Showing posts with label Church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Church. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Luke 3:1-17 –Bear Good Fruit!

Lesson Focus:
Baptism, the repentance that takes place before it, and the cleansing and rising to new life that takes place in it, are meaningless if they are not followed by the bearing of “fruit.” 

Lesson Outcomes:
Through this lessons students should:
1.     Understand that John the Baptist is a prophet like the prophets in the Old Testament who were to prepare the hearts and minds of God’s people for his coming.
2.     Understand that John’s call for followers of God to produce fruit is not just for the newly converted but for those who have been Christian a long time.
3.     Discuss what it looks like to produce good fruit as Christians. 

Catch up on the story:
The stage has been set for Jesus to appear on the scene as an adult.  We have heard all about his birth and what people are saying he is and what he is to do.  It is obvious to those who have read Luke’s story to this point that something great and expected is going to come from Jesus.  Before we meet Jesus, however, we meet John who is called the Baptist.  In the words and actions of John we will get a good idea of what Jesus is going to do.  John, it seems, is the last of the prophets pointing the way toward Jesus.

John, if you will remember, is the son of Zechariah and Elizabeth who were at an old age and unable to have children.  An angel visits Zechariah while he is working in the Temple and informed him that he would be the father of a special boy.  This boy will grow up and help prepare the way for God’s salvation to enter the world.     

The Text:

A Voice from the Wilderness: 3:1-6
John’s own birth was something of a miracle, marking him as a significant character in the story.  Luke begins this section with John by giving us a bunch of clues to his actual historical and social location.  Luke has done this in such a way as to make his readers draw a connection between John, what he will do and what he will say, with the prophets that Israel has seen before.  Many of the Old Testament prophetic books begin in similar fashion.  There is no doubt in Luke’s mind that John is a prophet who is to prepare the hearts and minds of God’s people for his arrival. 

Luke also tells us exactly what John is up to, “proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.”  We are not told much about the actual nature of John’s baptism, how he performed it that is. This leads us to believe that what Luke (and John) find important about the event is not how it is carried out, but rather that what is happening before, during, and after the event. 

Baptism was not unknown in John’s day; it would have been one of the rituals a gentile would need to go through to convert to Judaism.  As such it was seen as an outward ritual signifying the washing away of sins.  Like other similar Jewish ritual washings, the symbolic action would have been deemed ineffective without a corresponding change in inward attitude and external behavior. (Marshall, 135).  Luke connects John and his baptism within the general flow of Old Testament prophecy.  He does this by quoting Isaiah 40:3-5.  John is the one whose voice is crying out from the wilderness urging people to ensure that things are ready for the coming King.  At the heart of the quotation is a desire for the hearts and minds of God’s people to be ready for his coming.  

You Brood of Vipers! 3:7-10
There is no need to understand this section as all taking place at one time and place.  It is rather likely that there were many opportunities for John to baptize people and to proclaim to them who he was and for whom he was preparing the way.  John obviously had enough popularity and name recognition that people were coming in waves to be baptized by him. 

Verse 7 begins with John announcing to the people what exactly it is that they are to be doing.  As prophets do, John knows the context of his people, what they will say, and the difference between what they think they want and what they really need.  John knows these people are seeking something –repentance and salvation– and they think it can be found in John’s baptism.

Just what they thought they were being saved from is different than what we commonly understand salvation.  While it is true that many were seeking freedom from their sin, the sin of the people was also thought of as having consequences for the nation as a whole: political consequences.  For some time leading up to the time of John, Israel had been ruled by the Romans.  It was common to think that this Roman occupation was a result of Israel’s unfaithfulness and what was needed was a new Exodus of sorts.  If Israel turned and repented, then God would bring about liberation from the Romans.   

It becomes clear, as we look at the passage, that some in the crowd believed that if they merely received the right kind of baptism they would be saved from the harsh reality in which they already lived.  After all, they were children of Abraham, God’s chosen people, and God had promised to be faithful to them.  Some thought salvation should be secure just because they are God’s people.   John, however, sees right through this and chastises the crowd.  He clearly points out that it is not just the baptism that will bring about their salvation, but their subsequent change of action and attitude. 

John introduces a metaphor that Jesus will pick up on and use, that of bearing good fruit.  A tree that should bear a certain kind of fruit but does not is a tree that is not worthy of the ground it is using.  John says, if you want this baptism to mean anything, then you must begin to bear the fruit that comes along with repentance.  Repentance without fruit is worthless, it seems!

Then, John sends out a very sharp warning: even now your tree is about to be cut down.  If you do not get it together the ax will strike the trunk and you’ll be cut down and used for firewood.  There is no need to press the “thrown into the fire” image here.  John is not making claims about what happens to those who are unrepentant.  The fire pit is a place you put wood that has been cut down. 

What Then Should We Do? 3:14
Realizing that John is indeed right, the people respond by putting a question to John, “What then should we do?”  In other words, the people are interested in bearing fruit but they are not exactly sure how this is to happen.  What does it look like? 

This question, even though it seems so simple and, perhaps, only suitable for those who are seeking new faith, is for us too.  Remember, John is not speaking to the unconverted here; he is speaking to those who are deeply familiar with the story of God’s working in, through and for Israel.  This question comes from those who are “in” so to speak.  Certainly, most of those who will attend your group this week are “in” as well.  Let this question speak to them too.     

To the first group John responds, “Those of you who have two pairs of underwear give it to those who have none.  Likewise, if you have food share it with those in need.”  John is not saying that just those who have abundance should give, -they should- he is saying that even the poorest of poor have something to give. If you’ve got more than one pair of underwear and someone needs some, you should give them a pair of yours.  For this first group of people, who were perhaps the poorest of the poor, bearing good fruit is taking care of the needs of others.

Luke goes on telling more of the story, showing that it wasn’t just the poor ones that came but even tax collectors and soldiers (probably Jewish men assigned to protect the much hated dishonest tax collectors, or perhaps soldiers in Herod’s army).  They came and asked the same question, “What should we do?”  John responds with simple advice that should not seem too burdensome.  These tax collectors and soldiers were to be satisfied with what they were paid and were to quit oppressing those from whom they collected taxes.  Often collecting taxes was a contract job that went to the highest bidder.  Payment was expected upfront and it was left to the tax collector to recoup his money from the people.  This was often done in harsh and exorbitant ways.

Here, again, Luke places John within the same vane as all of the Old Testament prophets.  John is calling God’s people to live with justice, righteousness and faithfulness in relation to their neighbors.  The fruit which John calls us to bear is not just morality as we often understand it (a list of don’ts), it’s a way of living in relation to those around us that sees their dignity and humanity and seeks to ensure that others can live abundant lives.  Repentance and the baptism that signifies it is not just for purity’s sake; it is also always for the sake of the other.

One Who is More Powerful: 3:15-17
The people who were gathered to hear John and receive his baptism are amazed.  Something new yet remarkably familiar is happening through this man.  Their hearts begin to stir, and they begin to wonder if John himself might be the one they are expecting.  John realizes what they are thinking and puts an end to that kind of talk.  He is not the one who is coming.  John’s baptism is not the end; it is but the beginning of what God is going to do.  Indeed, John says, there is one who is coming who is much more powerful and who will bring a baptism that will be like nothing you have seen or experienced.  It will be a baptism of fire, not water.  If water can wash away dirt and filth (symbolizing forgiveness), fire sterilizes (symbolizing the transformation of the human heart).  The fire that is coming is the fire of the Holy Spirit. And it is for this purpose that Jesus came: to pour out God’s Holy Spirit upon people, and thereby change their hearts.

So What?
For Luke and his hearers John’s “baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins” is a public rite of washing that represents the opportunity for a new start in life, a renewal of things.  Luke is saying, however, that baptism by itself is worthless unless those who receive it “bear fruits worthy of repentance” (v. 8).  The change in direction must be validated by changed behavior. 

One cannot rest on the fact that one has been “saved” or that one was born into a Christian family or that one has been a Christian his or her whole life or for a long time.  What matters is that one responds to the grace and forgiveness that has been received with a change in direction and behavior.  One must now produce good fruit (with the help of God’s Spirit of course).  What does the production of good fruit look like?

In this current passage it looks like:
·      Giving of one’s surplus to those who do not have
·      Not taking more than you deserve
·      Not extorting money (or anything) from people of lesser authority
·      Living with justice and righteousness toward others

In other places it is:
·      Loving your neighbor as yourself 
·      Caring for the orphan, the widow and the refugee
·      Living with love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control (Galatians 5:16-26)

It seems apparent that John is demanding from those who have gathered to repent and be baptized that merely being baptized or being Jewish isn’t enough.  It translates for us today that things like going to church, being baptized, saying the sinner’s prayer, aren’t enough.  What is necessary is bearing fruit worthy of the salvation we have received from Jesus Christ.  It is a response to the love and grace that has been given to us that leads us to produce the fruit we talked about above. 

Some of us have been “Christian” for so long and our lives have been initially changed. We have been saved from all sorts of maleficent things.  Could it be that now we are guilty of resting on our once received salvation?  Do we fail to continue to live into our salvation by continuing to bear fruit worthy of our repentance?

As we approach our celebration of the birth of Christ at Christmas, John reminds us that we can never rest on God’s past actions in us or our own past fruit, but that we must always bear good fruit. We must have regular practices in our lives whereby we do the sorts of things mentioned above. We also need to be continually baptized by the Holy Spirit, who empowers us to bear fruit more and more.

Critical Discussion Questions:
1.     What does God look like in this text/Who is God in this text/What is God doing in this text?
a.     God’s desire and God’s call on our life displayed in this text is the same as it has been throughout almost all of the Old and New Testament.  God is ultimately concerned that we live in right relationship with him and others. He is concerned with how we treat one another, especially those who are unable to care for themselves.
b.     God is using John to prepare the hearts and minds of his people for his coming in the person of Jesus.  God does not want to surprise us with his expectations of us; he always helps us know what it is that we must do or not do to be prepared for his coming.  We can hear and know what God desires of us if we are willing to listen and obey.  
2.     What does holiness/salvation look like in this text?
a.     Certainly, salvation is God’s gracious gift to us through his Son Jesus Christ. It is the gift of forgiveness of sins, symbolized by the baptismal washing. It is the transformation of our lives, through the power of the Spirit. Yet salvation is never a one-way street.  There is always an appropriate way for us to respond to the salvation we have received.  In this passage it looks like producing fruit, and that fruit looks a lot like seeking to act with the same justice, faithfulness, steadfast love and righteousness we talked a lot about this summer.  God’s requirement of his people does not change with the coming of Christ.  Yes, God is doing a new thing, he is becoming one of us, but that new thing that we celebrate at Christmas is so that we can live in right relationship with God and with others, which is not a new command.    
3.     How does an encounter with this story shape who we are and who we should become?
a.     John’s call to those who came to seek his baptism is an appropriate call for us today.  We may be baptized; we may be Christians; but are we truly producing fruit that is worthy of our repentance?  What this passage calls us to do is to question how it is that we are living our lives, as individuals and as a church, to see if we are indeed bearing good fruit.  If we are not, and if we persist in not producing fruit, then our lives and our church will eventually be cut down.   All is not lost, however; we are constantly called toward this fruit producing life and it is never too late to change.  

Specific Discussion Questions:
Read the text aloud. Then, read the text to yourself quietly. Read it slowly, as if you were very unfamiliar with the story.

1.     Who does Luke believe John to be?  
2.     Luke tells us that John came proclaiming a baptism for repentance and the forgiveness of sins.  Baptism was a ritual used when someone converted to the Jewish faith and symbolized the washing away of sins.  So, John’s baptism was not completely unusual, but it was unique.  Why were so many rushing out to be baptized by John?
3.     In verse 4 Luke quotes Isaiah 40:3-5.  What is that passage about and why would Luke quote it in regards to John? 
4.     Obviously, John did not come just to baptize.  What was the role that John and his baptism were supposed to play? 
5.     It’s apparent that some in the crowd believed that their salvation was secure because they were Jews and had Abraham as their father.  After all, God had promised to Abraham and his descendants that he would always be faithful to them.  How might we have similar attitudes to some of those who were going out to see John?
6.     After John warns the crowd, they want to know what it is that they should do.  John tells them to produce fruit worthy of their repentance.  What does that mean?  Read verses 11-14 again.  What kind of action steps does John tell the crowd to do?
7.     John’s call to produce fruit worthy of the repentance is not just for those who are new believers.  Those of us who have been Christians for a long time often fail to continue to produce good fruit.  Take some time to quietly examine your life, are you producing good fruit?  After you quietly reflect, share your thoughts with the group. 
8.     What are some of the ways we might produce good fruit as individuals and as a church?

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

1 John 4:1-6 –The Word Made Flesh

Lesson Focus:
Our beliefs about Jesus’ nature are important for how we daily live out our faith. 

Lesson Outcomes:
Through this lessons students should:
1.     Understand that not everyone who claims to have authority to teach is from God.
2.     Understand that what we believe about who Jesus is matters for how we practice the Christian faith.
3.     Understand that the nature of Jesus as God incarnate drives our call to embody the love of God for those around us in the church and the world. 

Catch up on the story:
John has just finished up describing for us the marks of someone who has truly been born of God.  His primary focus is the tangible love that believers show toward their brothers and sisters in Christ.  This love, we have said, is practice for how we are to go out and love our world.  If we see one of our Christian brothers or sisters in need and yet do not help them, we will not be able to help those outside of our community who desperately need it.

John moves on, though, to discuss other marks of being a true child of God.  He begins to emphasize belief as a mark of being born of God.  The kind of belief that John advocates is not just a mental assent to the idea of God, but rather a belief in Jesus that is born out in action.  John will have more to say about right belief in this week’s text.          

The Text:
John’s main concern for our text this week is Christological in nature.  That is, it is all about what we believe about who Jesus is as the incarnate Word of God.  The conversation, however, is set up the same way as many of the arguments in First John have been to this point.  There is a negative example and then a positive one. 

First, we are admonished to not believe every spirit, and by proxy those who say they have the Spirit and who are claiming to be teachers.  Crucial to understanding John’s comments here is remembering the context in which John has been writing.  There have been people, or rather a group of folks, in John’s community, that have broken away and have begun to teach in ways that deny or place significantly less stress on Jesus’ humanity.  John, in other places in the letter, will refer to these people as antichrists (In Greek, anti means “against” or “a substitute for.”  So, antichrist is “against Christ” or “a substitute for Christ.”).  These people had mostly or completely spiritualized Jesus.  They thought that Jesus either only seemed to be human, or that Jesus’ humanity is completely taken over by his divinity.  Either way, there was a significant denial of Jesus’ humanity going on. 

The Council of Nicaea in AD 325, from which we get the Nicene Creed, affirmed that God was indeed present in Jesus and not as some subordinate divine being, but as God himself.  The Council affirmed what John says at the beginning of this letter, that Jesus was “from the beginning.”  He is co-existent with God the Father before creation.  While at Nicaea the church affirmed Jesus’ divinity, it was not until over one hundred years later at the Council of Chalcedon that the church affirmed the balance between Jesus’ divinity and his humanity.  Jesus, in the incarnation, is fully human and fully divine.[1]  We might add as well that Jesus continues, even to this day, to be fully human and fully God.  The incarnation does not end with Jesus’ ascension. 

It is in this context that John admonishes his hearers to test the spirit of those who claim to be dispensing right teaching.  For, as John says, many false prophets have gone out into the world.  We do not know, but can suppose, that at least some of these false prophets have come from John’s own community of faith.  This makes them even more dangerous.  There is a way, John confesses, that we can know if teachers are from God or not.  If the spirit confesses through the person claiming to have authority, that Jesus Christ is God in the flesh and is from God, then that testimony is to be accepted.  If a spirit denies the humanity of Jesus then it is not from God.  Those who confess this way have the spirit of the antichrist. 

At this point we might ask, why does it matter if Jesus is both human and divine?  Why is it so important that we confess that Jesus became human in such a significant and permanent way? If God the Son is not embodied in the concrete historical person of Jesus then there can be no salvation for us.  We need Jesus to be fully God because we cannot save ourselves.  We need Jesus to be fully human so he can live the perfect life in a way that we are unable to.  If Jesus does not really and physically die, then the power of death is not defeated in Jesus’ physical resurrection.

For John, if we deny Jesus’ humanity then all of this talk about embodied and tangible acts of love become unimportant. The Christian faith, as the church has defined it through thousands of years, through the Councils which shaped our Creeds, is an embodied faith.  It is a faith that cares for more than just our souls and where they end up after we die.    If Jesus is just spiritual then there is no need to care for anyone’s physical needs.  This spiritualizing of Jesus has always been a temptation.  Indeed, even today there are many who, though they probably do not know it, functionally deny Jesus’ humanity by placing too much emphasis on the spiritual.  To be sure, we need both Jesus’ humanity and his divinity.  His divinity allows us to enjoy fellowship with God now and forever.  The truth is, however, that the nature of Jesus Christ is embodied, and if we want to be like him, then we must live our lives in the same kind of incarnational embodiment as he did.  Any teacher who does not confess the physical nature of Christ, through both word and deed, is not to be accepted. 

As we turn to verse 4, John begins to encourage his hearers by reminding them that they have believed and acted rightly.  They are from God.  In faithfulness to the divine/human Jesus they have ousted these false teachers from their ranks.  This probably means that they have rejected their teaching and not allowed them to have any teaching authority.  How have they done this?  They have done it because they are from God and the one that is in them, John says, is greater than the one who is in the world!  This is truly Good News!  The Spirit of the God who created and sustains the heavens and the earth resides in us, teaching us, cleansing us, helping us to discern right teaching and right practice from what is not right.

It is because of this that the church need not worry about being defeated.  We can look out at our world, which often seems to be in such a chaotic mess, and say with confidence that we will not be defeated.  The church, so long as it remains faithful to the incarnated Son of God, so long as it remains willing to allow the Spirit to teach and guide it, will never be destroyed.  Greater is the one who is in us than the one who is in the world!

John continues to talk about those who are the false teachers and prophets.  They are from the world, and so it is no surprise that the world flocks to them and listens to them.  Here is a warning to us.  Whenever we see a preacher or Christian personality gaining great fame outside of the church we should be a little suspicious.  The message of Christ is foolishness to the world (1 Corinthians 1:18-25).  It convicts the world and challenges the way it works.  It is not easily accepted.  If it is, what is being preached just might not be the true message of the crucified yet risen Christ. 

The believing and confessing community, however, is from God.  John squarely places himself and those he is writing to in that camp.    He then goes on to say that whoever knows God will listen to the message John is proclaiming.  Those who are advancing false teaching and professing to have received a message from the Spirit, they are the ones who will not listen.  Proof of their not being from God is in their lack of willingness to hear and confess.  So, we will know if a person has been inspired to teach by the Spirit if they do two things, confess that Jesus was both human and divine and is willing to listen (and submit) to the community of faith and its message. 

So What…?
To this point in the letter, John has stressed love as the mark of being a child of God.  This love that works for the benefit of the other is to a large degree what defines the Christian faith.  In just the next passage, John will confess that God is love.

Indeed, our belief and confession that God is love comes straight from our confession about the historical and physically embodied reality of Jesus Christ.  Right belief drives right practice and right living.  Right living and practice confirms our right belief.  In this case, and I believe that this is what John wants us to hear, our right belief about Jesus being fully in the flesh compels us to exercise love for our brothers and sisters in the faith and in the world.  If our beliefs about Jesus are not inline with the church’s confession concerning him, then our expression and practice of the Christian faith will look vastly different than it did for much of church history. 

Belief and practice go hand in hand.  The bottom line is this, Jesus became one of us and remains one of us.  He gave himself up, in death, for us so that we might have freedom from the power of sin and death.  He was resurrected in the flesh.  He ascended to be with God the Father for all of time, in the flesh.  He will come again one day, in the flesh, to judge the living and the dead.  We live, day in and day out, as bodies who confess that this Jesus is God and that what he did he did in the flesh because of his great love for us.  If we want to truly claim that we follow this incarnated Jesus, then we must live as he lived, in the flesh, in love, among the hurting, needy people of our church and of our world.  “Beloved, since God loved us so much, we also ought to love one another.” (1 John 4:11)   

Critical Discussion Questions:
  1. What does God look like in this text/Who is God in this text/What is God doing in this text? 
    1. John wants us to understand that what God has done is that he has become completely one of us, in the body, so that we might love through him.  John also confesses that God in Christ is stronger than anything that is from the world.  

  1. What does holiness/salvation look like in this text?
    1. Salvation and holiness begin with right belief and confession concerning Jesus.  Right belief is proved, not just through our words, but through how those beliefs influence our daily behavior.  We cannot be holy without believing the right things about who Jesus is.   
 
  1. How does an encounter with this story shape who we are and who we should become?
    1. We should constantly be testing the beliefs that are being taught to us, not just by our clergy, but other outlets as well.  We should be able to begin to recognize the importance our beliefs have on our daily lives.  The belief that God’s great love is on display for us through the concrete reality of Jesus should compel us to exercise our belief in and love for God through our own incarnational ministry in the church and in our surrounding world.     

Specific Discussion Questions:
Read the text aloud. Then, read the text to yourself quietly.  Read it slowly, as if you were very unfamiliar with the story.

1.     Why does John admonish us to test every “spirit” to see if they are from God?  To which “spirits” is John referring? 
2.     Who are these “false prophets” that have gone out into the world? 
3.     How will we know what comes from the Spirit of God?
4.     What does “antichrist” mean?  Is there just one antichrist or are there many?
5.     John claims that the true mark that a spirit is from God is that it affirms the physical person of Jesus.  Why is it important that we believe and confess that Jesus was both fully human and fully divine?  Is there salvation for us if Jesus only seems to be human?   
6.     Jesus honors or dignifies our bodies by becoming one of us.  If bodies matter to Jesus, how might that affect how we live out our faith?
7.     Last week John asked us this question, “How does God’s love abide in anyone who has the world’s goods and sees a brother or sister in need and yet refuses to help?”  (1 John 2:17)  In what ways might John’s stress on the importance of Jesus’ incarnation help us better understand John’s question in chapter 2?
8.     This week, what is one way in which you can express your belief in Jesus through action?


[1] D. Moody Smith, First, Second and Third John, Interpretation: A Commentary for Teaching and Preaching, (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1991), 102.

Monday, April 27, 2015

1 John 3:11-24 – “Luv Is A Verb”

“The need of the world is not for heroic acts of martyrdom, but for heroic acts of material sacrifice.”[1]

Lesson Focus:
God’s love for us enables us to love others like God has loved us.  More often than not, we are called to express our love for others through our care for those who do not have. 

Lesson Outcomes:
Through this lessons students should:
1.     Understand that an important part of Christian love expresses itself through material care for others.
2.     Examine the quality of love that we have for one another in the church.
3.     Identify ways in which we might grow in our practice of love for one another and for the world. 

Catch up on the story:
John has been describing for us what it means to be a child of God.  We have been and are in the process of being changed into the likeness of Jesus.  While Jesus is for us the fullest revelation of who God is, we still do not yet know Jesus in his fullness.  When he returns we will finally know him fully and, as children of God, we will become like what he is. 

Another important aspect of being children of God is our freedom from sin.  We have had our sins taken away and so, we should not continue to commit sin. John made a startling statement that those who have truly been born of God cannot sin.  We explored what this means, and came to the conclusion, with a little help from John Wesley, that indeed we do not need to sin, and will not as long as we are attentive to authentic prayer and worship in mind, body and spirit.  As the Spirit breathes into us, we are transformed and empowered so long as we continue to breathe the Spirit in and out.  Finally, John tells us that doing right means loving our brothers and sisters.  John will continue discussing what this kind of love looks like. 

The Text:
This week’s text can be split into two sections.  The first, 3:11-17 defines the sort of love that Christians should have for their brothers and sisters in Christ.  The second, 3:18-24, gives us some assurance in the midst of our shortcomings in love as well as helping us to understand the link between belief and love. 

Section #1: Love From the Beginning…
John begins this section declaring that this command to love is what “we” have heard from the very beginning.  This statement, “from the beginning” harkens back to the opening line of the epistle where John declares that what was from the beginning was the person of Jesus Christ.   This message of love then, is tied tightly to the work and person of Jesus. John may be referring to Jesus’ words in the Gospel: “A new commandment I give you: love one another” (John 13:34).  As such, the command to love spoken of here is nothing new.  

What is the nature of this love that we have been commanded to show and to whom is it to be given?  Most commentators believe that John is referring to love for one’s Christian brothers and sisters.  Love for neighbor, as Jesus defined for us in the parable of the Good Samaritan, must begin with love for one’s fellow Christian.  The community of faith is the place where we learn and practice the love that we are called to have for the world.  Without loving our Christian brother or sister first, it will be impossible for us to share with the world the love that we have received. 

As John has done throughout the letter, he compares and contrasts a negative example of love with a positive one.  He begins first with the negative in the form of an admonishment.  We are not to be like Cain, who you will remember from your elementary Sunday school class, killed his brother Abel.  John claims that Cain was from the evil one.  This is not to discount Cain’s personal responsibility in the matter.  Rather, it is to display that those who engage in murder, and even hate are still under the influence of the realm of evil and death, the realm, John says, that we have been freed from because of Jesus. 

Verse 14 can be taken the wrong way.  John is not asserting that love is how we cross over form death to life, but rather that love is the result of our being freed from the power of death.  The proof that a person possesses eternal life is displayed through expressions of love for one’s brothers and sisters.  Love expressed in concrete action for others is the evidence of Christian faith. 

If love is the evidence of Christian faith and love, then hate, and the murder that springs from it, is the evidence of lack of faith.  Most, if not all of us, are not, nor will become murders.  John’s description, however, should not fail to convict us and call us to examine our inner thoughts towards our Christian brothers and sisters (not to mention the world at large).  Something as simple as hate can derail our Christian life.  Hatred is the wish that another person were not there.  It is the denial of a person’s right to live in full connection within the community.  Nowhere is hatred expressed more, by Christians at that, than on social media.  Our posts in support of this or that cause, or our posts in opposition to this or that movement, often reveal to us and the world around us just how much hate lives in our hearts.  Those who hate, John says –and he draws on sayings of Jesus in Matthew 5:21 and in other places -- do not “have eternal life abiding in them.” 

John now moves to the positive image of love.  He goes straight to Jesus and his actions for the best and clearest picture of love.  We know what love is because Jesus, in love, laid down his life for us.  It was not just that Jesus sacrificed himself for us, but that in Jesus’ death he said no to his own life so that we might live.  It was for our benefit.  Love that does not work for the benefit of the other is not love. 

What Jesus has done for us, the love that we have experienced through Jesus we ought to share with others.  This is more than a mere telling of the love of God through Christ; it is a concrete, lived out expression of love for the other.  It is a self-sacrifice for the benefit of another.  No doubt, due to the nature of Jesus’ sacrifice for us that resulted in his death, we will champion the kind of love that actually leads one to literally give up one’s life in martyrdom.  For some, in some contexts, this might be a close reality.  This is not so here in America or most of the developed world.  We might, at some point, be asked to lay down our life for our Christian brother or sister, but this is not what John has in mind. 

The last verse in this section, verse 17, displays for us John’s intention, and that intention is much more mundane than dying as a sacrifice.  The love that is expressed in laying down one’s life for another person is love that sacrifices one’s material goods, time and money so that another might live.  Here John speaks of love that is displayed through compassion and mercy for those who do not have adequate means of caring for themselves. 

The NRSV’s phrase “yet refuses to help” fails to communicate the true nature of what John is expressing.  The NIV’s “but has no pity” is a little better, but still misses the mark.  What these two translations render as “refuses” and “no pity” comes from the Greek phrase that means, “to close the bowels.”  The intestines were regarded as the seat of emotion and compassion.  To close off one’s intestines means to shield their inner selves from the suffering and want that takes place around them.  The language is active in nature.  This intentional shielding oneself from the very real physical reaction that takes place upon seeing someone in need and refusing to help.  It is a conscious choice.  The image is vivid and describes something we almost all certainly have felt.  We have seen great and small human need and felt the knot in our stomach that is compassion.  Yet, we all have, at sometime or other, shut off our minds to those feelings and have gone on our way.

John’s point is that, “Christian love is love which gives to those in need, and so long as we have, while our brothers [and sisters] have little or nothing, and we do nothing to help them, we are lacking in the love which is essential evidence that we are truly children of God.”[2]  John concludes the section with the admonition, based on his argument to this point, to love not just in speech and word but also in the truth of love expressed through action.  I’m sure that, if the popular Christian rock band from the ‘90’s, DC Talk, would have been around in John’s day, he would have quoted their song, “Luv Is A Verb.          

So What…?
The question that John poses in verse 17 should stop to give us pause.  How can the love of God truly remain in someone if they choose to turn from the needs of their brothers and sisters in Christ?  While it is true that John is speaking about the love that members of the community of faith have for one another, this community is the place that we practice our love for the world at large.  If we cannot seriously take care of one another we will not be able to exercise our love for the world, and if we cannot exercise our love for the world then we fail at being the body of Christ, the physical hands and feet of God in our world.

What is at stake here is more than just the nature of our own community of faith, how we might love and live together, it is the very nature of our witness to the larger world.  If we are to take seriously the part of our mission statement, which says, “…to bear witness to the kingdom of God,” then we must intentionally and tangibly express our love for our Christian brothers and sisters, so that we can better express our love for those in need in our community. 

This is not to say that our church does a bad job with loving one another and caring for each other’s needs.  I know our church to be just that kind of place, a place of love and generosity.  It never hurts, however, to be reminded of the true nature of the love that we are to exercise.  We can always do better.  I’ll leave you with the words of DC Talk,    

Words come easy but don't mean much
When the words they're sayin' we can't put trust in
We're talkin' 'bout love in a different light
And if we all learn to love it would be just right

Critical Discussion Questions:
  1. What does God look like in this text/Who is God in this text/What is God doing in this text?
    1. This message that we have hard from the beginning, that we should love one another, is intimately tied to the One who was from the beginning, Jesus.  The nature of love has always been about God’s self-sacrificial care for his creation. Love itself is born in God’s creative act.  It is expressed through God’s promise to a barren Abraham and Sarah.  It is manifested in the Exodus, and it is exemplified in the incarnation, in Jesus’ becoming one of us.  Love seeks the good of the other.  God is always seeking our good.  God is love. 
 
  1. What does holiness/salvation look like in this text?
    1. Our sanctification is bound up with our willingness to allow the Spirit to perfect us in love.  We will only be a holy people, who call others to be holy, when we allow the Spirit to help us to love in intentional and tangible ways.  There can be no salvation without our reciprocating God’s love.  There can be no holiness with out expressing our love to one another and to the world. 

  1. How does an encounter with this story shape who we are and who we should become?
    1. We must become a people who gather to practice love for one another so that we can love our world.  We must love in word and deed.  We must seek and find ways in which we can better and more fully love each other.  We must identify the things, attitudes, structures and the like that keep us from loving one another. 

Specific Discussion Questions:
Read the text aloud. Then, read the text to yourself quietly.  Read it slowly, as if you were very unfamiliar with the story.
  1. John says that we must not be like Cain who was from the evil one.  What does that mean?  What does Cain do that might show that he is from the evil one?
  2. Why does Cain kill Abel?  Why does John say that we should not be astonished when the world hates us?
  3. John says that we have passed from death to life because we have loved one another.  What does John mean by that?  Do we receive life because we love?  Or, do we love because we have received life?  Why would that distinction matter?
  4. How are hate and murder connected? Has there ever been a time when you have hated someone?  How did that come about?  Have you moved on from that?  If so, how? 
  5.   According to John, how do we know what true love is? Who shows us what true love is?  What is our proper response to an encounter with that love?
  6.   In verse 17 John asks this question, “How does God’s love abide in anyone who has the world’s goods and see a brother and sister in need and yet refuses to help?”  What do you think  
  7.  John is addressing a community of believers and in encouraging them to care for one another.  Why is it important for us to care for each other, as brothers and sisters in Christ, first?  How might our care for one another impact our witness to the world around us? 
  8. As a church, how good are we at tangibly caring for one another?  How might we be better at it?  What are some specific and intentional ways we might practice our love for one another so that we can love our world better?


[1] I. Howard Marshall, The Epistles of John, (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1978), 195-196.
[2] Marshall, 195.