A Summary of 3 John*
Third John is the most personal and situationally specific of John's three letters, a brief pastoral note addressed not to a congregation but to an individual — a man named Gaius, whom John calls his beloved four times in the span of these fourteen verses. The letter addresses a concrete crisis of church leadership and hospitality. Yet, in doing so, John lays down principles of enduring importance for the life and governance of the local church. It is a window into the practical struggles of the early Christian community, and what it reveals is both encouraging and sobering. John opens with a prayer for Gaius that is as theologically rich as it is personally warm. He prays that Gaius would prosper in all things and be in good health, even as his soul prospers. The connection John draws between the flourishing of the soul and the flourishing of the whole person is characteristic of a biblical anthropology that refuses to divide the spiritual from the physical. John does not pr...