Saturday, March 9, 2024

John 3:16-21: Snake Clowns

Presented to the Alberni Valley Community during the Ministerial Lenten Service at Christian life Church, 10 March 2024 by Major Michael Ramsay

 

The following is allegedly from a Peace Corps Manual for volunteers working in the Amazon Jungle. It tells what to do in case an anaconda attacks you:

1. If you are attacked by an anaconda do not run. The snake is faster than you are.

2. Lie flat on the ground. Put your arms tight against your sides, your legs tight against one another.

3. Tuck your chin in.

4. The snake will come and begin to nudge and climb over your body.

5. Do not panic.

6. After the snake has examined you, it will begin to swallow you from your feet and always from the end. Permit the snake to swallow your feet and ankles. Do not panic.

7. The snake will now begin to swallow your legs into its body. You must lie perfectly still. This will take a long time.

8. When the snake has reached your knees, slowly and with as little movement as possible, reach down, take your knife and very gently slide it into the side of the snake’s mouth between the edge of its mouth and your leg, then suddenly rip upwards, severing the snake’s head.

9. Be sure you have your knife.

Our Gospel reading today is also about snakes. At least the first verses, John 3:14&15: “Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the wilderness, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, that everyone who believes may have eternal life in him.”

 

We know to what this is referring, right? Remember the Exodus? God delivers the Israelites; they began complaining and so suffer the natural consequences. In this case the consequences are snakes. Numbers 21:6-7:

6 Then the Lord sent venomous snakes among them; they bit the people and many Israelites died. 7 The people came to Moses and said, “We sinned when we spoke against the Lord and against you. Pray that the Lord will take the snakes away from us.” So Moses prayed for the people.

 

Who here likes snakes? Who here likes big snakes and poisonous snakes? And there is even more. “The Hebrew phrase hannehashim hasserapim, [here means literally] ‘the burning snakes’ or ‘the snakes that produce burning’. The Lord sent these poisonous serpents among the Israelites and they bite them and they die - probably painfully.

So the Israelites then realize what they are doing by blaming God and rejecting the very life that He is providing for them. They realize their sin and they repent of it. God then tells Moses that He will yet again save these people. Vss 8-9:

“The Lord said to Moses, ‘Make a snake and put it up on a pole; anyone who is bitten can look at it and live.’  So Moses made a bronze snake and put it up on a pole. Then when anyone was bitten by a snake and looked at the bronze snake, they lived.”

 

This is great and this is exciting. This deliverance from the serpents meant so much to the Israelites that they actually kept that bronze snake around for a long time to remember this miracle. They kept this symbol of what God had done with them their whole time in the desert. They kept this bronze snake with them throughout the whole life and leadership of Joshua, son of Nun during the conquest of Canaan. They kept the bronze snake safe and secure for generations. They kept it through the roughly 400 years of alternating oppression and liberation in the time of the Judges. They kept this bronze snake with them through the entire existence of the United Kingdom: through the reigns of Kings Saul, David, and Solomon. They kept this bronze serpent during the divided kingdoms, using it during worship, through many kings and political administrations, through many wars and trials and tribulations and throughout all these generations. They used this snake in worship for much longer a time period than Canada or the US has even existed. For hundreds of years they used this bronze snake as part of their worship and then, 1 Kings 18:1-4:

In the third year of Hoshea son of Elah king of Israel, Hezekiah son of Ahaz king of Judah began to reign… He did what was right in the eyes of the Lord, just as his father David had done. He removed the high places, smashed the sacred stones and cut down the Asherah poles. He broke into pieces the bronze snake Moses had made, for up to that time the Israelites had been burning incense to it. (It was called Nehushtan.)

 

To worship also means to adore. They had started to adore, to worship a symbol of their salvation instead of or as well as God. We know it is only Jesus - as John 3 reminds us – through whom our salvation actually comes.

 

A question for us here today then: do we commit the same sin? Is there anything in our life or our worship that needs to be smashed like Nehushtan? is there anything that we have used as an aid to worship God that now we may adore alongside God? Maybe a church practice – singing certain hymns? Maybe the way one dresses on Sunday, the church choir, the pipe organ – these are historical things that maybe have been broken from our worship?

 

One of the Good things that came out of the Protestant Reformation was the smashing of many ceremonial Nehushtans. Sadly they possibly took up some new ones.

 

What about us today? Are there practices that maybe we have used as part of worship for hundreds of years that may need to be smashed because we adore them too much? What about our sermons? Do we worship those? Do we say we are not a church if we don’t have a 15-to-45-minute sermon? (I was actually scolded once for have too short of a sermon, believe it or not?) What about our ceremonies? Do we worship ceremonies alongside or instead of Jesus? What about something as important – or not as important – as baptism? Do we say that if you don’t baptise people the ‘right way’… immersion, as an infant, as an adult believer, by sprinkling, or by some other means… Do we say that if you don’t utter the correct words when you baptise people… or if you don’t offer them communion in the right way then God can’t, won’t or didn’t save them? Our ceremonies, our traditions, or anything else that has been ordained to help us worship God – they are a benefit as long as they bring us closer to the Father, Son and Holy Ghost. As soon as we worship them alongside God even if we have practiced them for millennia, they need to be smashed like Nehushtan.

 

Now our relationship with God is corporate but it is also individual so if there is anything in our lives: a person, place, or thing, that is a rival for God in our hearts – someone or something we adore more than or as much as Him. That is a Nehushtan and needs to be destroyed.

 

I think it is significant that God and the Bible placed this reminder right here in our text and our story, right before one of the most memorized verses in the Bible. God reminds us here that our salvation is only through Jesus and adding anything to that is idolatry. It is only Jesus through whom our salvation comes. And that brings us to John 3:16.

 

John 3:16 is one of the verses in the Bible that almost everyone knows. If people memorize no other verse in the Bible, they usually memorize this one. Let me hear you all say John 3:16 together: “For God so loved the world that He sent His only begotten Son that whosever believeth in Him shall not perish but have everlasting life, John 3:16.”

The fact that we pretty much all know it is neat because here today, we have people of many different ages from many different parts of the country who were brought up in many different traditions and yet we all know John 3:16 by heart. I think that points to its importance. Martin Luther said the words of John 3:16  are “able to make the sad happy, [and] the dead alive if only the heart believes them firmly”
[1]  John 3:16 has long been my favourite verse in the Bible.

 

Now maybe I am dating myself a bit. Any of you who are at least my age and who are or used to be sports fans do you remember back in the 1980s when it seemed that you couldn’t turn on a sporting event even without seeing someone hold up a sign that said ‘John 3:16’ on it? Do you know the story about how that got started? (The following is based on the account by Dr. David Wendel)

In 1976, hoping to gain some attention, Rollen Stewart had the idea to become famous by popping up in the background of TV sporting events… It didn’t work – not at first.

Then in his depression after the 1980 Super Bowl, he had a conversion experience while watching a preacher on TV. he then began showing up at sporting events holding the soon to be very famous sign which read, "John 3:16". Later accompanied by his second wife, he spent his time traveling to sporting events around the United States, living in his car, existing on just savings and donations. All in all, he figures he was seen on TV and in person at more than a thousand sporting events causing many people to open their Bibles and read, starting with John 3:16, the Gospel of Salvation…. Until… his wife left him… because he choked her for holding up a sign in the wrong location… his car was totalled by a drunk driver… his money ran out, and he wound up homeless in L.A.
Feeling harassed and convinced that the end was near, he then set off a string of bombs in a church, a Christian bookstore, a newspaper office, and other locations. He sent out letters warning of the end time and compiled a hit list of preachers. On September 22, 1992, Rollen, the man who brought the gospel in John 3:16 to the North American sports fan, believing in the Rapture, that it was only six days away, and wanting to make a big media splash; he took a maid and two other workers hostage in an LA airport, and demanded a three-hour press conference. Instead, the police threw in a grenade, kicked down the door, and Rollen was sentenced to three life-sentences.
 
[2]

As Paul Harvey would say…now you know the REST of the story.

 

This anecdote actually brings us quite nicely to John 3:17. John 3:17  always reminds me of Jolene. Jolene was a young lady in a youth group we led when Susan and I first came to a Salvation Army as young marrieds many, many years ago. Jolene and her family are wonderful, faithful people. John 3:17 was her favourite verse. John 3:17 records that Jesus did not come to condemn the world but rather He came so that the world may be saved through Him.

 

Many years after we met them, after we became ordained, after we moved far away and back again to the Island and after we had grown children of our own, we were alerted - Jolene’s mom was looking for her on Vancouver’s DTES. Addiction had wrapped its hands around her and clenched Jolene tight in it’s grasp. She – like so many of our friends through our life and ministry - had been struggling against addiction for so long; for so long it had been seeking destroy her mind, body, and soul and drag her through all the circumstances, environments and choices through which addiction drags us and she suffered the same brutality that many suffer when addiction grabs hold. She was found, PTL. And I hope, I really hope that she always remembered and remembers – even in her darkest days, even when it seemed and seems that there is no hope, even when it seemed and seems what she has done or has had done to her is so horrible that there is no recovery, I hope she always remembers that verse God gave her as a young child, to help her live out her salvation, to help her grow in holiness, to help her get through everything that life throws our way, John 3:17 – For God did not send his son into the world to condemn the world but that the world would be saved through him.

 

The other week I had three friends overdose and two die. Tragically, this is not uncommon anymore. The enemy seeks to destroy. A friend of mine here in Port Alberni just lost her 28-year-old son to addiction and everything else that the Enemy throws at people who are suffering in addiction’s grasp.

 

We have many friends whom the Enemy has trapped by some other really horrible choices, events, and circumstances. People who have lost loved ones. People who have killed loved ones by accident or design. Many friends of ours have been captured by sins of assault, robbery, theft and other things. I have had one person tell me in tears that they can’t be saved because of the things they have done. I disagree. For God did not send his son into the world to condemn the world but that the world might be saved through him. We can all be transformed!

 

My first sermon as an ordained minister was to my friends in Stony Mountain Penitentiary. On my first day of freedom from seminary after being ordained as a minister of the Gospel, I walked into Stony Mountain penitentiary to see my friends as I had done every week for almost the whole time we lived in Winnipeg. Many of them are in the Kingdom today. Many of them have probably tripped and stumbled along the way. Many of them were released; some of them probably returned to prison and are still slowly be conformed to the likeness of Christ and many of our friends  -those free or caged- are living with Christ for now and forever.

 

John 3:18 tells us that any of us – no matter our past, no matter our circumstance - who actually believe in Jesus are not condemned but saved.  It is interesting that John 3:16 says that Jesus died for the whole world. The Greek word for world here is ‘Kosmos’.[3] It refers to all civilization, all humankind. He died for us all so that we can now all live life abundantly and freely follow God’s will (cf. TSA d. 6). There is no need for any to perish but yet some people do.

John 3:18 “Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because they have not believed in the name of God’s one and only Son.” This is particularly sad because we know that God loves us. He loves us so much that He laid down His life for us (John 15). God loves us so much that He sent His only begotten, his only natural, his only sired Son to die so that we may live. I can’t imagine how much this must hurt God that some of us do actually perish. I have met people who have rejected God’s love and salvation. It breaks my heart. I am a parent. I think of my friend who just lost her son to addiction. God is our heavenly father think about how he must feel if a child perishes. Think of how He must feel if you and I have the opportunity to tell our brothers and sisters about Him, to point them to salvation – and we don’t. It must break his heart. I truly believe what John 3:14-21 here says: God raised Jesus, any of us who look to him will live – there is no condemnation in Christ Jesus and as we serve Him, we will be conformed into His likeness. Like 1 Thessalonians 5:24 says, “The one who calls you is faithful, and he will do it.” He will lead us to walk into the light and away from the darkness.


Jesus is the light, Jesus is from the beginning. Jesus is God incarnate. He lived, He died and Jesus raised from the dead and all who look to him, like those who looked to the bronze serpent in the desert, are saved. John 3:18: “Those who believe in Him are not condemned; but those who do not believe are condemned already…” because 3:19, “people loved darkness rather than light.”

But there is hope even for those still walking in darkness and that is the good news of John 3:16-17 which is this: as long as we are still breathing, we still have the opportunity to walk in the Light that is Jesus; through whose death and resurrection God made it possible for us each to walk from certain death to certain life today for, John 3:17-16, “Indeed, God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through Him”, “For God so loved the world that He sent His only begotten Son, that whosoever believes in Him shall not perish but have everlasting life.”