No problem, awelight - great reply and I appreciate it. There is one other thing that always comes to my mind when I read 3:16 & 17
but I'm usually hesitant to mention it because it usually upsets people..... but I'll throw it out now and buckle my seat belt. That is,
the world mentioned in the verses may be the world to come, not this current world. Why? For several reasons but one of the more important ones is that this cosmos is to be destroyed by God so how then could He love it? God makes clear in the Bible that the apple of his eye is the New Holy City and the new Jerusalem, not those of this world but the next. With that in mind, to me, the verses then make sense and harmonize perfectly with other verses. There are other reasons but won't go into them now. Thanks again
Wow, are you going to put me to work on this one. This is a deep subject you have opened. I love the question.
First, I think you are trying to move "world" to the future because of the abuses that some are teaching about these verses. Just an observation. But to the point.
The "world" cannot be future because John 3:16 said: ".. that God so LOVED the world and as I have shown this "love" was past tense and therefore, this world must also be past tense. So what world was this referring too?
Pulling in all of the Scriptures on this subject, I believe it is in reference to the world that God had originally planned to be "upright". As such, the world that was in the mind of God before He created and was marred by sin after creation. This takes us to before the fall of Adam. After all, did not God purpose to send His Son before the foundation of the world? Is not part of Christ's work, the redemption of all creation? (Rom. 8:19-22). Does not creation groan for the redemption of God's people because then it will be redeemed and lifted from the curse?
The word - "world" - has many meanings in Scripture, it can mean: the Earth, all of humanity, a particular group of people and a working system. When Scripture admonishes believers not to be a part of this world, it is referring to the system of this world, it's beliefs, likes and dislikes, (john 17:16; Rom.12:2) God loved, past tense, the world as he intended it, not what the fall made it. In the future, He will make it again, that which was intended through a re-creation of the universe and the removal of sin and the curse.
While it is true, that the judgement of the world is future, the emphasis of "world" in John 3:17, is that the object is the purpose of Christ's first advent. To bring about his redemptive work upon the Earth. In this case, the ones who inhabit the Earth. In this verse, there is no qualifier as to whom they are because that qualification came earlier, (John 3:3-9) and is given again in John 3:18 and 21. Remember, this is one complete conversation with Nicodemus, not individual, standalone comments.
As to your following statement: "..one of the more important ones is that this cosmos is to be destroyed by God...", raises a concern for me. Do you believe that God is going to "destroy" this creation as in permanently destroy it? In other words, wipe it out of existence or totally annihilate it? This goes to those who recently started teaching "Annihilationism". Even men like John MacArthur, are teaching an annihilationist point of view. However, this subject is deep and has become controversial. But in short, I do not believe the Scriptures teach this point of view. This is why?
I will try to keep this short, otherwise I will be all day writing a book.
First, there are two Hebrew words with different meanings. One means, to create something from nothing - this is creation. The other means, to create something from something - this would be recreation or a renewing but not a genuine creation. Interestingly, when in Genesis it talks about the world being made for man in six days, the Hebrew word for "recreation" is used, making something from something else. Just as man was fashioned from the dirt of this world. However, in Gen. 1:1, it is the word for Creation. To bring something into existence from nothing. This raises another topic altogether and we should save that for another time.
There are also Greek words that infer the idea of "recreation" and not "creation". To believe that Scripture teaches Annihilationism, opens the door to other teachings and meanings for the word destruction. For instance, there are those teaching that eternal destruction, means to be eternally wiped out of existence. Thus, they attempt to remove the horror of an eternal punishment. Likewise, those who teach the Annihilationist points, believe the whole Universe will be destroyed in some kind of nuclear implosion. Then God will "create" a new heaven and a new earth, (Rev. 21:1). The Greek word used here:
καινὸν, does not mean something from nothing, it means to renew or refresh. See also how it is used in these other verses: Mat. 26:29; Lk. 5:36; Jn. 19:41; Eph. 2:15 & 4:24.
Therefore, the Cosmos will not be destroyed in some kind of annihilation but will be renewed or recreated apart from sin and the curse. It's renewal, will use the existing matter but will be rearranged, yet will still have recognizable features of this Earth. If it was going to be totally destroyed, then what would Christ had meant when He said the following:
Mat_5:5 Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth.
Secondly, creation cannot be wiped out of existence, no more than anything God has created can be wiped out of existence. What God speaks - He brings into creation - and what He creates, are eternal with Him. Once God speaks something into existence, His words are eternal with Him. God cannot un-speak something once He speaks. Since He spoke the Universe into existence, He cannot un-speak it.
However, nothing stops Him from rearranging it. Just as He brought a new arrangement in us by the new birth. We were not wiped out of existence, then born anew, God took what was there and rearranged us; thus, we were born again. We also know, that when we put on the bodies not made by our hands but from God - this body, carries in it, the seed of what we once were, (1 Cor. 15:37, 42-44).
In conclusion, The world of John 3:16, is going back to God's plan and purpose to reveal His Glory to his own creation and how He is going to deal with the sin issue, even before He created anything. In John 17, the first use of the word world, is in the time of the speaker and the second use of the word world, is all three - past, present and future, since it takes in all of the revelation of God at different times. Some of the old writers therefore, call the first use of world -the world of the non-elect and the second use - the world of the Elect.