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Introduction:
There are plenty of resources for leaders of churches in America today.
Quite a bit of these resources are about church growth.
The sad truth is a lot of these books and article on Church growth suggest ideals for a church to obtain that are not found from scripture.
Pragmatically speaking, these strategies may yield higher numbers, but only for a season.
I like the way one pastor put it years ago when he became overwhelmed with all the "ideals" he was collecting from church growth seminars and books.
He said, "Quite frankly, I'm sick to death of all these ideals.
I have so many ideals and I've been so frustrated by them, I really don't care for any more.
What I'm really looking for is a savior -- not someone who will just tell me what I ought to do or be, but someone who will forgive me for what I am, and then with his very love will enable me to be more than I ever believed I could be."
That's exactly what Jesus does for us when we acknowledge our sin before Him.
His love enables us to be more than we ever believed we could be to His honor and glory!
A church with this kind of love is attractive enough to be a Biblical ideal for Church growth which lasts for eternity.
But it takes love.
Transition:
The “Apostle of Love” can help us out with this! John admonishes us again and again throughout his whole epistle to love one another.
Our passage this morning is no exception to this continual challenge:
Scripture Reading:
In this and the next few verses John is going to describe the relationship between love for fellow believers and the abiding relationship one has with God, what it means with Him abiding in us and we in Him.
After discussing tests of one’s salvation in chapter three, John warned his readers to test the false teachers in 4:1–3.
That test was doctrinal.
What do they say about Jesus?
He then discussed love as it relates to God and said that God’s love produces action.
In the remainder of this chapter he will address the subject of godly love.
Now I would agree the subject of love is easy preaching, but it is often hard practicing and is why John, along with the Holy Spirit finds this topic worthy of repetition.
Transition:
There is only two aspects of this love I want to focus on this morning: First the unseen Source with the seen proof
I.
The Unseen Source (vv.12-13)
No one has ever seen God!
Why has no one ever seen God? why mention this now?
Well first, this reiterates what John wrote in the start to his Gospel (John 1:18)
Which you might remember is what YHWH said to Moses in Exodus 33:20.
Moses wanted to see God’s glory, but he was not allowed to because, as YHWH explained, no human can see YHWH and live.
We cannot describe the Father expect for the picture of Him we discover as we read the pages of Scripture.
However God's love allows humanity to "see" Him through the actions of His people.
Our knowledge of God is not limited to physical sight, but revealed greatly through the love He has shown us.
If no one has ever seen YHWH, then how can people ever really know Him personally?
“God abides in us” He is describing a relationship with God that involves God’s influence in the life of the believer.
Because of Christ’s sacrifice, the Holy Spirit could enter believers’ lives.
Through the Holy Spirit, God lives in Christians.
God can be “seen” through believers as they love each other.
With the Holy Spirit within each believer’s life, Christians can genuinely love one another.
Their love reveals that God himself is present and that they are partaking of the divine nature (see 2 Peter 1:3–8).
Believers’ love for God grows stronger when they see its results in their loving actions toward each other.
As their love develops, Christ’s love is brought to a full practice through his people.
Just yesterday, I was talking with one of the gentleman at the men’s prayer breakfast about how amazing it is that wherever he goes, if he finds another Christian there, he can just somehow “sense” that they are truly a born again Christian.
And how on a couple occasions a couple other people just seemingly out-of-the-blue asked him if he was a Christian.
No doubt the way he “sensed” them or the other people sensed that he was a Christian was an outpouring of agape love.
When believers love one another, our invisible God reveals himself to others through them, and His love is perfected:
“His love is perfected in us” Loving other Christians is one of several evidences of the abiding, perfect love of God in us.
Seeing that God is invisible, His abiding in us is proven by His essential characteristic being manifested in us and through us— all by our showing self-sacrificing love.
Our love towards YHWH is matured/ τελος brought to completion by showing His love towards our brothers & sisters in the faith.
John now explains verse 12, how God abides in us in verse 13:
After Jesus’ resurrection, believers could live in him, that is, in God, because God has given us his Spirit.
According to the Gospel of John 14:16–20, Jesus is sharing the Glory of receiving His Spirit
What Love!
These disciples would begin to experience what it meant to “abide” in God and have God live in them once Christ sent them the Holy Spirit.
From that point on, they would know that the Son is in the Father, they are in the Son, and the Son is in them
When people first become Christians, they receive the Holy Spirit as a new creation—total transformation.
This is amazing and radical if you stop and think about it.
Conversion is more than most people think or even want.
Tim Hansel in his book "When I Relax I feel Guilty," writes some insights of what most people want from God.
"I would like to buy $3.00 worth of God, please.
Not enough to explode my soul or disturb my sleep, but just enough to equal a cup of warm milk or a snooze in the sunshine.
I don't want enough of Him to make me love a black man or pick beets with a migrant.
I want ecstasy, not transformation; I want the warmth of the womb, not a new birth.
I want a pound of the Eternal in a paper sack.
I would like to buy $3.00 worth of God, please."
If we would be totally honest, the idea of transformation really scares us.
That is because we know that such a radical change would be inconvenient and uncomfortable.
We realize that with transformation comes a major change of our life’s plans and priorities.
God’s presence in their hearts and the fruit of the Spirit in their lives is proof that they really belong to Him.
Again we find encouragement and confidence regarding our relationship with the Lord.
It is possible to have assurance of salvation.
We can know that God dwells in us through His Spirit.
One of the most wonderful ways that I am assured that the Spirit lives in me and also in my wife is that all the neighborhood kids are oddly attracted to us.
We’ve had Braylon, Adam and Kevin, Kaitlyn, Danika, Zoey and Shyla, and now even a boy named Jacob that have came over either in the past and/or come over now to our new house on a regular basis simply to hang out with us and, not only to play with our kids, but to taste the godly, agape, love that we have for one another in our family.
And from time to time, we get several opportunities to share with these kids about this Unseen Source of our love.
Transition:
And with these opportunities that you may have to share this unseen source with others, it leads naturally into the second aspect of this kind of love:
II.
The Seen Proof (vv.14-15)
John affirms the truth by reminding his readers that he is an eye-witness of Jesus, who is eternal life incarnate.
In addition to the gift of the Holy Spirit to believers, another way believers can trust in this relationship with YHWH is that their message comes from those who have also seen with their own eyes and now testify that the Father sent his Son to be the Savior of the world.
The “We” here in verse 14 refers to the apostles and other eyewitnesses of Christ’s life on earth.
They were appointed by Christ to testify to others about their firsthand, eyewitness experiences (1:3)
We have this same witness before the lost today!
We might not be eyewitnesses in the same exact way as the apostles were, however we are eyewitnesses to the change in our own lives.
Therefore, Christians have two proofs of God’s love for them:
the indwelling presence of God’s Spirit; and
the eyewitness testimonies of those who already knew Jesus.
Our own witness might vary slightly from the testimony of others around us, but the same message will emerge and be consistent.
Another thing that is true for converts is that it is impossible for the born again Christian to continually refrain from sharing his/her faith.
At some point, the love we have from our Creator and for our Savior will compel us to share what Christ has done for us and what He can do for many more.
Conversely, those “Christians” who are always too shy to share their faith might not really have agape love nor truly abide in Christ.
That’s why we do and must profess/testify Jesus—to prove our love and to show His love!
John agrees here:
It is quite interesting that one of John’s tests of a true Christian is doctrinal!
— theological truth concerning the person and work of Jesus.
Some Christians, usually in the name of ecumenicism, claim that doctrine, in general, is really not that important to discuss or debate.
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