Monday, 25 February 2013

The Saviour of the World

Jn.4:42.
In this verse, we have another universal statement as to the identity and Person of the Saviour.  The context is Jesus’ conversation with the woman at Jacob’s well in Samaria, and the statement is that of those Samaritans who believed in Christ, not just because of the testimony of the woman, but because they had heard Him for themselves during one interview with Him.  As Jews had no dealings[1] with the Samaritans,[2] it is quite amazing that these ‘unclean’ humans were enabled by God’s Spirit to see the truth about Jesus.  Many had believed because of the woman’s testimony and besought Him to remain with them, and Jesus stayed a further two days in that vicinity.[3]  The effectiveness and authenticity of her testimony brought these men not only to where Jesus was, but right into a new saving relationship with Him.  This spiritual re-awakening amongst the Samaritans indicated that Jesus was not only the Saviour for the Jewish people, but also for the Samaritans.  God’s salvation was not confined to any one nation or people, but was sent into the entire world.  Brown is correct when he avers that Christ’s two day stay not only brings over many more to the same faith in Him, but raises that faith to a conviction – never reached by the Jews, and hardly as yet attained by His own disciples – that as the Christ, he was “the Saviour of the world.’”[4]
As “Saviour of the world,” He was to bring “deliverance ... from serious danger.”[5]  What more serious danger is there than to be under the divine wrath on account of our sin; and from this we need deliverance.  This implies that Jesus is more than a perfect example for us to follow.  He is the One Who saves.  The general term “Saviour” is sometimes applied to the Father[6] and also to the Son[7] but is found nowhere else in the New Testament.  To the word “Saviour” John, adds a qualifier, “of the world,” which has the impact of enlarging His role and work.  He is the “Saviour of the world.”  Morris comments that this
elevates the title to one of infinite grandeur.  Jesus is not concerned simply with petty, minor issues.  Nor is He the Saviour of few unimportant individuals.  He is the Saviour of the world.[8]
Calvin comments,
Again, when they proclaim that Jesus is the Saviour of the world and the Christ, they have undoubtedly learned this from hearing Him ... And He declared that the salvation He had brought was common to the whole world, so that they should understand more easily that it belonged to them also. [9]
All exclusivity is hereby ruled out by our Lord.  The salvation that He came to bring transcends all geographical and ethnic barriers.  It is for all men because all are sinners.  God’s love is for “the whole world” because then salvation His Son brought is common to all.[10]
Ryle contends, with Calvin and contra Owen and Hendriksen,[11] that “the singular fullness of the confession” that the Samaritan believers made is significant because it provides the fullest declaration of the Saviour’s office as “the Saviour of the world” that is unequalled in the Gospels.[12] He raises the interesting point as to whether the Samaritans really understood the significance of the term “Saviour” as applied to Jesus was fully understood, and Ryle suggests that it was not.  However, he affirms that whatever deficiencies existed in their understanding of that term, there were none regarding their grasp of the universal scope of what He came to do.  To them, He was the world’s Saviour, not just the Saviour of the Jews.  In Ryle’s language, He came to be “a Redeemer for all mankind.”[13]  The religious Jews did not see this truth despite His being with them for upwards of three years, but these people of mixed race and of semi-heather origin who had only had Jesus with them for two days, grasped the true identity of this Preacher, and affirmed His universal and crucial role for mankind.     
DML-J preached, as he was bringing his sermon on Ac.5:1-13, and upbraided the church for her cowardice.  “The church must stop apologising, stop accommodating, stop taking bits out of the Bible.  We must face the world and proclaim Jesus of Nazareth, Son of God and Saviour of mankind.”[14]  He was already retired from the active Christian ministry for five years by this time, and his universal Gospel preaching was still uppermost in his emphasis.  Regularly, he referred to Jesus Christ as “Son of God, Saviour of the world.”[15]  In answering the question as to the reason for the incarnation, he said, “Why does he do that?  There is only one answer: he has come into the world to save the world.”[16]  When seeking to expound why some men hold tenaciously to the truth of the Gospel, he said, “Here were men who would sooner die than refrain from preaching the glory of the Son of God as the only Saviour of the world.”[17]  That Christ was and is the only truly cosmic Saviour there is, was an emphasis in his preaching that none can gainsay.  He died as the Saviour of the world, which implies that He died for all men without exception.  His death was as much for the unbeliever as it was for the believer.  When sinners reject the only Saviour of mankind, they are rejecting a Saviour Who suits their case perfectly.  Listen to DML-J as he describes those leaders who “[reject] of the Saviour of the world.”[18]  Little did they know but the One they were rejecting was “God’s only begotten Son, Jesus of Nazareth, ... the Saviour of the world.”[19] It was He Who died on the Cross, and the only way sinners have of being reconciled to Him is by believing in and surrendering to, the Saviour of the world.[20]
An examination of these expository comment by the Doctor will confirm that he is well suited to the company of men like Calvin, Baxter, Davenant, Wesley, Ryle, Morris, etc.  His expositions do not fit nearly as well with those of Owen and Hendriksen whose confessionalism determines the meaning of Scripture.



[1]    The Geneva Bible 1599 translates this word as “meddle.”  The Geneva Bible notes add, “There is no
         familiarity nor friendship” between these groupings.
[2]    Jn 4:9.
[3]    Jn 4:40, 43.
[4]    Brown, 1684/1969:375.
[5]    Morris, 1972:284.  Brown cites the Greek as “the Saviour of the world, the Christ (p.374).  Cf also Ryle,
         1869/1987:251.
[6]    Lk. 1:47; 1 Tim.1:1; etc.  The LXX uses this term for the Father, and secular Greek writers uses it of a
         multitude of deities.
[7]    1 Jn 4:14
[8]    Morris, 1972:285.
[9]    Comment on Jn 4:42.
[10]    Calvin, comm.. on Jn 4:42.
[11]    Hendriksen, 1954:176.
[12]    Ryle, 1869/1987:251.  He points out that the conversion of these Samaritans can be attributed solely
         to the grace of God, and that while the Jews were hardened under Christ’s preaching, miracles and
         wonderful works, the Samaritans were softened and believed.
[13]    Ibid.
[14]    Selection #358.
[15]    Selection #357.
[16]    Selection #327.
[17]    Selection #236.
[18]    Selection #232.
[19]    Selection #100.
[20]    Selection #99.

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