Thursday, December 17, 2015

1 John 3:22-24 - We Can Ask Him

When clean – can ask
 v. 3:22 - and whatever we ask we receive from Him, because we keep His commandments and do the things that are pleasing in His sight

What commandments? Actually, two: Believe and Love. Note: this is a conditional statement (a nice lady in Mountain View Christian Church always said, "Promises in the Bible come with strings attached...") I don't necessarily agree with her, but there are several such statements, e.g., "...the truth will set you free." John 8:32,33 There not exactly a string attached to this, but there is a condition: you must hold to Christ's teachings before you can see the truth, that is -  knowing the truth requires you follow Christ. Likewise, here in this passage, IF you keep his commandments, AND Do the things pleasing to Christ THEN you may ask and know you will receive. 
Note there seems to be two (2) conditions "keep the commandments" and "do what is pleasing". You may ask, "How are these different?" (I know I did.) Can you keep His commands and still not do things that are pleasing? I think that was the problem the Jews had almost from the beginning, and why much of the Jewish religion at that time devolved into a 'works' type practice. They did things they knew they had to do, but there was no spirit of love or relationship to God. It may have been an assembly line faith. Have you ever worked in a factory or food processing plant where your job consisted on one small task - tightening a bolt on a piece, or trimming the bad spot out of a potato, picking the bad green bean from a conveyor loaded with green beans streaming passed? There is very little connection to the end product - whether a Cadillac or a bag of French fries or a can of green beans.
There is so much of life that is not proscribed by rules or instructions. Jesus wants us to rely on Him for our daily lives (not receiving stuff only, but living out, demonstrating Him living in us). This means living to please Him, and not guessing at it but to live empowered by Him in us. The Holy Spirit was given to instruct and help. See John 14:16, 17, 26ff.

Commandments Keeping them = pleasing God

Commandment = believe and love
v. 3:23 - This is His commandment, that we believe in the name of His Son Jesus Christ, and love one another, just as He commanded us. 

Keep the commandment; that is – living in Christ (picture making a home, settling down, making a nest – that is, abiding).
There is only one really important commandment - believe in the Lord Jesus Christ as your Savior.
The second command is love one another.
Are there any unimportant commands? I don't think so. That's why, I think, there are so few commands from Christ in the new covenant. Three are paramount: (1) Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ; (2) Love one another; (3) Share with others so they may believe, have fatith and be saved. Without faith in Christ, all else is basically useless. Loving fellow Christians flows from our faith. Our faith means we live in Christ; likewise, Christ living in us. There are some other commands, but these are the most important (I do not think I am stomping on any doctrinal issues.)

v. 3:24 - The one who keeps His commandments abides in Him, and He in him. We know by this that He abides in us, by the Spirit whom He has given us. 

How do we know? We will have the Holy Spirit! Tying actions to motives, i.e., motive is as serious as action it indicates heart/mind/spirit turning away from God. How do we know Christ lives in us (makes his home in us) – we don’t hate! God wants us to be aware of, and in control of our thoughts and motives. We are not to be ‘eat, drink, and be merry…’ types. See John 14:16, 17, 26ff. The Holy Spirit is ours if we are Jesus's believers. He will never leave us. He will teach us what we need to know to live pleasing lives. The Holy Spirit will act as God and Jesus act - always 'on-call', always ready to lead, and empower us. He will never force us to do or say anything. That is the paradox of our faith - He stands at the door and knocks. If we invite Him in, He comes in. This is not a smash-and-grab operation, where He storms in like a SWAT team, battering down the door, rushing in grabbing us and dragging us into the light. His voice is quiet. We do not need to strain to hear. Yet amongst all the noise of the world around us, we do need to filter out what is not important. He is there to guide us. See Isa. 30:21 "Do this", or "Go there", or "Talk to that person." These are directions for us, and if we do not follow, can we say we are pleasing Him?

***
End of Chapter

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

1 John 3:16-21 - Caring for Others

Caring for others

v. 3:16We know love by this, that He laid down His life for us; and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren.

God demonstrates what it is to love – He gave us Christ – the ultimate example of love (compare this to the ultimate example of hate – Cain.) As He gave, so also should we.

by this…know love
Gave his life for us

***
v. 3:17-18 But whoever has the world's goods, and sees his brother in need and closes his heart against him, how does the love of God abide in him?  Little children, let us not love with word or with tongue, but in deed and truth.

How do we demonstrate that God’s love is in us? We help those in need.Don’t just talk about doing it! See also the letter from James 1:27, 2:5 - a very practical book – for practical Christian living. Don't think that this is a New Testament (NT) teaching only. The Lord has been a champion of the underdog - widows, orphans, poor, strangers - from the Old Testament (OT) until now. The Jews were to take care of these people. They were instructed to leave some for gleaners when harvesting the crops from their fields. Ruth, one of Jesus' ancestors gleaned from the field of the man who eventually became her husband. The Jews were instructed to share (Isa. 58:7,10); were considered righteous if they shared with the needy (Ezek, 18:7); instructed to not oppress the poor (Zech. 7:9,10). Jesus instructed his disciples that caring for the needy was the same as caring for Him (Matt. 25:35-40) - that is an impressive command! Besides, we will always have the poor (Mark 14:7) so we won't run out of people to serve.

love of God abides
love…in word and deed

v. 3:19-21 - We will know by this that we are of the truth, and will assure our heart before Him   in whatever our heart condemns us; for God is greater than our heart and knows all things   -

If our heart or conscience  condemns and convicts us – God has pointed out our sins by the Holy Spirit. Don’t deny the Holy Spirit pointing out the sin (because God knows everything). We can see this in a couple of verses - Eccl. 12:13-14 and Heb. 4:12,13 - in both verses God will judge all things, because He knows everything, even things done in the dark, hidden, or secret. It is with him 'with whom we have to do'. (Wonderful turn of phrase!) This ties into verse 18, if you aren’t living your faith, you will know. So live the love.

Beloved, if our heart does not condemn us, we have confidence before God; 

See also 1 Jn1:9 – confess your sins as identified. And when your conscience is clear, clean, (i.e., not condemned) then you can ask God. See also James – the reason you don’t get what you ask for, is that you are asking with ‘evil motives’. How do you know (can be confident) you live in truth? By keeping the commandments, and doing the things that are pleasing to Jesus. Practicing righteousness is keeping commandments (for example: loving one another).
This is an If…Then statement: If you keep the commandments, Then you will pray and receive your requests. 
This not "If you just believe hard enough..." (I have heard this said in a church service - a lady wanted to know why she had not been healed of her malady. She was told she didn't believe enough! That was cruel, and wrong headed.) If you are keeping His commandments; if you are living in the power of the Holy Spirit, the prayers you bring to Jesus will be in His will. You will not ask for frivilous, selfish things. I do not count praying for salvation for our children or grandchildren as selfish. Praying for safety during travel is not frivilous. Asking to win the lottery - selfish. Praying for a team to win a football game - frivilous. 

Heart confirms or condemns 
***

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

1 John 3:11-15 - Love One Another

Vs. 3:11For this is the message which you have heard from the beginning, that you should love one another. -

The word ‘message’ is not like a text, voice mail, an email, or even a letter – this is probably closer to ‘command’. It can mean message, as in 1 Jn 1:5 (this is the message you have heard from Him…). In Jn 13:34, 35; Jn 15:12, Jesus commands us to love one another. That is how the world will know we are His, we love one another. Not that the world does not love its own, but the world does not necessarily love others than its own. We are to love all fellow Christians, no matter if we know them well or not. We are to love the world as Christ loved the world – otherwise we won’t have the desire to preach the gospel to the world. Paul tells us that we fulfill the ‘law of Christ’ when we do so (Gal 6:2). He also tells us we have been taught to love one another (1 Thess 4:9) Peter says that we will love each other because we have obeyed the truth and have a sincere love for the brethren (1 Pet 1:22). (Now, is ‘love your brethren” different from ‘love your neighbor”? I think so. Loving a family member is slightly different than loving a stranger. Need to think on this one a little bit.) The emphasis on love in the new covenant (New Testament) is different than in the Old Testament. Perhaps that is the difference: the emphasis. That God loved the nation Israel, and preserved her in spite of rebellion and disobedience, cannot be denied. But love is not the initial impression you get from the OT.

First message (command)

***
Vs. 3:12not as Cain, who was of the evil one, and slew his brother. And for what reason did he slay him? Because his deeds were evil, and his brother’s were righteous.

O.K. Love one another. The negative example is Cain, who murdered his own brother. See Gen. 4:3-10.
Note that no reason is directly stated why God approved of Abel’s sacrifice, but did not accept Cain’s. I don’t think it was merely that Abel’s were sacrificed animals, and Cain’s were vegetables. There are grain offerings specified for the Israelites later in the Pentateuch. The animal sacrifices may indeed be key, since without the shedding of blood, there is no forgivenss of sins.
Cain became angry, immediately – so angry he killed Abel. His attitude was ‘all about me’, rather than ‘how do I please the Lord?’ He also considered any judgment brought against him by God was too harsh – he didn’t realize the grace he had received; he did not recognize the mercy, (Cain obviously did not think of 'eye-for-eye' vengeance) but rejected God. Doesn’t this example seem a bit over the top? Love your brother, versus killing him? Job asks in chapter 34 if God should accept your choice of payment in recompense for your sin, when you have rejected His command, His stated payment required?
The basis for loving one another is placing the others needs and interests genuinely before your own. It flows from the heart. It is not grudgingly done.

Cain vs Abel - object lesson
Why was Abel accepted?
Why was Cain not?

***
The world will hate you
Vs. 3:13Do not marvel, brethren, if the world hates you.

This seems thrown in – it seems to be a non sequitur. (NOTE: I do not think any scripture is a throw-away, a 'nonsense verse' used as filler. There are verses we don't understand because of poor translation, or they are beyond our ken.) So, if it is not a non sequiter, how does this statement fit into the discussion of practicing righteousness, or messages of loving one another? Or is it a continuation of the “love” vs. “hate” message.
Let’s start with how people will receive you since you are a believer.
Jesus knew we would be hated by the world because we are His own (Luk 6:22).
Jesus warned that the world would hate the believers, because we belong to Him (Jn 15:19).
James says that the world and God are not friends (loving the world means we must turn our back on God. Jam. 4:4)
Rom 8:16,17 indicates that since we are children with Christ, we will suffer with Him.
In Ephesians 5:1,8 we are children of the light, which means that the world will not like to have its evil deeds exposed (John 3:19) – not that we need to go around pointing out evil, but the very existence of ‘light’ will cause opposition.
And see also 1 John 3:1 - "the world does not know you, because it did not know Him"

world hates you

***
Vs. 3:14We know that we have passed out of death into life, because we love the brethren. He who does not abides in death. -

Another “we know that” section. How do we know we have God in us? We love one another – the brethren, fellow believers. John changes the perspective a little – life versus death. If I love fellow believers, I have Christ, I have life eternal. If I don’t love fellow believers, I don’t have Christ in me, I don’t have life eternal. Like the paragraphs on sin and sinning, this is not just a one-time kerfuffle with someone, but an attitude, a way of life. That way of life is antithetical with the one God wants for us – and that way leads to death

Love brethren - know…life
No love…death

***
Vs. 3:15Everyone who hates his brother is a murderer; and you know that no murderer has eternal life abiding in him.

Not actually killing, murdering, another person. When we lust after a woman, we have committed adultery already (Mat. 5:28). It is not what goes into our mouths that condemns us, but what comes out (Mat 15:11, 18) that shows what is in our heart. Hate is not love, is not close to love. Despite that Hollywood says love and hate are closely related. (I believe they confuse anger with hate – note all the scenes where couples are fighting, angry with other, and at a snap of the fingers they are making passionate sex. Which is bogus – but it makes good movie scenes.) 

When you have hate for another, especially a fellow believer, love has been displaced. The love of God cannot be there. God is taking us beyond action to motives, to what makes us act. Either we are compelled to love by the love of Jesus for us, or sucked, led down the path of anger, hate, disdain, even apathy by Satan. Why equate murder with hate? Try this scenario: If I hate another person, there is no way that I will have any desire to share the gospel. If that person does not learn of Jesus's love and sacrifice, he will not accept Him as Savior - which means death. My anger has the effect of letting him go to hell, unless the Holy Spirit works in other ways. But his salvation will happen without me, (the results are always up to God, but my job is to share Christ by the power of the Holy Spirit). I have not done what Jesus wants me to do, hence 'murderer'. See Heb. 4:12-13, and Eccl. 12:13-14, also 1 Cor 4:5, and Rom 2:16 – We will all be judged – no actions will go un-noticed.

hate = murder…
murder = no life abiding

***

Monday, September 28, 2015

1 John 3:4-10 - Abide in Him

Abide in Him , not in sin

Vs. 3:4“Whoever sins is guilty of breaking God’s law, because sin is a breaking of the law.” (GNMM) Everyone who practices sin also practices lawlessness; and sin is lawlessness. (NASB).(note 1)
This seems like a change of subject: whoever practices sin... But maybe not, it is the opposite of keeping yourself pure. I see a slight difference in emphasis between the Good News for Modern Man version and the New American Standard Bible version. “Whoever sins..” is fairly stark (anyone, anywhere, at any time...it could be a single occurance), whereas "practices sin” has the feeling of habitual disobedience rather than a single act.
This is not just a one time incident, otherwise it conflicts with John’s own letter (this one), see 1 John 1:8-10. If we were truly sinless, then why would we need to confess, or admit we sin? Paul, in Rom 7:16-25 shows the wretched condition in which we live – we screw up, even when we know we shouldn’t, and when we don’t ‘want’ to screw up. We are sinners, but forgiven. Which doesn’t mean that we should continue to sin. On the contrary, we should be striving to not sin. The closer we come to God, the more we are aware of how short we come to perfection.
John is not writing about a one-time failing, but serial failings. See Jam 4:17 – knowing what is right to do, but not doing it is sin; but doing it over, and over, and over… This is a pattern of behavior. Also see Isa 48:17-18 – God tells them that if only they had paid attention, they would have ‘lived’. Moses warned they had a choice – life or death – obey or die (Deut 30:19).
“practice lawlessness” – according to the lexicon, lawlessness is describing a condition of without law by ignorance, or by violation, or by contempt and violation of law. Note: violation of the law results in lawlessness, but practicing lawlessness is a repetitive happening (contempt for the law would be the driving force, where we do not fear the consequences.)

practice…sin
Lawlessness
Campus Crusade for Christ has a succinct definition of sin, “active or passive rebellion against God.” Breaking the law is lawlessness, but repetitive breaking is ‘practicing’ lawlessness.
***
Vs. 3:5 - And you know that He appeared in order to take away sins; and in Him there is no sin.
See John 1:29; 3:16-21; Rom 11:27. In Christ we have forgiveness of sins (Col.1:14). There is forgiveness through Him and no other (Acts 10:43).
Christ, through the communion sacrament, told us to remember there is forgiveness of sins in Him (Matt. 26:28).
Forgiveness is from God (Ps. 79:9, Mark 2:7).
Jesus forgave sins while here on earth (Matt. 9:16).
Christ is pure and holy, as God the Father is holy. God is described as too pure to even look on evil (Hab 1:13).
We have a high priest (Christ) who was tempted but was without sin (Hbr 4:15).
Even the demons knew that Jesus is God (Mrk 1:24).
God the Father was pleased with Christ (Lk 3:22) – Why is this important, that God was pleased? If God, who is holy, is not pleased, then the offering is not acceptable. If the offering is not acceptable, then it cannot provide forgiveness. Without forgiveness, we have no hope to meet God’s requirements.  Only Christ met all of God’s requirements.
Jesus is called the Holy one of God (Acts 4:27).
Christ presents us as holy to God – through His sacrifice on the cross, we have been made holy (Col 1:22).
His blood is the vehicle (so to speak) to bring us to holiness (God) Heb. 9:12).
Know (why He came)
No sin

***
Vs. 3:6 - No one who abides in Him sins; no one who sins has seen Him or knows Him.
This is an interesting verse. Taken by itself, you could be led to a philosophy (doctrine) of “sinless perfection”; to which I cannot subscribe. There are too many places in the NT, especially the letters, where believers are warned to watch themselves so they don’t sin. Note that they are not warned that all is lost if they do sin. Even John himself, (1 John 1:7-9), warns that believers need to remember they sin, and need to confess it. "abides" – this word has the sense of to live or tarry, to not depart from where you are. To live in Christ. See John 15:4-7; which states that without Christ we can do nothing.
"Has seen Him or knows Him" – again, this must be read in context – it does not mean that if we commit one sin, then we are ignorant of God and Christ, that we have known nothing of the price paid for sins. Peter sinned, when he denied Christ, as one example, but he had ‘seen’ Christ. Paul acknowledges that he sins even though he doesn’t wish to do so, and Paul had seen Christ. John states that if he says he has no sin, he lies – John saw Christ. To see Him – to take heed, or become acquainted by experience. To know Him – to learn to know, understand, and perceive Him. I think John is indicating that if we ‘abide’ then we become so familiar, as if we spent time staring at Him.
There is a book, "The Little Book of Talent" by Doyle. It is about sports and the discipline required for excelling. Without meaning to be so, this is a very spiritual book. It is about the things to practice to become a good golfer, or tennis, or chess, or violin player also apply to walking in our faith. We often believe that successful athletes are just more talented than we. That is true, to a point. Beyond that point is hard work, discipline, time spent perfecting their craft. One of the first premises presented in the book is to find someone to model and 'stare' at him. Study that person: the way he stands, the way he holds the club or racquet, the way he moves his arms, his feet, torso, the way he finishes his follow-through. Then, emulate that style, technique. Break it down into bite-size steps. Practice and perfect them.
Doesn't that sound like learning to live the Christian life? Find a brother or sister in Christ who would be a good example. Do what they do. Do what Christ did. Let them mentor you.
Sinning = not knowing Him.
When we have become intimately familiar with him, have experienced Him, then there is no way we will practice sin, habitually sin. We may even progress to the point we sin less and less.
***
Vs. 3:7,8Little children, make sure no one deceives you; the one who practices righteousness is righteous, just as He is righteous; the one who practices sin is of the devil; for the devil has sinned from the beginning. The Son of God appeared for this purpose, to destroy the works of the devil. -
These verses (7,8) probably should be read together, since separately, verse 7 by itself doesn’t make a lot of sense. Note: verses 7-10 are about practicing righteousness. How do we know how to practice righteousness? Start by loving one another.
Who would try to deceive you by saying that practicing righteousness is not an indication of being righteous? (Well, maybe Satan, but not a lot of other takers on that one). However, it makes a pretty good lie to tell you that you can still be righteous if you continue to sin. These lies, spread by Satan, and by others who are not believers in the Lord Jesus Christ. There are other mis-directions: ‘You’re O.K. I’m O.K.’, ‘White lies don’t count…”. These idea is a great scam – “live like you want, not regarding God’s laws and requirements, and because of Christ’s payment, you can still be righteous.”
Dallas Willard, in “Divine Conspiracy”, says that he hates the bumper sticker "Christians aren’t perfect, just forgiven." He thinks it is shorthand for it doesn’t matter how I act/behave because I have a free pass through Christ. The result is non-effective Christians, who can’t be discerned from non-believers.

Don't be deceived

Practice righteousness

Don’t be fooled – you cannot be righteous and live a life of sin. Why? The Devil has been defeated by Christ Jesus. He no longer has a strangle hold on you, if you abide in Christ. Since you are no longer controlled by Satan, then living a life of sin indicates you are choosing to disobey the Lord. The book of Proverbs classifies this person as as fool - someone who knows the right thing to do, but chooses otherwise. Living in sin is antithetical to Christianity.
C.S. Lewis in "Mere Christianity" says this so beautifully: "Now the whole offer which Christianty makes is this: that we can, if we let God have His way, come to share the life of Christ. If we do, we shall then be sharing a life which was begotten, not made, which has always existed and always will exist. Christ is the Son of God. If we share in this kind of life we also shal be sons of God. We shall love the Father as He does and the Holy Ghost will arise in us. He came to this world and became a man in order to spread to other men the kind of life He has - by what I call 'good infection'. Every Christian is to become a little Christ. The whole purpose of becoming a Christian is simply nothing else."
v. 7 - “for the devil has sinned from the beginning.” -
Not sure how this works out (time versus eternity and timelessness-wise) – God is a spirit, and lives in eternity. There is no ‘time’ for Him. Has Satan/devil/Lucifer sinned from the moment he was created (the beginning)? It appears so. We understand, that the archangel Michael contended with Satan (see Rev.). To some extent, in Ezek 28:12-14, the devil is shown in his glorious and splendid state (using the king of Tyre as imagery). In Isa 14:12-14, the king of Babylon is shown, and the devil is the power behind Babylon, and other world powers. Satan is an accuser of the saints. He is used by God for judgement of His people; and the fall of Lucifer/devil/Satan is depicted. Eph 6:12 says that we battle against the powers of darkness, i.e., the devil. He is the enemy of Christ, and will be defeated and destroyed at the end of time.
Destroy – devil’s work

v. 8 - "Destroy the works of the devil". – Again, see Rev 20:7-10. Complete and utter defeat. The works of Christ the Savior are vindicated. Did they need to be? No. But it completes the work started by the Lord, in order to offset the rebellion of Satan and his angel demons.
***
Vs. 3:9 - No one who is born of God practices sin, because His seed abides in him; and he cannot sin, because he is born of God. -

Rebirth breaks the strangle hold sin has on us. We no longer need to be habitual sinners (practicing sin). When Christ and Holy Spirit make their home, settle down, get comfortable, we will no longer practice unrighteousness. Again, John is not saying that we must experience ‘sinless perfection’. John knows we will sin, see chapter 1:7-9. Without being born again, we cannot stop sinning. We must be born again, John 3:6,7. Peter writes that it is because of God’s mercy through the resurrection of Jesus we have been reborn, and it is because of the imperishable work of Christ (1 Pet. 1:3, 23). Recently, I read in some BSF notes (note 2)that Jesus is “not merely the agent for communication of the message of salvation, but Jesus is salvation itself.” A similar thing is said by Dietrich Bonhoeffer in “The Cost of Discipleship”. In Acts 4:12, “Salvation is found in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved.” This new life without sin does not come automatically without any input from us, but we must ‘work out our salvation with fear and trembling.’ By the power of the Holy Spirit, with Christ living in us, we can live a life without practicing sin. Jesus said if we obey His commandments, we show we love Him, and the Father and the Son will come live in us. (John 14:21, 23).

***
born of God = not practicing sin
Abiding => no sin

Vs. 3:10 - By this the children of God and the children of the devil are obvious: anyone who does not practice righteousness is not of God, nor the one who does not love his brother.
‘By this’ – I think this does not automatically look back to the previous verses, but it easily could do so. The 'by this' can either point to the last half of verse 10 - i.e., you can tell by the way they live if their life is in Christ, or it can point to the verses 1 John 2:29-3:9 -
I think vs 10a may be the end of a train of thought which started in 2:29. It is a bridge verse, tying the previous verses to the next.
This verse summarizes verses four (4) through nine (9). These verses have been about practicing righteousness versus practicing sin – who does and who doesn’t. We can know who is God’s and who is not. It’s simple: watch how they live. Do they practice sin? Then it is probable they are not God’s children. Do they practice righteousness? Then it is highly likely they are not the devil’s followers.
Either you have the Son, or you do not. If you have the Son, there is no reason for you to be a habitual sinner - in fact, you should absolutely not be a habitual sinner. Living in sin is antithetical to God, and Jesus, and the Holy Spirit. John reiterates a statement made in chapter 2 "nor the one who does not love his brother" – linking love of a brother (and also hate) with walking in light or darkness.
***
note 1: "GNMM" = Good News for Modern Man; "NASB" = New American Standard Bible.
note 2: "BSF" = Bible Study Fellowship

Monday, September 14, 2015

1 John 3:1-3 - We are God's Children

vs. 3:1"See how great a love the Father has bestowed on us, that we would be called children of God; and such we are. For this reason the world does not know us, because it did not know Him."

That we are children of God is a demonstration, proof of His love. Also: 'How great a love' is sometimes rendered “see what kind of love” – There are all sorts of ways that love can be expressed. We have been moved from enemies, or just creations, to a position most to be envied. We are now children of the King of Kings, and the Lord of Lords, there is no other. We were created a little lower than angels (Heb. 2:7,9 - and I realize that it is refering to Jesus Christ; that He was lower than angels when He was born of Mary. I extrapolated that since Jesus was human, that perhaps we also are slightly lower than angels. One day, at some time in the future, we will judge angels; implication we will be placed higher than they. All by God's grace of course.) Now we are children of the LORD.
And such we are.” – That’s exactly what we are, Children of God. Not just called children of God, but we are that in this life, not just the life to come. Go back to 2:29, ‘born of Him’ – you must be born again (John 3:3-8; 1 Pet 3:3, 23; 2 Cor 5:17; Gal 6:15; Eph 2:15, 4:24).

For this reason” – I think this refers back to the “we are children of God” set-up. The world does not know us, because we are born of Him, and the world is not, so the world cannot know Him nor us. The phrase could be looking forward to the ‘because’, i.e., because the world did not know Christ, it cannot know us. Either way works.

Children of God
Great love for us
World does not know

***
Vs. 3:2Beloved, now we are children of God, and it has not appeared as yet what we will be. We know that when He appears, we will be like Him, because we will see Him just as He is.

“Beloved” – GNMM (note 1) puts it “My dear friends..”, you know John has been writing close friends, he uses ‘my little children’, ‘beloved’, etc. throughout the letter.
“Now we are children of God” – we are children, right now! Don’t need to wait for later.
“…what we shall be” - However, the job isn’t complete yet. Kind of like, “But wait, there’s more!” See Rom 8:19, 23-25. For the anxious longing of the creation waits eagerly for the revealing of the sons of God. And not only this, but also we ourselves, having the first fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our body. For in hope we have been saved, but hope that is seen is not hope; for who hopes for what he already sees?But if we hope for what we do not see, with perseverance we wait eagerly for it.

We have eternal life, but we have not experienced the full effect, yet. We have the Holy Spirit, but we have not seen God face-to-face. There is so much more to come.

“We know that” – again, be assured. He’s coming again! Jesus himself said he is returning, see John 14:1-3.
“We will be like Him” – this is an overwhelming statement. This is God, the Messiah, the beloved Son of God (with whom he is PLEASED) – and we will be like Him – resembling, corresponding to. Now ‘resembling’ is not the strong word I would be looking for; and ‘corresponding to’ is much closer, giving the idea of being equivalent, or to compare closely.
“We shall see Him just as He is.” – This is how we will know we are like Him – because we will be the same as He is. I don’t think that means we will be God ourselves, pretty sure God is the one and only. We will have been transformed, given a new body, and will begin experiencing the eternal life promised. How is it that being able to see Him ‘as He is’ mean that we are like Him? At this time, we cannot see God and live. He is too glorious. We will, at that time, be able to see Him face-to-face - and live. More than that we will rejoice, sing, praise, even talk with Him - child to parent (and as the bride of Christ, we  also will be with Jesus). I am sure that I cannot adequately describe the wonders we will see.

Look at the following verses regarding seeing God as He is:
Isa. 6:1-8 - Isaiah thought he was ruined, destroyed, because he was looking at God on His throne.
Ex 33:18-23 – Moses was protected from seeing God’s face. This is more than a ‘theophony’.
Rev. 1:12-18 – John’s reaction? He fell down as if dead! I’ll bet John thought he was ‘ruined’ also.
Rev. 19:11-16 – If you met Him face-to-face, there would be no bravado, no bluster, no pride, only abject fear. This is not a ‘meek and mild’ savior, this is the warrior king, King of kings, and Lord of lords!
But then, see Rev 21:3-4, God Himself will be among us, the believers, no more pain, no more grief. He personally will wipe away the tears! We will see Him as He is: our God, our Savior, personal and loving. We are His children!

Side note: non-believers will also see Him as he really is, but not with the same reaction as those of us who are saved. Our reaction - joy, elation, rejoicing, maybe even relief. Their reaction - fear, terrified sadness, dread; they see their 'end', and it isn't good.

In the sermon for 13-Dec-15 Pastor Gene preached on these verses: The following are from my notes on this really good message. Every once in awhile you hear someone ask, "Do you know who I am?" This is a prideful question. We don't even know or understand who we are. The question implies you need to understand this is no ordinary person. There are no 'ordinary' believers. If we could see now what we will be when Christ returns, we would be tempted to fall down and worship that person. We will be revealed as 'glory' - we have more of a sense about it (glory) rather than a definition. We will be the people that God intended for us to be - completed in reality.
Every thing that is part of this fallen world, in terms of sin and weakness and failure, will be stripped away. What is there about your character that is not what you wished it would be? This is glory by subtraction - Are you sharp, angry, bitter, lustful, greedy, bitter, want more and more, jealous, selfish, prideful, apathetic, passive, in depression, worry, stress, bi-polar, fear - most of us can say "yes" to most of those things. Wouldn't it be nice to be done with all that? Imagine the freedom to have none of that.
Glory by addition - this is even more exciting. We will get new bodies, new minds. We do not yet know what we will be! One of the fundamental meanings of the word 'glory' is light, such as the glory of the sun. The 'Transfiguration' is a sample - Jesus' face shown like the sun, and body was pure light. In Revelation, John saw Jesus, and it almost killed him. Light, blazing, molten metal, glory - and we will be like Him! In the mean time, we live between the first advent and the next. Sometimes we ask, "Is this all there is?" Our pet dog does not ask that, nor our cat. That is because there is a deep longing within us, an understanding there is MORE. See Col 3:1-4 'Therefore if you have been raised up with Christ, keep seeking the things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your mind on the things above, not on the things that are on earth. For you have died and your life is hidden with Christ in God. When Christ, who is our life, is revealed, then you also will be revealed with Him in glory.'

children of God
Not yet complete
Be like Him

***
Vs. 3:3 - And everyone who has this hope fixed on Him purifies himself, just as He is pure.

“has this hope in Christ” – the hope is that we will shall see Him just as He is. This translates to eternal life (again see Rev. 21:3-4). Jesus Christ is our hope (1 Th 1:3, 1 Ti 1:1), God is our hope (Rom 15:13), We have hope for salvation (1 Th 5:8), and eternal life (Titus 1:2); We are not to hope in riches (1 Ti 6:17). The hope is that we will be like Him. Our hope is based on the fact that we are children of God.
- “keeps himself pure” – This points out that being saved does not stop at that event. We must live out our salvation. Psalms 119:9 puts it, “how does a young man keep himself pure?” The answer is to live according to His ways. We are to focus on what is pure (Ph 4:8), among other things listed, and the God of Peace will be with us. We know the wisdom from heaven is pure (Jam 3:17). If we live according to God’s word, we can keep ourselves pure. Work out our salvation, or so to speak.
See Col. 1:10 – we need to walk in manner worthy of the Lord. In 2 Pet 1:5-10 and Php 4:8-10, we are supplied with a ‘formula’ for maintaining ‘purity’. I do not mean this can be done by rote, without the power of the Holy Spirit. But the HS does not force me to act as a holy person, the HS appeals, convicts, teaches, leads, but does not make me behave. That it takes effort can be seen in Php 2:12 – that we should ‘work out our salvation’.
“He is pure” – See Revelation! See also 1 Pet 3:18 – Christ is described as the ‘just’ who was given up for the unjust – you and me.

Purify

*** note 1: "GNMM" = Good News for Modern Man (aka: New English Translation)

Friday, August 28, 2015

1 John 2:27-29 - Let what you heard abide in you

The key - What you have heard from beginning,
Keep doing it - (then) You will abide with Son and Father
***
Vs. 2:27 As for you, the anointing which you received from Him abides in you, and you have no need for anyone to teach you; but as His anointing teaches you about all things, and is true and is not a lie, and just as it has taught you, you abide in Him -

But as for you…remember there are those trying to trick you into moving away from Jesus – but it won’t happen. Why? You have been given the Holy Spirit that Jesus promised (see John 14:16, 26). Since you have the Holy Spirit, you don’t need to worry about being led into falsehoods, false teachings, away from Christ, because the Holy Spirit will only teach you the truth. But there is a catch: now that you have the Holy Spirit, you must ‘keep’ him.
This verse is very specific: You have the truth because you have the Holy Spirit, but to remain in the truth you need to remain in a relationship with the Holy Spirit. “Abide” is the word used – it basically means to remain in place, to sojourn, to not depart, to be held, kept, continually, to remain as one, not to become different. I heard somewhere, that the word picture is ‘making a home’, or ‘making a nest’. This not a casual relationship, but a inter-connection between you and the Holy Spirit, and God. Teaching and knowing the truth is not happenstance, peripheral, but requires time spent. Each day we learn how to live with the Holy Spirit in charge.

BUT…you have the Holy Spirit Anointing..
Anointing teaches
You Abide in Him
***
Have You Made the Wonderful Discovery of the Spirit-Filled Life?

Do you have a relationship with the Holy Spirit? If not, you are missing a vital, necessary part of living the Christian life. The Holy Spirit is promised to us by Jesus to be our helper, our teacher, our guide through our life on earth. Here is a good place to start learning how to have a growing, vibrant relationship with the Holy Spirit.
The following link, Have You Made the Wonderful Discovery of the Spirit-Filled Life? will lead you step-by-step to living an empowered Spirit-filled life. (Link opens in new window)
This is from CRU.org (formerly Campus Crusade for Christ), and I can say it has had a huge impact on my life. I first heard this at 'Explo 72' in Dallas, TX. There, for the first time I learned about living moment-by-moment in the power of the Holy Spirit.

***
Vs. 2:28 - Now, little children, abide in Him, so that when He appears, we may have confidence and not shrink away from Him in shame at His coming

Christ is coming again, and when He appears – are you ready? Can you face the judgement? We know the believers will not face the final ‘Great White Throne’ judgement. Our names are in the Lamb’s book of life. But we will face the judgement of Christ. (See 1 Cor 3:10-15; 2 Cor 5:10). We must lead a life that is worthy of our calling (Col 1:10-14) Offer ourselves as living sacrifices (Rom 12:1-2). The only way we can live as we ought is to have Christ living through us.(Gal. 3:20)


Abide in Him = confidence, no shame

If we remain in the living by faith mode, then there is no worry about what we face. There is no need for shame on our part. If we remain in living faithfully, we can be confident. No need to panic.

We can KNOW.
But...
When we sin,
we are not lost!

We can know, we won’t be deceived by our own selves, or by others. This is true because we have the Holy Spirit. We have been “anointed” by the Holy Spirit. But requires effort – we must ‘abide’ – make our home with Christ. Abiding gives confidence. So that you are not afraid to answer for your life when He returns. Even believers face a judgment (See 2 Cor. 5:10, 1 Cor 3:10-15). Being saved, our names are forever written in the Lamb’s book of life (Phil 4:3; Rev. 3:5, 13, 18; 17:8; 20:12, 15; 21:27), is the first (and most important) step. Christianity does not stop there.
James puts it bluntly: ‘faith w/o works is dead’, James 4:14-26. But Paul also indicates this – Col 1:10; Tit 3:8. I especially like the way Colossians states it, “in a manner worthy…” At the end of the movie “Saving Private Ryan.” Tom Hanks' character, as he lay dying from his wounds says to Ryan, “Make your life worth this cost.” (or so). That is what has been asked of us, to be worthy of the price paid.

Vs. 2:29If you know that He is righteous, you know that everyone also who practices righteousness is born of Him -

Since you know Christ is righteous, then you know what is right to do. And since you are God’s child, then you will know to do right. I like the way NASB* puts it, “practice righteousness”.
This seems like this verse should have been at the beginning of chapter 3.
This is an “if…then” statement: If you are from (born) of Christ, then you will be righteous. Why: because He is righteous. Born: John 3:3, 5-8; 1 Pet 1:23; 1 Cor 5:17. We need to not just know about righteous behavior, but to practice it.

Know He is righteous
Practice righteousness

We are God's children - practice righteousness.
End of Chapter.
* (New American Standard Bible)

Thursday, August 13, 2015

1 John 2:15-26 - In or Out of the World

Love of the world versus the love of God

Vs. 2:15Do not love the world nor the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him.

"Love the World" - This is not reverence for nature. The pattern here is that our nature (sin nature by the way) is not God’s nature. Light versus dark, sin versus righteousness. In the letter to the Colossians Paul gives a list of behaviors that we are to avoid, or that we used to practice, but now need to avoid. Col. 3:7-9 "and in them you also once walked, when you were living in them. But now you also, put them all aside: anger, wrath, malice, slander, and abusive speech from your mouth. Do not lie to one another, since you laid aside the old self with its evil practices," If our hearts and minds are focused on the pleasures and sins of this world, it is not focused on the will of God. God’s love abiding in us, drives us to obey. Self-love (from the world) seduces us to turn away from His will. I cannot seek pornography and God’s love. I cannot seek to be angry and have God’s love. I cannot be envious and be controlled by God’s love.

Do not love the world,
If love world, then no Father’s love.

Other verses that touch this topic:
   James 4:4 “Friends with world means hostility towards God”
   Deut. 10:12 –“What does God require, but to serve Him…”
   Luke. 16:13 – “…cannot serve God and mammon”.
   Col. 2:8, 3:12 – working to keep from being defiled by the world.
   Rom. 12:2 – “Do not be conformed to the pattern of this world.”
***
Vs. 2:16 For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the boastful pride of life, is not from the Father, but is from the world.

– A simple list. It covers it all: "All that is in the world..."
Lust of the flesh = Physical pleasures (traps, actually) – sex, drugs, rock-and-roll;
Lust of the Eyes = Mental (wanting stuff); the tenth of the 10 commandments is "do not covet" - See Exo. 20:3-17.
Self-pride = elevating self above others, especially putting yourself in God's place (Satan's downfall).

World – lust of flesh, lust of eyes, pride

Vs. 2:17 "The world is passing away, and also its lusts; but the one who does the will of God lives forever."

The – world going away. We who obey abide forever. We can be strong because the love of God is in us.

***
It is the last hour

Vs. 2:18Children, it is the last hour; and just as you heard that antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists have appeared; from this we know that it is the last hour.
I always thought there was only one antichrist. (See Matt. 24:5, 24 – false Christs!) Anyone who opposes Christ is an ‘antichrist’ – opposes through non-belief, preaching disbelief, persecution, etc.
* * *
Vs. 2:19"They went out from us, but they were not really of us; for if they had been of us, they would have remained with us; but they went out, so that it would be shown that they all are not of us."

This is how we know…they (the antichrists) are no longer with us. Not dead – no longer fellowshipping, worshiping, praying, or believing. We may have thought they were fellow believers. But this shows they were not. They did not know the truth, they knew the world. They (the false teachers) left our fellowship; not driven out, but of their own volition. If they were faithful to Christ, they would have remained faithful in the fellowship,of believers. (see vss. 15-18)

Antichrist – Is coming
  Many have arisen
  Denies Father and Son
They - went out (2x in 19)
They - were not of us (2x)

***
Vs. 2:20 "Nevertheless you have an anointing from the Holy One, and you all know." -
But - You Know.  The reason we know is that we are not on our own. Jesus promised a Helper, someone to come along side and teach us all we needed to know. See John 14:16, 17, 22 -  I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Helper, that He may be with you forever; that is the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it does not see Him or know Him, but you know Him because He abides with you and will be in you... But the Helper, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in My name, He will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I said to you.
***
Vs. 2:21"I have not written to you that you do not know the truth, but that you do know it, and that no lie is of the truth."

A reminder: John is writing to encourage them. Why: because they are believers. They know the truth. They know the ones who said they were fellow followers of Jesus; but then these faux believers left. This does not mean they just moved to Timbuktu. They left the faith, turned their backs, proof they were lying. The people John is writing to have the HS, they have the truth, and are not liars. And the truth does not lie. A lie cannot be the truth. This is a concept that is being lost in our culture. Some people revel in call truth a lie, and a lie the truth.
See Isa. 5:20-21 - Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil; Who substitute darkness for light and light for darkness; Who substitute bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter! Woe to those who are wise in their own eyes And clever in their own sight!


But – you (20)
  Have H.S.
  All know
  Know the truth
No lie is of the truth (21)
Liar denies Jesus (22)

***
Vs. 2:22 – "Who is the liar but the person who denies that Jesus is the Christ? This one is the antichrist: the person who denies the Father and the Son.The Holy Spirit has given you the ability to know the truth."  So where do the lies come from? What is the source? OBVIOUSLY – Satan. But what about the body of believers John is writing to? The lie is “I am a believer.” These are being led to lie by the Anti-Christ
***
Vs. 2:23Everyone who denies the Son does not have the Father either. The person who confesses the Son has the Father also.

Denies Father and Son. Do one, get both. You cannot separate them. Accept the Son, accept the Father. You cannot have one without the other. Deny one, means denying both. The world changed, the relationship of mankind and God changed with the Advent of the Christ. Jesus Christ was always with the Father and the Holy Spirit – but the world was ignorant of His being.
When He came to earth, lived and ministered, was crucified and resurrected, the whole dynamic shifted. Previously, it was God, basically the Father, that the world, including the Jews, had a relationship with, if any. Now, we know that Christ is sent by God, represents God, is God incarnate. Jesus did the will of God. He did not take off on His own to come to earth.
His sacrifice paid the price, and was approved – how else could the resurrection take place? If you despise Christ, you despise the one who sent Him. Jesus acted for the triune God to bring us back into the loving relationship. Reject Christ, reject the Holy Spirit, reject God the Father. On the other hand, accepting Christ means you get the Father also. You can not say, “I’ll take the Son without needing the Father.” Or, “I’ll follow God, but I reject Christ.” Not possible.

***
Denies Son = does not have Father
Confess Son = have Father

Vs. 2:24As for you, what you have heard from the beginning must remain in you. If what you heard from the beginning remains in you, you also will remain in the Son and in the Father.

As for you…” You are different. You are one of us – you haven’t abandoned the gospel; you haven’t pretended to believe; you are not liars; you know the truth; you know Him; you have been anointed by the Holy Spirit.
What you have heard from the beginning” – the gospel is what they heard from beginning, the world has heard.

The message, in brief:

“I have come to seek and save the lost.” (Lk 19:14).
“I am the way the truth and the life.No one comes to the Father but through me.” (Jn14:6)
“…I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners.” (Matt. 9:13)
“…I will him before my Father”, (Matt. 10:32)
“For God so loved the world…” (Jn 3:16); See Jn 5:19-45.
“If any man is willing to do His will, he shall know the teaching…” Jn 7:17;
“… and the truth will make you free.” Jn 8:31-32,
“He who obeys my teachings…will be loved by me.” (Jn14:21,23);
“No other name under heaven..” (Acts 4:12); see Acts 5:29-32;
“God demonstrates His own love for us…” (Rm 5:12);
“…the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” (Rm 6:23).

The message they have heard from the beginning – believe in Christ and you will be saved, to eternal life. If that abides in you, then Christ and the Father will be with you, and in you.
***
Vs. 2:25"Now this is the promise that he himself made to us: eternal life."

The conclusion to be drawn from this is that if you abide in Christ and the Father, and they also abide in you, the result is eternal life. This is the message: you know Christ, you are faithful, therefore – you have eternal life. You can KNOW this. No confusion, no doubt, but certainty. What a blessed relief.

Promise: eternal life

***
Vs. 2:26 "These things I have written to you about those who are trying to deceive you." -

The whole of the previous part of the letter is to encourage and build up the faith of the believers. Look at the statements encouraging them: “by this we know”, “because you know”, “because you are strong”, “abide”, “anointing”.
Look at the phrases warning them: “If we say…we deceive ourselves”, “Do not love the world”, “they are not of us”, “no lie is of the truth”, and the biggie – “anti-christ”.
There are people trying to deceive the believers.

 
Observation (not sure this is entirely accurate): 

In chapter 1:8 we are warned that we deceive ourselves. 

In 2:22 there are those who may be lying to us. 

In 2:26 we are warned they really are deceiving us. The antichrists are doing everything possible to draw us away from Christ. Their goal is to feed that self-deception, to sow confusion, the result is ineffectual followers. That is the crime: we are the messagers for the Kingdom of Christ. If we are wimpy, confused - the world around us will not know! 

These people … Trying to deceive

***

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

1 John 2:9-14 - Loving God

OLD = Love God
NEW = Love one another as Christ did


Vs. 2:9"The one who says he is in the Light and yet hates his brother is in the darkness until now." - This is a similar formula to the “If we say..” focusing on the hypocrisy. These verses are addressing not living as professed. I cannot hate and be filled with love. To hate is to to detest, to pursue with hatred. Is 'brother' talking about an actual brother, or any fellow man, or only a fellow believer. I do not think this means to hate a fellow believer. I think this means that we are not to hate anyone – believer, non-believer, no other fellow human being. God loves the human race, even though we have shunned Him. God expects us to love them, too.

until now.” – STILL in darkness. But the light has come when Jesus came. We can no longer act as if He did not. See John 3:19-21 This is the judgment, that the Light has come into the world, and men loved the darkness rather than the Light, for their deeds were evil. For everyone who does evil hates the Light, and does not come to the Light for fear that his deeds will be exposed. But he who practices the truth comes to the Light, so that his deeds may be manifested as having been wrought in God. Note that James says “even if you do not commit adultery, you are a lawbreaker if you commit murder. If you break one law, you are guilty of breaking them all.” So what if I do not commit adultery, if I hate I am still ensconced in sin. I have not broken free. Jesus came to set us free from the clutches, the guilt, the shame of sin.

SAYS in light, BUT in darkness - Due to hate.

Blinded by Darkness

Vs. 2:10 – "The one who loves his brother abides in the Light and there is no cause for stumbling in him." - The antidote to hate. Love them. Let God love them through you. Not an emotional appeal here. This is not romance, but agape love – love that will bring the good news to them. Love means abiding in light, abiding in Christ. 


Light vs. Dark
love means light, abiding in light,
not blinded by darkness;
No stumbling
Love = light; hate = darkness.

There is no cause for stumbling…” - Nothing to trip them up. The word means to trip up as in a part of a trap, a stick, an impediment. The Jews stumbled over Jesus, but the Gentiles thought Him to be foolish – they just didn’t understand. In us, sin causes us to be blind, even during midday.

see Isa. 59:9,10 – We stumble, because we are in darkness. ***

Vs. 2:11 – "But the one who hates his brother is in the darkness and walks in the darkness, and does not know where he is going because the darkness has blinded his eyes." - ”But” – in contrast to the one walking in the light.
Darkness used three times in this verse. Hating places me in darkness, when I try to navigate, I am in trouble, since I am in darkness, and am blinded by darkness. We tend to think we are blinded by light. And indeed, moving from a dark area to a lighter one, there is a momentary overexposure. We need to squint to give our eyes a chance to adjust. Or we can be blinded by glare, or a reflection. But in fact, darkness is a bigger hindrance. It takes longer for our eyes to adjust when moving from a bright room to a dark one. Also, as the light levels get lower, our eyes lose the ability to discern. Colors are lost first (more rods than cones in our retina). We lose depth perception, and finally, the ability to pick out any objects. Without actually damaging our eyes, we are blind. (It is amazing how little light we need to be able to function).

Refer back to verse 9 – “the one who says…yet” and verse 10.
Verses 9, 10, and 11 are a verbal sandwich
       Darkness
          Light
       Darkness
***
Hate brother = darkness
  But… Does not know
Blinded by darkness

Be encouraged because you are His

Vs. 2:12: - I am writing to you, little children, because your sins have been forgiven you for His name's sake.

'Writing' is the theme for verses 12 through 14. These three verses are like a “bridge” in a song. It doesn’t seem to tie into the verses before or after.
However, “writing" is a running theme for this letter. These verses are a mini-pep-talk. previous the “if-then” type statement. Here John is encouraging them by saying he ‘knows’ they are in light. The proof: their living.
Be encouraged because your sins are forgiven. You don’t need to be blind. You don’t need to stumble about in the dark. See John 3:19-21 (see above). Also, Paul writes that we were slaves to sin, but are now slaves of righteousness. The shackles of righteousness are not odious. Indeed. We are free from sin, and do not need to stumble.

Know Him
Vs. 2:13 –  I am writing to you, fathers, that you have known him who has been from the beginning. I am writing to you, young people, that you have conquered the evil one. I have written to you, children, because you know the Father.

 See John16:33 "I have told you these things so that in me you may have peace. In the world you have trouble and suffering, but take courage - I have conquered the world.", (Rom. 3:4 ?), Rom. 12:21 "Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.", See also Gen. 3:15 – Jesus to overcome Satan, as foretold by God to Eve.

Overcome the evil one.

Vs. 2:14I have written to you, fathers, because you know Him who has been from the beginning. I have written to you, young men, because you are strong, and the word of God abides in you, and you have overcome the evil one.

See Col. 1:9-13 – we are strengthened with “all power”, because of the power He possesses.
Jude 24,25. “Now to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in the presence of His glory blameless with great joy, to the only God our Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen.

***

Monday, July 20, 2015

1 John 2:5-8 - We will know by our obedience

Key: Keep His word.
***
Vs. 2:5-6: "but whoever keeps His word, in him the love of God has truly been perfected. By this we know that we are in Him: the one who says he abides in Him ought himself to walk in the same manner as He walked" -

God’s love perfected in us. Not “perfect" as “without flaw or defect”, but more to be “made complete”. No doubt God’s love is perfect, and in us it will be “without flaw…”, but until we see Him face to face, we will know we are getting closer to Him by how well we keep His word.
Yoda may have said, “There is no Try, only Do or Not Do.” But we always need to Try as well as Do.
“By this we know – (in vs. 6) – we will walk (or, live) as he lived, if we abide in him.
"Walk” – regulate one’s life, to conduct one's self, to pass one's life, to live.
Abiding in Him: is it positional (place) or state (condition)? "Abide” – (in reference to place) to sojourn, tarry, not to depart but to continue to be present, to be held, kept continually. – or, (in reference to state or condition) to remain as one, not to become another or different. See Col. 1:10, 2:6.
Both senses work – if we are present in Christ, if we are kept continually in Him – we will live thus and so. If we are “one” with Christ, if we are not different than Him, then we will live thus and so.
If you say it, then live it. – That is how you will know and God are on the same “page”.

Whoever keeps word will:
   “Walk”
   “Abide”
***
Old and New Commandments

Vss. 2:7 - "Beloved, I am not writing a new commandment to you, but an old commandment which you have had from the beginning; the old commandment is the word which you have heard." - An old commandment as compared to a new Commandment – What is the old commandment? Perhaps it is Deut. 6:4,5 "Hear, O Israel! The LORD is our God, the LORD is one! You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might..  Or perhaps it is “Believe and you will be saved.” Or perhaps “Obedience is better than sacrifice” 1 Sam. 15:22.

What is the new commandment – It could be “If you are His, then live your life abides in Christ”, or perhaps even “love your brother.”
All of those are possibilities, but I think the old commandment is as follows: Love the Lord, love your neighbor. The word from the beginning – obey and trust the Lord, Love the Lord…

The following are samples of following God's commands (or not...):
    Gen.12:4 – Abram did as God commanded.
   years wandering because they would not obey. Exodus – 40
    Love God - Deut. 6:4-6
    “we will serve the Lord” - Josh. 24:14,15
    generation that did not know the Lord. - Judg 2:11
    God will not abandon; but fear and serve. - 1 Sam. 12:20-24
    Because you have not kept the commandment - 1 Sam. 13:14 –
Or,
    Because they did not obey. -  Gen. 3:14, 17
***

Abiding Him, means living like Him.

Vs. 2:8"On the other hand, I am writing a new commandment to you which is true in him and in you, because the darkness is passing away and the true light is already shining."

“On the other hand…” Now, in this verse – a new commandment. The old commandment a “Word” they have heard. The new commandment – 'which is true in Him and in you' is a little obtuse. There seems to be no direct reference. However, it is implied believers will know, non-believers will not have a clue. We can love, because He did. That kind of love is incomprehendable. The "normal" view of God (esp. the OT God) is one of wrath and commands, demands of obedience. This command is LOVE. Love God, love your neighbor, love your fellow believers. Love is the emphasis, not obedience. (Obedience was never for obedience sake, but in response to God). Remember, Jesus is called the light of the world John 1:3-9. Jesus was obedient, to the point of death Phil. 2:5-9 The "old" commandment is "Love the Lord your God." The "new" commandment is "Love others as Jesus loved you." That is, love God, love neighbors, love strangers, love enemies. LOVE!

New commandment
   True in Him
   True in you
Why? –darkness passing away

***
Look at some of the references to “light” – and that Jesus came to quench the darkness. Satan is the lord of darkness. Jesus came to destroy the works of the Devil.

    John 1:5 – darkness did not comprehend light
    John 3:19 – men loved the darkness rather than light.
    John 12:35,36, 46 - in darkness you don't know where you're going
    John 13:34 – love one another, as I have
    John 15:12 – ditto
    Rom. 5:8 – God demonstrates His love…
    Eph. 5:1,2 – walk in love…
    Acts 13:47 - a light for the Gentiles
    Rom 2:19 - a light to those in darkness
    Rom 13:12 - put on the armor of light
    1 Cor 4:5 - God will bring to light the things hidden
    2 Cor. 4:4,6 - Light will. Shine out of the darkness
    2 Cor. 6:14 - fellowship of light with darkness?
    Eph. 5:13 - visible when exposed to light
    Col. 1:12 - inheritance of the saints in light
    1 Thess 5:5 - sons of light and day.
***

Monday, July 13, 2015

1 John 2:1-4 - So That - You May Not Sin ...

Vs. 2:1 – "My little children, I am writing these things to you so that you may not sin. And if anyone sins, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous; " - This could be the answer to the verse 6, 8 and 10 problem. In those verses we were warned not to convince ourselves we had not, or did not sin. If so, we deceive ourselves, we make God a liar because He said we have sinned. However, John is encouraging us to not lose heart.
If we belong to Jesus we will not live in sin. We may fall into it, (I do not mean 'accidental sin') but it will not be habitual. When sin happens there is an answer – we are not abandoned. John sent this letter is to help us not sin. We don’t have to blunder through life. We can live life intelligently, with purpose.

So you may not sin.” - That’s the goal, to live a life for Jesus without sin.
If we do sin, if we don’t make it to the goal, we are not lost. We have an advocate. This is a “legal term” indicating someone who argues a case before a judge, someone who steps forward in my place. If I sin, I do not have to face the wrath of God on my own. I have someone to argue my case before the Judge. The Advocate is none other Jesus the Messiah, the Savior, God the Son. Not some second rate lawyer, or underpaid legal aide. I have the best there is. Jesus Christ the righteous.

If anyone sins (implied: “and they will”) there is a solution. See verse 1:9 – He (Jesus) is faithful and righteous (that word again). We are cleansed and forgiven. We are defended before the Judge, the Father. Jesus is the only one who can stand before the Judge. He paid the price. None of us can come close to meeting the requirements. The Advocate can and does. To say that Jesus argues for us, puts too much emphasis on our adversarial court system. Jesus only needs say, "He is mine." God the Father can say, "That is sufficient." Our adversary is Satan, not God. The Devil is the accuser. He has no answer for Jesus's declaration, and the Father's approval.

Vs. 2:2"and He Himself is the propitiation for our sins; and not for ours only, but also for those of the whole world." - And this is how the Advocate meets the requirements. He himself (i.e., Jesus Christ) is the propitiation. “Propitiation” – an atoning sacrifice. A sacrifice is required to meet the penalty for the sin, according to God’s law. Go back to Passover. A sacrifice – the lamb – was slain, the blood was placed on the door jam (lintel). See the day of Atonement in the Law of Moses. And Jesus' death on the cross. If Christ had died for the few only, the believers only, it would seem to be such a high cost. Face it, not every one will take advantage of the atoning sacrifice. 

It has been said that if I were the only person in the world God would have paid the same price – Christ’s death as a payment for the sin. Still, Almighty God, giving Himself for one – seems highly unreasonable. On the other hand, what is few more (believers only) - still the price is too high. What about the whole world? Price still too high. Yet, it was done, paid, finished.

Unfortunately – that is the case. Only God himself can pay the price required. If God is completely holy, if we cannot come into God’s presence if we have sin, if the only payment in full means a perfect sacrifice – that means only a perfect God can meet the perfect cost. Therefore – Jesus HAD to die to pay the penalty. Why could not God forgive without payment? Wouldn’t that be perfectly merciful? But that kind of mercy would flaunt God’s perfect justice. Justice without payment is not justice at all. It is not a matter of being found “not guilty” – that cannot happen.

He Himself - For our sins For the whole world’s sins.

***
How we know

Vs. 2:3 – "By this we know that we have come to know Him, if we keep His commandments." - This is a change of subject, sort of. This is how we KNOW we know Jesus. Previously, we were claiming (falsely) that we were sinless, past and present. John shows that we have the absolute best Legal Advocate when we do sin. God Himself.

But how can you and I know if we are on the right track? Many times people are committed to a course of action, based on faulty information. Their intentions are good. When you start with a faulty premise, you cannot reach a proper solution.
John lays out a relatively simple test. This is how we can understand, know, perceive, have knowledge. We can be sure we know Jesus. Again, to understand, to perceive, to have knowledge of Him. This is the test: do we keep His commandments? Yes, or no.

We have come to know Him
By this…keep His commandments
Keeping commandments: know we are in Him, abiding

***
Other verses re: commands -
Mrk 7:8 - neglecting God's commands
Mrk 12:28-31 - most important command
Eccl. 12:12-14 - fear God and keep his commands
John 8:31,32 – if you abide in His words, then truly are His disciples, know the truth!
John 13:34 - new commandment - love one another
John 14:15 - love = obey (keep commands)
John 14:21, 23 - love = obey (keep commands)
Jam. 2:14 - faith without works?
Jam. 1:22-25 - hearing without doing
1 Sam. 15:22-23 – “better than sacrifice”
Deut. 5:29 – “Oh, that they would…”
Deut. 6:1-3 - profound reverence of God produces followers

If "I know Him," but do not obey...
***
V. 2:4 - The one who says, "I have come to know Him," and does not keep His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him; -

verses 3, 5 and 6 are all positives to 4’s negative. Verse 4 echos chapter 1:6, 8, and 10.
Basically, an “If..then” statement – “If” we say we know, but don’t live it – “then” we are a liar without the truth.

Saturday, July 4, 2015

1 John 1:6-10 - How to Avoid Hypocrisy

Verses 1:6-2:2 are a discussion on how we as believers see ourselves. Either we are honest about our relationship to sin, and deal with it correctly. Or we are not honest, having a much too positive view of ourselves (see the movie 'Talented Mr. Ripley' for this side of it) and live a life of hypocrisy.

There is a pattern to these verses –

"If we say” – "but"…display (i.e., live out) problems, -
We can see that "If we say…” is used three times. The “but” is understood in two of the verses.

John has setup a logical pattern in the sentences and verses (remember: verse numbers were added by monks or priests many centuries later.)
Vss 6, 8, and 10 are coupled together with vss 7, 9, and 2:1.
Vss 6, 8, and 10 – lists the problem…
Vss 7,9, and 2:1,2 are antidotes.

An example of the pattern is:
    Vs. 6: beginning of “If’ statement
    Vs. 7: completion of the “then” statement

The following is sort of an outline of the verses, a summary:
   If we say “no sin” – then we are self-deluded, untruthful.
   or, if we Say “have not sinned” = we are calling God is a liar, His word is not in us.

These words and phrases are packed with imagery and meaning:
   'Lie' = do not practice truth, not just a one-time Oops
   'Deceived' (self-deception) = without truth, there is truth, but you do not have it in you
   'Liar' = without God’s word.
   'Cleansed' = by Christ’s blood
   'Confession' = leads to cleansing
   'Advocate' is “propitiation for our sins”

IF we say…But we walk otherwise, we lie.
However,
  IF we Walk in light (note: He is light) - our lives match our claims.
  Then: fellowship
  And: cleansed by His blood, i.e., Cleansed from SIN
Conclusion: If Truth is not in us, that is, not practiced, then the word is not in us.
***

Vs. 1:6 - "If we say that we have fellowship with Him and yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth;" - (This the first of three "If...Then" statements.) 

If we say we have fellowship – i.e., to claim intimacy with Jesus, the Lord. I claim to share a life. I claim that my life is an embodiment of Christ living in me. (Gal. 2:20no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me). YET… walk in darkness.
God is light, with no darkness at all. How can I be sharing my life (which is darkness, because I am practicing it) and be one with Jesus who is Light? It cannot happen. Therefore, if I claim to be so, I am lying. God cannot lie "God [is] not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath he said, and shall he not do [it]? or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?" (Num 23:19). It is not God who is mistaken.

"We do not practice"… literally translated is “we do not truth” – not exactly a well turned phrase in English.  To do rightly, to carry out, to do well.  

Fellowship vs. darkness
Fellowship vs. lying, or untruthfulness
Not accidental straying; but is NOT practicing the Life

vs. 1:7 - "but if we walk in the Light as He Himself is in the Light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus His Son cleanses us from all sin." - This is the last half of the first "if...then" statement. Part of this is: actions are proof of fellowship with Jesus. You can say you are a Christian, but if you don’t live it, you are either fooling yourself, or are an out-and-out liar. See the letter by James, especially chapter 2. If I say I know Christ (personally, not just intellectually) then I will live it out.  I will have fellowship, shared experience, with other Christians.
Wait, there’s more: we are cleansed from sin. Note: first time sin is mentioned in this letter. Darkness, deception, lying – but not sin. Sin is the cause of darkness in us. If we are in fellowship with Jesus, we are clean – no deception, no lying, no darkness.

vs. 1:8 - If we say that we have no sin, we are deceiving ourselves and the truth is not in us. - (Second of three “if statements” - first vss 6 &7, third: vss. 10, 2:1,2). Continuation of sin subject. In verse 7, we are cleansed from sin.  If I claim that I am not in a condition of sin (i.e., have no sin) – this is not past tense, it is 'now'. OK - We have been cleansed from sin by Christ’s blood, but if we try to claim there is no sin in us, then we have deceived ourselves. Obviously, as long as we live here on earth, we have the chance to sin (not only the opportunity, but we will do it). Because I am cleansed does not mean that I am sinless – forever and ever. John is writing to believers. Don’t be naïve, don’t be uninformed – you will sin, it is part of you.  Don’t be disobedient, don’t be stupid – lying about your condition. The truth is I am a sinner, saved by Jesus’ sacrifice.
If we say…“No sin” – we are deceiving selves, there is no truth in us. (this seems to be in the present tense). "Have not sinned" – this says we are implying no missing the mark, ever – appears to be past tense – to include all past action

"Have no sin" – claiming none at all - We deceive ourselves

vs. 1:9 – "If we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness." - The action verse of this pair (vss. 8 & 9). Verse 8 is the proclamation verse, verse 9 is the action verse. In vs. 8, we deceive ourselves because we do not admit, acknowledge that we are sinful. So, what to do if I understand that sin is in me, and it separates me from God?
The proof that I am God’s is that I get the sin taken care of. Note: it is not me that handles it. By agreeing with God, He steps up to solve the problem. This is a two-fold solution – forgiveness and cleansing. 'Confess' is not just agreement. Agreement is, "Yes, Lord, you are correct, that was a sin", but it does not stop there. 'Confess' also includes repentance - regret, and choosing to not do it again.  
 - The first, forgiveness, removes the penalty of sin.
 - The second, cleansing, provides a new start.
It is kind of like getting an old car repaired. (forgiveness – the old problem is fixed), and getting a new engine and drive train (cleansed – no old parts to break right away).  – O.K., maybe this is not a great analogy. Forgiveness treats us as if the sin was not there. Cleansing removes the guilt. We are fresh and clean - not just a new paint job.

“He is faithful and righteousness” – This is a response to our confessing. Note: if we confess, He will forgive and cleanse. This sounds like a “contract”. Throughout the O.T. and N.T. God has promised He will forgive if we confess. “Faithful” – always there for us. “Righteous” – will act rightly, it is His nature to do as He said He will do.

Action - Confess!

***
Vss 1:10-2:3 – is one paragraph, another 'If we say that' statement

vs. 10 – "If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar and His word is not in us" - There are two If-Then statements in this one verse
First we “make God a liar”, second, God’s Word is not in us. God has said we are sinners (we sin because we are sinners, not vice versa). So if we disagree with Him, and claim we have not sinned. Either God is telling the truth or we are not telling the truth. If we insist we are correct, then God must be wrong – He’s lied to us. 

Secondly, if we disagree with God, then obviously we haven’t been paying attention – “His word is not in us.” We have not accepted the premise that we have sinned.

(1) If we say…then we make ...
(2) If we say then His word is not...

***

There is a downward spiral, a spiritual descent of refusing to acknowledge our sin. I don’t know if this is a stretch or not – here goes:

Vs.6 – We are in darkness, we lie, do not practice truth. To,
Vs. 8 – we deceive ourselves, do not have truth. To,
vs.10 – God is a liar, and we do not have His word.

There is a three step progression:
One – we are in darkness, (uniformed);
Two – we fool ourselves (actively involved in our deception);
Three – we lash out at God.

Another view of the  three step progression:
One -  we do not practice the truth, even though we know it;
Two – the truth is not in us, don’t know it;
Three – His word is not in us.  We don’t live it, we don’t have it, We don’t have His revelation.

Also it goes from
One - claiming fellowship (6), to
Two - claiming sinless condition (present tense) (8), to
Three - claiming to have never sinned (all of our lives) – escalating claims of holiness.

Note in verse 1:6 – we lie and do not tell truth; in verse 1:8 – deceive self and no truth.
The opposites:
(vs.3) - we know when we keep the commandments.
(vs.5) – keeps the word – know we are in;
(vs.6) – Abiding means walking as he walked.

The Apostle Paul says it SO MUCH better than I. See Romans, chapter One...
18 For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who suppress the truth in unrighteousness,
19 because that which is known about God is evident within them; for God made it evident to them.
20 For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what has been made, so that they are without excuse.
21 For even though they knew God, they did not honor Him as God or give thanks, but they became futile in their speculations, and their foolish heart was darkened.
22 Professing to be wise, they became fools,
23 and exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of corruptible man and of birds and four-footed animals and crawling creatures.
24 Therefore God gave them over in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, so that their bodies would be dishonored among them.
25 For they exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever. Amen.
26 For this reason God gave them over to degrading passions; for their women exchanged the natural function for that which is unnatural,
27 and in the same way also the men abandoned the natural function of the woman and burned in their desire toward one another, men with men committing indecent acts and receiving in [fn]their own persons the due penalty of their error.
28 And just as they did not see fit to acknowledge God any longer, God gave them over to a depraved mind, to do those things which are not proper,
29 being filled with all unrighteousness, wickedness, greed, evil; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, malice; they are gossips,
30 slanderers, haters of God, insolent, arrogant, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents,
31 without understanding, untrustworthy, unloving, unmerciful;
32 and although they know the ordinance of God, that those who practice such things are worthy of death, they not only do the same, but also give hearty approval to those who practice them.

***
Note: In general, in these notes, and the following ones, the scripture verse is shown in italics, with the notes following...
***

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

1 John 1:1-5 - We were Witnesses!

Why John wrote this letter:

v. 1:1 - What was from the beginning, what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, what we have looked at and touched with our hands, concerning the Word of Life

— “And the life was manifested” is the center part of these first three verses. “The eternal life was manifested…” The Word of Life was from the beginning.

What we have: heard/seen/handled - Word of Life
We have: seen/bear witness/proclaim
manifested (2x)
What we have: seen/heard - We proclaim
First hand account – not hearsay

v. 1:2 - and the life was manifested, and we have seen and testify and proclaim to you the eternal life, which was with the Father and was manifested to us

— "Manifested" – made known. See John 1:1 – In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
(See the following definition: to make manifest or visible or known what has been hidden or unknown, to manifest, whether by words, or deeds, or in any other way
  a) make actual and visible, realized
  b) to make known by teaching
  c) to become manifest, be made known
  d) of a person expose to view, make manifest, to show one's self, appear
  e) to become known, to be plainly recognized, thoroughly understood)

What was…”, “What we have…”, all of these point to the Word of Life. John has heard the Word of Life speak. John has seen the Word of Life work. John has “beheld” – (How is that different from seeing, or hearing - definition of 'to behold' = look upon, view attentively, contemplate (often used of public shows) a) of important persons that are looked on with admiration; 2) to view, take a view of a) in the sense of visiting, meeting with a person 3) to learn by looking, to see with the eyes, to perceive).
John has touched, handled the Word of Life. Hear, see, touch, all experiencing the phenomenon personally with the senses. John uses the “we” rather than “I”. Not sure that is being humble. Think that John is including all of the apostles and disciples – all the witnesses.

Proclaim for fellowship

v. 1:3 - what we have seen and heard we proclaim to you also, so that you too may have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ.

And he is speaking up as a witness. “Proclaim”. (To make known openly, to bring a report, to tell) All that has been experienced by John and all the other witnesses – is being told to the reader. It is told for one reason – that you may believe and have fellowship. And why is fellowship so important? What is meant by fellowship. (To share - the share which one has in anything, a gift jointly contributed, a collection, a contribution, as exhibiting an embodiment and proof of fellowship, intimacy). To be intimate with God, the Lord. God will share all that He has. What can I provide to produce as a contribution to the fellowship? “So that…” – Everything John has done is to bring us into fellowship with God, and Jesus, and other believers.

So that – fellowship
   - with us
   - with faithful,
   - with the Father (God)
   - with His Son.

Vss 4-5 – This is the message

v. 1:4 - These things we write, so that our joy may be made complete

First John proclaims, then he writes. Another “so that” statement. “we write” joined to “completed joy”. Whether it is “our joy” or “your joy” (depending manuscripts used). John’s joy is complete, made full – because the believers to whom he is writing are saved. The believer’s joy is complete because they are saved. The “these things” are the things John has witnessed. Also, the things John writes about are to follow – the truth that God is light, etc.

Vs. 1:5 - This is the message we have heard from Him and announce to you, that God is Light, and in Him there is no darkness at all.

And this is the message” – John is proclaiming what he has witnessed, what he heard. John is not making this up – it is not John’s message, it is God’s. John is the conduit. He heard it. He is announcing it. It is one of “these things” he is writing about. God is light.

This is also a “transition” verse. Moving from proclaiming and writing to “darkness” and “light”. John moves to hypocrisy – that’s not what he calls it, but the message is you can’t say one thing, do another, and call yourself a light bearer.

The theme of "God is light” is a major one in OT and NT. God made light and pushed back the darkness. God lead Israel from Egypt with a pillar of fire. God’s words are a light for my feet and path. Those who sin do not want the light to reveal their actions (John 3:19). Without God, we are like a blind man stumbling on a rocky trail. (see Isa. 59:10) Even at noonday – at the brightest time of the day – we are as though blind. We are in darkness. James 1:17 echoes this theme. God provides light to guide me. He does not leave me to stumble along my path. He provides a light. See also Col. 1:13he has delivered out of the domain of darkness …Also Acts 26:18

Thursday, June 25, 2015

My Bible Study Notes

A number of years ago, just after I had committed my life to Jesus Christ, a good friend and co-worker, being a very strong Christian, suggested we have a lunch time Bible Study. We did. I received a lot of guidance from Dave.

First - a two-minute testimony:
I grew up going to church. Mom and Dad were faithful Christians and members of the First Christian Church of Lebanon, OR. I had Perfect Attendance awards to prove it. When I was nine or ten, I went forward at an altar call and accepted Christ, and was baptized. Unfortunately that was about as far as it went. When I went away to college, so did my faith - not completely. There was form but little substance.
I got married, and my wife who had accepted Christ in college through Campus Crusade for Christ (now known as CRU) kept insisting that CCC was so great. Hey! I didn't need Campus Crusade, I had accepted Jesus as a kid, what else was needed? But I had not taken stock of my life, and wouldn't admit that my life did not match my profession of faith. My temper was over the top on occasion, scaring the wife and kids. Not that I actually physically abused them; I did not. But I was volatile, and my anger would flare. It always went away quickly, or so I thought. I was just fine, but they were still anxious and worried.
In 1972, Campus Crusade held a big event in Dallas, TX. Donna convinced me to go. So in June 1972 I took my skeptical self to Dallas for Explo '72, to keep her quiet. The big evening meetings were in the Cotton Bowl, the smaller meetings (only a few thousand people) were in the basketball arena.
The Holy Spirit slapped me up side the head with the 'Four Spiritual Laws', and then He bowled me over with 'Four Laws of the Spirit Filled Life'. I knew right then, right there that I had been playing at Christianity the last few years. I re-committed my life to Christ - confessed my sins and failures, accepted Jesus Christ as Lord of my life, and asked to be filled, controlled and empowered by the Holy Spirit. The verse in First  Corinthians "When we are in Christ, old things have passed away, behold, new things have come" truly fits my life. 

Dave is a good mentor. One of his suggestions was to study a book or letter of the scriptures - reading and asking God to help me understand what was being said therein. By the way, no concordances, commentaries, or Bible dictionaries were to be used. That was overwhelming at first. Another part of that suggested study was to write down what I learned as I studied. That was 'doable'.

So that is the genesis (no pun intended) of the beginning of my Bible Study. I have a couple of spiral notebooks, with handwritten observations of the studies. I have started to type them out and save them on the computer. Since that start, I have discovered there are questions and parts that simply require I check a Bible Dictionary, or Commentary, visiting with my pastor, or the notes in a Study Bible. So I have not studied 'cold turkey', and rely on the Holy Spirit to lead me.  

I plan to post them on this blog - not all at once. The notes need to cleaned up and formatted a little better. Please read, enjoy, and I pray there may be a germ or two of insight that will bless your day.


In Christ -

1 John - Proof of Life - Introduction

John's First Letter
This is the theme of the John's letter -  So that we may KNOW…

One of the interesting things in our my spiritual journey, is that we (my wife, family and I) were in a church in Gresham. They (the church members and leaders) felt that you could not know for sure if you were going to heaven. What if you had just committed a sin and then died before you take communion? You might not be saved! It was very 'works' oriented. They took the Philippians verse about working out your salvation very seriously. Jesus's sacrifice gave you the opportunity to work your way into heaven, to prove you were worthy.
They had no answer to, "But it says you can KNOW you have eternal life." This letter and John's gospel were fundamental in my confidence that Jesus loved me, died for me, was raised from the dead, and is my personal savior. I know that Jesus has provided eternal life for me, because I accept Him as Svior and King.

These are the evidences that you are, or are not, a child of God… Proof of Life
OUTLINE 
1 John 1:1-4 – Personal witness testimony
1:5-7 – Fellowship with Jesus
1:8-10 – Sin damages the relationship
2:1-2 – So you may not sin
2:3-8 – Obedience shows fellowship
2:9-11 – Light vs. Dark
2:12-14 – Reason for letter
2:15-17 – Do not love the world
2:18-27 – Warning against the anti-Christ
2:28-3:2 – Children of God
3:3-10 – Practicing righteousness or practicing sin
3:11-18 – Love one another
3:19-21 – Heart is our conscience
3:22-24 – His commandment
4:1-6 - come
4:7-21 – Love abides in us
5:1-3 – We have the love of God
5:4-5 – Overcoming the world
5:6-12 – Witness of the Holy Spirit
5:13-16  – We can know
5:17-19 - Confidence
5:20 - We have the truth
5:21 - Final exhortation 

Words used/repeated in 1 John:

* * *
Fellowship – 1:3, 6, 7, 
Joy – 1:4
Light – 1:5, 7,  2:9, 2:10, 
Darkness – 1:5. 1:6, 2:8, 9, 11, 
If we say – 1:6, 
Know – 2:3, 5, 13, 14, 18, 20, 21, 29, 3:2, 5, 6, 14, 15, 16, 19, 20, 24;
  4:2, 6, 7, 8, 13, 16, 5:2, 13, 15, 18, 19, 20, 5:15, 18, 19, 20
Come to know – 2:3, 4, 
Does not know – 2:11, 21,  3:1; 4:8, 13, 16 
Abide – 2:6, 10, 24, 27, 28; 3:6, 9, 14, 15, 17, 24; 4:12, 13, 15, 16, 
Practice sin – 3:4, 8, 9, 
Practice righteousness – 1:6 (truth), 2:29; 3:7, 10, 
Do not practice – 1:6, 
Love (loves) – 2:10, 15, 3:1, 11, 14, 16, 17, 18,
  4:7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21; 5:1, 2, 3, 
Hates (hate) – 2:11,  3:13, 15, 4:20, 
By this - 2:3, 5, 18 (from this), 3:16, 19, 24, 4:2, 6, 9, 13, 17, 5:2,
Have (has) the Father (Son) – 2:23; 5:12, 4:1-6
Keep … commandments – 2:3, 4, 3:22, 24, 5:2, 3
Born – 5:4, 
Bear witness - 5:7-11; 
Beloved – 2:7; 3:2, 21; 4:1, 7, 11;  
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I included the above list, because it is my firm conviction that God uses repetition to emphasize a topic. Lecturers know that a subject must be repeated at least six times for it to 'catch' in a listeners mind. Sometimes, a subject is not repeated verbatim, but with a slight variation, or using allegory, or other type of illustration to get it to stick. Don't fool yourself. Just because you are not flogged with a topic in a letter does not mean it is not important. For example, Joy is only mentioned in the first chapter. However, we know that joy is important to Jesus, the Father, and the Holy Spirit. 

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The following table shows the positive and negative truths that reveal whether you believe and accept Christ as Lord in your life or not. This should not be used as a club against others. Use it as a barometer of your own life - are walking with Christ or not?  This is how you may KNOW you are a Christian.


Are you walking with Christ or not...
- - YES - -
1:7 - walk in the light
1:9 - confess our sins
2:3 - keep His commandments  
2:5 - obey His word
2:11 - love fellow Christians
2:20 - have the H.S.
3:3 - hope means purifying self
3:7 - practice righteousness
3:14 - love fellow Christians
3:19-21 - our conscience is convinced by the H.S.
3:24 - keeps commandments, believe in Jesus
  Christ, have H.S.
4:2 - confess Jesus is Christ
4:6 - listen to teachings of apostles
4:13 - have the H.S.
4:15 - confess Jesus is Son of God
5:2 - love God and obey commandments
5:5 - have conquered the world
- - NO - -
1:6 - say fellowship but walk in darkness
1:8 - say do not sin
1:10 - say have not sinned
2:4 - say know God but do not keep commandments
2:9 - hates fellow Christians
2:19 - they left the church (antichrists)
2:22,23 - denies Jesus is the Christ
3:8-10 - practices sin
4:3 - does not confess Jesus
4:6 - do not listen to apostles teachings
4:20 - hates fellow Christians.

John's writing style is different than Paul's.
I don't know how many of you ever diagrammed a sentence. That was pretty standard when I went to grade school. Diagramming sentences helps to figure out the subject, predicate, object, and any adverb or adjective phrases. Diagramming one of Paul's sentences are a huge undertaking. On the other hand the long, convoluted sentences can be broken down to more clearly get to the root of what is being stated, and what is amplification, or expansion. John's writing is not so convoluted as Paul's (clearly God uses the writer's personality and training when inspiring them to write - can you doubt that Paul is a scholar, perhaps even a legal scholar?). John writes in a florid fashion, with more imagery and feeling. I am not saying Paul was pedantic and dry. John's writing style seems more 'personal' than Paul's. Both writers address people they know, but John seems more empathetic.