Has anyone ever not seen the multicolored hair-guy at a sporting event with the sign that reads John 3:16? Perhaps that is one reason why this brief statement that Jesus makes has become so well known, and maybe has even played a part in why “God So Loved” was penned with music in 2019 by the musical group We the Kingdom. Andrew Bergthold and the Cashes (Ed, Franni, Martin, and Scott) are just the latest group of humanity to be fascinated by God’s saving act, which culminated in His march to the cross and death there (See Jesus as God in the flesh acting out His most important bit of love for humanity, as He prepared to die, shown here in the painting Ecce Homo [Behold the Man!] by Antonio Ciseri.) It was such a momentous event, that it’s a wonder that more of us don’t snap wide awake with this on our minds. That part helps explain why Ed felt like the song just had to be born in 2019, and though the main theme of the verse is key, the subtext of the song also resonates personally with members of the group, too.
We the Kingdom was sharing, beginning with Ed Cash, in 2020 how the song came to light and what it meant to them. Ed said that he woke up one morning with the John 3:16 verse on his mind, and an accompanying musical phrase just kept repeating for him, so he wanted a song to continually remind him of the beauty of that verse. Ed pondered what God was really preparing to do when he sent Jesus, and Scott then shared that what God did was say that we humans don’t have to get all fixed up before coming to Him. We can bring all the hurts, and sins/shames/filth to him, and anybody that says otherwise is a liar. He welcomes us as we are, and therefore shed His blood to save us from those things. All we have to do is to be vulnerable and acknowledge our condition. Franni talked about the song’s 2nd verse, which admits the hardship of life, addictions and darkness, and how the song’s bridge lifts people above those things. We let Him be sovereign when we admit who we are, and seek His greatness. That evidently was pretty significant for all the Cashes, who had been part of an addiction of sorts, having formerly been part of a religious cult. Another group member, Martin, shared that God loves not just America or some particular state or city, but the whole world and every culture, so there are no borders restricting who can come to Jesus. Everyone in the world is spiritually thirsty, just as everyone also needs physical water.
Failures, addictions, weariness, power of hell – those are all part of the subtext of the song that We the Kingdom says that Jesus has buried for people who come to Him. God so loved the world, that He was willing to do what He did. Anyone who thinks they have it all together is really saying that God’s deepest expression of Himself for us was a vain act, an exercise that would be rooted in a hoax so great that we would really have to question how this God could still be Creator and Sustainer. Would He really be able to make everything sensible if His coming to earth and dying and rising weren’t necessary? We the Kingdom, probably more than some others, were people that felt like something ‘was off’, as they recall their time in a cult before leaving it in Franni’s 18th year. That’s how other people who don’t have God may ultimately think as well, when they aren’t in touch with the real, authentic, compassionate God of John 3:16. Things eventually go awry in our mortal existence, but are set right eventually when we have Him and connect with His Spirit, and recognize Jesus as the doorway. Have you walked through that doorway yet, as the Cashes did some years ago?
Read the song’s story here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_So_Loved
Watch/hear the song’s story shared here by the composers: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-3CW4qQ9gQ (Story starts at 0:24 of video.)
Read about the composing group here: We the Kingdom - Wikipedia
Read about one of the composers here: ‘God Is Not Done With You,’ Says Former Cult Member Franni Cash, Now Opening for Brandon Lake
Information on the image: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ecce_homo_by_Antonio_Ciseri_(1).jpg …The author died in 1891, so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 100 years or fewer….This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1931.

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