For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son,
that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.
John 3:16
Only Begotten Son – One of the better known titles of Christ because it is used in perhaps the most-memorized verse of scripture. Actually, it occurs only four times in the Bible and was penned only by the Apostle John. Although the phrase is very familiar, what does it really mean?
Early in church history, there were heretics who reasoned that if Christ was begotten, he had a beginning, so He is something less than the eternal God. There are plenty of people who believe this today, and they’re still wrong.
To try to correct this, the Nicene creed, written in AD 325, tries to define “begotten.” This early doctrinal statement declares Christ to be “eternally begotten of the Father” and “true God from true God, begotten, not made, one in Being with the Father.” This refuted the heresy that Jesus was merely a “God Jr.” or “God, the Sequel.” Rather, Christ was the eternal God revealed in a human body.
The word in the Greek for only begotten is “monogenes,” which can also be translated “sole” or “one and only.” The idea here is that Christ is unique. He wasn’t one of many sons of God, but the one and only Son. The Word becoming flesh, God manifested in flesh, and Only Begotten Son are three ways of describing this unique miracle of incarnation.
False teachers today do what they have been doing throughout the centuries. They redefine terms, plug a new phrase back into the verse, and try to make it say what it doesn’t. John 3:16 means exactly what we thought it did the first time we heard it and believed it. God loves us and gives us eternal life through His Only Begotten Son.
*see also John 1:18, 3:18; 1 John 4:9
December 29