Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Podcast: 1 John: Water, Blood, and Spirit

Podcast feed: Subscribe This is a transcript of one of our recent podcasts. To subscribe to the podcast using iTunes, please click here. To listen to the podcast without iTunes, please follow this link.

This is he who came by water and blood – Jesus Christ; not by the water only but by the water and the blood. And the Spirit is the one who testifies, because the Spirit is the truth. For there are three that testify: the Spirit and the water and the blood; and these three agree. If we receive the testimony of men, the testimony of God is greater, for this is the testimony of God that he has borne concerning his Son. Whoever believes in the Son of God has the testimony in himself. Whoever does not believe God has made him a liar, because he has not believed in the testimony that God has borne concerning his Son. And this is the testimony, that God gave us eternal life, and this life is in his Son.
-1 John 5:6-11


I wasn’t really looking forward to it because this passage has just about as many interpretations as there are commentators. Albert Barnes, for one, lists six interpretations, and that’s in one commentary alone. The ultimate meaning of the passage as a whole is very clear, and very wonderful, but trying to figure out the particulars is pretty hard. Very honestly, I’m not sure what John is getting at here. I have an opinion, but I don’t know that John had this particular thing in mind when he wrote it. So I’m going to give this one a stab and see what we come up with, but with the hope and understanding that it is getting us to verse 11 here, which is the real wonder of this passage. Hopefully we won’t let this business of water and blood distract us from where John is going. It is that clear conclusion that should draw us, even if we don’t understand the rest.

We’ll get there. Stick with me. “This is he who came by water and blood – Jesus Christ; not by the water only but by the water and the blood. And the Spirit is the one who testifies, because the Spirit is the truth. For there are three that testify: the Spirit and the water and the blood; and these three agree.”

Deuteronomy 19:15 tells us that “Only on the evidence of two witnesses or of three witnesses shall a charge be established.” Both Jesus and Paul make reference to this “two or three witnesses” idea, and John is here giving us the witnesses to the truth of Christ.

The real sticking point here is the “water” is the passage.
Most people say the blood is His death, but the water is more difficult. So I’m going to throw out some possible interpretations. The water, some say, is for His baptism. He was baptized by John the Baptizer, and the Spirit bore witness to that. Some say it is OUR baptism, as a symbol of our salvation, bought by His blood. Others will say it refers to when blood and water mixed came out of him when he was speared on the Cross.

The water represents, I believe, His baptism, at which time the Father identified Jesus and the spirit descended on Him. That Spirit becomes another witness, for the Spirit helps guide Jesus through life without sin. His words, His actions, and even His thoughts were perfect, and people could see that. If you read the Gospel accounts and watch for the account of the crowd, they can tell that there is something different in Jesus. They tell us that no one ever spoke as He did.

The blood is the final witness, for upon the Cross He died a death that He did not deserve. It is this Blood that saves us, for He was dying for God’s children. The passage tells us that Jesus did not come by water alone. John the Baptizer baptized by water, and it was a baptism by repentance. And repentance is great, except that it doesn’t satisfy justice. There is still a price to be paid, and the writer of Hebrews reminds us that without the shedding of blood, there is no forgiveness of sins. So Jesus came by water and blood both.

The Cross is such an amazing testimony for who Jesus is, for it is the culmination of redemptive history. God loves us so much, and He wants us to be saved, but we, like wayward children, have gone about our own pleasures and wickedness. We have sinned against a holy and just God. We have embraced inequity rather than righteousness. We have sinned, and that sin is not some minor thing. Sin is crime against God. Every greedy, lustful, or prideful thought is a sin against Him. Those sins deserve punishment.

And the Cross was that punishment for those who repent and have faith in Him. The Cross provides that Blood that we need to be forgiven. Jesus died the death we deserve so that we could have the life that He earned. If you wonder who Jesus is, then look to the Cross. There died not just another guy. There died not some other sinner who deserved it. There died the Son of God.

His baptism, His life, and His death, all testify together that Jesus is God.

But there is more, because these three combined make up the first of a new set of three witnesses. We know who Jesus is because of the historical truths of His life, death, and resurrection. But there is more, because God the Father also testifies about Jesus. How does this happen? By His words to us.

The Bible is about Jesus. It was started thousands of years before the birth of Christ, and yet it is about Him. The whole Old Testament points forward to Him. There are hundreds of prophecies about the Messiah, and Jesus is that Messiah. The Father testified of Him when He inspired the Old Testament. Then He testified again when He brought Jesus back to life on the third day, proving that He was God. Do you want testimony about Jesus? Look for the body. It’s not there. That is strong testimony, my friends. The Jews of the first century, when arguing against Christianity, never just took officials to the tomb and pointed inside, saying, “See? He’s still there.” That would have destroyed Christianity at the very start if they had done it, but they didn’t. They didn’t do it because the tomb was empty.

The Father testified further through the writers of the New Testament, giving them the Word of God to transmit to us in the Bible. Creation itself is a testimony, because through Jesus was everything made. The sunset tonight is a testimony to God. Creation and the Word stand as the witness of God that Jesus is the Messiah.

Finally, there is an internal testimony. This is not some warm feeling in your belly, but a change when we are saved. What has John been telling us the whole time? He’s been telling us that once we become Christians, the Spirit begins to change us so that we start actually living as we should. It is a work of God in us, because once we are saved, we are in Him. So what is this testimony? It is the change within us. Don’t take this verse out of context and say, “I have a quiver in my liver, so I must be saved!” You cannot look at the whole of 1 John and come to that conclusion.

Three witness, and they all point to the truth of the Gospel. Jesus was God, and He died for us, and yet He lives. He lives! If you deny that, then you are calling God a liar, because He has given us these testimonies to teach us of Himself.

“And this is the testimony, that God gave us eternal life, and this life is in his Son.” Jesus told us, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6).

This is the way to life. In Jesus there is life, and in no one else. You cannot earn your way to eternal life. You cannot follow some false god and expect to live. Jesus is the way. Examine the testimonies, for they are true. These witnesses all point to the Cross, where Jesus took on the sins of the children of God and died for them. Eternal life is a free gift, not to be earned, because it was already earned by the only one who could do it – Jesus.

If you are a believer, you will find that these witnesses remain with us. By water we are baptized, by Blood forgiven, and by the Spirit led.

No comments: