At the time of the writing of John, it is clear that the high Christology of God in Christ has been worked out quite fully. This would be, in no small part, due to the efforts of men such as the Apostle Paul, whose preaching, teaching, and letters had been a major influence in the development of what could be called Christian orthodoxy. It was the love of God, demonstrated by His grace and mercy while being firmly rooted in His faithfulness to His covenant and His creation, that best explained the whole of the Christ-event (incarnation, ministry, death, Resurrection, ascension).
Now, though it would be both challenging and entertaining, we are not going to explore every use of “love” or one of its derivatives within the Johannine corpus. To do so would take us far afield of our primary task, which is ascertaining the way in which a disciple of Jesus is to define love, based on the terms on offer in the various John writings, and in accordance with Jesus’ command of the thirteenth chapter to “love one another.” However, we do begin with the first use of “love” in the Gospel of John, as it does lay the groundwork for what will follow. Following up on our assertion that God’s faithfulness to His covenant and His creation was foundational for His actions in and through His Christ, it only makes sense that the first use of love, forming the premise of the way in which we are to understand the insisted upon love for one another on John’s own terms, is the well-known sixteenth verse of the third chapter. As this Gospel receives its oral performance, the very first mention of this foundational element for the Johannine community, falls from the lips of Jesus we hear “For this is the way God loved the world: He gave His one and only Son, so that everyone who believes in Him will not perish but have eternal life.”
For John then, we learn that giving is foundational for love. However, it is not giving for the sake of giving, but giving that is purposed in the direction of redemption. The concept of redemption provides the context for the tension between perishing and eternal life. The interpretive framework that stands behind the contrast between perishing and eternal life would have been that of exile and exodus. For a Jew of the first century (and we can surmise that the author and the audience of John were primarily Jewish, and if not Jewish by descent, well- instructed in the history of the Jewish people, as it is only in being well versed in the story of God’s covenant and His activities for and through His covenant people that the message of the Gospel of Christ is going to make any sense whatsoever, especially in light of the fact that Christianity is simply a messianic Jewish movement centered upon Jesus), unlike the vast majority of overly Greek-influenced Christendom in the early twenty-first century, perishing would not have produced thoughts concerning an eternity in hell. Likewise, “eternal life” would not have conjured up thoughts of going to heaven when one died. Rather, perishing would have been equated to exile (according to Levitical and Deuteronomic curses, as well as the continued oppression of Israel under foreign powers), whereas eternal life would have been equated with exodus into a promised land. That promised land would have been understood as God’s renewed creation (God’s kingdom come on earth with all things set to right), enjoyed by those that have been resurrected to new life with bodies suited for that glorious age.
Therefore, what we see is that the love of God (for John) must be understood in accordance with the coming of God’s kingdom on earth. So immediately, based upon the foundation that has already been laid in our study up to this point, we get the sense that the love of one another that will evidence the fact that one is a disciple of Jesus is love that serves as a signal that the kingdom of God has come and is coming. This is reinforced by Jesus’ statement that love between and among His followers would be modeled on His love for them. Since John is operating with a very high Christology in which Jesus’ is presented as God manifest in the flesh from the very outset (John 1:1), the love of Jesus for His disciples can be equated with God’s love for the world. So along those lines, it would not be a stretch to say that love, as desired by Jesus (according to John) must function redemptively. It is this thought that will serves as our guide.
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