monogenes John 1:141:18John 3:163:18Hebrews 11:171 John 4:9Luke 7:12Luke 8:42Luke 9:38unicus unigenitus
Monogenes is used for an only child ( Luke 7:12; Luke 8:42; Luke 9:38 ). The writer of Hebrews used monogenes of Isaac with full knowledge that Isaac was not Abraham's only child ( Hebrews 11:17-18 ). Here monogenes designates Isaac as the special child of promise through whom Abraham's descendants would be named.
KJV, NAS render monogenes as “only begotten” when referring to Jesus. NIV renders the term “One and Only” (Compare the NAS margin, “unique, only one of His kind.”) Other translations (REB, NRSV, TEV) render monogenes consistently as “only.” John used monogenes to designate the unique relationship which Jesus shares with God. John is careful to reserve the term Son for Jesus; believers are children ( John 1:12; 1 John 3:1-2; 1 John 5:2 ). As unique Son of God, Jesus makes God's glory known in a unique way (John 1:14 ,John 1:14,1:18 ). As the One and Only Son, Jesus is the unique gift of God, the giving of God's own self for salvation (John 3:16; 1 John 4:9 ). Because Jesus is the unique representative of God, rejection of Jesus is tantamount to rejection of God. Such rejection results in swift condemnation (John 3:18 ).
Chris Church
The product of over 6 years of work by hundreds of people, the Holman Bible Dictionary manages to be readable and easy to use, yet take advantage of the finest modern Bible scholarship without heavy technical language. The over 6,600 entries includes extensive cross-referencing of related articles, and quotes from 6 different Bible translations.Wikipedia
Read More