Very few of us will be called upon to literally lay down our lives for the faith. But Jesus calls all of us to lay down our lives for the faithful.
Jesus is not concerned primarily with you and I being able to persuade other people into the Christian faith through arguments and eloquence, though we should be passionate witnesses and able to speak articulately about our faith. And He’s not concerned primarily that others see us as kind, generous, patient or peace-loving people. As important as these and other traits are, of all the good impressions we might make on non-Christian people, the impression He most wants others to have when they encounter a Christian is, ‘Man, this person really loves Jesus.’
If John’s gospel were a symphony, John 16 would be in the middle of the great crescendo, the building of events in volume and intensity from His triumphal entry into Jerusalem riding on the back of a donkey colt to carrying on His back a Roman cross. As the God-man fully knowing and controlling every event and eventuality leading to His bearing…
God doesn’t look at you and I and see imperfect obedience; He sees the perfect obedience of His Son and counts it as our obedience. Don’t fear, dear children of God, being cut off and cast out by our loving God and Father. Let your joy be full in knowing that you’re loved. And prove you love Him by dwelling in His love for you and working to improve your obedience to Christ every day.
We continue in God’s love when we cherish God’s Son. And we cherish God’s Son by continuing to believe and receive what He continues to make known to us: His Father’s name, His Father’s love, God’s love for God—the love that God so graciously extends to us in the Person of His Son, Jesus.
That God wants to save sinners is clear in other verses in this conversation; but why He wants to save those sinners isn’t. That God sent His Son is clear in other statements by Jesus; but the nature of that sending isn’t. Why does God want to save sinners? Because He loves them! How did God send His Son? As a loan? As wages? No. As a gift! “For God so loved the world that GAVE his only Son.”
God’s love doesn’t begin at “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son…” It begins much earlier—eternally earlier in fact. It begins with “For God so loved His only begotten Son”!