The Bible says in John 3:16 that whoever believes in God’s Son will have eternal life. Jesus Himself spoke those words.
The Gospel writers sprinkle evidence throughout their books that Jesus was that Son. Consequently, we would be accurate to say that whoever believes in Jesus will have eternal life. But what exactly are we to believe about Jesus? That He existed? That eternal life is in Him? That He is God’s Son?
Perhaps we should start by saying what this phrase does NOT mean.
We are not to believe that Jesus was a good example. Yes, He was, and we are to follow Him, to live as He lived, to obey what He said. But doing all that is 1) not possible apart from supernatural power; and 2) not going to give us eternal life. We know this from the totality of Scripture.
Let’s use a sobering example. Say a married man is unfaithful to his wife just once, but in that one act of infidelity, he contracts a venereal disease. No matter how faithful he acts from that time forth, he will not cancel out his faithless act. His fidelity is what he owed his wife all along, and giving it to her before or after his adultery does not scrub out the faithless act or its consequence.
So too, if someone says he believes in Jesus as a model for how to live, good for him. If he could actually do so, he would now be living as he should have all along. But this new behavior would not scrub away the life lived in contradiction to Jesus’s example. In other words, living as Jesus lived cannot bring that eternal life John 3:16 promises.
Believing in Jesus also does not mean believing that He will make this life more comfortable for us or that He will fix our heartaches, keep our loved ones safe, help us to get a better job, or make us better wives or husbands. He may do those things. But the truth is, He wants to do more.
Two missionary couples were killed last week by Somali pirates. If their belief was in Jesus making them happy, they must have been sorely disappointed when their yacht was captured. I suspect they were not, because their chosen mission was to distribute Bibles. I suspect, therefore, they believed the Bible and knew that their lives were more than comfort and ease.
Today in LA a fireman who died in the line of duty was buried, his funeral televised for all the area to see. His pastor, among others who spoke, gave a stirring testimony of this man’s faith — not in Jesus who would give him a comfortable life, but Jesus who assured him of eternal life.
Believing in Jesus is also not taking to heart His teaching. Like the challenge to live as He lived, this one is also impossible and insufficient.
What, then, does it mean to believe in Jesus?
First it means to believe in who He is — God’s Son, the promised Messiah, the suffering Savior, the risen Lord, the soon to return King.
Second it means to believe in what He has done — while we were yet sinners, He died for us, bearing the punishment we deserved for our wayward hearts and willful rebellion; then He rose again that we too who were dead in our sins could be alive to God. We also must believe that His sacrifice as our substitute is sufficient to reconcile us to our Holy God. That, after all, is the point and purpose of the promise — eternal life means life with God enjoying his abiding love and fellowship and presence, here in part, after this life in uninterrupted fullness.





And Third it means to trust that He did this for me, and know that it is only in his strength that I can accomplish what he has commanded. Head knowledge of these things is still not enough. This knowledge must be trusted enough for me to step out onto the seas Jesus calls us to tread- knowing full well in my own power I would sink- yet trusting in his power that I can accomplish what he has called me to do. My life is dependent on His. That is Belief in Jesus.
wow. Nice.
Good one, Rebecca. And thanks, Patrick, i was thinking there needed to be a third, yet there is more still. To believe in who He is, and what He has done, and trusting completely in Him makes us want to know Him more intimately and have an ongoing, ever-expanding personal relationship with Him. In this “sanctification” process, do we not grow to better fit His image within us? Then, as we grow, don’t our repentant hearts, our compassionate and loving hearts grow another three sizes as well?
What are we believing if we believe in Jesus?
Probably the most unimaginable thing there is – that the holy Creator became the creature to suffer and die to redeem the likes of me.
Amen!
Ahem. Should the Holy Creator be called a “creature”? Not in my opinion,but i do hear what you’re saying.
Len, I know it sounds bizarre, but Bob is right. God took the form of man, in essence becoming His creature.
And Patrick, thanks for adding your thoughts.
I appreciate all the discussion and feedback.
Becky
I like your site and your ministry! Your posts make people think. I like most of the resulting discussions here unless they become contentious, argumentative, rants about minor points of doctrine at which point I feel that the enemy laughs while he drives a wedge and watches the Church splinter. I am only an ordinary guy and a relatively new Christian, but I like to try to add to the discussion. Yes Bob is right in everything he said and he said it beautifully. I would like to clarify my reasoning, though. To me, there are only two classifications for all things in existence: God and Not God. Everything Not God was created by God, thus being a creation. Therefore, is Jesus God, or Not God? Creator of all things, or created? Was Jesus made or begotten? Is He the Word by which, and for which, all things were created, or not?
Thanks for giving me an “ear”
Len