 3:16 does not focus on the extent of the atonement; the verse is a statement about the magnitude of God's love. Here is a profound wonder: God loved "the world"—this wicked realm of fallen humanity—so much that He sacrificed His only begotten Son to pay the price of redemption for all who believe in Him.

The Apostle John was staggered by the magnitude of God's love and its implications. He stressed it so much that he is often called "the Apostle of love." This comment from 1 John 3:1 makes a fitting commentary on the central point of John 3:16: "See how great a love the Father has bestowed on us, that we would be called children of God." The language is as simple as the truth is profound: "how great." John doesn't employ a dozen adjectives, because all the superlatives in human language wouldn't even come close to declaring the full truth. He simply calls our attention to the inexpressible wonder of it.

The Apostle Paul was captivated by the same truth: "God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us" (Rom. 5:8). And when the Apostle Peter mentions "things into which angels long to look" (1 Peter 1:12), one of the pressing questions they surely must ponder is why God would pour out His love on fallen humanity. Why would He choose to love finite, fallen, sinful human beings at the cost of His own Son's life? Why didn't God just write us all off as wretched sinners, make us the objects of His wrath, and display His glory in judgment against us? It is a mystery even angels might find bewildering. Fallen humans alone are the recipients of divine mercy: "It is not angels that he helps, but he helps the offspring of Abraham" (Heb. 2:16). "God did not spare angels when they sinned, but cast them into hell and committed them to chains of gloomy darkness to be kept until the judgment" (2 Peter 2:4).

Having redeemed us and guaranteed us entry to heaven, couldn't He have given us a lesser position? Yet, He has made us joint heirs with Christ. Indeed, He has given us His very best. He has bestowed on His people the most priceless, eternal blessing in all the universe—His own beloved Son. Therefore, we can be absolutely confident that He will withhold no good thing from us (Rom. 8:32).

Have you ever truly pondered the mystery of such great love? Why is it that God's greatest love isn't bestowed on the angels who never fell and who faithfully throughout all of time have been loyal to love and worship the God who made them? In short, why would God even love us, much less pay so high a price to demonstrate His love?

Frankly, the answer to that question is still shrouded in mystery. It is an immense, incomprehensible wonder. Beyond the fact that His love for sinners will redound to His glory, we do not know why God chooses to love fallen sinners. And I must confess, together with each true child of God, that I do not know why God chose to love me. It is certainly not because He finds me deserving of His love. In other words, the reasons for His love are to be found in God alone, not in those whom He loves.

This is a tremendously humbling truth. God's love is graciously, freely bestowed, not merited by anything we can do. Boasting is excluded (Rom. 3:27). There is no occasion for human pride in the doctrine of God's love—only sober-minded humility, deep gratitude, and the quiet reverence of a faithful, obedient heart.