Three-in-One: The Relational GodNäide

God the Son (2)
I AM
In his conversations and teaching, Jesus often used everyday things to explain or clarify a profound truth. Trees, water, stones, vines, birds, branches, flowers, sheep, and other physical objects were some of his favorite metaphors for spiritual truths.
He even used everyday metaphors for himself so people could more easily understand who he was, why he was there, and what he had come to accomplish.
He did that in John 6. After miraculously feeding more than 5,000 people with just five loaves of bread and two fish, Jesus used that experience to explain his true identity, power, and purpose by tying it into a well-known story of their ancestors eating manna in the wilderness. You can find that story in Exodus 16 and Numbers 11.
Jesus described himself with seven total “I AM” statements in the book of John. This is the first one (the others are in 8:12, 10:9, 10:11, 11:25, 14:6, 15:1) and it features bread—something very unspectacular, ordinary, and unflashy. But also something very familiar, which makes it brilliant. Everyone knows what bread is. Everyone can understand the metaphor and make sense of the meaning if they have listening ears and open hearts.
First Jesus multiplied real bread. Then he said it was bread from heaven. Then he said that he was bread from heaven. Then he said that people who eat bread from heaven will live forever. Then he told people to “eat his flesh.”
Follow the metaphors: “eat” is a metaphor for “believe.”
Anyone who believes in Jesus will have eternal life.
Reflect
- Jesus said whoever comes to him will never be hungry again (John 6:35). What do you think he means?
- Jesus said whoever “eats this bread” will never die (John 6:50, 58). Think about the purpose of eating actual food, the act of eating actual food, and the results of eating actual food. What do you think Jesus meant when he said, “Anyone who eats the bread from heaven will never die”?
Pühakiri
About this Plan

Read what the Bible says about our triune God (God the Father, God the Son, God the Spirit) and about God's children. Then read what the Bible says about God's fellowship—how his children are in relationship with each other and with the Father, Son, and Spirit.
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