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Introduction
A couple of weeks back I got an email from a Kickstarter campaign that I had subscribed to for the production of a sort of “reunion album” of a one-hit-wonder band from the ‘90s that I listened to in college.
(Yes, I’ve become part of that “nostalgia demographic” that drives so many band reunions and reboots…) In the course of this particular band’s process of producing their reunion album, the band leader shared news via the Kickstarter emails that their long-time bassist had come to the realization—in the middle of the project!—that he was no longer interested in playing bass guitar.
Ever.
So the band has scrambled to find another bassist to complete their project and still perform at the live show they have scheduled later this year.
A common way of describing what that bass player experienced is to say that “his heart wasn’t in it”—he no longer loved playing music, his delight and affection for performing was gone.
(On the whole, I think it’s probably better for a musician at that level to step away from performing and recording if he gets to the point when he no longer has the “heart”—the passion or the joy—of playing.
That kind of thing comes out in the music, doesn’t it?)
I guess I wanted to mention that this morning because it helps us focus in on what John is talking about here in our text—because it’s not just Boomer musicians who can find that their heart is no longer in what they are doing.
John says here that believers can find themselves with a heart that is weary and burdened—a heart that needs to be “reassured”
1 John 3:19 (ESV)
By this we shall know that we are of the truth and reassure our heart before him;
A heart that can “condemn us”
1 John 3:20 (ESV)
for whenever our heart condemns us, God is greater than our heart, and he knows everything.
A heart that needs “confidence”
1 John 3:21 (ESV)
Beloved, if our heart does not condemn us, we have confidence before God;
I don’t know where your heart is this morning—but I know that there are a lot of reasons why you may be weary and discouraged.
You may be struggling with sin that won’t leave you alone, you may be weighed down by the consequences of other people’s sin.
Perhaps you’re going through a season where it feels like “your heart’s not in it” when it comes to following Christ—your Bible reading has fallen off, your prayer life has gone stale, your enthusiasm for spiritual things has grown dim.
And if you’re not in a place like that today, you certainly have been in the past—and all of us will be there at one time or another as our lives go on!
And so what I want us to take from John’s words here in our text this morning is to uncover some “Gospel remedies for a burdened heart”—I pray that God’s Spirit working through His Word would meet you in your weariness that you may
REASSURE your heart with the REALITY of God’s LOVE for you in Christ
There are at least four of these wonderful “Gospel remedies” that John lays out here in our text.
The first Gospel remedy for your burdened heart this morning is to consider the fact that
I. God’s love that SAVED you is now TRANSFORMING you (1 John 3:18-19)
I say this because of verses 18-19:
1 John 3:18–19 (ESV)
Little children, let us not love in word or talk but in deed and in truth.
By this we shall know that we are of the truth and reassure our heart before him;
We observed this last week, and it’s worth revisiting here today—John uses verse 18 to conclude his argument from the previous verses that anyone born of God would love with actions and not just words—and then he turns around and says that genuine Christlike love in our lives is a reassurance that we belong to Him! Do you see it?
“Love in deed and in truth” is the way that “we shall know we are of the truth and reassure our hearts before Him!”
Reassure your heart with the love of God that saved you—this love is seen in the fact that
He SACRIFICED Himself for you (1 John 3:16)
A couple of verses earlier we saw the sacrificial nature of the love of God for you:
1 John 3:16 (ESV)
By this we know love, that he laid down his life for us...
This is the love that saved you, Christian—when you were still a sinner, Jesus laid down His life for you!
When you were unwilling to listen to Him, when you were set against Him, an enemy and oathbreaker by nature—even when you were an outlaw and rebel, Jesus willingly laid down His life for your sake!
And John says in these verses that this love that saved you is also in the process of transforming you!
The rest of 1 John 3:16 says
1 John 3:16 (ESV)
By this we know love, that he laid down his life for us, and we ought to lay down our lives for the brothers.
In other words, the love by which Christ sacrificed Himself for you is the same love by which
You love others SACRIFICIALLY (John 13:35)
You can have the assurance that your salvation is genuine—that “you are of the Truth”—when you see yourself exhibiting the same sacrificial love for others that Jesus showed you!
When your thought process naturally goes something like, “I can’t leave him in that fix; Jesus never left me!” Or “I can’t let her suffer like that; Jesus didn’t let me suffer!” or “I know it’s going to cost me dearly to get down into their mess with them; but Jesus came down into my mess to rescue me!”
You can’t just shrug your shoulders and say, “Well, he’s getting what’s coming to him..., because Jesus didn’t let you get what was coming to you!
That is love that the fallen heart simply cannot produce, that the world simply has no mechanism for.
When you love sacrificially like Jesus did, when the same love that saved you begins to transform you, you can be assured that you genuinely belong to Jesus Christ in salvation!
After all, Jesus Himself said that this kind of love is how the world will know that you belong to Him:
John 13:35 (ESV)
By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
And if that love is a sign for the world to know you are His disciple, surely it is an assurance to you that you are His disciple!
Reassure your burdened heart with the reality of God’s love for you in Christ—be comforted that God’s love that saved you is now transforming you, and be comforted that
II.
God KNOWS your HEART better than you do (1 John 3:20)
1 John 3:20 (ESV)
for whenever our heart condemns us, God is greater than our heart, and he knows everything.
We noted earlier that Satan has no more power to bring formal charges against you—he has been permanently disbarred from the Throne Room of Heaven, where he used to accuse God’s people.
But all too often the Accuser that hounds us isn’t Satan; it is our own heart!
What do you do when it’s not the devil that is accusing you, but your own conscience?
When it’s your own heart that recoils at the sin you still get tripped up by, when it’s your own voice muttering in your ear, “You ain’t no Christian!”?
Here is the great Gospel remedy for that weary, condemning heart: The love of God for you in Jesus Christ means that
He UNDERSTANDS all your CIRCUMSTANCES
He is “greater than your heart”—He knows your struggle.
He has seen every battle you’ve fought and lost, He understands any and every “extenuating circumstance” that there could be, He “knows everything”.
Including all the battles that you’ve won with that sin, and especially the genuine longing for holiness and grief over how far you have to go to grow into the Christlikeness that He has promised you!
So reassure your condemning heart that God knows that your faith is genuine even when you feel like “you ain’t no Christian!”
The love of God in Christ for you means that He understands all your circumstances—whatever is excusable in your behavior, He excuses.
But even better than that--
He FORGIVES the INEXCUSABLE (Romans 8:1)
This is the Gospel—that
Romans 8:1 (ESV)
There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.
When you are crushed by your failures to love, disheartened by losing a battle with sin, when your conscience is condemning you for your remaining corruption, remember this, beloved: God sees you with the eyes of a loving Father!
He knows everything about your struggles, and He does not condemn you!
Reassure your burdened heart with the reality of God’s love for you in Christ—the love that saved you is even now transforming you; God knows your heart better than you do, and reassure your burdened heart with the promise that
III.
God HEARS you and ANSWERS you (1 John 3:21-22)
1 John 3:21–22 (ESV)
Beloved, if our heart does not condemn us, we have confidence before God; and whatever we ask we receive from him, because we keep his commandments and do what pleases him.
The love of God that understands your heart better than you do enables you to grow in confidence before Him—you learn that He is not standing over you as a stern and implacable Judge; He looks on you with the loving heart of a Father who does not condemn you.
And that gives you confidence to call on Him in prayer!
Here in this verse John is referring back to Jesus’ words that he recorded in his Gospel.
John 15:15-16 reads
John 15:15–16 (ESV)
No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you.
You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide, so that whatever you ask the Father in my name, he may give it to you.
John says in both places that God hears and answers your prayers
When you are SERVING Him (John 15:16)
In his Gospel he writes that God answers your prayers “so that you may bear fruit and your fruit should abide”—here he writes that we receive whatever we ask from God “because we keep His commandments”.
In other words, Jesus has appointed us to go out and obediently bear fruit for Him!
He has commanded us to nothing less than bringing the entire world into the obedience of faith—and He has promised us all of His presence, power and authority as we do it!
In other words, when we are in the trenches of the warfare of this world, battling to destroy arguments and every lofty opinion raised against the knowledge of God, when we are striving to take every thought captive to Christ (2 Cor.
10:4-5), when we are going into all the world to declare this Gospel to every nation and teaching them to obey Christ, when we are seeking to battle our indwelling sin and strive for the holiness he commands in us—He has promised that we can always call in the artillery of His power through the walkie-talkie of prayer!
(But, in John Piper’s memorable turn of phrase, far too many Christians are trying to use that walkie-talkie to call the maid to bring another pillow!)
God hears and answers your prayers when you are serving Him in the sacrificial love and obedience that He calls you to—but John is careful to point out that God doesn’t just love to answer your prayers because you are a “good soldier”—He also loves to answer your prayers
Because you are PLEASING to Him
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