Behold,
what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called
the sons of God. 1 John 3:1
We are
exploring this text in a way not usually studied, but the way we are divinely instructed
to do as we seek to understand God's Word.
"Meditate on the Scriptures until the
understanding, the gate to the door to the heart, is opened to comprehend its
requirements and our
dependence." {HP277}
In this
study we will see a little of what God means when He calls us "sons of
God". The Greek word here
translated "sons" is not the word that would generally be used to
denote a son as "a male child of a particular father." (In our discussion here I will simply
transliterate the Greek word, {in orange} but separating its parts
is not germane to our discussion.)
The word in our text rendered
"sons" is teknon, which is "offspring, or children", but
more in a metaphorical way such as:
"the name transferred to that intimate and
reciprocal relationship formed between men by the bonds of love, friendship,
trust, just as between parents and children." Teknon
also carries the sense of: "anything who depends upon it, is possessed by
a desire or affection for it, is addicted to it." The "it" in these definitions
refers to the bond, or the intimate union that is necessary to this kind of
binding together.
(These definitions are from Thayer's Greek Definitions)
Let's look at some of the ideas
presented in this text as we meditate on it and seek to learn some of the glory
of God's love that is revealed in this concept of being called by God as His
"sons".
First of all let your mind seek to
grasp the idea that God is not thinking of us merely as offspring, as beings He
created. What God has in mind for us, our purpose, the reason He created us, is
so we can enter into the very highest, intimate, and reciprocal relationship
that is "higher than the highest human thought can reach...."(Ed18) We are to have a unity with our Heavenly
Father that is similar to what He has with His Son and our Savior, Jesus
Christ. While we can never be divine as
Jesus is, yet we were made to have the unity with God that Jesus exhibited in
His existence as a human while on this earth.
In heaven we will enjoy a privilege based upon the position Jesus has as
our Elder Brother.
When I was in my 30's, my Dad and
I were talking in the hallway at church one day. Someone saw us and asked: "having a father-son talk?" I will never forget the feeling I had when my
Dad said: "No, we're having a man
to man talk." Obviously I was still
his son, but our relationship entered a higher and closer level. He was showing respect to me as a young man,
and my love and respect for him increased.
As our definition of
"sons" above says: "the name transferred to that intimate and reciprocal relationship
formed between men by the bonds of love, friendship, trust, just as between
parents and children." What must
God think of humanity when His Son became human, and then for all eternity
carries that humanity into the highest heaven!
Think about the manner, the kind of love, God has for us because of
Jesus.
This
leads to further thoughts on what it means to be called God's sons. "Anything who depends upon it, is
possessed by a desire or affection for it, is addicted to it." First look at what it means to me as a human
to be called God's son. To have this
bond God is speaking of means I must depend on it. I must realize that my standing with God is
based on dependence, I must depend fully and totally on Him. I have to be possessed by a desire to belong
to Him, in fact I need to have a strong affection, I must LOVE the idea, even
to the point of being addicted to that dependence on God.
Sin
began because Lucifer wanted to depend on himself. When God showed His love and Lucifer was
convinced of his error, he refused to acknowledge his dependence and sought to
be totally independent. We must be
transformed form sinners who think we can do something, anything, on our own. We have to come to the point where we will
never, ever, think of being independent of God.
Rather we must love our dependence.
Even more, be addicted to dependence on God.
This is
the point Jesus tried to reveal to us.
Though He is, and was still while on earth, a divine member of the
Godhead, He said: "I can of mine own self do
nothing: as I hear, I judge: and my judgment is just; because I seek not mine
own will, but the will of the Father which hath sent me." (John 5:30) All His words were what God gave Him to
say. "The words that I speak unto
you I speak not of myself: but the Father that dwelleth in me...." (John
14:10) Even now that He is in
heaven the messages, the revelations we receive from Him originate with the
Father. We are plainly told that the
Revelation of Jesus Christ is: "what
God gave unto Him... and He (Jesus) sent and signified it by His angel unto His
servant John...." (Revelation 1:1)
Let's
think about this for a bit. From all
eternity, from an infinity we cannot comprehend, the Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit have always been united in love, purpose, and activity. Their unity was such that though they are
each individually Divine in all ways, yet they had never done anything "on
their own" as we would say. Never
acted with a separateness from each other.
Such is their unity that though they are three individuals, they are yet
One God. This adds something to my
comprehension of the terror Jesus experienced on Calvary.
Beginning
in Gethsemane, and culminating on the cross hear again His agonizing cry: "My God, My God, why have you forsaken
Me!?" Think of some of the
words from Proverbs 8 - "The LORD possessed Me in the beginning
of His way, before His works of old. I
was set up from everlasting, from the beginning, before the earth was.... I was by Him as One brought up with Him. I was daily His delight, rejoicing always
before Him." (V.22-30) This
unity Christ carried with Him all during His earthly life. His greatest delight, the source of all His
joy was found in His union with our Father.
Then it
was broken. "He trod the winepress
alone." Alone! For the first time in His eternal existence
the Son was alone. To top it off it was
an aloneness caused by a purposeful forsaking by the Father. My sin broke up the eternal union, the union
that had never been breached before!
Oh how terrible sin must be. How
terrible MY sin must be! So great is God's
love that He would endure infinite pain and suffering so we could again have that
intimate and reciprocal relationship formed by the bonds of love, friendship,
and trust. He wants us to be more than
just offspring. Our Father wants us to
be one with Him, in fulfillment of Jesus' prayer: "That they all may be one; as thou,
Father, art in me, and I in
thee, that they also may be one in us"
(John 17:21)
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