1~21절 카드 ↗
Christ's Interview with Nicodemus. 1 There was a man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews: 2 The same came to Jesus by night, and said unto him, Rabbi, we know that thou art a teacher come from God: for no man can do these miracles that thou doest, except God be with him. 3 Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God. 4 Nicodemus saith unto him, How can a man be born when he is old? can he enter the second time into his mother's womb, and be born? 5 Jesus answered, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God. 6 That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit. 7 Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born again. 8 The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit. 9 Nicodemus answered and said unto him, How can these things be? 10 Jesus answered and said unto him, Art thou a master of Israel, and knowest not these things? 11 Verily, verily, I say unto thee, We speak that we do know, and testify that we have seen; and ye receive not our witness. 12 If I have told you earthly things, and ye believe not, how shall ye believe, if I tell you of heavenly things? 13 And no man hath ascended up to heaven, but he that came down from heaven, even the Son of man which is in heaven. 14 And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up: 15 That whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life. 16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life. 17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved. 18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. 19 And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. 20 For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved. 21 But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God. We found, in the close of the foregoing chapter, that few were brought to Christ at Jerusalem; yet here was one, a considerable one. It is worth while to go a great way for the salvation though but of one soul. Observe, I. Who this Nicodemus was. Not many mighty and noble are called; yet some are, and here was one. Not many of the rulers, or of the Pharisees; yet. 1. This was a man of the Pharisees, bred to learning, a scholar. Let it not be said that all Christ's followers are unlearned and ignorant men. The principles of the Pharisees, and the peculiarities of their sect, were directly contrary to the spirit of Christianity; yet there were some in whom even those high thoughts were cast down and brought into obedience to Christ. The grace of Christ is able to subdue the greatest opposition. 2. He was a ruler of the Jews, a member of the great sanhedrim, a senator, a privy-counsellor, a man of authority in Jerusalem. Bad as things were, there were some rulers well inclined, who yet could do little good because the stream was so strong against them; they were over-ruled by the majority, and yoked with those that were corrupt, so that the good which they wished to do they could not do; yet Nicodemus continued in his place, and did what he could, when he could not do what he would. II. His solemn address to our Lord Jesus Christ, John 3:2 . See here, 1. When he came: He came to Jesus by night. Observe, (1.) He made a private and particular address to Christ, and did not think it enough to hear his public discourses. He resolved to talk with him by himself, where he might be free with him. Personal converse with skilful faithful ministers about the affairs of our souls would be of great use to us, Malachi 2:7 . (2.) He made this address by night, which may be considered, [1.] As an act of prudence and discretion. Christ was engaged all day in public work, and he would not interrupt him then, nor expect his attendance then, but observed Christ's hour, and waited on him when he was at leisure. Note, Private advantages to ourselves and our own families must give way to those that are public. The greater good must be preferred before the less. Christ had many enemies, and therefore Nicodemus came to him incognito, lest being known to the chief priests they should be the more enraged against Christ. [2.] As an act of zeal and forwardness. Nicodemus was a man of business, and could not spare time all day to make Christ a visit, and therefore he would rather take time from the diversions of the evening, or the rest of the night, than not converse with Christ. When others were sleeping, he was getting knowledge, as David by meditation, Psalms 63:6 and Psalms 119:48 . Probably it was the very next night after he saw Christ's miracles, and he would not neglect the first opportunity of pursuing his convictions. He knew not how soon Christ might leave the town, nor what might happen betwixt that and another feast, and therefore would lose no time. In the night his converse with Christ would be more free, and less liable to disturbance. These were Noctes Christianæ—Christian nights, much more instructive than the Noctes Atticæ—Attic nights. Or, [3.] As an act of fear and cowardice. He was afraid, or ashamed, to be seen with Christ, and therefore came in the night. When religion is out of fashion, there are many Nicodemites, especially among the rulers, who have a better affection to Christ and his religion than they would be known to have. But observe, First, Though he came by night, Christ bade him welcome, accepted his integrity, and pardoned his infirmity; he considered his temper, which perhaps was timorous, and the temptation he was in from his place and office; and hereby taught his ministers to become all things to all men, and to encourage good beginnings, though weak. Paul preached privately to those of reputation, Galatians 2:2 . Secondly, Though now he came by night, yet afterwards, when there was occasion, he owned Christ publicly, ch. vii. 50; xix. 39. The grace which is at first but a grain of mustard-seed may grow to be a great tree. 2. What he said. He did not come to talk with Christ about politics and state-affairs (though he was a ruler), but about the concerns of his own soul and its salvation, and, without circumlocution, comes immediately to the business; he calls Christ Rabbi, which signifies a great man; see Isaiah 19:20 . He shall send them a Saviour, and a great one; a Saviour and a rabbi, so the word is. There are hopes of those who have a respect for Christ, and think and speak honourably of him. He tells Christ how far he had attained: We know that thou art a teacher. Observe, (1.) His assertion concerning Christ: Thou art a teacher come from God; not educated nor ordained by men, as other teachers, but supported with divine inspiration and divine authority. He that was to be the sovereign Ruler came first to be a teacher; for he would rule with reason, not with rigour, by the power of truth, not of the sword. The world lay in ignorance and mistake; the Jewish teachers were corrupt, and caused them to err: It is time for the Lord to work. He came a teacher from God, from God as the Father of mercies, in pity to a dark deceived world; from God as the Father of lights and fountain of truth, all the light and truth upon which we may venture our souls. (2.) His assurance of it: We know, not only I, but others; so he took it for granted, the thing being so plain and self-evident. Perhaps he knew that there were divers of the Pharisees and rulers with whom he conversed that were under the same convictions, but had not the grace to own it. Or, we may suppose that he speaks in the plural number ( We know ) because he brought with him one or more of his friends and pupils, to receive instructions from Christ, knowing them to be of common concern. "Master," saith he, "we come with a desire to be taught, to be thy scholars, for we are fully satisfied thou art a divine teacher." (3.) The ground of this assurance: No man can do those miracles that thou doest, except God be with him. Here, [1.] We are assured of the truth of Christ's miracles, and that they were not counterfeit. Here was Nicodemus, a judicious, sensible, inquisitive man, one that had all the reason and opportunity imaginable to examine them, so fully satisfied that they were real miracles that he was wrought upon by them to go contrary to his interest, and to the stream of those of his own rank, who were prejudiced against Christ. [2.] We are directed what inference to draw from Christ's miracles: Therefore we are to receive him as a teacher come from God. His miracles were his credentials. The course of nature could not be altered but by the power of the God of nature, who, we are sure, is the God of truth and goodness, and would never set his seal to a lie or a cheat. III. The discourse between Christ and Nicodemus hereupon, or, rather, the sermon Christ preached to him; the contents of it, and that perhaps an abstract of Christ's public preaching; see John 3:11-12 . Four things our Saviour here discourses of:— 1. Concerning the necessity and nature of regeneration or the new birth, John 3:3-8 . Now we must consider this, (1.) As pertinently answered to Nicodemus's address. Jesus answered, John 3:3 . This answer was wither, [1.] A rebuke of what he saw defective in the address of Nicodemus. It was not enough for him to admire Christ's miracles, and acknowledge his mission, but he must be born again. It is plain that he expected the kingdom of heaven, the kingdom of the Messiah now shortly to appear. He is betimes aware of the dawning of that day; and, according to the common notion of the Jews, he expects it to appear in external pomp and power. He doubts not but this Jesus, who works these miracles, is either the Messiah or his prophet, and therefore makes his court to him, compliments him, and so hopes to secure a share to himself of the advantages of that kingdom. But Christ tells him that he can have no benefit by that change of the state, unless there be a change of the spirit, of the principles and dispositions, equivalent to a new birth. Nicodemus came by night: "But this will not do," saith Christ. His religion must be owned before men; so Dr. Hammond. Or, [2.] A reply to what he saw designed in his address. When Nicodemus owned Christ a teacher come from God, one entrusted with an extraordinary revelation from heaven, he plainly intimated a desire to know what this revelation was and a readiness to receive it; and Christ declares it. (2.) As positively and vehemently asserted by our Lord Jesus: Verily, verily, I say unto thee. I the Amen, the Amen, say it; so it may be read: "I the faithful and true witness." The matter is settled irreversibly that except a man be born again he cannot see the kingdom of God. "I say it to thee, though a Pharisee, though a master in Israel." Observe, [1.] What it is that is required: to be born again; that is, First, We must live a new life. Birth is the beginning of life; to be born again is to begin anew, as those that have hitherto lived either much amiss or to little purpose. We must not think to patch up the old building, but begin from the foundation. Secondly, We must have a new nature, new principles, new affections, new aims. We must be born anothen , which signifies both denuo—again, and desuper—from above. 1. We must be born anew; so the word is taken, Galatians 4:9 , and ab initio—from the beginning, Luke 1:3 . By our first birth we are corrupt, shapen in sin and iniquity; we must therefore undergo a second birth; our souls must be fashioned and enlivened anew. 2. We must be born from above, so the word is used by the evangelist, John 3:31 John 19:11 , and I take this to be especially intended here, not excluding the other; for to be born from above supposes being born again. But this new birth has its rise from heaven ( John 1:13 ) and its tendency to heaven: it is to be born to a divine and heavenly life, a life of communion with God and the upper world, and, in order to this, it is to partake of a divine nature and bear the image of the heavenly. [2.] The indispensable necessity of this: "Except a man (Any one that partakes of the human nature, and consequently of its corruptions) be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God, the kingdom of the Messiah begun in grace and perfected in glory. " Except we be born from above, we cannot see this. That is, First, We cannot understand the nature of it. Such is the nature of things pertaining to the kingdom of God (in which Nicodemus desired to be instructed) that the soul must be re-modelled and moulded, the natural man must become a spiritual man, before he is capable of receiving and understanding them, 1 Corinthians 2:4 . Secondly, We cannot receive the comfort of it, cannot expect any benefit by Christ and his gospel, nor have any part or lot in the matter. Note, Regeneration is absolutely necessary to our happiness here and hereafter. Considering what we are by nature, how corrupt and sinful,—what God is, in whom alone we can be happy,—and what heaven is, to which the perfection of our happiness is reserved,—it will appear, in the nature of the thing, that we must be born again, because it is impossible that we should be happy if we be not holy; see 1 Corinthians 6:11-12 . This great truth of the necessity of regeneration being thus solemnly laid down, a. It is objected against by Nicodemus ( John 3:4 ): How can a man be born when he is old, old as I am: geron on — being an old man? Can he enter the second time into his mother's womb, and be born? Herein appears, ( a. ) His weakness in knowledge; what Christ spoke spiritually he seems to have understood after a corporal and carnal manner, as if there were no other way of regenerating and new-moulding an immortal soul than by new-framing the body, and bringing that back to the rock out of which it was hewn, as if there was such a connection between the soul and the body that there could be no fashioning the heart anew but by forming the bones anew. Nicodemus, as others of the Jews, valued himself, no doubt, very much on his first birth and its dignities and privileges,—the place of it, the Holy Land, perhaps the holy city,—his parentage, such as that which Paul could have gloried in, Philippians 3:5 . And therefore it is a great surprise to him to hear of being born again. Could he be better bred and born than bred and born an Israelite, or by any other birth stand fairer for a place in the kingdom of the Messiah? Indeed they looked upon a proselyted Gentile to be as one born again or born anew, but could not imagine how a Jew, a Pharisee, could ever better himself by being born again; he therefore thinks, if he must be born again, it must be of her that bore him first. They that are proud of their first birth are hardly brought to a new birth. ( b. ) His willingness to be taught. He does not turn his back upon Christ because of his hard saying, but ingenuously acknowledges his ignorance, which implies a desire to be better informed; and so I take this, rather than that he had such gross notions of the new birth Christ spoke of: "Lord, make me to understand this, for it is a riddle to me; I am such a fool as to know no other way for a man to be born than of his mother." When we meet with that in the things of God which is dark, and hard to be understood, we must with humility and industry continue our attendance upon the means of knowledge, till God shall reveal even that unto us. b. It is opened and further explained by our Lord Jesus, John 3:5-8 . From the objection he takes occasion, ( a. ) To repeat and confirm what he had said ( John 3:5 ): " Verily, verily, I say unto thee, the very same that I said before." Note, The word of God is not yea and nay, but yea and amen; what he hath said he will abide by, whoever saith against it; nor will he retract any of his sayings for the ignorance and mistakes of men. Though Nicodemus understood not the mystery of regeneration, yet Christ asserts the necessity of it as positively as before. Note, It is folly to think of evading the obligation of evangelical precepts, by pleading that they are unintelligible, Romans 3:3-4 . ( b. ) To expound and clear what he had said concerning regeneration; for the explication of which he further shows, [ a. ] The author of this blessed change, and who it is that works it. To be born again is to be born of the Spirit, John 3:5-8 . The change is not wrought by any wisdom or power of our own, but by the power and influence of the blessed Spirit of grace. It is the sanctification of the Spirit ( 1 Peter 1:2 ) and renewing of the Holy Ghost, Titus 3:5 . The word he works by is his inspiration, and the heart to be wrought on he has access to. [ b. ] The nature of this change, and what that is which is wrought; it is spirit, John 3:6 . Those that are regenerated are made spiritual, and refined from the dross and dregs of sensuality. The dictates and interests of the rational and immortal soul have retrieved the dominion they ought to have over the flesh. The Pharisees placed their religion in external purity and external performances; and it would be a mighty change indeed with them, no less than a new birth, to become spiritual. [ c. ] The necessity of this change. First, Christ here shows that it is necessary in the nature of the thing, for we are not fit to enter into the kingdom of God till we are born again: That which is born of the flesh if flesh, John 3:6 . Here is our malady, with the causes of it, which are such that it is plain there is no remedy but we must be born again. 1. We are here told what we are: We are flesh, not only corporeal but corrupt, Genesis 6:3 . The soul is still a spiritual substance, but so wedded to the flesh, so captivated by the will of the flesh, so in love with the delights of the flesh, so employed in making provision for the flesh, that it is mostly called flesh; it is carnal. And what communion can there be between God, who is a spirit, and a soul in this condition? 2. How we came to be so; by being born of the flesh. It is a corruption that is bred in the bone with us, and therefore we cannot have a new nature, but we must be born again. The corrupt nature, which is flesh, takes rise from our first birth; and therefore the new nature, which is spirit, must take rise from a second birth. Nicodemus spoke of entering again into his mother's womb, and being born; but, if he could do so, to what purpose? If he were born of his mother a hundred times, that would not mend the matter, for still that which is born of the flesh if flesh; a clean thing cannot be brought out of an unclean. He must seek for another original, must be born of the Spirit, or he cannot become spiritual. The case is, in short, this: though man is made to consist of body and soul, yet his spiritual part had then so much the dominion over his corporeal part that he was denominated a living soul ( Genesis 2:7 ), but by indulging the appetite of the flesh, in eating forbidden fruit, he prostituted the just dominion of the soul to the tyranny of sensual lust, and became no longer a living soul, but flesh: Dust thou art. The living soul became dead and inactive; thus in the day he sinned he surely died, and so he became earthly. In this degenerate state, he begat a son in his own likeness; he transmitted the human nature, which had been entirely deposited in his hands, thus corrupted and depraved; and in the same plight it is still propagated. Corruption and sin are woven into our nature; we are shapen in iniquity, which makes it necessary that the nature be changed. It is not enough to put on a new coat or a new face, but we must put on the new man, we must be new creatures. Secondly, Christ makes it further necessary, by his own word: Marvel not that I said unto thee, You must be born again, John 3:7 . 1. Christ hath said it, and as he himself never did, nor ever will, unsay it, so all the world cannot gainsay it, that we must be born again. He who is the great Lawgiver, whose will is a law,—he who is the great Mediator of the new covenant, and has full power to settle the terms of our reconciliation to God and happiness in him,—he who is the great Physician of souls, knows their case, and what is necessary to their cure,—he hath said, You must be born again. "I said unto thee that which all are concerned in, You must, you all, one as well as another, you must be born again: not only the common people, but the rulers, the masters in Israel. " 2. We are not to marvel at it; for when we consider the holiness of the God with whom we have to do, the great design of our redemption, the depravity of our nature, and the constitution of the happiness set before us, we shall not think it strange that so much stress is laid upon this as the one thing needful, that we must be born again. [ d. ] This change is illustrated by two comparisons. First, The regenerating work of the Spirit is compared to water, John 3:5 . To be born again is to be born of water and of the Spirit, that is, of the Spirit working like water, as ( Matthew 3:11 ) with the Holy Ghost and with fire means with the Holy Ghost as with fire. 1. That which is primarily intended here is to show that the Spirit, in sanctifying a soul, (1.) Cleanses and purifies it as water, takes away its filth, by which it was unfit for the kingdom of God. It is the washing of regeneration, Titus 3:5 . You are washed, 1 Corinthians 6:11 . See Ezekiel 36:25 . (2.) Cools and refreshes it, as water does the hunted hart and the weary traveller. The Spirit is compared to water, John 7:38-39 Isaiah 44:3 . In the first creation, the fruits of heaven were born of water ( Genesis 1:20 ), in allusion to which, perhaps, they that are born from above are said to be born of water. 2. It is probable that Christ had an eye to the ordinance of baptism, which John had used and he himself had begun to use, "You must be born again of the Spirit," which regeneration by the Spirit should be signified by washing with water, as the visible sign of that spiritual grace: not that all they, and they only, that are baptized, are saved; but without that new birth which is wrought by the Spirit, and signified by baptism, none shall be looked upon as the protected privileged subjects of the kingdom of heaven. The Jews cannot partake of the benefits of the Messiah's kingdom, they have so long looked for, unless they quit all expectations of being justified by the works of the law, and submit to the baptism of repentance, the great gospel duty, for the remission of sins, the great gospel privilege. Secondly, It is compared to wind: The wind bloweth where it listeth, so is every one that is born of the Spirit, John 3:8 . The same word ( pneuma ) signifies both the wind and the Spirit. The Spirit came upon the apostles in a rushing mighty wind ( Acts 2:2 ), his strong influences on the hearts of sinners are compared to the breathing of the wind ( Ezekiel 37:9 ), and his sweet influences on the souls of saints to the north and south wind, Song of Solomon 4:16 . This comparison is here used to show, 1. That the Spirit, in regeneration, works arbitrarily, and as a free agent. The wind bloweth where it listeth for us, and does not attend our order, nor is subject to our command. God directs it; it fulfils his word, Psalms 148:8 . The Spirit dispenses his influences where, and when, on whom, and in what measure and degree, he pleases, dividing to every man severally as he will, 1 Corinthians 12:11 . 2. That he works powerfully, and with evident effects: Thou hearest the sound thereof; though its causes are hidden, its effects are manifest. When the soul is brought to mourn for sin, to groan under the burden of corruption, to breathe after Christ, to cry Abba—Father, then we hear the sound of the Spirit, we find he is at work, as Acts 9:11 , Behold he prayeth. 3. That he works mysteriously, and in secret hidden ways: Thou canst not tell whence it comes, nor whither it goes. How it gathers and how it spends its strength is a riddle to us; so the manner and methods of the Spirit's working are a mystery. Which way went the Spirit? 1 Kings 22:24 . See Ecclesiastes 11:5 , and compare it with Psalms 139:14 . 2. Here is a discourse concerning the certainty and sublimity of gospel truths, which Christ takes occasion for from the weakness of Nicodemus. Here is, (1.) The objection which Nicodemus still made ( John 3:9 ): How can these things be? Christ's explication of the doctrine of the necessity of regeneration, it should seem, made it never the clearer to him. The corruption of nature which makes it necessary, and the way of the Spirit which makes it practicable, are as much mysteries to him as the thing itself; though he had in general owned Christ a divine teacher, yet he was unwilling to receive his teachings when they did not agree with the notions he had imbibed. Thus many profess to admit the doctrine of Christ in general, and yet will neither believe the truths of Christianity nor submit to the laws of it further than they please. Christ shall be their teacher, provided they may choose their lesson. Now here, [1.] Nicodemus owns himself ignorant of Christ's meaning, after all: " How can these things be? They are things I do not understand, my capacity will not reach them." Thus the things of the Spirit of God are foolishness to the natural man. He is not only estranged from them, and therefore they are dark to him, but prejudiced against them, and therefore they are foolishness to him. [2.] Because this doctrine was unintelligible to him (so he was pleased to make it), he questions the truth of it; as if, because it was a paradox to him, it was a chimera in itself. Many have such an opinion of their own capacity as to think that that cannot be proved which they cannot believe; by wisdom they knew not Christ. (2.) The reproof which Christ gave him for his dulness and ignorance: " Art thou a master in Israel, Didaskalos — a teacher, a tutor, one who sits in Moses's chair, and yet not only unacquainted with the doctrine of regeneration, but incapable of understanding it?" This word is a reproof, [1.] To those who undertake to teach others and yet are ignorant and unskilful in the word of righteousness themselves. [2.] To those that spend their time in learning and teaching notions and ceremonies in religion, niceties and criticisms in the scripture, and neglect that which is practical and tends to reform the heart and life. Two words in the reproof are very emphatic:— First, The place where his lot was cast: in Israel, where there was such great plenty of the means of knowledge, where divine revelation was. He might have learned this out of the Old Testament. Secondly, The things he was thus ignorant in: these things, these necessary things, there great things, these divine things; had he never read Psalms 50:5 Ezekiel 18:31 Ezekiel 36:25-26 ? (3.) Christ's discourse, hereupon, of the certainty and sublimity of gospel truths ( John 3:11-13 ), to show the folly of those who make strange of these things, and to recommend them to our search. Observe here, [1.] That the truths Christ taught were very certain and what we may venture upon ( John 3:11 ): We speak that we do know. We; whom does he mean besides himself? Some understand it of those that bore witness to him and with him on earth, the prophets and John Baptist; they spoke what they knew, and had seen, and were themselves abundantly satisfied in: divine revelation carries its own proof along with it. Others of those that bore witness from heaven, the Father and the Holy Ghost; the Father was with him, the Spirit of the Lord was upon him; therefore he speaks in the plural number, as John 14:23 : We will come unto him. Observe, First, That the truths of Christ are of undoubted certainty. We have all the reason in the world to be assured that the sayings of Christ are faithful sayings, and such as we may venture our souls upon; for he is not only a credible witness, who would not go about to deceive us, but a competent witness, who could not himself be deceived: We testify that we have seen. He spoke not upon hear-say, but upon the clearest evidence, and therefore with the greatest assurance. What he spoke of God, of the invisible world, of heaven and hell, of the divine will concerning us, and the counsels of peace, was what he knew, and had seen, for he was by him as one brought up with him, Proverbs 8:30 . Whatever Christ spoke, he spoke of his own knowledge. Secondly, That the unbelief of sinners is greatly aggravated by the infallible certainty of the truths of Christ. The things are thus sure, thus clear; and yet you receive not our witness. Multitudes to be unbelievers of that which yet (so cogent are the motives of credibility) they cannot disbelieve! [2.] The truths Christ taught, though communicated in language and expressions borrowed from common and earthly things, yet in their own nature were most sublime and heavenly; this is intimated, John 3:12 : " If I have told them earthly things, that is, have told them the great things of God in similitudes taken from earthly things, to make them the more easy and intelligible, as that of the new birth and the wind,— if I have thus accommodated myself to your capacities, and lisped to you in your own language, and cannot make you to understand my doctrine,— what would you do if I should accommodate myself to the nature of the things, and speak with the tongue of angels, that language which mortals cannot utter? If such familiar expressions be stumbling-blocks, what would abstract ideas be, and spiritual things painted proper? " Now we may learn hence, First, To admire the height and depth of the doctrine of Christ; it is a great mystery of godliness. The things of the gospel are heavenly things, out of the road of the enquiries of human reason, and much more out of the reach of its discoveries. Secondly, To acknowledge with thankfulness the condescension of Christ, that he is pleased to suit the manner of the gospel revelation to our capacities, to speak to us as to children. He considers our frame, that we are of the earth, and our place, that we are on the earth, and therefore speaks to us earthly things, and makes things sensible the vehicle of things spiritual, to make them the more easy and familiar to us. Thus he has done both in parables and in sacraments. Thirdly, To lament the corruption of our nature, and our great unaptness to receive and entertain the truths of Christ. Earthly things are despised because they are vulgar, and heavenly things because they are abstruse; and so, whatever method is taken, still some fault or other is found with it ( Matthew 11:17 ), but Wisdom is, and will be, justified of her children, notwithstanding. [3.] Our Lord Jesus, and he alone, was fit to reveal to us a doctrine thus certain, thus sublime: No man hath ascended up into heaven but he, John 3:13 . First, None but Christ was able to reveal to us the will of God for our salvation. Nicodemus addressed Christ as a prophet; but he must know that he is greater than all the Old-Testament prophets, for none of them had ascended into heaven. They wrote by divine inspiration, and not of their own knowledge; see John 1:18 . Moses ascended into the mount, but not into heaven. No man hath attained to the certain knowledge of God and heavenly things as Christ has; see Matthew 11:27 . It is not for us to send to heaven for instructions; we must wait to receive what instructions Heaven will send to us; see Proverbs 30:4 Deuteronomy 30:12 . Secondly, Jesus Christ is able, and fit, and every way qualified, to reveal the will of God to us; for it is he that came down from heaven and is in heaven. He had said ( John 3:12 ), How shall ye believe, if I tell you of heavenly things? Now here, 1. He gives them an instance of those heavenly things which he could tell them of, when he tells them of one that came down from heaven, and yet is the Son of man; is the Son of man, and yet is in heaven. If the regeneration of the soul of man is such a mystery, what then is the incarnation of the Son of God? These are divine and heavenly things indeed. We have here an intimation of Christ's two distinct natures in one person: his divine nature, in which he came down from heaven; his human nature, in which he is the Son of man; and that union of those two, in that while he is the Son of man yet he is in heaven. 2. He gives them a proof of his ability to speak to them heavenly things, and to lead them into the arcana of the kingdom of heaven, by telling them, (1.) That he came down from heaven. The intercourse settled between God and man began above; the first motion towards it did not arise from this earth, but came down from heaven. We love him, and send to him, because he first loved us, and sent to us. Now this intimates, [1.] Christ's divine nature. He that came down from heaven is certainly more than a mere man; he is the Lord from heaven, 1 Corinthians 15:47 . [2.] His intimate acquaintance with the divine counsels; for, coming from the court of heaven, he had been from eternity conversant with them. [3.] The manifestation of God. Under the Old Testament God's favours to his people are expressed by his hearing from heaven ( 2 Chronicles 7:14 ), looking from heaven ( Psalms 80:14 ), speaking from heaven ( Nehemiah 9:13 ), sending from heaven, Psalms 57:3 . But the New Testament shows us God coming down from heaven, to teach and save us. That he thus descended is an admirable mystery, for the Godhead cannot change places, nor did he bring his body from heaven; but that he thus condescended for our redemption is a more admirable mercy; herein he commended his love. (2.) That he is the Son of man, that Son of man spoken of by Daniel ( John 7:13 ), by which the Jews always understand to be meant the Messiah. Christ, in calling himself the Son of man, shows that he is the second Adam, for the first Adam was the father of man. And of all the Old-Testament titles of the Messiah he chose to make use of this, because it was most expressive of his humility, and most agreeable to his present state of humiliation. (3.) That he is in heaven. Now at this time, when he is talking with Nicodemus on earth, yet, as God, he is in heaven. The Son of man, as such, was not in heaven till his ascension; but he that was the Son of man was now, by his divine nature, every where present, and particularly in heaven. Thus the Lord of glory, as such, could not be crucified, nor could God, as such, shed his blood; yet that person who was the Lord of glory was crucified ( 1 Corinthians 2:8 ), and God purchased the church with his own blood, Acts 20:28 . So close is the union of the two natures in one person that there is a communication of properties. He doth not say hos esti . God is the ho on to ourano — he that is, and heaven is the habitation of his holiness. 3. Christ here discourses of the great design of his own coming into the world, and the happiness of those that believe in him, John 3:14-18 . Here we have the very marrow and quintessence of the whole gospel, that faithful saying ( 1 Timothy 1:15 ), that Jesus Christ came to seek and to save the children of men from death, and recover them to life. Now sinners are dead men upon a twofold account:— (1.) As one that is mortally wounded, or sick of an incurable disease, is said to be a dead man, for he is dying; and so Christ came to save us, by healing us, as the brazen serpent healed the Israelites, John 3:14-15 . (2.) As one that is justly condemned to die for an unpardonable crime is a dead man, he is dead in law; and, in reference to this part of our danger, Christ came to save as a prince or judge, publishing an act of indemnity, or general pardon, under certain provisos; this saving here is opposed to condemning, John 3:16-18 . [1.] Jesus Christ came to save us by healing us, as the children of Israel that were stung with fiery serpents were cured and lived by looking up to the brazen serpent; we have the story of it, Numbers 21:6-9 . It was the last miracle that passed through the hand of Moses before his death. Now in this type of Christ we may observe, First, The deadly and destructive nature of sin, which is implied here. The guilt of sin is like the pain of the biting of a fiery serpent; the power of corruption is like the venom diffused thereby. The devil is the old serpent, subtle at first ( Genesis 3:1 ), but ever since fiery, and his temptations fiery darts, his assaults terrifying, his victories destroying. Ask awakened consciences, ask damned sinners, and they will tell you, how charming soever the allurements of sin are, at the last it bites like a serpent, Proverbs 23:30-32 . God's wrath against us for sin is as those fiery serpents which God sent among the people, to punish them for their murmurings. The curses of the law are as fiery serpents, so are all the tokens of divine wrath. Secondly, The powerful remedy provided against this fatal malady. The case of poor sinners is deplorable; but is it desperate? Thanks be to God, it is not; there is balm in Gilead. The Son of man is lifted up, as the serpent of brass was by Moses, which cured the stung Israelites. 1. It was a serpent of brass that cured them. Brass is bright; we read of Christ's feet shining like brass, Revelation 1:15 . It is durable; Christ is the same. It was made in the shape of a fiery serpent, and yet had no poison, no sting, fitly representing Christ, who was made sin for us and yet knew no sin; was made in the likeness of sinful flesh and yet not sinful; as harmless as a serpent of brass. The serpent was a cursed creature; Christ was made a curse. That which cured them reminded them of their plague; so in Christ sin is set before us most fiery and formidable. 2. It was lifted up upon a pole, and so must the Son of man be lifted up; thus it behoved him, Luke 24:26 ; Luke 24:26 Luke 24:46 . No remedy now. Christ is lifted up, (1.) In his crucifixion. He was lifted up upon the cross. His death is called his being lifted up, John 12:32-33 . He was lifted up as a spectacle, as a mark, lifted up between heaven and earth, as if he had been unworthy of either and abandoned by both. (2.) In his exaltation. He was lifted up to the Father's right hand, to give repentance and remission; he was lifted up to the cross, to be further lifted up to the crown. (3.) In the publishing and preaching of his everlasting gospel, Revelation 14:6 . The serpent was lifted up that all the thousands of Israel might see it. Christ in the gospel is exhibited to us, evidently set forth; Christ is lifted up as an ensign, Isaiah 11:10 . 3. It was lifted up by Moses. Christ was made under the law of Moses, and Moses testified of him. 4. Being thus lifted up, it was appointed for the cure of those that were bitten by fiery serpents. He that sent the plague provided the remedy. None could redeem and save us but he whose justice had condemned us. It was God himself that found the ransom, and the efficacy of it depends upon his appointment. The fiery serpents were sent to punish them for their tempting Christ (so the apostle saith, 1 Corinthians 10:9 ), and yet they were healed by virtue derived from him. He whom we have offended is our peace. Thirdly, The way of applying this remedy, and that is by believing, which plainly alludes to the Israelites' looking up to the brazen serpent, in order to their being healed by it. If any stung Israelite was either so little sensible of his pain and peril, or had so little confidence in the word of Moses as not to look up to the brazen serpent, justly did he die of his wound; but every one that looked up to it did well, Numbers 21:9 . If any so far slight either their disease by sin or the method of cure by Christ as not to embrace Christ upon his own terms, their blood is upon their own head. He hath said, Look, and be saved ( Isaiah 45:22 ), look and live. We must take a complacency in and give consent to the methods which Infinite Wisdom has taken is saving a guilty world, by the mediation of Jesus Christ, as the great sacrifice and intercessor. Fourthly, The great encouragements given us by faith to look up to him. 1. It was for this end that he was lifted up, that his followers might be saved; and he will pursue his end. 2. The offer that is made of salvation by him is general, that whosoever believes in him, without exception, might have benefit by him. 3. The salvation offered is complete. (1.) They shall not perish, shall not die of their wounds; though they may be pained and ill frightened, iniquity shall not be their ruin. But that is not all. (2.) They shall have eternal life. They shall not only not die of their wounds in the wilderness, but they shall reach Canaan (which they were then just ready to enter into); they shall enjoy the promised rest. [2.] Jesus Christ came to save us by pardoning us, that we might not die by the sentence of the law, John 3:16-17 . Here is gospel indeed, good news, the best that ever came from heaven to earth. Here is much, here is all in a little, the word of reconciliation in miniature. First, Here is God's love in giving his Son for the world ( John 3:16 ), where we have three things:— 1. The great gospel mystery revealed: God so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten Son. The love of God the Father is the original of our regeneration by the Spirit and our reconciliation by the lifting up of the Son. Note, (1.) Jesus Christ is the only-begotten Son of God. This magnifies his love in giving him for us, in giving him to us; now know we that he loves us, when he has given his only-begotten Son for us, which expresses not only his dignity in himself, but his dearness to his Father; he was always his delight. (2.) In order to the redemption and salvation of man, it pleased God to give his only-begotten Son. He not only sent him into the world with full and ample power to negotiate a peace between heaven and earth, but he gave him, that is, he gave him up to suffer and die for us, as the great propitiation or expiatory sacrifice. It comes in here as a reason why he must be lifted up; for so it was determined and designed by the Father, who gave him for this purpose, and prepared him a body in order to it. His enemies could not have taken him if his Father had not given him. Though he was not yet crucified, yet in the determinate counsel of God he was given up, Acts 2:23 . Nay, further, God has given him, that is, he has made an offer of him, to all, and given him to all true believers, to all the intents and purposes of the new covenant. He has given him to be our prophet, a witness to the people, the high priest of our profession, to be our peace, to be head of the church and head over all things to the church, to be to us all we need. (3.) Herein God has commended his love to the world: God so loved the world, so really, so richly. Now his creatures shall see that he loves them, and wishes them well. He so loved the world of fallen man as he did not love that of fallen angels; see Romans 5:8 1 John 4:10 . Behold, and wonder, that the great God should love such a worthless world! That the holy God should love such a wicked world with a love of good will, when he could not look upon it with any complacency. This was a time of love indeed, Ezekiel 16:6 ; Ezekiel 16:8 . The Jews vainly conceited that the Messiah should be sent only in love to their nation, and to advance them upon the ruins of their neighbours; but Christ tells them that he came in love to the whole world, Gentiles as well as Jews, 1 John 2:2 . Though many of the world of mankind perish, yet God's giving his only-begotten Son was an instance of his love to the whole world, because through him there is a general offer of life and salvation made to all. It is love to the revolted rebellious province to issue out a proclamation of pardon and indemnity to all that will come in, plead it upon their knees, and return to their allegiance. So far God loved the apostate lapsed world that he sent his Son with this fair proposal, that whosoever believes in him, one or other, shall not perish. Salvation has been of the Jews, but now Christ is known as salvation to the ends of the earth, a common salvation. 2. Here is the great gospel duty, and that is to believe in Jesus Christ (Whom God has thus given, given for us, given to us ), to accept the gift, and answer the intention of the giver. We must yield an unfeigned assent and consent to the record God hath given in his word concerning his Son. God having given him to us to be our prophet, priest, and king, we must give up ourselves to be ruled, and taught, and saved by him. 3. Here is the great gospel benefit: That whosoever believes in Christ shall not perish. This he had said before, and here repeats it. It is the unspeakable happiness of all true believers, for which they are eternally indebted to Christ, (1.) That they are saved from the miseries of hell, delivered from going down to the pit; they shall not perish. God has taken away their sin, they shall not die; a pardon is purchased, and so the attainder is reversed. (2.) They are entitled to the joys of heaven: they shall have everlasting life. The convicted traitor is not only pardoned, but preferred, and made a favourite, and treated as one whom the King of kings delights to honour. Out of prison he comes to reign, Ecclesiastes 4:14 . If believers, then children; and, if children, then heirs. Secondly, Here is God's design in sending hi Son into the world: it was that the world through him might be saved. He came into the world with salvation in his eye, with salvation in his hand. Therefore the aforementioned offer of live and salvation is sincere, and shall be made good to all that by faith accept it ( John 3:17 ): God sent his Son into the world, this guilty, rebellious, apostate world; sent him as his agent or ambassador, not as sometimes he had sent angels into the world as visitants, but as resident. Ever since man sinned, he has dreaded the approach and appearance of any special messenger from heaven, as being conscious of guilt and looking for judgment: We shall surely die, for we have seen God. If therefore the Son of God himself come, we are concerned to enquire on what errand he comes: Is it peace? Or, as they asked Samuel trembling, Comest thou peaceably? And this scripture returns the answer, Peaceably. 1. He did not come to condemn the world. We had reason enough to expect that he should, for it is a guilty world; it is convicted, and what cause can be shown why judgment should not be given, and execution awarded, according to law? That one blood of which all nations of men are made ( Acts 17:26 ) is not only tainted with an hereditary disease, like Gehazi's leprosy, but it is tainted with an hereditary guilt, like that of the Amalekites, with whom God had war from generation to generation; and justly may such a world as this be condemned; and if God would have sent to condemn it he had angels at command, to pour out the vials of his wrath, a cherub with a flaming sword ready to do execution. If the Lord had been pleased to kill us, he would not have sent his Son amongst us. He came with full powers indeed to execute judgment ( John 5:22 ; John 5:22 John 5:27 ), but did not begin with a judgment of condemnation, did not proceed upon the outlawry, nor take advantage against us for the breach of the covenant of innocency, but put us upon a new trial before a throne of grace. 2. He came that the world through him might be saved, that a door of salvation might be opened to the world, and whoever would might enter in by it. God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, and so saving it. An act of indemnity is passed and published, through Christ a remedial law made, and the world of mankind dealt with, not according to the rigours of the first covenant, but according to the riches of the second; that the world through him might be saved, for it could never be saved but through him; there is not salvation in any other. This is good news to a convinced conscience, healing to broken bones and bleeding wounds, that Christ, our judge, came not to condemn, but to save. [3.] From all this is inferred the happiness of true believers: He that believeth on him is not condemned, John 3:18 . Though he has been a sinner, a great sinner, and stands convicted ( habes confilentem reum—by his own confession ), yet, upon his believing, process is stayed, judgment is arrested, and he is not condemned. This denotes more than a reprieve; he is not condemned, that is, he is acquitted; he stand upon his deliverance (as we say), and if he be not condemned he is discharged; ou krinetai — he is not judged, not dealt with in strict justice, according to the desert of his sins. He is accused, and he cannot plead not guilty to the indictment, but he can plead in bar, can plead a noli prosequi upon the indictment, as blessed Paul does, Who is he that condemns? It is Christ that died. He is afflicted, chastened of God, persecuted by the world; but he is not condemned. The cross perhaps lies heavy upon him, but he is saved from the curse: condemned by the world, it may be, but not condemned with the world, Romans 8:1 1 Corinthians 11:32 . 4. Christ, in the close, discourses concerning the deplorable condition of those that persist in unbelief and wilful ignorance, John 3:18-21 . (1.) Read here the doom of those that will not believe in Christ: they are condemned already. Observe, [1.] How great the sin of unbelievers is; it is aggravated from the dignity of the person they slight; they believe not in the name of the only-begotten Son of God, who is infinitely true, and deserves to be believed, infinitely good, and deserves to be embraced. God sent one to save us that was dearest to himself; and shall not he be dearest to us? Shall we not believe on his name who has a name above every name? [2.] How great the misery of unbelievers is: they are condemned already; which bespeaks, First, A certain condemnation. They are as sure to be condemned in the judgment of the great day as if they were condemned already. Secondly, A present condemnation. The curse has already taken hold of them; the wrath of God now fastens upon them. They are condemned already, for their own hearts condemn them. Thirdly, A condemnation grounded upon their former guilt: He is condemned already, for he lies open to the law for all his sins; the obligation of the law is in full force, power, and virtue, against him, because he is not by faith interested in the gospel defeasance; he is condemned already, because he has not believed. Unbelief may truly be called the great damning sin, because it leaves us under the guilt of all our other sins; it is a sin against the remedy, against our appeal. (2.) Read also the doom of those that would not so much as know him, John 3:19 . Many inquisitive people had knowledge of Christ and his doctrine and miracles, but they were prejudiced against him, and would not believe in him, while the generality were sottishly careless and stupid, and would not know him. And this is the condemnation, the sin that ruined them, that light is come into the world, and they loved darkness rather. Now here observe, [1.] That the gospel is light, and, when the gospel came, light came into the world, Light is self-evidencing, so is the gospel; it proves its own divine origin. Light is discovering, and truly the light is sweet, and rejoices the heart. It is a light shining in a dark place, and a dark place indeed the world would be without it. It is come into all the world ( Colossians 1:16 ), and not confined to one corner of it, as the Old-Testament light was. [2.] It is the unspeakable folly of the most of men that they loved darkness rather than light, rather than this light. The Jews loved the dark shadows of their law, and the instructions of their blind guides, rather than the doctrine of Christ. The Gentiles loved their superstitious services of an unknown God, whom they ignorantly worshipped, rather than the reasonable service which the gospel enjoins. Sinners that were wedded to their lusts loved their ignorance and mistakes, which supported them in their sins, rather than the truths of Christ, which would have parted them from their sins. Man's apostasy began in an affectation of forbidden knowledge, but is kept up by an affectation of forbidden ignorance. Wretched man is in love with his sickness, in love with his slavery, and will not be made free, will not be made whole. [3.] The true reason why men love darkness rather than light is because their deeds are evil. They love darkness because they think it is an excuse for their evil deeds, and they hate the light because it robs them of the good opinion they had of themselves, by showing them their sinfulness and misery. Their case is sad, and, because they are resolved that they will not mend it, they are resolved that they will not see it. [4.] Wilful ignorance is so far from excusing sin that it will be found, at the great day, to aggravate the condemnation: This is the condemnation, this is what ruins souls, that they shut their eyes against the light, and will not so much as admit a parley with Christ and his gospel; they set God so much at defiance that they desire not the knowledge of his ways, Job 21:14 . We must account in the judgment, not only for the knowledge we had, and used not, but for the knowledge we might have had, and would not; not only for the knowledge we sinned against, but for the knowledge we sinned away. For the further illustration of this he shows ( John 3:20-21 ) that according as men's hearts and lives are good or bad, so they stand affected to the light Christ has brought into the world. First, It is not strange if those that do evil, and resolve to persist in it, hate the light of Christ's gospel; for it is a common observation that every one that doeth evil hateth the light, John 3:20 . Evil-doers seek concealment, out of a sense of shame and fear of punishment; see Job 24:13 , &c. Sinful works are works of darkness; sin from the first affected concealment, Job 31:33 . The light shakes the wicked, Job 38:12-13 . Thus the gospel is a terror to the wicked world: They come not to this light, but keep as far off it as they can, lest their deeds should be reproved. Note, 1. The light of the gospel is sent into the world to reprove the evil deeds of sinners; to make them manifest ( Ephesians 5:13 ), to show people their transgressions, to show that to be sin which was not thought to be so, and to show them the evil of their transgressions, that sin by the new commandment might appear exceeding sinful. The gospel has its convictions, to make way for its consolations. 2. It is for this reason that evil-doers hate the light of the gospel. There were those who had done evil and were sorry for it, who bade this light welcome, as the publicans and harlots. But he that does evil, that does it and resolves to go on in it, hateth the light, cannot bear to be told of his faults. All that opposition which the gospel of Christ has met with in the world comes from the wicked heart, influenced by the wicked one. Christ is hated because sin is loved. 3. They who do not come to the light thereby evidence a secret hatred of the light. If they had not an antipathy to saving knowledge, they would not sit down so contentedly in damning ignorance. Secondly, On the other hand, upright hearts, that approve themselves to God in their integrity, bid this light welcome ( John 3:21 ): He that doeth truth cometh to the light. It seems, then, that though the gospel had many enemies it had some friends. It is a common observation that truth seeks no corners. Those who mean and act honestly dread not a scrutiny, but desire it rather. Now this is applicable to the gospel light; as it convinces and terrifies evil-doers, so it confirms and comforts those that walk in their integrity. Observe here, 1. The character of a good man. (1.) He is one that doeth truth; that is, he acts truly and sincerely in all he does. Though sometimes he comes short of doing good, the good he would do, yet he doeth truth, he aims honestly; he has his infirmities, but holds fast his integrity; as Gaius, that did faithfully ( 3 John 1:5 ), as Paul ( 2 Corinthians 1:12 ), as Nathanael ( John 1:47 ), as Asa, 1 Kings 15:14 . (2.) He is one that cometh to the light. He is ready to receive and entertain divine revelation as far as it appears to him to be so, what uneasiness soever it may create him. He that doeth truth is willing to know the truth by himself, and to have his deeds made manifest. A good man is much employed in trying himself, and is desirous that God would try him, Psalms 26:2 . He is solicitous to know what the will of God is, and resolves to do it, though ever so contrary to his own will and interest. 2. Here is the character of a good work: it is wrought in God, in union with him by a covenanting faith, and in communion with him by devout affections. Our works are then good, and will bear the test, when the will of God is the rule of them and the glory of God the end of them; when they are done in his strength, and for his sake, to him, and not to men; and if, by the light of the gospel, it be manifest to us that our works are thus wrought, then shall we have rejoicing, Galatians 6:4 ; 2 Corinthians 1:12 . return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-22-36" class="com-number"
Pericope (part_of)
- part_of
pericope/per-jhn-3-001 - part_of
pericope/per-jhn-3-002
절 (explains)
bible-text/jhn-3-1, bible-text/jhn-3-2, bible-text/jhn-3-3, bible-text/jhn-3-4, bible-text/jhn-3-5, bible-text/jhn-3-6, bible-text/jhn-3-7, bible-text/jhn-3-8, bible-text/jhn-3-9, bible-text/jhn-3-10, bible-text/jhn-3-11, bible-text/jhn-3-12, bible-text/jhn-3-13, bible-text/jhn-3-14, bible-text/jhn-3-15, bible-text/jhn-3-16, bible-text/jhn-3-17, bible-text/jhn-3-18, bible-text/jhn-3-19, bible-text/jhn-3-20, bible-text/jhn-3-21
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
> 바리새파 사람 가운데 니고데모라는 사람이 있었는데, 그는 유대 사람의 지도자였다. 이 사람이 밤에 예수께 와서 말하였다. "선생님, 우리는 당신이 하나님께로부터 오신 선생님이신 줄 압니다. 하나님께서 함께하지 않으시면 아무도 당신이 행하시는 이런 표적들을 행할 수 없기 때문입니다." 예수께서 그에게 대답하셨다. "내가 진실로 진실로 너에게 말한다. 누구든지 다시 태어나지 않으면 하나님 나라를 볼 수 없다." 니고데모가 예수께 말하였다. "사람이 늙었는데 어떻게 다시 태어날 수 있습니까? 두 번째로 어머니의 태에 들어갔다가 태어날 수 있겠습니까?" 예수께서 대답하셨다. "내가 진실로 진실로 너에게 말한다. 누구든지 물과 성령으로 태어나지 않으면 하나님 나라에 들어갈 수 없다. 육으로 태어난 것은 육이고, 성령으로 태어난 것은 영이다. 내가 너에게 '너희가 다시 태어나야 한다'고 말한 것을 이상하게 여기지 말아라. 바람은 불고 싶은 곳으로 불고 너는 그 소리를 듣지만, 어디서 와서 어디로 가는지는 알지 못한다. 성령으로 태어난 사람은 다 이와 같다." 니고데모가 예수께 대답하였다. "어떻게 이런 일이 있을 수 있습니까?" 예수께서 그에게 대답하셨다. "너는 이스라엘의 선생이면서 이런 것을 알지 못하느냐? 내가 진실로 진실로 너에게 말한다. 우리는 우리가 아는 것을 말하고 우리가 본 것을 증언하는데, 너희는 우리의 증언을 받아들이지 않는다. 내가 너희에게 땅의 일을 말하여도 믿지 않는데, 하늘의 일을 말하면 어떻게 믿겠느냐? 하늘에서 내려온 이, 곧 인자 외에는 아무도 하늘에 올라간 사람이 없으니, 그는 하늘에 있는 분이다. 모세가 광야에서 뱀을 든 것같이, 인자도 반드시 들려야 한다. 이는 그를 믿는 사람마다 멸망하지 않고 영원한 생명을 얻게 하려는 것이다. 하나님께서 세상을 이처럼 사랑하셔서 자신의 외아들을 주셨으니, 이는 그를 믿는 사람마다 멸망하지 않고 영원한 생명을 얻게 하려는 것이다. 하나님께서 아들을 세상에 보내신 것은 세상을 심판하시려는 것이 아니라, 그를 통하여 세상을 구원하시려는 것이다. 그를 믿는 사람은 심판을 받지 않지만, 믿지 않는 사람은 하나님의 외아들의 이름을 믿지 않았기 때문에 이미 심판을 받았다. 심판은 이것이니, 곧 빛이 세상에 왔지만 사람들이 자기 행위가 악하므로 빛보다 어둠을 더 사랑한 것이다. 악을 행하는 사람마다 빛을 미워하여 빛으로 나오지 않으니, 이는 자기 행위가 드러날까 두려워하기 때문이다. 그러나 진리를 행하는 사람은 빛으로 나오니, 이는 자기 행위가 하나님 안에서 행해졌음을 드러내려는 것이다." (요 3:1-21)
앞 장의 끝에서 예루살렘에서 그리스도께로 나아온 사람이 많지 않았다고 했다. 그런데 여기 한 사람이 있고, 그것도 상당한 인물이다. 비록 단 한 영혼의 구원을 위해서라도 멀리까지 찾아갈 가치는 충분히 있다.
### I. 니고데모는 어떤 사람인가
권력자나 귀족 중에 부르심을 받는 사람은 많지 않다. 그러나 여기 한 사람이 있다.
1. 그는 바리새파 사람이었다. 학문을 익힌 사람, 학자였다. 그리스도의 제자들이 모두 무식하고 교육받지 못한 사람들이라는 말은 틀렸다. 바리새인들의 원칙과 그 종파의 특색은 기독교의 정신과 정면으로 배치되었다. 그러나 그 높은 생각들도 그리스도에게 복종하도록 허물어진 사람들이 있었다. 그리스도의 은혜는 가장 강한 저항도 극복할 수 있다.
2. 그는 유대 사람의 지도자, 곧 대의회 의원이었다. 예루살렘에서 권위 있는 자리에 있는 사람이었다. 상황이 나빴어도, 선한 마음을 가진 지도자들이 일부 있었다. 그러나 물살이 너무 강하여 그들이 원하는 선을 할 수 없었다. 그래도 니고데모는 자기 자리를 지키며, 하고 싶은 것을 다 할 수 없을 때에도 할 수 있는 일을 하였다.
### II. 예수께 한 그의 엄숙한 방문 (요 3:2)
**1. 방문 시각.** 그는 밤에 예수께 왔다.
- 이것은 신중함과 분별의 행동이었다. 예수께서 낮에는 공적인 사역으로 바쁘셨으므로, 그는 예수를 방해하지 않으려 하였다. 사적인 이익보다 공적인 것을 먼저 배려해야 한다.
- 열심과 적극성의 행동이기도 했다. 니고데모는 바쁜 사람이었기에 낮에 예수를 방문할 시간을 낼 수 없었다. 그래서 저녁의 여가나 밤의 쉬는 시간을 쪼개서라도 그리스도와 교제하려 했다. 다른 이들이 잠든 그 시간에 그는 지식을 얻고 있었다. 다윗이 침상에서 묵상한 것처럼(시 63:6; 119:48).
- 두려움과 소심함의 행동이기도 했다. 그리스도와 함께 있는 것이 알려지기가 두렵거나 부끄러워서 밤을 택하였다. 종교가 유행하지 않을 때, 특히 지도자들 중에 그리스도와 그의 종교에 더 좋은 마음을 품고 있으면서도 그것이 알려지기를 꺼리는 많은 '밤의 제자들'이 있다.
주목하라. 그가 밤에 왔음에도 그리스도께서는 그를 따뜻이 맞이하셨다. 그의 성품이 소심함을 감안하시고, 그의 성실함을 받아 주셨다. 이후에 기회가 되었을 때 니고데모는 공개적으로 그리스도를 인정하였다(요 7:50; 19:39). 처음에는 겨자씨 한 알만 하던 은혜가 자라서 큰 나무가 될 수 있다.
**2. 그가 한 말(요 3:2).** 그는 정치나 국가 문제가 아니라, 자신의 영혼과 그 구원에 관한 문제를 갖고 왔다. 그는 예수를 '선생님(랍비)'이라 불렀다. 이는 '위대한 분'을 의미하는 말이다(사 19:20). 그리스도를 공경하는 마음을 가진 사람들에게는 소망이 있다.
- 그는 예수에 관해 자신이 깨달은 것을 전했다. "당신이 하나님께로부터 오신 선생님이신 줄 압니다." 인간의 교육이나 서품을 통한 것이 아니라, 하나님의 영감과 하나님의 권위로 지지받는 선생님이라는 것이다. 주권적 통치자로 오신 분이 먼저 선생님으로 오셨다. 그분은 칼의 권세가 아니라 이성의 힘, 곧 진리의 능력으로 다스리려 하셨기 때문이다.
- 그는 그것에 대해 확신하고 있었다. "우리는 압니다." 나뿐 아니라 다른 이들도 안다. 그가 '우리'라는 복수를 쓴 것은 자신과 함께 배우러 온 제자나 친구가 있었기 때문일 수 있다.
- 그 확신의 근거는 이것이다. "하나님께서 함께하지 않으시면 아무도 당신이 행하시는 이런 표적들을 행할 수 없기 때문입니다." 자연의 섭리는 오직 자연의 창조주만이 바꿀 수 있다. 하나님은 진리와 선하심의 하나님이시니, 결코 거짓이나 속임에 자신의 인증 도장을 찍지 않으실 것이다.
### III. 그리스도께서 니고데모에게 하신 설교
예수께서 여기서 네 가지를 말씀하신다.
**1. 거듭남(중생)의 필요성과 본질 (요 3:3-8)**
예수께서 대답하셨다(요 3:3). 이 대답은 니고데모의 방문에서 부족한 점에 대한 책망이었다. 그가 그리스도의 표적에 감탄하고 그 사명을 인정하는 것만으로는 부족하다. 그는 다시 태어나야 한다. 메시아의 나라가 곧 나타날 것이라는 기대를 품고 있던 니고데모는, 그 나라의 유익을 누리려면 먼저 정신의 변화, 곧 새 출생에 맞먹는 원칙과 성향의 변화가 있어야 함을 들었다.
**(1) 우리 주 예수 그리스도께서 엄숙하고 강력하게 선언하신 것이다.** "내가 진실로 진실로 너에게 말한다." 나 아멘이, 아멘 아멘이 말한다. "신실하고 참된 증인인 나"로 읽을 수 있다. 다시 태어나지 않으면 하나님 나라를 볼 수 없다는 것은 되돌릴 수 없이 확정된 사실이다.
[1] 요구되는 것은 무엇인가? 다시 태어나는 것. 이는 곧,
- 새 삶을 사는 것이다. 출생은 삶의 시작이다. 다시 태어난다는 것은 새로 시작하는 것이다. 낡은 건물을 덧대는 것이 아니라 기초부터 다시 세워야 한다.
- 새 본성, 새 원칙, 새 애정, 새 목표를 갖는 것이다. '다시(anothen)'라는 말은 '새로(again)'와 '위로부터(from above)' 두 가지 의미를 모두 갖는다.
1. 위로부터 태어나야 한다. 이것이 여기서 특히 강조된 의미이다. 새로운 출생은 하늘로부터 그 기원을 가지며(요 1:13), 하늘로 향한다.
[2] 이것의 절대적 필요성. "누구든지 다시 태어나지 않으면 하나님 나라를 볼 수 없다." 첫째, 그 본질을 이해할 수 없다. 둘째, 그 위로를 받을 수 없고, 그리스도와 그의 복음에서 아무런 유익도 누릴 수 없다. 중생은 이 세상과 내세에서 우리의 행복을 위해 절대적으로 필요하다.
a. 이에 대해 니고데모가 반론을 제기하였다(요 3:4). "사람이 늙었는데 어떻게 다시 태어날 수 있습니까? 두 번째로 어머니의 태에 들어갔다가 태어날 수 있겠습니까?" 여기서 드러나는 것은,
- 그의 지식의 부족함이다. 그리스도께서 영적으로 말씀하신 것을 그는 육적이고 물질적인 방식으로 이해하였다.
- 그러나 배우려는 의지도 보인다. 어렵다고 물러서지 않고, 솔직하게 자신의 무지를 인정하였다.
b. 그리스도께서 이를 더 풀어 설명하셨다(요 3:5-8).
[ a ] 이 복된 변화의 주체는 누구인가. 다시 태어나는 것은 성령으로 태어나는 것이다(요 3:5-8). 이 변화는 우리 자신의 지혜나 능력이 아니라, 은혜의 성령의 능력과 역사로 이루어진다.
[ b ] 이 변화의 본질이 무엇인가. 그것은 영(spirit)이다(요 3:6). 거듭난 사람들은 영적으로 새로워지고, 감각적인 것의 찌꺼기에서 정화된다.
[ c ] 이 변화의 필요성이다. 그리스도께서는 이것이 본질상 필요하다고 보여 주신다. "육으로 태어난 것은 육이다"(요 3:6).
1. 우리가 무엇인지를 말씀하신다. 우리는 육이다. 단지 몸을 가진 존재가 아니라, 타락한 존재다(창 6:3). 영혼이 육에 완전히 지배당하여 대부분 '육'이라고 불린다.
2. 어떻게 그렇게 되었는지를 말씀하신다. 육으로 태어남으로써이다. 타락한 본성은 우리 본성에 뼈처럼 박혀 있다. 따라서 새 본성을 얻으려면 다시 태어나야 한다. 육에서 깨끗한 것은 나올 수 없다.
그 후로 그리스도께서 자신의 말씀으로 이것을 더욱 필요하게 하셨다. "내가 너에게 '너희가 다시 태어나야 한다'고 말한 것을 이상하게 여기지 말아라"(요 3:7). 그리스도께서 그렇게 말씀하셨고, 온 세상이 그것을 부정할 수 없다.
[ d ] 이 변화는 두 가지 비유로 설명된다.
- 먼저 성령의 거듭나게 하시는 사역은 물에 비유된다(요 3:5). 성령은 영혼을 물처럼 씻고 정결케 하신다. "물로 씻어 새롭게 하시는"(딛 3:5) 것이다. 또한 물처럼 시원하고 상쾌하게 해 주신다.
- 또한 바람에 비유된다(요 3:8). 같은 단어 '프뉴마(pneuma)'가 바람과 성령 두 가지를 뜻한다. 이 비유는 다음을 보여 준다.
1. 성령께서는 중생에서 임의로, 자유로운 행위자로 일하신다. 바람은 하나님의 명에 따라 움직이며 그분의 말씀을 이룬다(시 148:8). 성령께서는 언제 어디서 누구에게 어느 정도로 역사하실지를 자신의 뜻대로 정하신다(고전 12:11).
2. 성령께서는 능력 있게, 분명한 효과로 일하신다. "너는 그 소리를 듣는다." 영혼이 죄를 슬퍼하고, 부패의 짐 아래 신음하고, 그리스도를 사모하고, "아바 아버지"라 부르짖을 때, 우리는 성령이 일하고 있음을 안다.
3. 성령께서는 신비롭게, 숨겨진 방식으로 일하신다. "어디서 와서 어디로 가는지 알지 못한다." 성령의 일하시는 방식은 신비다.
**2. 복음 진리의 확실성과 숭고함에 관하여**
니고데모의 연약함에서 그리스도께서는 이것에 대해 말씀하실 기회를 얻으신다.
**(1) 니고데모가 제기한 반론(요 3:9).** "어떻게 이런 일이 있을 수 있습니까?" 자연인에게 성령의 일들은 어리석음으로 보인다. 그는 자신에게 이해되지 않는다고 해서 그것이 그 자체로 불가능하다고 의심한다.
**(2) 그리스도께서 그의 우둔함과 무지를 책망하셨다.** "너는 이스라엘의 선생이면서 이런 것을 알지 못하느냐?" 이 말씀은 다음에 대한 책망이다.
- 남을 가르치면서도 의의 말씀에 무지하고 미숙한 자들.
- 학문과 가르침에서 종교의 의식과 형식만을 추구하고, 마음과 생활을 새롭게 하는 실천적인 것을 소홀히 하는 자들.
**(3) 복음 진리의 확실성과 숭고함에 관한 그리스도의 설교(요 3:11-13).**
[1] 그리스도께서 가르치신 진리는 매우 확실하다(요 3:11). "우리는 우리가 아는 것을 말하고 우리가 본 것을 증언한다." 그리스도의 말씀은 신실한 말씀이며, 우리가 영혼을 걸 수 있는 말씀이다. 그분은 신뢰할 수 있는 증인이실 뿐 아니라, 스스로도 속지 않으시는 유능한 증인이시다. "그런데 너희는 우리의 증언을 받아들이지 않는다." 그리스도의 진리를 믿지 않는 것은 그 신뢰의 동기가 얼마나 강력한지를 볼 때 더욱 큰 죄다.
[2] 그리스도께서 가르치신 진리는 본질상 매우 숭고하고 하늘에 속한 것이다(요 3:12). "내가 너희에게 땅의 일을 말하여도 믿지 않는데, 하늘의 일을 말하면 어떻게 믿겠느냐?" 여기서 배울 것이 있다.
- 그리스도의 교리의 높이와 깊이에 경탄하라. 복음의 일들은 하늘에 속한 것들이다.
- 그리스도의 자기 낮추심에 감사하라. 그분은 복음의 계시 방식을 우리의 이해력에 맞추셨다.
- 우리 본성의 부패와 그리스도의 진리를 받아들이기에 얼마나 부적합한지를 탄식하라.
[3] 우리 주 예수 그리스도, 오직 그분만이 이처럼 확실하고 숭고한 교리를 계시하시기에 적합하셨다(요 3:13). "하늘에서 내려온 이, 곧 인자 외에는 아무도 하늘에 올라간 사람이 없다." 모세는 산에 올랐지만, 하늘에는 오르지 못했다. 그리스도에 대한 지식에 이른 사람은 없다(마 11:27). 하늘에서 내려오셔서 하늘 일들을 말씀하신 그분은 두 가지 본성을 가지셨다. 그분은 하늘에서 내려오셨으니 신적 본성을 가지시고, 인자이시니 인적 본성을 가지신다. 그리고 인자이시면서도 하늘에 계신다.
**3. 그리스도께서 세상에 오신 위대한 목적과 그를 믿는 자들의 복 (요 3:14-18)**
여기에 온 복음의 핵심 정수가 담겨 있다. 죄인들은 두 가지 의미에서 죽은 사람들이다. 첫째, 치명적 상처를 입거나 불치병에 걸린 사람처럼 죽어가는 자들이며, 이것에 대해 그리스도께서는 놋뱀이 이스라엘을 고친 것처럼 우리를 고치심으로 구원하신다(요 3:14-15). 둘째, 용서할 수 없는 죄로 사형 선고를 받은 사람처럼 법 앞에 죽은 자들이다. 이것에 대해 그리스도께서는 일정한 조건 하에 사면을 공표하심으로 구원하신다(요 3:16-18).
**[1] 예수 그리스도께서는 불뱀에 물린 자들이 놋뱀을 보고 치유된 것처럼, 우리를 고치심으로 구원하러 오셨다.** 그 이야기는 민수기 21:6-9에 나온다. 이 그림자(예표)에서 우리는 다음을 살펴볼 수 있다.
첫째, 죄의 치명적이고 파괴적인 본질이 암시된다. 죄의 죄책은 불뱀에 물린 고통과 같고, 부패의 권세는 그로 인해 퍼지는 독과 같다. 마귀는 오래된 뱀이다(창 3:1). 처음에는 교활했지만 그 뒤로는 불같이 맹렬하다.
둘째, 이 치명적 병에 대해 강력한 치료약이 마련되었다. "인자도 반드시 들려야 한다."
1. 치료한 것은 놋뱀이었다. 그것은 불뱀과 같은 모양이었지만 독도 없었고 쏠 수도 없었다. 이는 그리스도를 잘 나타낸다. 그분은 죄를 위한 제물이 되셨지만 죄는 알지 못하셨다. 죄 있는 육신의 모양으로 오셨지만 죄가 없으셨다(롬 8:3). 뱀은 저주받은 피조물이었다. 그리스도께서는 저주가 되셨다(갈 3:13).
2. 그것은 장대에 높이 들려야 했고, 인자도 그렇게 들려야 했다.
- 그분의 십자가 처형에서 들려지셨다(요 12:32-33). 그분의 죽음은 들려지심이라 불렸다. 하늘과 땅 사이에, 마치 두 곳 모두에 의해 버림받은 것처럼.
- 그분의 높이 올라가심에서 들려지셨다. 십자가에 달리심으로써 왕관으로 높이 올려지셨다.
- 영원한 복음을 선포하고 전파하는 데서 들려지셨다(계 14:6). 그리스도는 복음에서 온 이스라엘이 볼 수 있도록 높이 들려지셨다.
셋째, 이 치료약을 어떻게 적용하는가. 믿음으로, 곧 이스라엘이 놋뱀을 바라본 것처럼이다. 죄로 인한 자신의 병과 그리스도를 통한 치유 방법을 경히 여겨 그리스도를 그분의 조건대로 받아들이지 않는다면, 그 피는 자신에게로 돌아간다. "나를 바라보아라, 그러면 구원을 얻을 것이다"(사 45:22).
넷째, 이를 믿어 그분을 바라보도록 주어진 위대한 격려.
1. 그분이 들려지신 것은 그를 따르는 자들이 구원받게 하려는 목적이었다.
2. 그분에 의한 구원의 제안은 보편적이다. "그를 믿는 사람마다" — 예외 없이.
3. 제공되는 구원은 완전하다. 멸망하지 않을 것이고, 영원한 생명을 얻을 것이다.
**[2] 예수 그리스도께서는 우리를 용서하심으로 구원하러 오셨다 (요 3:16-17).** 여기에 복음이 있다. 정말 좋은 소식, 하늘에서 땅으로 내려온 가장 좋은 소식이다. 이 짧은 글에 많은 것이, 모든 것이 들어 있다.
**첫째, 아들을 주신 하나님의 사랑(요 3:16).** 세 가지를 보라.
1. 위대한 복음의 신비가 계시된다. "하나님께서 세상을 이처럼 사랑하셔서 자신의 외아들을 주셨다." 하나님 아버지의 사랑이 성령으로 말미암는 중생과 아들의 들려지심을 통한 화해의 원천이다.
- 예수 그리스도는 하나님의 외아들이시다. 우리를 위해 외아들을 주신 것이 얼마나 큰 사랑인지, 이는 그분이 항상 아버지의 기쁨이 되셨음을 나타낸다.
- 인간의 구속과 구원을 위해 하나님께서 자신의 외아들을 주시기를 기뻐하셨다. 그분을 주셨다 함은, 그분을 우리를 위해 고난받고 죽도록 내어 주신 것이다.
- 하나님께서 세상에 대한 사랑을 나타내셨다. "이처럼 사랑하셨다." 정말로, 풍성하게. 그분은 천사들의 타락한 세계를 이렇게 사랑하지 않으셨다(롬 5:8; 요일 4:10). 놀라운 일이다! 거룩하신 하나님께서 이렇게 악한 세상을 사랑하시다니!
2. 위대한 복음의 의무가 있다. 하나님께서 이렇게 주신 예수 그리스도를 믿는 것이다. 우리는 하나님의 아들에 관해 하나님께서 그 말씀 안에 주신 증언에 진실한 동의와 순종을 드려야 한다.
3. 위대한 복음의 유익이 있다. "그를 믿는 사람마다 멸망하지 않고 영원한 생명을 얻는다."
- 지옥의 고통에서 구원받는다. "멸망하지 않을 것이다." 하나님께서 그들의 죄를 제거하셨으니 그들은 죽지 않는다.
- 하늘의 기쁨을 누릴 자격을 얻는다. "영원한 생명을 얻을 것이다." 유죄 선고된 반역자가 단지 사면을 받을 뿐 아니라, 총애를 받고 왕이 영예를 베풀기로 기뻐하는 자처럼 높임을 받는다.
**둘째, 아들을 세상에 보내신 하나님의 목적(요 3:17).** "하나님께서 아들을 세상에 보내신 것은 세상을 심판하시려는 것이 아니라, 그를 통하여 세상을 구원하시려는 것이다."
1. 그분은 세상을 심판하러 오지 않으셨다. 세상은 죄가 있고, 유죄가 확정되었다. 만약 하나님께서 심판하러 보내셨다면 그분은 즉시 그렇게 할 천사들을 명할 수 있었다. 그러나 그분은 우리를 단죄하는 판결로 시작하지 않으시고 은혜의 보좌 앞에서 새 재판을 하셨다.
2. 그분은 세상이 그를 통하여 구원받게 하러 오셨다. 그를 통해서가 아니고는 세상이 결코 구원받을 수 없다. "다른 이로써는 구원을 받을 수 없다"(행 4:12). 이것은 죄책감에 사로잡힌 양심에 좋은 소식이다.
**[3] 이 모든 것에서 참된 신자들의 복이 추론된다(요 3:18).** "그를 믿는 사람은 심판을 받지 않는다." 비록 크게 죄를 지은 죄인이라도, 믿음 안에서 소송이 중단되고, 판결이 멈추어지고, 심판받지 않는다. 이것은 단순한 유예가 아니다. 그는 심판받지 않는다. 즉, 그는 무죄 방면된다.
**4. 불신앙과 고의적인 무지 가운데 머무는 자들의 처참한 상태 (요 3:18-21)**
**(1) 그리스도를 믿지 않으려는 자들의 선고(요 3:18).** "이미 심판을 받았다."
[1] 불신자들의 죄가 얼마나 큰지를 보라. 하나님의 외아들의 이름을 믿지 않는 것이다. 하나님께서 우리를 구원하시려고 가장 사랑하는 분을 보내셨다. 그런데도 그분을 믿지 않겠는가?
[2] 불신자들의 비참함이 얼마나 큰지를 보라. "이미 심판을 받았다." 이것은,
- 확실한 심판이다. 마치 이미 심판받은 것처럼 확실히 심판날에 정죄될 것이다.
- 현재의 심판이다. 저주가 이미 그들을 붙잡고 있다. 하나님의 진노가 그들 위에 머문다.
- 이전 죄에 근거한 심판이다. 그는 이미 율법 아래 모든 죄에 노출되어 있다.
**(2) 그분을 알려고도 하지 않는 자들의 선고(요 3:19-20).**
"빛이 세상에 왔지만 사람들이 자기 행위가 악하므로 빛보다 어둠을 더 사랑한 것이다."
[1] 복음은 빛이다. 복음이 왔을 때 빛이 세상에 왔다. 빛은 스스로 증거한다. 복음도 그렇다. 빛은 드러낸다. 진실로 빛은 달고 마음을 기쁘게 한다(전 11:7).
[2] 대부분의 사람들이 빛보다 어둠을 더 사랑하는 것은 말할 수 없이 어리석은 짓이다.
[3] 사람들이 빛보다 어둠을 더 사랑하는 진짜 이유는 그들의 행위가 악하기 때문이다. 그들은 어둠이 자신들의 악한 행위에 대한 변명이 된다고 생각하며 어둠을 사랑한다.
[4] 고의적인 무지는 죄를 변명하기는커녕 대심판 날에 더욱 심한 정죄를 받을 것이다. 우리는 가졌으나 사용하지 않은 지식뿐 아니라, 가질 수 있었으나 갖지 않은 지식에 대해서도, 그리고 죄를 지어 잃어버린 지식에 대해서도 심판 때에 셈을 해야 한다.
이를 더 자세히 설명하기 위해 그리스도께서는 사람들의 마음과 삶이 좋고 나쁨에 따라 그리스도께서 가져오신 빛에 대해 어떻게 반응하는지를 보여 주신다(요 3:20-21).
첫째, 악을 행하고 그 안에 계속 머물기로 결심한 자들이 그리스도 복음의 빛을 미워하는 것은 이상한 일이 아니다. "악을 행하는 사람마다 빛을 미워하여 빛으로 나오지 않는다." 악한 행위들은 어둠의 행위들이다(엡 5:13).
주목하라.
1. 복음의 빛은 죄인들의 악한 행위들을 책망하러 세상에 왔다. 죄가 아닌 것이 죄임을 보여 주고, 죄의 악함을 드러낸다.
2. 악을 행하는 자들이 복음의 빛을 미워하는 것은 이 때문이다. 그리스도를 미워하는 것은 죄를 사랑하기 때문이다.
3. 빛으로 나오지 않는 자들은 빛에 대한 숨겨진 미움을 드러내는 것이다.
둘째, 자신의 온전함 가운데 하나님 앞에서 자신을 인정받으려는 올바른 마음을 가진 자들은 이 빛을 기꺼이 환영한다(요 3:21). "진리를 행하는 사람은 빛으로 나온다."
1. 선한 사람의 특징은 이렇다.
- 그는 진리를 행하는 자다. 즉, 자신이 하는 모든 일에서 진실하고 성실하게 행한다. 비록 선을 행하는 데 부족함이 있을 때라도, 그는 진리를 행한다. 즉, 마음을 솔직하게 한다.
- 그는 빛으로 나오는 자다. 신적 계시를 기꺼이 받아들이고 환영한다.
2. 선한 행위의 특징이 있다. "하나님 안에서 행해진" 행위다. 언약의 믿음으로 그분과 연합하여 하나님 안에서 행해진 행위, 경건한 애정으로 그분과 교제하며 행해진 행위이다.
---
원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-jhn-3-1-21(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
1~36절 카드 ↗
J O H N. CHAP. III. In this chapter we have, I. Christ's discourse with Nicodemus, a Pharisee, concerning the great mysteries of the gospel, in which he here privately instructs him, John 3:1-21 . II. John Baptist's discourse with his disciples concerning Christ, upon occasion of his coming into the neighbourhood where John was ( John 3:22-36 ), in which he fairly and faithfully resigns all his honour and interest to him. return to ' Top of Page ' <a name="verses-1-21" class="com-number"
Pericope (part_of)
- part_of
pericope/per-jhn-3-001 - part_of
pericope/per-jhn-3-002 - part_of
pericope/per-jhn-3-003 - part_of
pericope/per-jhn-3-004
절 (explains)
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
이 장은 두 단락으로 이루어진다. 첫째, 예수께서 바리새파 사람 니고데모와 복음의 위대한 신비들에 대해 나누신 대화(요 3:1-21). 둘째, 세례 요한이 예수께서 자신과 가까운 곳에 오신 것을 계기로 제자들에게 예수에 관해 하신 말씀(요 3:22-36). 이 두 번째 단락에서 요한은 자신의 모든 명예와 이익을 예수께 기꺼이 그리고 신실하게 넘겨 드린다.
---
원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-jhn-3-intro(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반
22~36절 카드 ↗
John's Testimony to Christ. 22 After these things came Jesus and his disciples into the land of Judæa; and there he tarried with them, and baptized. 23 And John also was baptizing in Ænon near to Salim, because there was much water there: and they came, and were baptized. 24 For John was not yet cast into prison. 25 Then there arose a question between some of John's disciples and the Jews about purifying. 26 And they came unto John, and said unto him, Rabbi, he that was with thee beyond Jordan, to whom thou barest witness, behold, the same baptizeth, and all men come to him. 27 John answered and said, A man can receive nothing, except it be given him from heaven. 28 Ye yourselves bear me witness, that I said, I am not the Christ, but that I am sent before him. 29 He that hath the bride is the bridegroom: but the friend of the bridegroom, which standeth and heareth him, rejoiceth greatly because of the bridegroom's voice: this my joy therefore is fulfilled. 30 He must increase, but I must decrease. 31 He that cometh from above is above all: he that is of the earth is earthly, and speaketh of the earth: he that cometh from heaven is above all. 32 And what he hath seen and heard, that he testifieth; and no man receiveth his testimony. 33 He that hath received his testimony hath set to his seal that God is true. 34 For he whom God hath sent speaketh the words of God: for God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him. 35 The Father loveth the Son, and hath given all things into his hand. 36 He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him. In these verses we have, I. Christ's removal into the land of Judea ( John 3:22 ; John 3:22 ), and there he tarried with his disciples. Observe, 1. Our Lord Jesus, after he entered upon his public work, travelled much, and removed often, as the patriarchs in their sojournings. As it was a good part of his humiliation that he had no certain dwelling-place, but was, as Paul, in journeyings often, so it was an instance of his unwearied industry, in the work for which he came into the world, that he went about in prosecution of it; many a weary step he took to do good to souls. The Sun of righteousness took a large circuit to diffuse his light and heat, Psalms 19:6 . 2. He was not wont to stay long at Jerusalem. Though he went frequently thither, yet he soon returned into the country; as here. After these things, after he had had this discourse with Nicodemus, he came into the land of Judea; not so much for greater privacy (though mean and obscure places best suited the humble Jesus in his humble state) as for greater usefulness. His preaching and miracles, perhaps, made most noise at Jerusalem, the fountain-head of news, but did least good there, where the most considerable men of the Jewish church had so much the ascendant. 3. When he came into the land of Judea his disciples came with him; for these were they that continued with him in his temptations. Many that flocked to him at Jerusalem could not follow his motions into the country, they had no business there; but his disciples attended him. If the ark remove, it is better to remove and go after it (as those did, Joshua 3:3 ) than sit still without it, though it be in Jerusalem itself. 4. There he tarried with them, dietribe -- He conversed with them, discoursed with them. He did not retire into the country for his ease and pleasure, but for more free conversation with his disciples and followers. See Song of Solomon 7:11 ; Song of Solomon 7:12 . Note, Those that are ready to go with Christ shall find him as ready to stay with them. It is supposed that he now staid five or six months in this country. 5. There he baptized; he admitted disciples, such as believed in him, and had more honesty and courage than those had at Jerusalem, John 2:42 ; John 2:42 . John began to baptize in the land of Judea ( Matthew 3:1 ), therefore Christ began there, for John had said, There comes one after me. He himself baptized not, with his own hand, but his disciples by his orders and directions, as appears, John 4:2 ; John 4:2 . But his disciples' baptizing was his baptizing. Holy ordinances are Christ's, though administered by weak men. II. John's continuance in his work, as long as his opportunities lasted, John 3:23 ; John 3:24 . Here we are told, 1. That John was baptizing. Christ's baptism was, for substance, the same with John's, for John bore witness to Christ, and therefore they did not at all clash or interfere with one another. But, (1.) Christ began the work of preaching and baptizing before John laid it down, that he might be ready to receive John's disciples when he should be taken off, and so the wheels might be kept going. It is a comfort to useful men, when they are going off the stage, to see those rising up who are likely to fill up their place. (2.) John continued the work of preaching and baptizing though Christ had taken it up; for he would still, according to the measure given to him, advance the interests of God's kingdom. There was still work for John to do, for Christ was not yet generally known, nor were the minds of people thoroughly prepared for him by repentance. From heaven John had received his command, and he would go on in his work till he thence received his countermand, and would have his dismission from the same hand that gave him his commission. He does not come in to Christ, lest what had formerly passed should look like a combination between them; but he goes on with his work, till Providence lays him aside. The greater gifts of some do not render the labours of others, that come short of them, needless and useless; there is work enough for all hands. They are sullen that will sit down and do nothing when they see themselves out-shone. Though we have but one talent, we must account for that: and, when we see ourselves going off, must yet go on to the last. 2. That he baptized in Enon near Salim, places we find nowhere else mentioned, and therefore the learned are altogether at a loss where to find them. Wherever it was, it seems that John removed from place to place; he did not think that there was any virtue in Jordan, because Jesus was baptized there, which should engage him to stay there, but as he saw cause he removed to other waters. Ministers must follow their opportunities. He chose a place where there was much water, hydata polla -- many waters, that is, many streams of water; so that wherever he met with any that were willing to submit to his baptism water was at hand to baptize them with, shallow perhaps, as is usual where there are many brooks, but such as would serve his purpose. And in that country plenty of water was a valuable thing. 3. That thither people came to him and were baptized. Though they did not come in such vast crowds as they did when he first appeared, yet now he was not without encouragement, but there were still those that attended and owned him. Some refer this both to John and to Jesus: They came and were baptized; that is, some came to John, and were baptized by him, some to Jesus, and were baptized by him, and, as their baptism was one, so were their hearts. 4. It is noted ( John 3:24 ; John 3:24 ) that John was not yet cast into prison, to clear the order of the story, and to show that these passages are to come in before Matthew 6:12 . John never desisted from his work as long as he had his liberty; nay, he seems to have been the more industrious, because he foresaw his time was short; he was not yet cast into prison, but he expected it ere long, John 9:4 ; John 9:4 . III. A contest between John's disciples and the Jews about purifying, John 3:25 ; John 3:25 . See how the gospel of Christ came not to send peace upon earth, but division. Observe, 1. Who were the disputants: some of John's disciples, and the Jews who had not submitted to his baptism of repentance. Penitents and impenitents divide this sinful world. In this contest, it should seem, John's disciples were the aggressors, and gave the challenge; and it is a sign that they were novices, who had more zeal than discretion. The truths of God have often suffered by the rashness of those that have undertaken to defend them before they were able to do it. 2. What was the matter in dispute: about purifying, about religious washing. (1.) We may suppose that John's disciples cried up his baptism, his purifying, as instar omnium--superior to all others, and gave the preference to that as perfecting and superseding all the purifications of the Jews, and they were in the right; but young converts are too apt to boast of their attainments, whereas he that finds the treasure should hide it till he is sure that he has it, and not talk of it too much at first. (2.) No doubt the Jews with as much assurance applauded the purifyings that were in use among them, both those that were instituted by the law of Moses and those that were imposed by the tradition of the elders; for the former they had a divine warrant, and for the latter the usage of the church. Now it is very likely that the Jews in this dispute, when they could not deny the excellent nature and design of John's baptism, raised an objection against it from Christ's baptism, which gave occasion for the complaint that follows here ( John 3:26 ; John 3:26 ): "Here is John baptizing in one place." say they, "and Jesus at the same time baptizing in another place; and therefore John's baptism, which his disciples so much applaud, is either," [1.] " Dangerous, and of ill consequence to the peace of the church and state, for you see it opens a door to endless parties. Now that John has begun, we shall have every little teacher set up for a baptist presently. Or," [2.] "At the best it is defective and imperfect. If John's baptism, which you cry up thus, have any good in it, yonder the baptism of Jesus goes beyond it, so that for your parts you are shaded already by a greater light, and your baptism is soon gone out of request." Thus objections are made against the gospel from the advancement and improvement of gospel light, as if childhood and manhood were contrary to each other, and the superstructure were against the foundation. There was no reason to object Christ's baptism against John's, for they consisted very well together. IV. A complaint which John's disciples made to their master concerning Christ and his baptizing, John 3:26 ; John 3:26 . They, being nonplussed by the fore-mentioned objection, and probably ruffled and put into a heat by it, come to their master, and tell him, " Rabbi, he that was with thee, and was baptized of thee, is now set up for himself; he baptizeth, and all men come to him; and wilt thou suffer it?" Their itch for disputing occasioned this. It is common for men, when they find themselves run aground in the heat of disputation, to fall foul upon those that do them no harm. If these disciples of John had not undertaken to dispute about purifying, before they understood the doctrine of baptism, they might have answered the objection without being put into a passion. In their complaint, they speak respectfully to their own master, Rabbit; but speak very slightly of our Saviour, though they do not name him. 1. They suggest that Christ's setting up a baptism of his own was a piece of presumption, very unaccountable; as if John, having first set up this rite of baptizing, must have the monopoly of it, and, as it were, a patent for the invention: " He that was with thee beyond Jordan, as a disciple of thine, behold, and wonder, the same, the very same, baptizes, and takes thy work out of thy hand." Thus the voluntary condescensions of the Lord Jesus, as that of his being baptized by John, are often unjustly and very unkindly turned to his reproach. 2. They suggest that it was a piece of ingratitude to John. He to whom thou barest witness baptizes; as if Jesus owed all his reputation to the honourable character John gave of him, and yet had very unworthily improved it to the prejudice of John. But Christ needed not John's testimony, John 5:36 ; John 5:36 . He reflected more honour upon John than he received from him, yet thus it is incident to us to think that others are more indebted to us than really they are. And besides, Christ's baptism was not in the least an impeachment, but indeed the greatest improvement, of John's baptism, which was but to lead the way to Christ's. John was just to Christ, in bearing witness to him; and Christ's answering his testimony did rather enrich than impoverish John's ministry. 3. They conclude that it would be a total eclipse to John's baptism: " All men come to him; they that used to follow with us now flock after him, it is therefore time for us to look about us." It was not indeed strange that all men came to him. As far as Christ is manifested he will be magnified; but why should John's disciples grieve at this? Note, Aiming at the monopoly of honour and respect has been in all ages the bane of the church, and the shame of its members and ministers; as also a vying of interests, and a jealousy of rivalship and competition. We mistake if we think that the excelling gifts and graces, and labours and usefulness, of one, are a diminution and disparagement to another that has obtained mercy to be faithful; for the Spirit is a free agent, dispensing to every one severally as he will. Paul rejoiced in the usefulness even of those that opposed him, Philippians 1:18 . We must leave it to God to choose, employ, and honour his own instruments as he pleaseth, and not covet to be placed alone. V. Here is John's answer to this complaint which his disciples made, John 3:27 ; John 3:27 , c. His disciples expected that he would have resented this matter as they did but Christ's manifestation to Israel was no surprise to John, but what he looked for; it was not disturbance to him, but what he wished for. He therefore checked the complaint, as Moses, Enviest thou for my sake? and took this occasion to confirm the testimonies he had formerly borne to Christ as superior to him, cheerfully consigning and turning over to him all the interest he had in Israel. In this discourse here, the first minister of the gospel (for so John was) is an excellent pattern to all ministers to humble themselves and to exalt the Lord Jesus. 1. John here abases himself in comparison with Christ, John 3:27-30 ; John 3:27-30 . The more others magnify us, the more we must humble ourselves, and fortify ourselves against the temptation of flattery and applause, and the jealousy of our friends for our honour, by remembering our place, and what we are, 1 Corinthians 3:5 . (1.) John acquiesces in the divine disposal, and satisfies himself with that ( John 3:27 ; John 3:27 ): A man can receive nothing except it be given him from heaven, whence every good gift comes ( James 1:17 ), a general truth very applicable in this case. Different employments are according to the direction of divine Providence, different endowments according to the distribution of the divine grace. No man can take any true honour to himself, Hebrews 5:4 . We have as necessary and constant a dependence upon the grace of God in all the motions and actions of the spiritual life as we have upon the providence of God in all the motions and actions of the natural life: now this comes in here as a reason, [1.] Why we should not envy those that have a larger share of gifts than we have, or move in a larger sphere of usefulness. John reminds his disciples that Jesus would not have thus excelled him except he had received it from heaven, for, as man and Mediator, he received gifts; and, if God gave him the Spirit without measure ( John 3:34 ; John 3:34 ), shall they grudge at it? The same reason will hold as to others. If God is pleased to give to others more ability and success than to us, shall we be displeased at it, and reflect upon him as unjust, unwise, and partial? See Matthew 20:15 . [2.] Why we should not be discontented, though we be inferior to others in gifts and usefulness, and be eclipsed by their excellencies. John was ready to own that it was the gift, the free gift, of heaven, that made him a preacher, a prophet, a baptist: it was God that gave him the interest he had in the love and esteem of the people; and, if now his interest decline, God's will be done! He that gives may take. What we receive from heaven we must take as it is given. Now John never received a commission for a standing perpetual office, but only for a temporary one, which must soon expire; and therefore, when he has fulfilled his ministry, he can contentedly see it go out of date. Some give quite another sense of these words: John had taken pains with his disciples, to teach them the reference which his baptism had to Christ, who should come after him, and yet be preferred before him, and do that for them which he could not do; and yet, after all, they dote upon John, and grudge this preference of Christ above him: Well saith John, I see a man can receive (that is, perceive) nothing, except it be given him from heaven. The labour of ministers if all lost labour, unless the grace of God make it effectual. Men do not understand that which is made most plain, nor believe that which is made most evident, unless it be given them from heaven to understand and believe it. (2.) John appeals to the testimony he had formerly given concerning Christ ( John 3:28 ; John 3:28 ): You can bear me witness that I said, again and again, I am not the Christ, but I am sent before him. See how steady and constant John was in his testimony to Christ, and not as a reed shaken with the wind; neither the frowns of the chief priests, nor the flatteries of his own disciples, could make him change his note. Now this serves here, [1.] As a conviction to his disciples of the unreasonableness of their complaint. They had spoken of the witness which their master bore to Jesus ( John 3:26 ; John 3:26 ): "Now," saith John, "do you not remember what the testimony was that I did bear? Call that to mind, and you will see your own cavil answered. Did I not say, I am not the Christ? Why then do you set me up as a rival with him that is? Did I not say, I am sent before him? Why then does it seem strange to you that I should stand by and give way to him?" [2.] It is a comfort to himself that he had never given his disciples any occasion thus to set him up in competition with Christ; but, on the contrary, had particularly cautioned them against this mistake, though he might have made a hand of it for himself. It is a satisfaction to faithful ministers when they have done what they could in their places to prevent any extravagances that their people ran into. John had not only not encouraged them to hope that he was the Messiah, but had plainly told them the contrary, which was now a satisfaction to him. It is a common excuse for those who have undue honour paid them, Si populus vult decipi, decipiatur--If the people will be deceived, let them; but that is an ill maxim for those to go by whose business it is to undeceive people. The lip of truth shall be established. (3.) John professes the great satisfaction he had in the advancement of Christ and his interest. He was so far from regretting it, as his disciples did, that he rejoiced in it. This he expresses ( John 3:29 ; John 3:29 ) by an elegant similitude. [1.] He compares our Saviour to the bridegroom: "He that hath the bride is the bridegroom. Do all men come to him? It is well, whither else should they go? Has he got the throne in men's affections? Who else should have it? It is his right; to whom should the bride be brought but to the bridegroom?" Christ was prophesied of in the Old Testament as a bridegroom, Psalms 45:1-17 . The Word was made flesh, that the disparity of nature might not be a bar to the match. Provision is made for the purifying of the church, that the defilement of sin might be no bar. Christ espouses his church to himself; he has the bride, for he has her love, he has her promise; the church is subject to Christ. As far as particular souls are devoted to him in faith and love, so far the bridegroom has the bride. [2.] He compares himself to the friend of the bridegroom, who attends upon him, to do him honour and service, assists him in prosecuting the match, speaks a good word for him, uses his interest on his behalf, rejoices when the match goes on, and most of all when the point is gained, and he has the bride. All that John had done in preaching and baptizing was to introduce him; and, now that he was come, he had what he wished for: The friend of the bridegroom stands, and hears him; stands expecting him, and waiting for him; rejoices with joy because of the bridegroom's voice, because he is come to the marriage after he had been long expected. Note, First, Faithful ministers are friends of the bridegroom, to recommend him to the affections and choice of the children of men; to bring letters and messages from him, for he courts by proxy; and herein they must be faithful to him. Secondly, The friends of the bridegroom must stand, and hear the bridegroom's voice; must receive instructions from him, and attend his orders; must desire to have proofs of Christ speaking in them, and with them ( 2 Corinthians 13:3 ); that is the bridegroom's voice. Thirdly, The espousing of souls to Jesus Christ, in faith and love, is the fulfilling of the joy of every good minister. If the day of Christ's espousals be the day of the gladness of his heart ( Song of Solomon 3:11 ), it cannot but be of their too who love him and wish well to his honour and kingdom. Surely they have no greater joy. (4.) He owns it highly fit and necessary that the reputation and interest of Christ should be advanced, and his own diminished ( John 3:30 ; John 3:30 ): He must increase, but I must decrease. If they grieve at the growing greatness of the Lord Jesus, they will have more and more occasion to grieve, as those have that indulge themselves in envy and emulation. John speaks of Christ's increase and his own decrease, not only as necessary and unavoidable, which could not be helped and therefore must be borne, but as highly just and agreeable, and affording him entire satisfaction. [1.] He was well pleased to see the kingdom of Christ getting ground: " He must increase. You think he has gained a great deal, but it is nothing to what he will gain." Note, The kingdom of Christ is, and will be, a growing kingdom, like the light of the morning, like the grain of mustard-seed. [2.] He was not at all displeased that the effect of this was the diminishing of his own interest: I must decrease. Created excellencies are under this law, they must decrease. I have seen an end of all perfection. Note, First, The shining forth of the glory of Christ eclipses the lustre of all other glory. The glory that stands in competition with Christ, that of the world and the flesh, decreases and loses ground in the soul as the knowledge and love of Christ increase and get ground; but it is here spoken of that which is subservient to him. As the light of the morning increases, that of the morning star decreases. Secondly, If our diminution or abasement may but in the least contribute to the advancement of Christ's name, we must cheerfully submit to it, and be content to be any thing, to be nothing, so that Christ may be all. 2. John Baptist here advances Christ, and instructs his disciples concerning him, that, instead of grieving that so many come to him, they might come to him themselves. (1.) He instructs them concerning the dignity of Christ's person ( John 3:31 ; John 3:31 ): He that cometh from above, that cometh from heaven, is above all. Here, [1.] He supposes his divine origin, that he came from above, from heaven, which bespeaks not only his divine extraction, but his divine nature. He had a being before his conception, a heavenly being. None but he that came from heaven was fit to show us the will of heaven, or the way to heaven. When God would save man, he sent from above. [2.] Hence he infers his sovereign authority: he is above all, above all things and all persons, God over all, blessed for evermore. It is daring presumption to dispute precedency with him. When we come to speak of the honours of the Lord Jesus, we find they transcend all conception and expression, and we can say but this, He is above all. It was said of John Baptist, There is not a greater among them that are born of women. But the descent of Christ from heaven put such a dignity upon him as he was not divested of by his being made flesh; still he was above all. This he further illustrates by the meanness of those who stood in competition with him: He that is of the earth, is earthly, ho on ek tes ges, ek tes ges esti -- He that is of the earth is of the earth; he that has his origin of the earth has his food out of the earth, has his converse with earthly things, and his concern is for them. Note, First, Man has his rise out of the earth; not only Adam at first, but we also still are formed out of the clay, Job 33:6 . Look to the rock whence we were hewn. Secondly, Man's constitution is therefore earthly; not only his body frail and mortal, but his soul corrupt and carnal, and its bent and bias strong towards earthly things. The prophets and apostles were of the same mould with other men; they were but earthen vessels, though they had a rich treasure lodged in them; and shall these be set up as rivals with Christ? Let the potsherds strive with the potsherds of the earth; but let them not cope with him that came from heaven. (2.) Concerning the excellency and certainty of his doctrine. His disciples were displeased that Christ's preaching was admired, and attended upon, more than his; but he tells them that there was reason enough for it. For, [1.] He, for his part, spoke of the earth, and so do all those that are of the earth. The prophets were men and spoke like men; of themselves they could not speak but of the earth, 2 Corinthians 3:5 . The preaching of the prophets and of John was but low and flat compared with Christ's preaching; as heaven is high above the earth, so were his thoughts above theirs. By them God spoke on earth, but in Christ he speaketh from heaven. [2.] But he that cometh from heaven is not only in his person, but in his doctrine, above all the prophets that ever lived on earth; none teacheth like him. The doctrine of Christ is here recommended to us, First, As infallibly sure and certain, and to be entertained accordingly ( John 3:32 ; John 3:32 ): What he hath seen and heard, that he testifieth. See here, 1. Christ's divine knowledge; he testified nothing but what he had seen and heard, what he was perfectly apprized of and thoroughly acquainted with. What he discovered of the divine nature and of the invisible world was what he had seen; what he revealed of the mind of God was what he had heard immediately from him, and not at second hand. The prophets testified what was made known to them in dreams and visions by the mediation of angels, but not what they had seen and heard. John was the crier's voice, that said, " Make room for the witness, and keep silence while the charge is given," but then leaves it to the witness to give in his testimony himself, and the judge to give the charge himself. The gospel of Christ is not a doubtful opinion, like an hypothesis or new notion in philosophy, which every one is at liberty to believe or not; but it is a revelation of the mind of God, which is of eternal truth in itself, and of infinite concern to us. 2. His divine grace and goodness: that which he had seen and heard he was pleased to make known to us, because he knew it nearly concerned us. What Paul had seen and heard in the third heavens he could not testify ( 2 Corinthians 12:4 ), but Christ knew how to utter what he had seen and heard. Christ's preaching is here called his testifying, to denote, (1.) The convincing evidence of it; it was not reported as news by hearsay, but it was testified as evidence given in court, with great caution and assurance. (2.) The affectionate earnestness of the delivery of it: it was testified with concern and importunity, as Acts 18:5 . From the certainty of Christ's doctrine, John takes occasion, [1.] To lament the infidelity of the most of men: though he testifies what is infallibly true, yet no man re ceiveth his testimony, that is, very few, next to none, none in comparison with those that refuse it. They receive it not, they will not hear it, they do not heed it, or give credit to it. This he speaks of not only as a matter of wonder, that such a testimony should not be received (Who hath believed our report? How stupid and foolish are the greatest part of mankind, what enemies to themselves!) but as matter of grief; John's disciples grieved that all men came to Christ ( John 3:26 ; John 3:26 ); they thought his followers too many. But John grieves that no man came to him; he thought them too few. Note, The unbelief of sinners is the grief of saints. It was for this that St. Paul had great heaviness, Romans 9:2 . [2.] He takes occasion to commend the faith of the chosen remnant ( John 3:33 ; John 3:33 ): He that hath received his testimony (and some such there were, though very few) hath set to his seal that God is true. God is true, though we do not set our seal to it; let God be true, and every man a liar; his truth needs not our faith to support it, but by faith we do ourselves the honour and justice to subscribe to his truth, and hereby God reckons himself honoured. God's promises are all yea and amen; by faith we put our amen to them, as Revelation 22:20 . Observe, He that receives the testimony of Christ subscribes not only to the truth of Christ, but to the truth of God, for his name is the Word of God; the commandments of God and the testimony of Christ are put together, Revelation 12:17 . By believing in Christ we set to our seal, First, That God is true to all the promises which he has made concerning Christ, that which he spoke by the mouth of all his holy prophets; what he swore to our fathers is all accomplished, and not one iota or tittle of it fallen to the ground, Luke 1:70 ; Acts 13:32 ; Acts 13:33 . Secondly, That he is true to all the promises he has made in Christ; we venture our souls upon God's veracity, being satisfied that he is true; we are willing to deal with him upon trust, and to quit all in this world for a happiness in reversion and out of sight. By this we greatly honour God's faithfulness. Whom we give credit to we give honour to. Secondly, It is recommended to us as a divine doctrine; not his own, but his that sent him ( John 3:34 ; John 3:34 ): For he whom God hath sent speaketh the word of God, which he was sent to speak, and enabled to speak; for God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him. The prophets were as messengers that brought letters from heaven; but Christ came under the character of an ambassador, and treats with us as such; for, 1. He spoke the words of God, and nothing he said savoured of human infirmity; both substance and language were divine. He proved himself sent of God ( John 3:2 ; John 3:2 ), and therefore his words are to be received as the words of God. By this rule we may try the spirits: those that speak as the oracles of God, and prophesy according to the proportion of faith, are to be received as sent of God. 2. He spoke as no other prophet did; for God giveth not the Spirit by measure to him. None can speak the words of God without the Spirit of God, 1 Corinthians 2:10 ; 1 Corinthians 2:11 . The Old-Testament prophets had the Spirit, and in different degrees, 2 Kings 2:9 ; 2 Kings 2:10 . But, whereas God gave them the Spirit by measure ( 1 Corinthians 12:4 ), he gave him to Christ without measure; all fulness dwelt in him, the fulness of the Godhead, an immeasurable fulness. The Spirit was not in Christ as in a vessel, but as in a fountain, as in a bottomless ocean. "The prophets that had the Spirit in a limited manner, only with respect to some particular revelation, sometimes spoke of themselves; but he that had the Spirit always residing in him, without stint, always spoke the words of God. " So Dr. Whitby. (3.) Concerning the power and authority he is invested with, which gives him the pre-eminence above all others, and a more excellent name than they. [1.] He is the beloved Son of the Father ( John 3:35 ; John 3:35 ): The Father loveth the Son. The prophets were faithful as servants, but Christ as a Son; they were employed as servants, but Christ beloved as a son, always his delight, Proverbs 8:30 . The Father was well pleased in him; not only he did love him, but he doth love him; he continued his love to him even in his estate of humiliation, loved him never the less for his poverty and sufferings. [2.] He is Lord of all. The Father, as an evidence of his love for him, hath given all things into his hand. Love is generous. The Father took such a complacency and had such a confidence in him that he constituted him the great feoffee in trust for mankind. Having given him the Spirit without measure, he gave him all things; for he was hereby qualified to be master and manager of all. Note, It is the honour of Christ, and the unspeakable comfort of all Christians, that the Father hath given all things into the hands of the Mediator. First, All power; so it is explained, Matthew 28:18 . All the works of creation being put under his feet, all the affairs of redemption are put into his hand; he is Lord of all. Angels are his servants; devils are his captives. He has power over all flesh, the heathen given him for his inheritance. The kingdom of providence is committed to his administration. He has power to settle the terms of the covenant of peace as the great plenipotentiary, to govern his church as the great lawgiver, to dispense divine favours as the great almoner, and to call all to account as the great Judge. Both the golden sceptre and the iron rod are given into his hand. Secondly, All grace is given into his hand as the channel of conveyance; all things, all those good things which God intended to give to the children of men; eternal life, and all its preliminaries. We are unworthy that the Father should give those things into our hands, for we have made ourselves the children of his wrath; he hath therefore appointed the Son of his love to be trustee for us, and the things he intended for us he gives into his hands, who is worthy, and has merited both honours for himself and favours for us. They are given into his hands, by him to be given into ours. This is a great encouragement to faith, that the riches of the new covenant are deposited in so sure, so kind, so good a hand, the hand of him that purchased them for us, and us for himself, who is able to keep all that which both God and believers have agreed to commit to him. [3.] He is the object of that faith which is made the great condition of eternal happiness, and herein he has the pre-eminence above all others: He that believeth on the Son, hath life, John 3:36 ; John 3:36 . We have here the application of what he had said concerning Christ and his doctrine; and it is the conclusion of the whole matter. If God has put this honour upon the Son, we must by faith give honour to him. As God offers and conveys good things to us by the testimony of Jesus Christ, whose word is the vehicle of divine favours, so we receive and partake of those favours by believing the testimony, and entertaining that word as true and good; this way of receiving fitly answers that way of giving. We have here the sum of that gospel which is to be preached to every creature, Mark 16:16 . Here is, First, The blessed state of all true Christians: He that believes on the Son hath everlasting life. Note, 1. It is the character of every true Christian that he believes on the Son of God; not only believes him, that what he saith is true, but believes on him, consents to him, and confides in him. The benefit of true Christianity is no less than everlasting life; this is what Christ came to purchase for us and confer upon us; it can be no less than the happiness of an immortal soul in an immortal God. 2. True believers, even now, have everlasting life; not only they shall have it hereafter, but they have it now. For, (1.) They have very good security for it. The deed by which it passeth is sealed and delivered to them, and so they have it; it is put into the hands of their guardian for them, and so they have it, though the use be not yet transferred into possession. They have the Son of God, and in him they have life; and the Spirit of God, the earnest of this life. (2.) They have the comfortable foretastes of it, in present communion with God and the tokens of his love. Grace is glory begun. return to ' Top of Page ' John Jhn 2 John Jhn John Jhn 4 Footnotes: Copyright Statement These files are public domain and are a derivative of an electronic edition that is available on the Christian Classics Ethereal Library Website. Bibliographical Information Henry, Matthew. "Complete Commentary on John 3". "Henry's Complete Commentary on the Whole Bible". https://www.studylight.org/ commentaries/ eng/ mhm/ john-3.html. 1706. terms of use • privacy policy • • rights and permissions • contact sl • about sl • link to sl To report dead links, typos, or html errors or suggestions about making these resources more useful use the convenient contact form StudyLight.org © 2001-2026 Powered by Light speed Technology Ads Free Profile .sub-menu{font-size:12px;padding:10px 0;max-width:1260px;width:100%;background-color:#f7f7f7;color:#6b6b6b;border-bottom:5px solid #6b6b6b;display:flex;flex-direction:column;flex-wrap:nowrap;position:absolute;z-index:9998} .sub-menu .menu-group{width:100%;margin:0 5px 0;padding:0 5px 0;border-right:1px solid #6b6b6b} .sub-menu .menu-group-spacer{display:none} .sub-menu .menu-name{font-size:15px;font-weight:bold;color:#deac27} .sub-menu .menu-name a{color:#deac27} .sub-menu .menu-ul li a{color:#6b6b6b;} .sub-menu .menu-ul li:hover{color:#DD8000} .search-button{background-color:#6b6b6b;color:#fff;border:1px solid #6b6b6b;-webkit-appearance:square-button;padding:0 5px;font-size:13px} .int-search-div{display:flex;flex-direction:row;margin-top:10px;flex-wrap:nowrap;width:100%} .int-search-div .int-s-query{border:1px solid #dadada;font-size:13px;padding:0 5px 0;margin-right:5px;width:30%;height:30px;flex:1 1 100%} .int-search-div .int-s-button{width:50px;margin-right:10px;height:30px;flex:0 0 50px} .int-selections-div{display:flex;flex-direction:row;flex-wrap:nowrap;width:100%;margin-bottom:20px} .int-selections-div .int-s-section{border:1px solid #dadada;color:#6b6b6b;font-size:13px;margin:5px 5px 0 0;width:70px;height:30px;flex:1 1 50%} .int-selections-div .int-s-translation{border:1px solid #dadada;color:#6b6b6b;font-size:13px;margin-top:5px;padding:2px;width:40%;height:30px;flex:1 1 40%} .lex-search-div{display:flex;flex-direction:row;flex-wrap:nowrap;width:100%} .lex-search-div .lex-s-query{border:1px solid #dadada;width:95%;height:30px;font-size:13px;padding:5px;margin-right:5px} .lex-search-div .lex-s-range{border:1px solid #dadada;color:#6b6b6b;height:30px;font-size:13px;margin-right:5px;width:100px} .lex-search-languages{width:95%;font-size:11px;display:flex;flex-direction:row;flex-wrap:nowrap;justify-content:flex-start;margin-top:5px} .ill-quo-div{display:flex;flex-direction:row;flex-wrap:wrap;width:100%;margin-top:10px} .ill-quo-s-query{font-size:15px;color:#6b6b6b;padding:0 10px 0;border:1px solid #dadada;height:30px;width:100px;margin-right:5px;flex:1 1 auto} .ill-quo-s-select{border:1px solid #dadada;color:#6b6b6b;padding:5px;height:30px;margin-right:5px} .clickable{cursor:pointer} ia, qa{cursor:pointer;margin:0 4px; line-height:25px} @media only screen and (max-width: 899px) { .sub-menu{height:65%;overflow:scroll} .sub-menu .menu-group, .sub-menu .menu-group:first-child{border-right:0} .sub-menu .part2{margin-top:-24px} .sub-menu .menu-group .menu-ul{width:100%;display:flex;flex-direction:row;flex-wrap:wrap;justify-content:flex-start} .sub-menu .menu-group .menu-ul li{list-style:disc;list-style-position:outside;padding:0 15px 5px 0;flex-grow:0;flex-basis:50%} } @media only screen and (min-width: 900px) { .sub-menu{flex-direction:row;flex-wrap:nowrap;justify-content:space-between} .sub-menu .part2{padding-top:18px;margin-top:0} .sub-menu .menu-group:last-child{border-right:0} .sub-menu .menu-group-spacer {border-right:1px solid #6b6b6b;padding:5px 0} .sub-menu .menu-ul{width:100%} .sub-menu .menu-ul li{list-style:disc;list-style-position:outside;padding:0 15px 5px 0} .lex-search-div{width:95%} .lex-search-div .lex-s-range{width:70px} } Bible Commentaries (144) Verse‑by‑Verse Commentary Burton Coffman Commentaries Adam Clarke Commentary Albert Barnes' Notes John Gill's Exposition Complete List of 144 Bible Concordances (6) Thompson Chain Reference Nave's Topical Bible The Topical Concordances Torrey's Topical Textbook Scofield Reference Index Treasury of Scripture Knowledge Bible Dictionaries (26) Vine's Expository Dictionary Holman Bible Dictionary Baker's Evangelical Dictionary King James Dictionary Smith's Bible Dictionary Complete List of 26 Bible Encyclopedias (7) Int Standard Bible Encyclopedia The Nuttall Encyclopedia The 1901 Jewish Encylopedia The Catholic Encyclopedia Kitto's Bible Cyclopedia Complete List of 7 Interlinear Study Bible Hebrew Old Testament Greek Old and New Testament Strong's Interlinear Search Whole Bible ---------------- Old Testament New Testament ---------------- Books of Law Books of History Books of Wisdom Major Prophets Minor Prophets The Gospels Pauline Epistles General Epistles Apocalyptic Books NASB KJV HCS ESV BSB WEB Bible Lexicons (3) Old Testament/ New Testament Greek Old Testament Hebrew New Testament Aramaic Translated As Begins With Containing Ends With Exact matching Greek Hebrew Aramaic Original Language Studies (4) Bill Klein's "Greek Thoughts" Charles Loder's "Hebrew Thoughts" Benjamin Shaw's "Aramaic Thoughts" KJ Went's "Difficult Sayings" Additional Lexical Resources Berry's NT Synonyms Girdlestone's OT Synonyms Trench's NT Synonyms Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar Bullinger's Figures of Speech B.C. (Before Christ) Bible History, Old Testament Sketches of Jewish Social Life The Temple - Its Ministry and Service The Works of Flavius Josephus A.D. (Anno Domini) The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah John Foxe's "Book of Martyrs" History By Category Ussher's "The Annals of the World" Creeds and Statements Confession Catechisms Today in Christian History Church and Denominational History History of the Moravian Church History of the Catholic Church Sketches of Church History The History of Protestism Sermon Illustrations Archive Illustration Title or browse by: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Sermon Quotations Archive Quote Author or browse by: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Additional Resources Sunday Bulletin Inserts Gustave Doré's Illustrations Bible Maps Archive PowerPoint Bible Maps The Bible in Pictures Personalized Reading Plan Create a personalized plan Daily Reading Plans (7) Bible-in-a-Year Straight Thru the Bible Different Topics Chronological Order Historical Order NT, Psalms & Proverbs Old & New Testament Daily Devotionals Chip Shots from the Ruff of Life Morning and Evening with Tozer Voice of the Lord 'Every Day Light' Music For the Soul The Believer's Daily Remembrancer Daily Light on the Daily Path Spurgeon's "Faith's Checkbook" Spurgeon's "Morning & Evening" Truths to Live By - One Day at a Time Bowen's Daily Meditations Devotional Hours Within the Bible The Believer's Daily Remembrancer Daily Light on the Daily Path Spurgeon's "Faith's Checkbook" Spurgeon's "Morning & Evening" Truths to Live By - One Day at a Time Bowen's Daily Meditations Devotional Hours Within the Bible Site Tools Manage My Preferences Reset My Password Update My Email Address Manage My Subscriptions Site Info About SL Contact SL Copyright Statements Statement of Faith Rights and Permissions Privacy Policy Terms of Use Additional Features Bulletin Insert Font Resources Custom Search Plugins Multi-Media Center Audio Bibles ESV • KJV • NAS • NIV • NLT • NRS • WEB Video Bibles ASL Audio Commentaries TTB --> document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded",function(){document.querySelectorAll("qa").forEach(function(e){e.addEventListener("click",function(){document.location.href="/pastoral-resources/sermon-quotations-archive/"+this.textContent.toLowerCase()+".html"})}),document.querySelectorAll("ia").forEach(function(e){e.addEventListener("click",function(){document.location.href="/pastoral-resources/sermon-illustrations-archive/"+this.textContent.toLowerCase()+".html"})}),document.querySelector(".lex-s-button").addEventListener("click",function(){var e=document.querySelector("input[name=res]:checked"),t=e?e.value:"",n=document.querySelector(".lex-s-query").value,e=document.querySelector(".lex-s-range option:checked").value;window.location.href="/lexicons/eng/"+t+".html?action=search&ol="+t.substring(0,3)+"&w="+encodeURIComponent(n)+"&range="+encodeURIComponent(e)}),document.querySelector(".int-s-button").addEventListener("click",function(){var e=document.querySelector(".int-s-url").getAttribute("href")+"?q1="+encodeURIComponent(document.querySelector(".int-s-query").value)+"&tr3="+encodeURIComponent(document.querySelector(".int-s-translation").value)+"&ss="+encodeURIComponent(document.querySelector(".int-s-section").value);window.location.href=e}),document.querySelectorAll(".sub-menu input,.sub-menu select,.sub-menu textarea,.sub-menu label").forEach(function(el){el.addEventListener("click",function(e){e.stopPropagation()})})}); (function(){function c(){var b=a.contentDocument||a.contentWindow.document;if(b){var d=b.createElement('script');d.innerHTML="window.__CF$cv$params={r:'a04e948579f14adb',t:'MTc4MDMyMDcwMg=='};var a=document.createElement('script');a.src='/cdn-cgi/challenge-platform/scripts/jsd/main.js';document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(a);";b.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(d)}}if(document.body){var a=document.createElement('iframe');a.height=1;a.width=1;a.style.position='absolute';a.style.top=0;a.style.left=0;a.style.border='none';a.style.visibility='hidden';document.body.appendChild(a);if('loading'!==document.readyState)c();else if(window.addEventListener)document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded',c);else{var e=document.onreadystatechange||function(){};document.onreadystatechange=function(b){e(b);'loading'!==document.readyState&&(document.onreadystatechange=e,c())}}}})(); var value=localStorage.getItem("adsfree-subscriber");const stripe_status="live",stripe_public_key = "pk_live_51NefoTCuo3I044tv6ufC94ztfox67iUoMX4Et6azdLHDfZ2iSRli3v3knfjKFmxebnCamK3ul7W1u51PEvVU5PcV00nSe9hZ5P";var isEqualToOne="1"===value;window.onload = function() {af_script=document.createElement("script"),af_script.src=isEqualToOne?"https://www.studylight.info/jscripts/min/adsfree-profile.min.js?v=1.5.0":"https://www.studylight.info/jscripts/min/adsfree-login.min.js?v=1.5.0",document.getElementsByTagName("head")[0].appendChild(af_script)} var default_commentaryReferenceAction = "b"; var default_langtrans = "eng_nas"; var book_list_type = "3"; var com_lang = "eng"; var com_abbr = "mhm"; var com_type = "ch"; var cur_com_bn = "42"; var cur_com_cn = "3"; var cur_com_vs = ""; var com_abb = "commentaries_eng_mhm"; var book_data = [{num:0,name:"Genesis",url:"genesis",abbr:"Gen",sl:"ge",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50]},{num:1,name:"Exodus",url:"exodus",abbr:"Exo",sl:"ex",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40]},{num:2,name:"Leviticus",url:"leviticus",abbr:"Lev",sl:"le",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27]},{num:3,name:"Numbers",url:"numbers",abbr:"Num",sl:"nu",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36]},{num:4,name:"Deuteronomy",url:"deuteronomy",abbr:"Deu",sl:"de",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34]},{num:5,name:"Joshua",url:"joshua",abbr:"Jos",sl:"jos",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24]},{num:6,name:"Judges",url:"judges",abbr:"Jdg",sl:"jdg",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]},{num:7,name:"Ruth",url:"ruth",abbr:"Rut",sl:"ru",ch:[1,2,3,4]},{num:8,name:"1 Samuel",url:"1-samuel",abbr:"1Sa",sl:"1sa",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31]},{num:9,name:"2 Samuel",url:"2-samuel",abbr:"2Sa",sl:"2sa",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24]},{num:10,name:"1 Kings",url:"1-kings",abbr:"1Ki",sl:"1ki",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22]},{num:11,name:"2 Kings",url:"2-kings",abbr:"2Ki",sl:"2ki",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25]},{num:12,name:"1 Chronicles",url:"1-chronicles",abbr:"1Ch",sl:"1ch",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29]},{num:13,name:"2 Chronicles",url:"2-chronicles",abbr:"2Ch",sl:"2ch",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36]},{num:14,name:"Ezra",url:"ezra",abbr:"Ezr",sl:"ezr",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]},{num:15,name:"Nehemiah",url:"nehemiah",abbr:"Neh",sl:"ne",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]},{num:16,name:"Esther",url:"esther",abbr:"Est",sl:"es",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]},{num:17,name:"Job",url:"job",abbr:"Job",sl:"job",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42]},{num:18,name:"Psalms",url:"psalms",abbr:"Psa",sl:"ps",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63,64,65,66,67,68,69,70,71,72,73,74,75,76,77,78,79,80,81,82,83,84,85,86,87,88,89,90,91,92,93,94,95,96,97,98,99,100,101,102,103,104,105,106,107,108,109,110,111,112,113,114,115,116,117,118,119,120,121,122,123,124,125,126,127,128,129,130,131,132,133,134,135,136,137,138,139,140,141,142,143,144,145,146,147,148,149,150]},{num:19,name:"Proverbs",url:"proverbs",abbr:"Pro",sl:"pr",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31]},{num:20,name:"Ecclesiastes",url:"ecclesiastes",abbr:"Ecc",sl:"ec",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]},{num:21,name:"Song of Solomon",url:"song-of-solomon",abbr:"Sng",sl:"so",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]},{num:22,name:"Isaiah",url:"isaiah",abbr:"Isa",sl:"isa",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63,64,65,66]},{num:23,name:"Jeremiah",url:"jeremiah",abbr:"Jer",sl:"jer",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52]},{num:24,name:"Lamentations",url:"lamentations",abbr:"Lam",sl:"la",ch:[1,2,3,4,5]},{num:25,name:"Ezekiel",url:"ezekiel",abbr:"Ezk",sl:"eze",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48]},{num:26,name:"Daniel",url:"daniel",abbr:"Dan",sl:"da",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]},{num:27,name:"Hosea",url:"hosea",abbr:"Hos",sl:"ho",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]},{num:28,name:"Joel",url:"joel",abbr:"Joe",sl:"joe",ch:[1,2,3]},{num:29,name:"Amos",url:"amos",abbr:"Amo",sl:"am",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]},{num:30,name:"Obadiah",url:"obadiah",abbr:"Oba",sl:"ob",ch:[1]},{num:31,name:"Jonah",url:"jonah",abbr:"Jon",sl:"jon",ch:[1,2,3,4]},{num:32,name:"Micah",url:"micah",abbr:"Mic",sl:"mic",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7]},{num:33,name:"Nahum",url:"nahum",abbr:"Nah",sl:"na",ch:[1,2,3]},{num:34,name:"Habakkuk",url:"habakkuk",abbr:"Hab",sl:"hab",ch:[1,2,3]},{num:35,name:"Zephaniah",url:"zephaniah",abbr:"Zep",sl:"zep",ch:[1,2,3]},{num:36,name:"Haggai",url:"haggai",abbr:"Hag",sl:"hag",ch:[1,2]},{num:37,name:"Zechariah",url:"zechariah",abbr:"Zec",sl:"zec",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]},{num:38,name:"Malachi",url:"malachi",abbr:"Mal",sl:"mal",ch:[1,2,3,4]},{num:39,name:"Matthew",url:"matthew",abbr:"Mat",sl:"mt",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28]},{num:40,name:"Mark",url:"mark",abbr:"Mrk",sl:"mr",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16]},{num:41,name:"Luke",url:"luke",abbr:"Luk",sl:"lu",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24]},{num:42,name:"John",url:"john",abbr:"Jhn",sl:"joh",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]},{num:43,name:"Acts",url:"acts",abbr:"Act",sl:"ac",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28]},{num:44,name:"Romans",url:"romans",abbr:"Rom",sl:"ro",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16]},{num:45,name:"1 Corinthians",url:"1-corinthians",abbr:"1Co",sl:"1co",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16]},{num:46,name:"2 Corinthians",url:"2-corinthians",abbr:"2Co",sl:"2co",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]},{num:47,name:"Galatians",url:"galatians",abbr:"Gal",sl:"ga",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6]},{num:48,name:"Ephesians",url:"ephesians",abbr:"Eph",sl:"eph",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6]},{num:49,name:"Philippians",url:"philippians",abbr:"Phi",sl:"php",ch:[1,2,3,4]},{num:50,name:"Colossians",url:"colossians",abbr:"Col",sl:"col",ch:[1,2,3,4]},{num:51,name:"1 Thessalonians",url:"1-thessalonians",abbr:"1Th",sl:"1th",ch:[1,2,3,4,5]},{num:52,name:"2 Thessalonians",url:"2-thessalonians",abbr:"2Th",sl:"2th",ch:[1,2,3]},{num:53,name:"1 Timothy",url:"1-timothy",abbr:"1Ti",sl:"1ti",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6]},{num:54,name:"2 Timothy",url:"2-timothy",abbr:"2Ti",sl:"2ti",ch:[1,2,3,4]},{num:55,name:"Titus",url:"titus",abbr:"Tit",sl:"tit",ch:[1,2,3]},{num:56,name:"Philemon",url:"philemon",abbr:"Phm",sl:"phm",ch:[1]},{num:57,name:"Hebrews",url:"hebrews",abbr:"Heb",sl:"heb",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]},{num:58,name:"James",url:"james",abbr:"Jas",sl:"jas",ch:[1,2,3,4,5]},{num:59,name:"1 Peter",url:"1-peter",abbr:"1Pe",sl:"1pe",ch:[1,2,3,4,5]},{num:60,name:"2 Peter",url:"2-peter",abbr:"2Pe",sl:"2pe",ch:[1,2,3]},{num:61,name:"1 John",url:"1-john",abbr:"1Jn",sl:"1jo",ch:[1,2,3,4,5]},{num:62,name:"2 John",url:"2-john",abbr:"2Jn",sl:"2jo",ch:[1]},{num:63,name:"3 John",url:"3-john",abbr:"3Jn",sl:"3jo",ch:[1]},{num:64,name:"Jude",url:"jude",abbr:"Jud",sl:"jude",ch:[1]},{num:65,name:"Revelation",url:"revelation",abbr:"Rev",sl:"re",ch:[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22]}]; var curWidth,curHeight,curTop,curLeft,masWidth,masHeight,sliderHeight=window.innerHeight-300,sliderTop=(window.innerHeight-sliderHeight)/2,popTop,popLeft,popWidth,popHeight,verse_selected,comsec,comlang,comabbr,translang,transabbr,translation_scope,sections=[],commentaries=[],languages=[],bibles=[],langtrans=default_langtrans.split('_'),language=langtrans[0],translation=langtrans[1];book=cur_com_bn,chapter=cur_com_cn,verse=cur_com_vs; function _ts_el(tag,opts){var el=document.createElement(tag);opts=opts||{};if(opts.cls){el.className=opts.cls;}if(opts.html!=null){el.innerHTML=opts.html;}if(opts.text!=null){el.textContent=opts.text;}if(opts.data){for(var k in opts.data){if(opts.data.hasOwnProperty(k)){el.setAttribute('data-'+k,opts.data[k]);}}}if(opts.style){for(var s in opts.style){if(opts.style.hasOwnProperty(s)){el.style[s]=opts.style[s];}}}if(opts.click){el.addEventListener('click',opts.click);}return el;} function getBible_data(t){var keys=t.split(',');keys.forEach(function(key){if(key==='com'){_ts_loadCom();}if(key==='bib'){_ts_loadBib();}});} function _ts_loadCom(){var commEl=document.querySelector('.commentary');comsec=commEl?commEl.getAttribute('data-com-sec'):'';comlang=commEl?commEl.getAttribute('data-com-lang'):'';comabbr=commEl?commEl.getAttribute('data-com-abbr'):'';var qs='bk='+encodeURIComponent(cur_com_bn)+'&ch='+encodeURIComponent(cur_com_cn)+'&vs='+encodeURIComponent(cur_com_vs)+'&cs='+encodeURIComponent(comsec)+'&cl='+encodeURIComponent(comlang)+'&ca='+encodeURIComponent(comabbr);fetch('/cgi-bin/bible/getBible_data.cgi?'+qs).then(function(r){return r.text();}).then(function(text){var doc=new DOMParser().parseFromString(text,'text/xml');var sn=_ts_xmlSplit(doc,'sn');var sa=_ts_xmlSplit(doc,'sa');var sf=_ts_xmlSplit(doc,'sf');for(var i=0;i u?o(n,r,t,e,u+1):0:0==i?1:-1}(o,n,r,t,0)})} var TS_PARENT_MODE={commentary:'section',translation:'language',chapter:'book',verse:'chapter'}; function _ts_isPerVerseUrl(path){var slash=path.lastIndexOf('/');if(slash =stem.length-1){return false;}return _ts_isAllDigits(stem.substring(0,dash))&&_ts_isAllDigits(stem.substring(dash+1));} function _ts_isAllDigits(s){if(!s||!s.length){return false;}for(var i=0;i 57){return false;}}return true;} function _ts_buildOverlay(){document.documentElement.style.overflowY='hidden';document.body.style.overflowY='hidden';updateSizes('470','650');var overlay=_ts_el('div',{cls:'overlayMaster',style:{top:curTop+'px',left:curLeft+'px',width:'100%',height:'100%'}});document.body.appendChild(overlay);var popup=_ts_el('div',{cls:'popupDiv noselect',style:{left:popLeft+'px',top:popTop+'px',width:popWidth+'px',height:popHeight+'px'}});overlay.appendChild(popup);} function _ts_buildHeader(mode){var parent=TS_PARENT_MODE[mode];var popup=document.querySelector('.popupDiv');var titleBar=_ts_el('div',{cls:'popupDiv-title'});popup.appendChild(titleBar);var prevBtn=_ts_el('span',{cls:'popupDiv-title-prev clickable',html:'❮',click:function(){if(parent){translationSelector_menu(parent);}}});titleBar.appendChild(prevBtn);if(!parent){prevBtn.style.visibility='hidden';}titleBar.appendChild(_ts_el('span',{html:mode.charAt(0).toUpperCase()+mode.slice(1)+' Selector'}));titleBar.appendChild(_ts_el('span',{cls:'popupDiv-title-closer clickable',html:'✖',click:function(){_ts_removeOverlay();translationSelector_menu('close');}}));} function _ts_removeOverlay(){var ov=document.querySelector('.overlayMaster');if(ov&&ov.parentNode){ov.parentNode.removeChild(ov);}} function _ts_buildChoices(mode){var items,count,start=0;if(mode==='section'){items=sections;count=items.length;}else if(mode==='commentary'){items=sortByColumn(commentaries.filter(function(c){return c.sec===comsec;}),['pop'],['ASC']);count=items.length;}else if(mode==='language'){items=languages;count=items.length;}else if(mode==='book'||mode==='chapter'){items=book_data.filter(function(b){return translation_scope==='1'?b.num 38:b.num 0);}else{takesVerse=(parseInt(verse,10)>0);}if(takesVerse){translationSelector_menu('verse');}else{_ts_sendThemBack('reference-noverse');}}});}if(mode==='verse'){return _ts_el('div',{cls:'popupDiv-item clickable selector-chapter',data:{number:o},html:o,click:function(){_ts_removeOverlay();verse=parseInt(this.getAttribute('data-number'),10);_ts_sendThemBack('reference-verse');}});}if(mode==='language'){return _ts_el('div',{cls:'popupDiv-item clickable selector-languages',data:{'trans-lang':items[o].abbr},html:items[o].name,click:function(){_ts_removeOverlay();translang=this.getAttribute('data-trans-lang');translationSelector_menu('translation');}});}if(mode==='translation'){return _ts_el('div',{cls:'popupDiv-item clickable selector-translation',data:{'trans-abbr':items[o].trans},html:items[o].name,click:function(){_ts_removeOverlay();transabbr=this.getAttribute('data-trans-abbr');_ts_sendThemBack('translation');}});}} function _ts_sendThemBack(reason){var origPath=window.location.pathname;var parts=origPath.split('/');var noVerse=(reason==='reference-noverse');var inputIsPerVerse=_ts_isPerVerseUrl(origPath);if(parts[1]==='interlinear-study-bible'){parts=parts.slice(0,5);parts[3]=book_data[book].url;parts[4]=noVerse?(chapter+'.html'):(chapter+'-'+verse+'.html');}else if(parts[1]==='commentary'){parts=parts.slice(0,4);parts[2]=book_data[book].url;parts[3]=noVerse?(chapter+'.html'):(chapter+'-'+verse+'.html');}else if(parts[1]==='commentaries'){parts[2]=comlang;parts[3]=comabbr;if(inputIsPerVerse){parts=parts.slice(0,6);parts[4]=book_data[book].url;parts[5]=noVerse?(chapter+'.html'):(chapter+'-'+verse+'.html');}else{parts=parts.slice(0,5);parts[4]=book_data[book].url+'-'+chapter+'.html';}}else if(parts[1]==='bible'){parts=parts.slice(0,6);parts[2]=translang;parts[3]=transabbr;parts[4]=book_data[book].url;parts[5]=(verse duction ","Verses 1-21","Verses 22-36"]; function
Pericope (part_of)
- part_of
pericope/per-jhn-3-003 - part_of
pericope/per-jhn-3-004
절 (explains)
bible-text/jhn-3-22, bible-text/jhn-3-23, bible-text/jhn-3-24, bible-text/jhn-3-25, bible-text/jhn-3-26, bible-text/jhn-3-27, bible-text/jhn-3-28, bible-text/jhn-3-29, bible-text/jhn-3-30, bible-text/jhn-3-31, bible-text/jhn-3-32, bible-text/jhn-3-33, bible-text/jhn-3-34, bible-text/jhn-3-35, bible-text/jhn-3-36
Source
source-manifest/mhm— Matthew Henry Complete Commentary (PD)- evidence_grade: T_theological
> 그 뒤에 예수께서 제자들과 함께 유대 땅으로 가셔서, 거기서 그들과 함께 머무르며 세례를 베푸셨다. 요한도 살림 근처 애논에서 세례를 베풀고 있었는데, 그곳에 물이 많았기 때문이다. 사람들이 와서 세례를 받았다. 요한이 아직 감옥에 갇히기 전이었다. 그래서 요한의 제자들과 어떤 유대 사람 사이에 정결 예식에 관한 논쟁이 일어났다. 그들이 요한에게 와서 말하였다. "선생님, 요단강 건너편에서 선생님과 함께 계셨고 선생님께서 증언하신 그분이, 보십시오, 세례를 베푸시니 모두가 그분에게로 가고 있습니다." 요한이 대답하였다. "사람은 하늘에서 주시지 않으면 아무것도 받을 수 없다. 내가 '나는 그리스도가 아니라 그분보다 앞서 보내심을 받은 사람이다'라고 말한 것을, 너희 자신이 증언한다. 신부를 차지하는 이는 신랑이다. 그러나 신랑의 친구는 서서 신랑의 음성을 들으며 그 음성 때문에 크게 기뻐한다. 그러므로 나의 이 기쁨이 충만하게 되었다. 그분은 흥하여야 하고, 나는 쇠하여야 한다. 위에서 오시는 이는 모든 것 위에 계신다. 땅에서 난 사람은 땅에 속하여 땅의 일을 말한다. 하늘에서 오시는 이는 모든 것 위에 계신다. 그분은 자기가 본 것과 들은 것을 증언하시지만, 아무도 그분의 증언을 받아들이지 않는다. 그분의 증언을 받아들인 사람은 하나님께서 참되시다는 것에 인을 친 것이다. 하나님께서 보내신 분은 하나님의 말씀을 전하시니, 이는 하나님께서 성령을 한없이 주시기 때문이다. 아버지께서는 아들을 사랑하셔서 모든 것을 그의 손에 맡기셨다. 아들을 믿는 사람은 영원한 생명을 가지지만, 아들에게 순종하지 않는 사람은 생명을 보지 못하고 도리어 하나님의 진노가 그 위에 머물러 있다." (요 3:22-36)
### I. 예수께서 유대 땅으로 이동하심 (요 3:22)
1. 우리 주 예수께서는 공적 사역에 들어가신 후, 족장들이 나그네로 떠돌며 살았던 것처럼 많이 다니시고 자주 이동하셨다. 이는 그분의 겸비의 일부였고, 세상에 오신 목적을 위해 지칠 줄 모르는 열심으로 일하셨음을 보여 준다.
2. 그분은 예루살렘에 오래 머무시는 일이 없었다. 예루살렘에서 그분의 설교와 표적은 가장 큰 반향을 불러일으켰지만, 유대 교회의 가장 중요한 사람들이 지배하는 곳에서는 가장 적게 유익을 끼치셨다.
3. 유대 땅으로 오셨을 때 제자들이 함께 왔다. 이들이 "그의 모든 시험 중에 항상 나와 함께 한 자들"이었다(눅 22:28).
4. 거기서 그들과 함께 머무르며 대화하셨다. 더 자유로운 대화를 위해 물러나신 것이다.
5. 거기서 세례를 베푸셨다. 그분이 직접 세례를 주신 것이 아니라 제자들이 그분의 명령과 지시에 따라 주었다(요 4:2). 제자들이 베푼 세례는 그분의 세례였다. 거룩한 예식은 그리스도의 것이지, 비록 연약한 사람들이 집행할지라도.
### II. 세례 요한이 자신의 사역을 계속함 (요 3:23-24)
1. 요한이 세례를 베풀고 있었다. 그리스도의 세례는 본질상 요한의 세례와 같았다. 요한은 그리스도께 증언하였고, 따라서 그들은 서로 상충하거나 방해하지 않았다.
- 그리스도께서는 요한이 사역을 마치기 전에 설교와 세례 사역을 시작하셨다. 요한이 물러날 때 제자들을 받아들일 준비가 되시기 위해서이다.
- 비록 그리스도께서 사역을 이어 받으셨다 해도, 요한은 아직 사역을 계속하였다. 그는 하늘로부터 명을 받았고, 하늘로부터 해임령을 받을 때까지 계속할 것이었다.
2. 그가 세례를 베푼 곳은 살림 근처 애논이었다. 어디에 있는지는 알 수 없지만, 요한은 한 곳에 머물지 않고 자리를 옮겼다. 사역자들은 기회를 따라 이동해야 한다. 그는 물이 많은 곳을 선택했는데, 세례를 베풀 물이 항상 가까이에 있도록 하려는 것이었다.
3. 사람들이 와서 세례를 받았다. 처음처럼 대규모는 아니었지만, 그래도 여전히 나아오는 사람들이 있었다.
4. 요한이 아직 감옥에 갇히지 않았다는 것이 기록되어 있다(요 3:24). 요한은 자유가 있는 한 결코 사역을 그치지 않았다. 오히려 시간이 얼마 남지 않았다는 것을 알았기에 더욱 열심히 일했다.
### III. 요한의 제자들과 유대 사람 사이의 다툼 (요 3:25)
정결 예식에 관한 논쟁이 일어났다. 참으로, 그리스도의 복음은 분쟁이 아니라 평화를 가져온다고는 할 수 없었다.
1. 논쟁자들은 누구인가. 요한의 제자들 일부와 그의 세례를 받지 않은 유대 사람들이었다. 이 다툼에서 요한의 제자들이 먼저 도전하는 쪽이었다. 그리스도의 진리들은 종종 그것들을 방어하기에 준비되지 않은 자들의 경솔함으로 인해 손해를 입어 왔다.
2. 다툼의 주제는 무엇인가. 정결 예식, 즉 종교적 씻음에 관한 것이었다. 요한의 제자들은 그의 세례를 모든 것을 능가하는 것으로 치켜세웠을 것이다. 한편 유대 사람들은 모세의 율법에서 제정된 정결 예식과 장로들의 전통을 변호했을 것이다.
### IV. 요한의 제자들이 스승에게 불평을 토로함 (요 3:26)
그들이 앞서 언급한 반론 때문에 막히고 격앙되어, 스승에게 와서 말했다. "선생님, 요단강 건너편에서 선생님과 함께 계셨고 선생님께서 증언하신 그분이, 보십시오, 세례를 베푸시니 모두가 그분에게로 가고 있습니다." 논쟁하기를 좋아하는 버릇이 이런 결과를 낳았다.
이 불평에서 그들은 자신의 스승에게는 존경을 표하였지만, 우리 구주에 대해서는 매우 가볍게 말하였다.
1. 그리스도께서 자신의 세례 예식을 시작하신 것이 주제넘은 일인 것처럼 암시한다. "요단강 건너편에서 선생님과 함께 계셨던 그분이 세례를 베풀고 있습니다." 마치 요한이 이 의식을 먼저 시작했으니 독점권이 있다는 듯이.
2. 이것이 요한에 대한 배은망덕이라고 암시한다. "선생님께서 증언하신 그분이 세례를 베풉니다." 마치 예수가 자신의 명성을 요한에게 빚지고 있는데, 오히려 그것을 요한에게 불리하게 사용하고 있다는 것처럼. 그러나 그리스도께서는 요한의 증언이 필요 없으셨다(요 5:36). 그분은 요한에게서 받은 것보다 더 많은 영예를 요한에게 주셨다.
3. 그들은 이것이 요한의 세례에 완전한 일식을 일으킬 것이라고 결론짓는다. "모두가 그분에게로 가고 있습니다." 그리스도께 나아오는 자들이 너무 많다고 요한의 제자들이 슬퍼하였다. 그러나 요한은 아무도 그분께 나아오지 않는다고 슬퍼할 것이다. 너무 적다고 생각하는 것이다.
### V. 요한의 제자들의 불평에 대한 요한의 대답 (요 3:27 이하)
제자들은 그가 그들처럼 이 일을 억울하게 여길 것이라 기대했다. 그러나 그리스도께서 이스라엘에게 나타나시는 것은 요한에게 전혀 놀라운 일이 아니었다. 그것은 그가 기대하던 것이요 바라던 것이었다. 그러므로 그는 이 불평을 꾸짖고, 이 기회를 통해 전에 그리스도에 대해 증언했던 것들을 확인시키며, 이스라엘에서 가진 자신의 모든 이익을 기쁘게 그리스도께 넘겨 드렸다. 이 설교에서 복음의 첫 번째 사역자(요한이 그러하다)는 모든 사역자들에게 자신을 낮추고 주 예수를 높이는 탁월한 본보기가 된다.
**1. 요한이 자신을 그리스도와 비교하여 낮추다 (요 3:27-30)**
다른 사람들이 우리를 더 높일수록, 우리는 더욱 자신을 낮추어야 한다.
**(1) 요한이 하나님의 처리에 순복하며 그것으로 만족한다(요 3:27).** "사람은 하늘에서 주시지 않으면 아무것도 받을 수 없다." 이것은 이 경우에 매우 적절한 일반적인 진리다. 서로 다른 직무는 하나님의 섭리에 의해 주어지고, 서로 다른 능력은 하나님의 은혜로 주어진다. 아무도 참된 영예를 스스로 취할 수 없다(히 5:4). 이것은 두 가지 이유로 적용된다.
- [1] 우리보다 더 큰 은사나 더 넓은 사역의 영역을 가진 자들을 부러워해서는 안 되는 이유이다. 요한은 제자들에게 만약 하늘이 주지 않으셨다면 예수께서 이렇게 탁월하지 않으셨을 것이라고 상기시킨다. 제자들이 그것을 억울해한다면, 그들은 하나님이 불공정하고 지혜 없다고 탓하는 것이 된다(마 20:15 참조).
- [2] 비록 다른 이들의 탁월함에 가려지더라도 낙심해서는 안 되는 이유이다.
**(2) 요한이 그리스도에 관해 이전에 한 증언에 호소한다(요 3:28).** "내가 '나는 그리스도가 아니라 그분보다 앞서 보내심을 받은 사람이다'라고 말한 것을, 너희 자신이 증언한다." 요한은 그리스도에 대한 증언에서 얼마나 한결같고 일관성이 있었는지! 대제사장들의 위협이나 자기 제자들의 아첨도 그의 주제를 바꾸게 할 수 없었다.
[1] 이것은 불평의 부당함에 대한 제자들을 향한 질책이다. 요한이 "나는 그리스도가 아니다"라고 말하지 않았던가? 그렇다면 왜 나를 그리스도와 경쟁자로 세우려 하는가?
[2] 이것은 자신이 제자들에게 이 오류에 빠질 기회를 준 적이 없다는 위안이기도 하다. 신실한 사역자들에게 위안이 된다. 그들의 백성이 범하는 지나침에 대해 자신의 가르침에 근거를 두지 않았다는 사실이 위안이 된다.
**(3) 요한이 그리스도의 이익과 영향력의 증대에 깊이 만족함을 고백한다(요 3:29).** 그는 이것을 우아한 비유로 표현한다(요 3:29).
[1] 그는 구주를 신랑에 비유한다. "신부를 차지하는 이는 신랑이다. 모두가 그분에게로 가고 있습니까? 잘 되었습니다. 그 외에 어디 가겠습니까? 그분이 사람들 마음의 왕좌를 차지하셨습니까? 그 외에 누가 차지해야 하겠습니까? 그것은 그분의 권리입니다." 그리스도는 구약에서 신랑으로 예언되었다(시 45편). 말씀이 육신이 되신 것은 본성의 차이가 결혼의 장벽이 되지 않도록 하기 위해서이다.
[2] 그는 자신을 신랑의 친구에 비유한다. 신랑을 섬기고, 그를 위해 좋은 말을 하고, 결혼이 성사될 때, 특히 신부를 얻게 될 때 기뻐하는 친구. 요한이 설교하고 세례를 베풀며 한 모든 것은 그분을 소개하기 위한 것이었다. 그분이 오셨으니 그가 원하던 것을 얻은 것이다.
주목하라. 첫째, 신실한 사역자들은 신랑의 친구들이다. 그들은 그리스도를 사람들의 애정과 선택에 추천한다. 둘째, 신랑의 친구들은 서서 신랑의 음성을 들어야 한다. 곧 그에게서 지시를 받고 그의 명령에 주목해야 한다. 셋째, 영혼들이 믿음과 사랑 안에서 예수 그리스도와 연합하는 것이 선한 모든 사역자들의 기쁨을 충만케 한다. 그들에게 이보다 더 큰 기쁨은 없다.
**(4) 요한이 그리스도의 명성과 영향력이 높아지고 자신의 것은 줄어드는 것이 매우 합당하고 필요한 일임을 인정한다(요 3:30).** "그분은 흥하여야 하고, 나는 쇠하여야 한다."
[1] 그는 그리스도의 나라가 성장하는 것을 보고 기뻐했다. "그분은 흥하여야 합니다." 그리스도의 나라는 자라는 나라다. 아침 빛처럼, 겨자씨처럼.
[2] 그는 이것의 결과가 자신의 영향력이 줄어드는 것임에도 전혀 싫어하지 않았다. "나는 쇠하여야 합니다." 그리스도의 영광이 빛날 때 다른 모든 영광이 바래진다. 만약 우리의 감소가 그리스도의 이름을 높이는 데 조금이라도 기여할 수 있다면, 우리는 기꺼이 그것을 받아들이고, 그리스도께서 전부가 되시도록 아무것도 아닌 것이 되기를 기뻐해야 한다.
**2. 요한이 그리스도를 높이며 제자들에게 그분에 관해 가르침 (요 3:31-36)**
**(1) 그리스도의 위엄 있는 인격에 관해(요 3:31).** "위에서 오시는 이는 모든 것 위에 계신다."
[1] 그분의 신적 기원을 전제한다. 위에서, 하늘로부터 오신 분은 신적 근원과 신적 본성을 가지셨다. 하늘로부터 오신 분 외에는 아무도 하늘의 뜻을 보여 주거나 하늘로 가는 길을 안내할 자격이 없다.
[2] 이로부터 그분의 최고 권위를 추론한다. 그분은 모든 것 위에 계신다. 그분과 선례를 다투는 것은 무모한 자만이다. 예수 그리스도의 영예에 대해 말할 때, 우리는 단지 "그분은 모든 것 위에 계신다"라고 말할 수 있을 뿐이다.
**(2) 그분의 교리의 탁월성과 확실성에 관해.**
[1] 그리스도의 교리는 무오하게 확실하다(요 3:32). "그분은 자기가 본 것과 들은 것을 증언하시지만, 아무도 그분의 증언을 받아들이지 않는다."
a. 그리스도의 신적 지식이 있다. 그분은 자신이 완전히 알고 깊이 친숙한 것만을 증언하셨다. 선지자들은 사자를 통해 중개적으로 알려진 것을 증언했다. 그러나 그리스도는 직접 하나님으로부터 들었고 직접 보셨다. 복음은 철학의 가설이나 새로운 이론처럼 믿거나 믿지 않을 자유가 있는 의심스러운 의견이 아니다. 그것은 영원한 진리인 하나님의 뜻의 계시다.
b. 그분의 신적 은혜와 선하심이 있다. 그분이 보고 들은 것을 우리에게 알리시기를 기뻐하셨다.
c. 대부분의 사람들이 믿지 않는 것은 슬픈 일이다. 요한의 제자들은 모두가 그리스도께로 가고 있다고 슬퍼했다. 너무 많다고 생각했다. 그러나 요한은 아무도 그분께 오지 않는다고 슬퍼한다. 너무 적다고 생각한다. 죄인들의 불신앙은 성도들의 슬픔이다.
[2] 선택된 남은 자들의 믿음을 칭찬할 기회를 얻는다(요 3:33). "그분의 증언을 받아들인 사람은 하나님께서 참되시다는 것에 인을 친 것이다." 하나님은 우리가 인을 치지 않아도 참되시다. 그러나 믿음으로 우리는 그분의 참되심을 인정하는 명예와 의무를 우리 자신이 지게 된다. 하나님의 약속들은 모두 예(yes)이고 아멘이다. 믿음으로 우리는 그 아멘을 한다.
[3] 그것은 신적 교리로 추천된다(요 3:34). "하나님께서 보내신 분은 하나님의 말씀을 전하시니, 이는 하나님께서 성령을 한없이 주시기 때문이다." 선지자들은 하늘로부터 편지를 가져온 사자들과 같았다. 그러나 그리스도께서는 대사의 자격으로 오셔서 우리와 협상하신다.
1. 그분은 하나님의 말씀을 전하셨다. 그분이 말씀하신 것들에는 인간적 나약함의 흔적이 없다.
2. 그분은 다른 어떤 선지자도 하지 않은 방식으로 말씀하셨다. "하나님께서 성령을 한없이 주시기 때문이다." 하나님은 선지자들에게는 제한된 분량으로 성령을 주셨다(왕하 2:9-10; 고전 12:4). 그러나 그리스도에게는 분량 없이 주셨다. 모든 충만함이 그 안에 거하였고(골 1:19), 신성의 충만함이, 헤아릴 수 없는 충만함이 있었다.
**(3) 그분께 위임된 권세와 권위에 관해(요 3:35-36).** 이것이 그분께 모든 다른 이들보다 뛰어난 탁월함을 주고 훨씬 더 탁월한 이름을 드린다.
[1] 그분은 아버지의 사랑받는 아들이시다(요 3:35). "아버지께서는 아들을 사랑하셔서." 선지자들은 종들로서 신실했으나, 그리스도는 아들로서 그러하셨다. 그들은 종들로서 사용되었으나, 그리스도는 아들로서 사랑받으셨다. 아버지께서는 겸비의 상태에서도 그분을 덜 사랑하지 않으셨다.
[2] 그분은 만물의 주이시다. "모든 것을 그의 손에 맡기셨다." 주목하라. 중보자의 손에 만물이 맡겨진 것은 그리스도의 영예이며 모든 그리스도인의 말할 수 없는 위로이다.
- 모든 권세가 주어졌다(마 28:18 참조). 그분은 만물의 주이시다. 천사들은 그분의 종들이다. 마귀들은 그분의 포로들이다.
- 모든 은혜가 전달의 통로로서 그분의 손에 주어졌다. 하나님이 인류에게 주시려 의도하신 모든 것들이 그리스도의 손에 예탁되었다. 이것은 믿음에 큰 격려가 된다.
[3] 그분은 영원한 행복의 위대한 조건이 된 믿음의 대상이시다(요 3:36). "아들을 믿는 사람은 영원한 생명을 가지지만, 아들에게 순종하지 않는 사람은 생명을 보지 못하고 도리어 하나님의 진노가 그 위에 머물러 있다."
여기에 요한이 그리스도와 그분의 교리에 대해 말씀하신 것의 적용이 있다. 이것은 모든 피조물에게 전파되어야 할 복음의 요약이다(막 16:16).
**첫째, 모든 참된 그리스도인들의 복된 상태.** "아들을 믿는 사람은 영원한 생명을 가진다."
1. 모든 참된 그리스도인의 특징은 그가 하나님의 아들을 믿는다는 것이다. 단지 그분의 말씀이 진실하다고 믿는 것뿐 아니라, 그분을 믿고, 그분께 동의하고, 그분을 신뢰하는 것이다.
2. 참된 신자들은 지금 이미 영원한 생명을 가진다. 나중에 갖게 될 뿐 아니라, 지금 가진다.
- 그들은 그것에 대한 매우 훌륭한 담보를 가지고 있다. 하나님의 아들을 통해 그것을 가지며, 이 생명의 보증으로 성령을 가진다.
- 그들은 현재의 복된 예감을 가진다. 하나님과의 현재의 교제와 그분의 사랑의 표징들 안에서.
**둘째, 믿지 않는 자들의 선고.** "아들에게 순종하지 않는 사람은 생명을 보지 못하고 도리어 하나님의 진노가 그 위에 머물러 있다." 불신앙이 진실로 크고 저주받는 죄라고 불릴 수 있다. 왜냐하면 그것은 우리를 다른 모든 죄의 죄책 아래 남겨 두기 때문이다. 그것은 치료제에 반하는 죄다.
---
원주석
- 번역원본
commentary-section/mhm-jhn-3-22-36(Matthew Henry, PD) - CC0-1.0 · Sonnet 위탁 번역 · 성경 인용은 WEB(PD) 기반