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Category Archives: Sermons

Love not the world, 1 John 2: 15-17

May

7

2017

thebeachfellowship

As we have seen in our study of 1 John so far, John has been writing to the church that they might not only know God, but that they might have fellowship with God. Fellowship is intimacy, it is communion, it is having the life of God and the light of God in you. Fellowship with God is the way to complete joy. It is the way to life, abundant life, even eternal life. And fellowship, John says, produces love for God. That is the result of fellowship; that we come to love God, even as He has loved us. And so to that end we love one another.

In chapter 2, John has shown us what love for God looks like. It looks like the same love that Christ has for us. In 2:6 he says we walk in the same manner as He walked. So Jesus Christ is our example of how to love. And the evidence that we have Christ’s kind of love, John says, is that we keep His commandments. We keep His word. Jesus manifested His perfect love by keeping the commandments of God and keeping the word of God perfectly. And so if we are His disciples, we too will keep His commandments and His word. If we do not keep His commandments, and yet we say we know God, then John says in vs 4 that we are a liar and the truth is not in us.

That love which produces obedience also produces spiritual maturity. As we obey Him, as we are trained by obedience to the word and His commandments, we grow in our faith. We grow in maturity. And that is the goal of discipleship. That we would come to maturity in Christ, that we might become reproducers. That we might shine the light of God to others, so that they would come to know God, as they see the life of Christ in us.

So John tells us that if we love God, we will love what He loves. We will love Him, we will love one another, we will love His commandments, and we will love His word. But in our text today, John says that on the other hand, if we love God, we will not love things that are opposed to God. If we love God’s truth, we will not love a lie. If we love God’s word, we will not love that which is opposed to His word.

So he shows us what love is not, by saying it this way; “Do not love the world nor the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him.” What John is saying, is that the world system is opposed to God, it is not of God, and if you love the things of the world, God does not love you. “The love of the Father is not in him.” I take that to mean that God’s love is not completed in us, because our love is diverted from Him to the world. So loving the world is not loving God because the world is in opposition to God.

Now let’s make sure everyone is on the same page with what is meant by the world. The world does not mean Earth, or all that God has created to live on the earth, like animals and birds and trees or the ocean. One could have an ungodly love for those things too, so that they become sinful, if we worship the creature rather than the Creator. But I don’t think that’s primarily what John is talking about. And he isn’t necessarily talking about the individual people in the world. In John 3:16 it says, “God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believes on Him should not perish, but have everlasting life.”

So God obviously loves the people of this world, and we also are told to love one another, to love our neighbor, and even love our enemies. But again it’s possible to love people, or a person, to the degree that you love them more than God, and that would be a sin. But again, I think that isn’t primarily what is spoken of here.

What we can deduce from scripture is that the “world” is a reference to the world system, which was orchestrated by Satan himself, to be in opposition to God, and designed to seduce people to believe a lie and reject the truth. This demonic system is described in Eph 2:1 which says, “And you were dead in your trespasses and sins, in which you formerly walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, of the spirit that is now working in the sons of disobedience. Among them we too all formerly lived in the lusts of our flesh, indulging the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, even as the rest.”

So it’s the world system, or age, which Paul speaks of is like a water course, which directs the flow of a river, like a channel cut through the landscape. It is directed, Paul says, by Satan, and works in mankind to produce disobedience to God. And John also tells us that this world system is opposed to God – it is opposed to what God has revealed in His word, so that if you love the world, then you are being equivalent to an adulterous wife or husband who is cheating on their mate.

In James 4:4 we see that very analogy of adultery used. James says, “You adulteresses, do you not know that friendship with the world is hostility toward God? Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God.” So to be a friend of the world, is to love the world system. And God is not pleased with that. He is opposed to that world system, Jesus suffered and died to take us out of that system, and so to return to it is to spurn the value of the shed blood of the Holy Son of God.

Now in vs.16, we see more detail in regards to what constitutes the world. Notice the phrase, “all that is in the world.” So all that is in the world, all that constitutes what he means by the words “in the world” is found in the next three phrases. Three things that make up what John refers to as the things of the world system which is in opposition to God.

The first thing John says is of the world, is the lust of the flesh. What is that? Well, lust means a carnal desire or forbidden desire. It is sinful desires. In John 8:44 Jesus said to the Pharisees, “You are of your father the devil, and you want to do the desires of your father. He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth because there is no truth in him. Whenever he speaks a lie, he speaks from his own nature, for he is a liar and the father of lies.” So it is sinful, it’s from your fallen nature, and it is of the devil.

Paul said in Romans 6:12, “Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body so that you obey its lusts.” Lusts then is a desire of the flesh, it is carnal, it is sinful, it is natural, it is devilish. It is wanting what Satan says is good, and rejecting what God says is good. It is selfish. Ultimately that is it: it is selfish impulses that are contrary to the spiritual truth God has given us. It can be a lust of the body, or a lust of the mind. But it is not spiritual, but carnal, and self centered, desiring self fulfillment, usually at the expense of others. It is loving me, more than loving God.

The second thing John identifies as of the world is the lust of the eyes. All of these are related, of course. They can be overlapping. But specifically, John says it is the things which are lusts of the eyes. Once again, lust means carnal desires. And many times those desires originate by what we see. What we look at excites our lusts. Now most of us instantly think of things like pornography, or looking at someone in a lustful way. And that certainly fits in this category. 

Jesus said in Matthew 5:28, “but I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lust for her has already committed adultery with her in his heart.” So merely looking at a woman with lust is equivalent to adultery which is a grievous sin against God and man. David committed a horrible sin, the sin of adultery and murder, and it all started with looking at Bathsheba inappropriately. It started with a look, gave birth to sin, and it ended up in destruction.

But there is more to the lust of the eyes than looking at a woman. Lust of the eyes can include looking at your neighbors house and lusting after it. Looking at the nice clothes of people you meet and lusting after that. Or lusting after cars, or possessions of any kind. Anything that takes your eyes off of Christ and turns that kind of adoration to someone or something else is sinful. It’s seeking what isn’t yours. It’s seeking what God has not given you. It’s dissatisfaction with what God has given you. It’s of the world. And it’s in opposition to God.

The final thing which John says is of the world is the pride of life. I really think this one is behind all the others because it’s the source of all sin. The pride of life is that which says, “I will get what I want because I need it, or because it’s my right to have it, or because it will make me happy.” And once again it’s origin is from Satan.

In Isaiah 14:13, we read what God said to Lucifer, “For you have said in your heart: ‘I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God; I will also sit on the mount of the congregation On the farthest sides of the north; I will ascend above the heights of the clouds, I will be like the Most High.’” Notice, five times Satan says, “I will.” That is the hall mark of pride. It was the original sin, and it still is the origin of all sin. Pride. And God hates pride.

Jesus was anything but prideful. Phil. 2:6 says of Christ, “Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God: But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men: And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.” To humble yourself is to be like Christ, to be a servant, to be obedient even unto death. Christ put aside His rightful place in heaven on the throne, to take our place as a payment for our sin. He is the opposite of prideful. And so should we be even as He was. We should live for Him and no longer simply for ourselves.

So there are three gateways to sin that are identified here; the lusts of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life. All sin finds it’s way into our hearts by at least one of those gates. And there are two examples in the Bible in which we see all three of those illustrated. The first one we will look at the person failed in their temptation. The second one we will look at the person was victorious in their temptation.

Now as you might have guessed, the first example is found in Genesis 3, when Eve was deceived by Satan to eat of the tree. Verse 6 says, “When the woman saw that the tree was good for food…” So what’s the first one? Lust of the flesh. She desired to eat what God had said was not good. It wasn’t related to hunger, she had all kinds of things to eat. It was the idea that there was something desirable being withheld from her. She thought it was something good. That there was something good outside of what God had said was good. The lust of the flesh.

Secondly, she saw also that it was a delight to the eyes. That’s the lust of the eyes. She went from thinking about it to looking at it. To gaze at it longingly.

And then she also saw that the tree was desirable to make one wise. That is the pride of life. The pride of life is arrogance to think you know better than God knows. Eve listened to the devil, then she believed the devil’s lie. She doubted God’s goodness and doubted His word. Then she wanted what the devil told her was good. She looked at it and it looked good to her. And so she ate it, and she got her husband to eat it as well. And because Adam partook of the sinful thing, the sin nature has passed down from him to every subsequent generation. We suffer the sin nature today because of the original sin of Adam.

But because God loved us, even when we were sinners, God sent forth the second Adam. And that second Adam is Jesus Christ. And Christ is my second illustration of dealing with the threefold temptation of sin, but unlike Adam and Eve, the second Adam was victorious over sin, that we too might have victory over sin.

This illustration is found in Luke 4. Jesus had just been baptized. God had spoken audibly to Him from heaven. It was the beginning of His earthly ministry. And God started it all off with 40 days of fasting in the wilderness and being tempted by the devil. That ought to be a lesson right there. You can have a mountain top experience with God, be doing everything right, and yet God decides you need to go through a period of fasting and temptation.

But Jesus was obedient because the Father willed that He do it. He was submitted completely to the will of the Father, He only did what the Father told Him to do. He operated only in the power of the Holy Spirit and here He was led by the Spirit into the wilderness. But along comes Satan and Satan comes at Him with the three temptations of the world and says to Him, “You need to eat, why don’t you turn those stones into bread.” “Jesus said, ‘It is written man shall not live on bread alone.'” He didn’t give in to the lusts of the flesh.

So, Satan led Him up and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world. Satan went after Him by the lust of the eyes. “And the devil said to Him, “I will give You all this domain and its glory; for it has been handed over to me, and I give it to whomever I wish. Therefore if You worship before me, it shall all be Yours.” This was an attempt to appear to help get Christ’s mission accomplished, but by Satan’s methods. We have that same temptation in ministry today, don’t we? We can get it done quicker, more efficiently if we do it the world’s way. We can have the admiration of the world if we only disregard what God says and do it the world’s way.

But Jesus answered and said to him, ‘It is written you shall worship the Lord your God and serve Him only.'” I can’t serve you. I will not worship you. Jesus will say later that you must worship God in spirit and in truth. There can’t be worship that isn’t true to God.

There is one more temptation left and that’s to the pride of life, so Satan led Him to Jerusalem, had Him stand on the pinnacle of the temple, probably a 400-foot drop to the valley below on that southeast corner of the temple ground. “If you are the Son of God, throw Yourself down from here.” You want these people to recognize You as the Messiah, the Son of God, remember the Old Testament says in Psalm 91, “He’ll give His angels charge concerning You to guard You, on their hands they’ll bear You up lest You strike Your foot against a stone.”

Satan has appealed to the lust of the eyes, the lust of the flesh, and now the pride of life, and Jesus said to him, “You shall not put the Lord your God to the test.” Three times now Jesus quotes from Deuteronomy. He quotes the law of God. He just met every temptation with Scripture. He was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin.

And that’s how we overcome the world with it’s lusts of the flesh and eyes, and the pride of life. Every temptation can be overcome with scripture. We answer every temptation with the word. It’s the only way we can overcome temptation, when we remind ourselves of what God has said. We combat the lie with the truth.

So that’s what we are left with. A choice between the lie and the truth. The lie of the world, the lie of Satan, or the truth of God. And these two choices, John says, have two outcomes, two destinies. One leads to death, and one leads to life. He says in vs.17, “The world is passing away, and also its lusts; but the one who does the will of God lives forever.” We have two different principles operating. In the world the principle of death is operating. In the people of God who have overcome the world the principle of life is operating. The world is corrupt and dying. It is fading away. It’s becoming worse and worse and the cancer that is sin is feeding upon itself, destroying itself. And one day, Peter said in 2 Peter 3, “ by His word the present heavens and earth are being reserved for fire, kept for the day of judgment and destruction of ungodly men.” “But the day of the Lord will come like a thief, in which the heavens will pass away with a roar and the elements will be destroyed with intense heat, and the earth and its works will be burned up.” All that is in the world, all it’s lusts, all it’s pride, will be destroyed.

But, John says, “the one who does the will of God lives forever.” That which is physical, earthly, worldly will pass away. But that which is spiritual will live forever. Jesus taught this principle in Luke 12:30, saying, “For all these things (lusts of the world, pride of life) the nations of the world eagerly seek; but your Father knows that you need these things. But seek His kingdom, and these things will be added to you. Do not be afraid, little flock, for your Father has chosen gladly to give you the kingdom. Sell your possessions and give to charity; make yourselves money belts which do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near nor moth destroys. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”

I close today with that thought; set your affections on things above. Not on this world. Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your strength, with all your soul, and with all your might. Love your neighbor as yourself. And love not the world, neither the things in the world. They are passing away, but He who does the will of God lives forever. Martin Luther wrote, “I have held many things in my hands and I have lost them all. But the things I have placed in God’s hands I still possess.”

Have you completely surrendered your life to God? Or are there things of this world that have seduced your affection from God and cause you to sin against Him? I pray that today the eyes of your heart will be opened, and you will confess your sin, turn from that sin, and trust in His word to lead you and guide you in all truth, and into life everlasting. Let us pray.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

The test of fellowship, 1John 2:7-11

Apr

23

2017

thebeachfellowship

 

We have been studying the doctrine of fellowship so far in our exposition of 1 John. We have seen that God designed us for fellowship with Him, and He desires fellowship with us. But as we have learned, before we can have fellowship with God, we must first have a relationship with Jesus Christ. Jesus manifested Himself to the world so that we might come to know God. Hebrews 1:3 tells us that “[Jesus] is the radiance of [God’s] glory and the exact representation of [God’s] nature.” But God desires more than just knowledge of Him. He desires fellowship with us, communion with us. He desires love with us. He loved us enough to punish Christ so that we might by faith become the children of God. And out of this relationship He desires our love for Him.

So we have seen various aspects of fellowship up to this point. We saw the basis of fellowship, the nature of fellowship, the proof and progression of fellowship. Today we are going to examine the test of fellowship. When we were in school as kids, we dreaded tests, didn’t we? The idea of a test always struck a chord of fear in my heart. Usually it was because I was not prepared. But the teacher understood that for us to really know the material she had been teaching, there must be a test of our knowledge. As students, we could protest all day long that we knew the subject matter, but the teacher knew that unless there was a test, our knowledge, or lack of it, would not be proven, it would not become evident.

So also John, as he teaches us this vital doctrine, knows that it is one thing to say you know Christ, but it’s another thing to actually have a relationship with Him. John says it’s one thing to say you have fellowship with God, but it’s another thing to actually walk with Him. And to illustrate that in chapter one we see John use again and again the phrase, “if we say.” “If we say we have fellowship with Him and yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth.” “If we say that we have no sin, we are deceiving ourselves and the truth is not in us.” And “If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar and His word is not in us.” All false professions of fellowship which are revealed by our walk. And we looked at the remedies to all those false professions. What we should do, as opposed to what we merely profess. We have to examine our worship to be certain we do not simply give lip service to God, but that our actions give testimony to the truth.

The next progression then in John’s letter is to define sin. And in chapter 2 vs 4, he defines sin as not keeping the commandments; “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.” So keeping His commandments, or obedience to God, is proof of fellowship with God.

Now today, John tells us what those commandments are. The commandment is love. John doesn’t explicitly spell out in these verses what the commandment is. But it’s clear from the context of the passage, especially vs 10, that the commandment is love. Love is the overarching theme of John’s epistle, and it’s the preeminent commandment of the Bible. But let’s look at our text to confirm this. Don’t just take my word for it. First of all, John says it’s an old commandment. Vs.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.”

So he is saying, “I’m not writing to you a new commandment.” “I’m not coming up with some new thing, some new gospel, some new knowledge.” There were a lot of false teachers in John’s day that were trying to teach some new doctrine, as if they received it from some vision or revelation. And so John, as he is writing to combat a lot of the false teaching of Gnostics and Dualists and so forth, is emphasizing that this is not something new.

A lot of commentators debate what exactly is meant by his comment that the commandment was “from the beginning.” Some think it predates creation, speaking of the nature of God. Some think it speaks of Moses and the Levitical law. Some think that it means the beginning of one’s salvation. I think we can make the case that all are true. John uses this idea of in the beginning, or from the beginning on a couple of other occasions. John 1:1, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God.” Obviously in this passage, “in the beginning” refers to eternity past. Before creation, before the law, before the incarnation.

Another passage is found right here in 1John, chapter 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, and we have seen and testify and proclaim to you the eternal life, which was with the Father and was manifested to us.” There again, “from the beginning” refers to the eternal nature of Christ, who was manifested to man in His incarnation. So I believe it’s safe to say John’s speaking of the eternality of this commandment, which reflects the eternal nature of God.

Now we know that God has also declared Himself to man in His law, which He gave to Moses on Mt. Sinai. His Law declares His nature, His character, and His attributes. And if we are to have fellowship with Him, then we must share those characteristics. Thus God’s nature becomes God’s law. As God said to Moses in Leviticus 19:2, “You shall be holy, for I the LORD your God am holy.”

In the law, Jesus said there were two commandments which contained the whole law. Some rabbi added up all the laws in the Pentateuch and came up with 613, if I remember correctly. And Jesus, in Matt. 22:37 said in answer to what was the greatest commandment said, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets.” So I think it’s fair to say that the old commandment, which was from the beginning, are these two which Jesus said contained all the law.

However, it can also be argued that it means the beginning of one’s salvation. John tells us in chapter 3 vs 11, “For this is the message which you have heard from the beginning, that we should love one another.” So it is a foundational message which is essential to the gospel. It’s old, it’s eternal, but it’s still vitally essential.

But notice then John seems to contradict himself in vs.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.”

Now John is indicating that on the other hand, this old commandment is, in some way, new. What does he mean, “On the other hand I am writing you a new commandment, which is true in him and in you …”? Well if you can remember back in our study of the gospel of John, you may recall that this is an echo of Christ’s words recorded in John 13:34, in the Upper Room Discourse. There Jesus said, “A new commandment I give unto you, that you love one another as I have loved you.” That last phrase, “as I have loved you” is the key. To love one another is the old commandment, predating even creation. But “as I have loved you” is new application of it. The manner by which we love, the process by which this can occur is new.

I would suggest then that what is new is the manifestation of this law through Jesus Christ. He establishes the standard of love. And this is certainly new. Because Jesus showed through His life God’s standard for love that we are to emulate. We are to love one another as Christ loved us. The motive for our love is new. Before we loved because it was legislated in the law. It was required, and so the Jews in particular looked closely to see who they had to love and when. They limited love according to what the law specifically dictated. Christ though showed a different standard for love. He loved us when we were enemies of God. He loved us though we despised Him. He served those who should have been serving Him. And when we come to know that love, through a personal relationship with Him, we have now a new standard for love, and a new motivation.

So in the reference from the Upper Room Discourse, how did Jesus show He loved them? He loved them by washing their filthy feet. That’s what He did to illustrate His love for the disciples. And I think that’s sort of a metaphor summing up how Jesus had loved them all through His ministry. They always needed their feet washed spiritually. And as we have discussed here in this epistle, this continual cleansing is necessary if we are to have communion with God. But our love for God should motivate us to stay pure, to live as He lived, and love as He loved.

How important is love? John 13: 35, “By this all men will know that you’re My disciples.” How they going to know you’re a disciple of Christ? “If you have love for one another.” You’ll know because it’s a test that reveals your knowledge of God. Everybody else will know you are a Christian because of your love for one another. It’s a humble love. It’s a self-sacrificing love. It’s a bowing and serving love. That kind of love, sacrificial love, is what Jesus speaks of when He said “Greater love hath no man than this that a man lay down his life for his friends.”

Now notice back in our text that John says this commandment is true in Him and in you. The word for true there means genuine. Genuine love is defined by Christ. Folks, I’m afraid the church has let the world co-opt Christian love. Love has been redefined by the world, and the church, unfortunately, has debased it’s definition as well to that of sentimentalism. The church must get back to the Biblical definition of love.

In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus had a few words to say regarding the law of love. In Matt. 5:43 He said, “You have heard that it was said, ‘YOU SHALL LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR and hate your enemy.’ “But I say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you,
so that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven; for He causes His sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. For if you love those who love you, what reward do you have? Do not even the tax collectors do the same? If you greet only your brothers, what more are you doing than others? Do not even the Gentiles do the same? Therefore you are to be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.”

I just want to point out, that it’s human to love those who love you. It’s natural to love those that do good to you. But God’s standard of love is to love those who injure you. To love those who mistreat you. To love your enemies. Even as Christ loved the church and gave Himself for her. Christian love is sacrificial love. It puts the other’s needs above your own. And this attribute, Jesus said, will be the defining characteristic, the defining test, to the world that is watching, that we truly are Christ’s disciples. And by the way, that’s God’s standard for marital love as well. The love between a husband and wife is not just sentimental, it’s not just romantic, but according to Ephesians 5 it is to be as Christ loved the church and gave Himself up for her. Marital love is sacrificial love.

Now how do we love like Christ loved? Isn’t that a tall order? Is it even possible? Well, John says it’s true in Christ and it’s true in us if we are truly in fellowship with Him. So as we have already learned, this fellowship with God occurs when we walk in the light as He is in the light. When we walk in the light of truth. When we keep His commandments. When we confess our sins as they happen. We walk in fellowship. “Because the darkness is passing away and the true Light is already shining.” As we are conformed to His image, as we are sanctified in obedience to Him, there is less darkness and more light shining in us.

The Apostle Paul gives us some more insight in Romans 5:5, “the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit who is given unto us.” Notice that we have the love of God in our hearts because of the Holy Spirit within us. He is the source of our love, He is the power that governs our love. And through that same Spirit is also the way the Lord loved his disciples. The love of God was shed abroad in his heart by the Holy Spirit who was given unto him without measure. That is the only way anyone loves another the way God loves. Only God can love that way. Therefore it is the same way for us. That is why John says, “which is true in him and in you.” It comes out of a shared life as we have communion with the Holy Spirit. He is our power to keep the commandments of God. As we yield to Him, and as we stay true to Him, we are filled with HIs presence and His power.
So finally, we see love not only as an old commandment and love as a new commandment, but love as a way of life as we walk in the Light. This isn’t just empty philosophy. This isn’t just pie in the sky liberal ideology. In verses 9 to 11 John gives some clear illustrations of what love looks like. Here the principle is applied. The test is given to the one who claims to be a Christian. Verse 9, “The one who says he’s in the light, yet hates his brother is still in the darkness until this moment.” Here is another false profession. “If we say, or the one who says he is in the light and eat hates his brother is still in darkness.”

I’m not sure if darkness is ignorance or an indication of a unbeliever. I would like to think it’s ignorance, or willful selfishness. Some commentators think it speaks of a unbeliever. Well, they would certainly fit the bill. But remember, we’re talking about fellowship here. And we have seen it’s possible to be a Christian and walk in darkness. So I would argue this is a condition of selfishness, or ignorance. But either way, it’s a sin. Ignorance of the law is still breaking the law, it’s still sin.

But the remedy comes in verse 10. “The one who loves his brother abides in the light and there is no cause for stumbling in him.” Now that’s a pretty obvious illustration. If you’re walking in the light, you’re not going to trip over something. He who is in the light sees where he’s going. He’s not like somebody bumping around in the darkness. When you love and obey the Law of God, when you express the love of God, the love of Christ to others, you’re walking in the light, you’re not going to stumble, you’re not going to fall into sin.

But their is also a sense in which this is saying if you love your brother, you won’t do something to cause him to stumble. Paul had a lot to say about this in Rom 14:21, “It is good not to eat meat or to drink wine, or to do anything by which your brother stumbles.” And again in
1Cor. 8:9, “But take care that this liberty of yours does not somehow become a stumbling block to the weak. For if someone sees you, who have knowledge, dining in an idol’s temple, will not his conscience, if he is weak, be strengthened to eat things sacrificed to idols? For through your knowledge he who is weak is ruined, the brother for whose sake Christ died. And so, by sinning against the brethren and wounding their conscience when it is weak, you sin against Christ. Therefore, if food causes my brother to stumble, I will never eat meat again, so that I will not cause my brother to stumble.” So then, if we love our brother, there will be no cause for stumbling in him. We will not despise our brother for the sake of our liberty or our rights. But we put his needs above our own.

And then John closes with a comment on the absence of love in verse 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.” Sin is darkness, it is ignorance, and it is blindness. One who is walking in darkness is one who is blinded by sin. Are they saved? I don’t know, God knows. Or are they just backslidden? Again, I don’t know. But I do know the remedy. The remedy to the darkness is light. 1John 1:5, “God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all.”

The answer is that we receive the light. The answer is we do not put a basket over the light. The answer is that we walk in the light as He is in the light. And if we are to stay in the light, we must love our brother. And the result will be that we shine the light of God to others. We reflect Jesus Christ to the world through our behavior. So that the world may know that we are His disciples. The manifestation of that test is that we love one another as Christ has loved us. This is difficult, I know. Human nature is opposed to it. Human nature talks about love, but only loves oneself. But through the knowledge of Christ, and through walking with Christ, we will adopt His nature, and what is true in Him will become true in us, because the darkness is fading, and the light is shining. Walk in the Light, even as He is in the Light. 1John 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.”

So this is a test of your fellowship; do you love one another as Christ loved you? Paul said in 2Corinthians 13:5, “Test yourselves to see if you are in the faith; examine yourselves! Or do you not recognize this about yourselves, that Jesus Christ is in you—unless indeed you fail the test?” Are you manifesting your faith? It’s one thing to claim it, it’s another thing to live it. We are called to live out our faith as a testimony to the world, and in obedience to Christ. I pray that you do not fail the test of fellowship, the test of loving one another as Christ loved you.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

The proof and progression of fellowship, 1John 2:3-6

Apr

16

2017

thebeachfellowship

If you are a regular here at the Beach Fellowship, then you will know that I do not normally try to accommodate the holidays with topical messages. It is our practice to preach verse by verse, and we are in 1John 2 today by the providence of God. So I hope that will not be discouraging for any visitors that might have come expecting a normal “Easter” message.

That being said, however, I do want to make one association from our text at the outset, which has to do with the theme of Easter – that is the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. The resurrection is the purpose of Easter, of course, and not an Easter bunny, or a Easter eggs. We celebrate Christ’s resurrection this Sunday as we do every Sunday throughout the year. That is why the Sabbath was changed to Sunday, the first day of the week, to commemorate the resurrection of Christ.

However, what is significant about the resurrection from our perspective here this morning is that it’s because of the resurrection that we worship a living person. John speaks here of knowing Jesus, of coming to know Him. Present tense. If I were to speak of the fact that I know George Washington, you would think I was either delusional or that I misspoke. It would be more correct to say “I know of him,” or if I were alive in the early 19th century I might have said, “I knew George Washington.” When someone has died, it is not proper to say “I know him.” But “I knew him.”

But because of the resurrection, John who witnessed Jesus crucified and dead and buried can say, “I know Him.” Present tense. Because John and 500 other people witnessed the appearance of the resurrected Lord on several occasions prior to His ascension. And because John knew that Jesus was alive, and that He is eternally alive having ascended bodily into heaven, and hence he is able to say to us that we too might know Him.

So today, rather than focusing on the facts of a historical event 2000 years ago, we are going to focus on the present reality of knowing the resurrected, living Jesus Christ. Christianity’s whole premise, is that we can have a vital relationship, and personal fellowship, with the living, Lord Jesus Christ. We can know Him, not just intellectually, or theologically, but we can know Him personally, and even intimately. In fact, that is John’s goal in this gospel; that we might come to know Jesus personally and intimately, so that we might have fellowship and communion with Him.

Just having a relationship with Christ is not the end goal of the gospel, but that we might have fellowship. Fellowship is the same word in the Greek we translate communion. It means the living, resurrected Christ lives in us and through us so that we might have the power of new life. The death and resurrection of Christ is not just an historical fact to celebrate, but a present reality to duplicate. His death is an example to be reproduced in us, dying to the old man, dying to the world. And His resurrection is to be reproduced in us, living a new life, conformed to the image of Christ, living in His power and for God’s glory. As Paul said in Phil.3:10, “that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death.”

Now to establish the doctrine of fellowship, John has in chapter one presented the basis of our fellowship, which is a relationship with Jesus Christ. In vs.1-4 John teaches the necessity of a relationship with Christ before you can have fellowship with God. Jesus Christ, says John in ch.1vs 1, was from the beginning. He is the eternal God who existed from the beginning. In the beginning, Christ already existed. Then He was manifested in the flesh. The invisible became visible. And by coming to know Him, to believe in Him and who He said He was, to believe in what He did for us by dying on the cross for our sins, God grants us salvation on the basis of Christ’s atonement. So we begin our relationship with God through faith, by the grace of God, by which we are made a part of the family of God. Through accepting and believing and trusting in Christ, we are made the children of God. That is the basis of our relationship. That is the only way you can have a relationship with God, it’s only through faith in Jesus Christ. Not through our good works, but through His good work. That’s why they call it “good Friday.” Because of what He did on the cross. Not by works of righteousness which we have done.

So faith in His atonement for our sins gives us a relationship with God. We become a child of God. But it is possible to have a relationship with God and not have fellowship with Him. There is a distinction between union (relationship) with Christ and communion (fellowship) with Christ. The goal is not to just have a relationship, but to have fellowship. In relationship we come to know God, but in fellowship we come to experience God. God designed us for fellowship. So John presented that principle by saying in chapter one that God is light and in Him there is no darkness at all.

He goes on to say in chapter one that a person can have a relationship with God and yet not have fellowship, when a person walks in darkness. And in order to illustrate that broken fellowship, he gives us three false professions of fellowship, all of which start with the phrase, “If we say.” He says, “If we say that we have fellowship with Him and yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth.” Then “If we say that we have no sin, we are deceiving ourselves and the truth is not in us.” And finally, “If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar and His word is not in us.” Three false professions of fellowship. Three ways in which our fellowship with God is broken; if we walk in the darkness, if we deny our sin, or if we rationalize our sin. Now I don’t want to re-preach the last two sermons, so I will leave it to you to go on our website if you like at www.thebeachfellowship.com and you can read them there if you like.

But as we come to chapter 2, John is continuing to teach this doctrine of fellowship, and in today’s passage he gives us two other principles of fellowship with God. First we will look at the proofs of fellowship, and then the progression of fellowship. Let’s start with the proofs of fellowship with God, or another way of saying it is the evidence of fellowship with God.

Vs.3, “By this we know that we have come to know Him, if we keep His commandments.” Here is proof number one that you have fellowship with God. You will keep His commandments. John states this both positively and negatively. Vs 4 is the negative; “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.”

The willingness to keep His commandments, says John, is a sign of true fellowship. It is proof that an act of union with Christ has already occurred, you have been born again. Your actions have changed, and because they have changed and you do not behave as you once did but you now have a desire to obey him, you can know you have indeed been born again.

But you cannot reverse this order! You cannot come to know God by attempting to keep His commandments. That is impossible. Titus 3:5 says, “Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us.” You can never come to know God by trying to keep his commandments, for a relationship with God comes by faith in Jesus Christ. That must come first, and then the keeping of the commandments is evidence that your relationship is real, and that it is producing fellowship with God.

There is an aspect of the negative principle of proof that I must mention, however. And that is that John makes it clear that it’s possible to claim you know God, to claim a relationship with God, to even claim fellowship with God, and yet be a liar because the evidence of your works speaks louder than your words.

Jesus gave a warning about such people in Matthew 7:21, “Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father who is in heaven will enter. Many will say to Me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name, and in Your name cast out demons, and in Your name perform many miracles?’ And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; DEPART FROM ME, YOU WHO PRACTICE LAWLESSNESS.’”

So then the first proof of fellowship is that you will keep the commandments. No one is able to keep the commandments perfectly. But the result of new birth is that you get a new heart, which gives you new desires, resulting in a desire to keep the commandments of God. If you sin though, God has given us a way to restore that fellowship. Chapter 1:9, “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” Confess means to agree with God, that His commandments are good, and that we agree they are right, but to admit it when we fall short. And if we confess our sins, Jesus Christ the Righteous (chapter 2:1,2) is able to cleanse us and restore us to fellowship.

The second proof of fellowship is found in vs. 5, “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 second evidence of fellowship is that we keep the word of God. The idea behind the word keep is that of a sentinel. It means to guard, to observe, to watch. A proof of your fellowship with God is that you observe His word, and you come to love His word. David was a man after God’s own heart, the Bible tells us. And though David fell into sin, he constantly proclaimed his love for God’s word. Psalm 119:11 says, “Your word I have treasured in my heart, That I may not sin against You.” It goes on to describe the love of the psalmist for the word of God; “I have rejoiced in the way of Your testimonies, I shall delight in Your statutes; Your testimonies also are my delight; Behold, I long for Your precepts; I shall delight in Your commandments, Which I love.” I could go on and on. Psalm 119 alone has 176 verses, practically all of which extol his love for the word of God.

Let’s not forget that Jesus Himself was introduced by John in his gospel as the Word made flesh. So if we are going to claim fellowship with the Word, then we must keep the Word, and treasure it in our hearts. And that love of God’s word will be a proof of our fellowship. This is how God talks to us, how He communes with us. Fellowship is communication.

The third proof of fellowship is found in vs.6, “the one who says he abides in Him ought himself to walk in the same manner as He walked.” You can exchange the word “abides” for “fellowship”. It means the same thing. So read it again, “the one who say he has fellowship with Him ought himself to walk in the same manner as He walked.”

That simply means that we go where He goes, we do what He does, we say what He says, we walk where He walks. We follow His leading. We follow His example. Peter, who was adept at missteps in his walk as a disciple, in his later years wrote in 1Peter 2:21, “For you have been called for this purpose, since Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example for you to follow in His steps.” The Greek word for “example” used there is “hypogrammos”, which means a writing copy, including all the letters of the alphabet, given to beginners as an aid in learning to draw them. Remember those when we were in elementary school? You traced over the dotted lines to learn how to write the letters. This is what Peter says about Christ’s example. We walk as He walked. We walk in the same manner as He did. And when we walk in His steps, we have fellowship with Him.

And the good news is that now that we are born again by faith in Christ, we have been given the Spirit of Christ within us to help us walk as He walked. To give us the power to live the life that He wants us to live.

Now let’s look at the last point John makes concerning fellowship, and that is what I call the progression of fellowship. If you know Christ, if you have a relationship with Christ, then not only will there be the evidences or proofs of your relationship as we just mentioned, but there will also be a progression in your fellowship. I’ve often stated the principle that Christianity is progressive. It’s a walk, a journey of faith. Jesus called it the Way, the Way of truth. And as you walk with the Lord, as you have fellowship with the Lord, there will be a progression that gets better and better.

And to illustrate that I just want to point out three words regarding this progression of fellowship that John uses in this text. He says fellowship begins with knowing, it becomes loving, and it ends with abiding. I said earlier that we were designed for fellowship with God. Ecclesiastes 3:11 says that “He has also set eternity in their heart.” Some have likened that to a God sized hole in your heart that cannot be filled with anything else but fellowship with God. God designed us, made us for fellowship with Him. Genesis 1 says that we were made in His likeness, according to His image. 2 Cor.11:2 says we were made to be the bride of Christ.

All the other things God made in creation, He spoke into existence. But God formed man out of the dust of the earth like an artist lovingly shapes a sculpture. And then it says that God put His lips to man’s lips and breathed into Him the breath of life, and man became a living soul. God made man for His pleasure, to be His bride, to have communion and intimacy with Him forever. But Satan sold man a bill of lies, promising a better life, a higher knowledge of good and evil if they would just obey him. And so man exchanged the glory of life with God for the temporary pleasure of this world, not fully comprehending that sin would bring about death and separation from God. But thanks be to God, Jesus made it possible for us to be reconciled to Him, to have life in His name and through His righteousness be restored to fellowship with God forever.

Now this notion of communion with one you love should be familiar to all of us. A young man sees a young lady, and he wants to know who she is. He is interested in her. He finds out her name. He introduces himself. He asks her out on a date. He wants to come to know her. And that knowledge of her produces a relationship. They become friends. They aren’t just acquaintances. They begin a relationship. And of course, that produces dating. It doesn’t really matter what they do, as long as they do it together. They want fellowship. They talk on the phone all the time. They have communication. They go on long walks together. And before you know it, they are in love. Their love is reciprocal. It’s not going to work if he loves her, but she doesn’t love him. They both love one another. And the progression continues as it has for thousands of years. That fellowship, that love, desires full time commitment. John calls it abiding. We call it getting married and setting up house together. Till death do us part. For better or for worse. Forsaking all others, I will cling only to you. That’s the idea of abiding.

Well, that’s the progression that John shows us in this text. Vs.3, we have come to know Him, Vs5, the love of God has truly been completed, and Vs 6, he abides in Him. Let’s look real quickly at those three stages. To know, in vs.3, we have already established as a relationship with Christ. The first stage of our fellowship is relationship with Jesus Christ. And John tells us that relationship is evidenced by obedience. We do what He tells us to do. We keep His commandments.

I want to point out something here. In the first chapter and the first two verses of chapter 2, John is talking about sin being the thing that breaks our fellowship with God. Now in vs.3, he starts talking about keeping the commandments of God. The point I want to make is that John is now defining sin. He said in the last chapter, “if we say we have not sinned, we lie.” Now John defines sin; it’s not keeping God’s commandments. God’s commandments define sin. Without the law, we would not know sin. Paul said in Romans 7:7, “What shall we say then? Is the Law sin? May it never be! On the contrary, I would not have come to know sin except through the Law; for I would not have known about coveting if the Law had not said, “YOU SHALL NOT COVET.”

Christ did not come to abolish the law, but He came to fulfill it. And furthermore, He came to explain it, expand upon it. He said that all of the law was contained in this; “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your strength and all your might. And you shall love your neighbor as yourself.” Those two commandments encompassed all the law. So a right relationship with God will be evidenced by obedience.

Jesus emphasized that obedience in John 14:15, “If you love Me, you will keep My commandments.” And in Verse 21, “He who has my commandments and keeps them, he it is who loves Me.” And so we see that obedience segues into the next stage of our fellowship; obedience to Christ produces the next stage which is love for Christ. In him who is obedient to the commands of Christ the love of Christ has truly been perfected. Perfected means completed.

We love God because He first loved us. God initiated this fellowship. He loved us, He sought us and wooed us to Him. He introduced Himself to us in the scriptures. He manifested Himself to us through Jesus Christ. And as a result we come to know the love of God experientially, and we reciprocate by loving others as He loves us. That’s what it means to be perfected or completed. We love others as He loves us. We love His church because it is HIs body.

And then lastly, that love desires to abide with Him permanently. One day that will result in Jesus coming again to take us to His home, to the place He has been preparing for us. But for now that means that His Spirit takes up residence in us, so that we might have communication with Him through His word and through prayer and assembling together with His people. But abiding means even more that that. Abiding produces fruitfulness. John 14:4 ”As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me.” You can be in Christ, as a member of the vine, and only bear dry leaves. That is mere relationship. But if you want fruitfulness in your life, there must be that further attitude of abiding in him, living in Him and He living in you. That, he says, is what produces significant results in this new life in Christ. Without Him, “you can do nothing,” (John 5:5)

Well, we must close. Let me just conclude by saying that Christianity is not a bunch of formulas or rituals, it’s not an intellectual assent to God, nor even an emotional attachment to God. Christianity is a personal relationship and communion with the very Creator of the Universe, the Lord Jesus Christ. He is alive, and He wants to come in and have fellowship with His bride, that we might know the power of the resurrection life that He died to purchase for us. Jesus said to His church in Rev 3:20, “Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and will dine with him, and he with Me.” That is what He wants. Fellowship with us. I trust that you will desire fellowship with Him. You can have this communion with God, when you come to know Christ, and to love Him, and abide with Him.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

The nature of fellowship, 1John 1:5-2:2

Apr

9

2017

thebeachfellowship

The theme of the first chapter of 1John is how we can have fellowship with God. Last time we saw the basis of fellowship starts with a relationship with Jesus Christ. Without the basis of a relationship, there can be no fellowship. Basically, that means that you must be born again by faith in Christ, trusting Him as your Savior and Lord for the forgiveness of your sins. That relationship is the basis by which you can have fellowship with God.

As we turn now to the remainder of the passage, we are going to look further at this principle of fellowship, particularly the nature of fellowship. Fellowship, by the way of reminder, is from the Greek word koininea, which means communion, intimacy, fellowship, communication. Some one has said it well that relationship is accepting Christ; fellowship is experiencing Him. You can never have fellowship until you have established relationship, but you can certainly have relationship without fellowship. It is possible to be a believer, a born again Christian, and be out of fellowship with God. We have seen several examples of that in Christ’s letters to the churches of Revelation. It’s possible to have lost your first love for God, to even commit adultery against God, all of which hurts your fellowship with God. So though you may have a relationship, you do not have fellowship, because of sin in your life. And as a consequence you may feel far from God, you may feel distant from God, or feel like you can’t talk to God. Such is the nature of fellowship, or broken fellowship with God. It causes separation.

An illustration can be found in your family. Your children are yours by relationship. Nothing is going to change that. But when they come to the dinner table with dirty hands and feet they are not going to have communion with you until they get cleaned up. That’s a simple illustration of fellowship. We are God’s children by relationship, but we lose fellowship with Him when we are stained by sin, when we pick up the muck and mire from being in the world. And to be restored to fellowship we must be cleansed from our unrighteousness.

Now John is addressing that problem. The Christian mired in sin is not the life that God has designed for us. That kind of life is not going to produce the joy of salvation that God intended, nor will it produce fruitfulness, nor the blessings of our salvation. If you are truly saved, living in sin will produce misery and heartache, and it can even require God’s discipline in order to turn you around to keep you from hurting yourself, or others, or the church. Paul, speaking about the Lord’s Supper, said for this reason, for the reason of unconfessed sin, many of you are sick and a number sleep. Some had even died as a result of living in sin. God is jealous for church and will act to keep it pure and to do away with stumbling blocks.

So now that John has established in vs1-4 the basis of our relationship with Christ, which gives us fellowship with God, he moves on to show us the nature of fellowship. And he starts with a message from Christ to the church. He says in vs.5; “This is the message we have heard from Him (that is Christ) and announce to you, that God is Light, and in Him there is no darkness at all.” He said, I have been with Christ, touched Him, lived with Him, walked with Him and heard His teaching. He is the Son of God who was in the flesh. Now here is His message, “God is light and in Him is no darkness at all.”

Well, at first glance that seems a strange way to summarize the gospel. But if you really think about it, it is a brilliant synopsis of the nature of God and our relationship to Him. It states the nature of God, and the nature of our fellowship with Him.

If I were an eloquent speaker, scientifically minded, I would probably try to give you an entire sermon today on the nature of light and how vs.5 illustrates it. But I’m not scientifically minded. However, I don’t think that John is making a sweeping theological treatise here which is meant to stand alone, but I think instead it is particularly pertinent to his theme of fellowship. For instance, John records in John 4:24 Jesus as saying that God is Spirit, and they that worship Him must worship Him in spirit and in truth. Now he records Jesus saying that God is Light. Does that mean that God is actually Light? Or is it perhaps an allegorical reference to God? I would suggest that it may be both to some extent. But perhaps it is better to understand it as God has manifested Himself as Light, both literally and figuratively.

Now I do not have time to spend this morning showing you all the ways in which God has manifested Himself as light in the Bible. But let me just show you one, which I think is illustrative. It’s found in Genesis 1:1. “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. The earth was formless and void, and darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was moving over the surface of the waters. Then God said, “Let there be light”; and there was light. God saw that the light was good; and God separated the light from the darkness. God called the light day, and the darkness He called night. And there was evening and there was morning, one day.”

Notice a couple of things here real quickly; one is that God commanded light to appear on the first day, before He made the sun, moon and stars. Secondly, notice, the Spirit of God was moving before the Light appeared. So God existed as Spirit before light was manifested to the world. Thirdly, notice that the world was in darkness and then God said, “let there be light.”

Cross reference that to John 1. And you will see that the Word was in the beginning with God and was God. The Word became Light in vs4. And in vs.5, the Light shined in darkness and the darkness did not overpower it, or understand it. It’s pretty cool to see the correlation between Genesis 1 and John 1. Now in 1John1, we see the Message, that is the Word, manifested in the flesh, and the message is that God is light and there is no darkness in Him at all. So we can say that as light is manifested to the world, it is a picture of God manifesting Himself to the world as the Word of God, the Truth.

So what is light, what does it figuratively represent about God? Well, I would suggest from the scriptures we just looked at and others that it represents purity, holiness, truth and life. Light represents the attributes of God; He is holy, pure, He is truth, and life.

John goes on to say that “in Him there is no darkness at all.” This speaks of God’s holiness. Darkness throughout the scriptures represents evil, i.e., the kingdom of darkness being the kingdom of Satan. When the scriptures speak of the world being in darkness it’s speaking of the sinful nature of the world, the blindness of the world in regards to spiritual truth. So God being without sin, being holy and pure, He cannot tolerate sin, or have fellowship with sin. Thus man when he sinned was kicked out of the Garden of Eden, and lost fellowship with God.

So the message from Christ states the principle that God is light and cannot have fellowship with darkness because He is without darkness, being holy. So we can say that Christians can have a relationship with God, and yet be out of fellowship with Him because we have sin in our lives. God cannot have fellowship with sin.

So now John presents three ways by which Christians lose fellowship with God. If you look at the first chapter of John’s letter, you will see three times he uses the phrase, “if we say”. Verse 6, “If we say we have fellowship,” Verse 8, “If we say we have no sin,” and Verse 10, “If we say we have not sinned.” Three times a false profession is made, but the condition that follows belies the profession. There are three false professions of man that are contrary to fellowship with God; the man who walks in darkness, the man who denies his sin, and the man who rationalizes his sin.

Let’s look at the first one in vs6; “If we say that we have fellowship with Him and yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth.” Now the most common way of interpreting this verse is to say that to walk in darkness is to walk in the world, according to the lusts of the world, which is to walk in sin. And that is true. James 4:4 says, “You adulteresses, do you not know that friendship with the world is hostility toward God? Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God.” So walking in darkness can be correlated with friendship with the enemies of God. Hardly conducive to fellowship.

Yet there is another dimension to walking in the darkness which is another possible interpretation. It is possible to be a Christian and yet walk in darkness by turning God off. To stop coming to a Bible teaching church, to stop reading the Word. To become attuned to the world, and out of tune towards God. In other words, to turn off the Light. If the Light is Truth, then to turn it off is to simply stop listening to the truth, to stop hearing the truth, and then to stop practicing the truth. The opposite of the truth is a lie. Listening to the lie of the devil is a sure fire way of walking in darkness. And when you start listening to a lie, you will start practicing evil and stop practicing the truth.

Now in each false profession John presents for us, he also gives us a remedy. And in this case, the remedy is simple; rather than walking in darkness, walk in the light as He is in the light. Walk in the truth. Listen to the truth, practice the truth.To walk in the light is to walk according to what God reveals in the Word. Psalm 119:105 says, “Your Word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.”

And one more aspect of walking in the light, is to let the light of God’s word shine in you and reveal in you all that is darkness, to examine yourself in the light of His word, and then you will have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus His Son cleanses us from all sin.

The second false profession that men make is to deny their sin. Vs.8, “If we say that we have no sin, we are deceiving ourselves and the truth is not in us.” There is an anecdote about the late D.L. Moody which illustrates this principle. Someone attending one of his services came up afterwards and told him that he had reached the place where he no longer sinned. Mr. Moody said, “Well, I’d like to ask your wife about that.”

If we say we have no ability to sin at all, we are only deceiving ourselves. Others are quite aware that we are lying to and deceiving ourselves. They are not fooled, it is we who are fooled. The first man who had a relationship with God but didn’t walk in the light may deceive others, but seldom himself. He knows that he is not living as he ought, he knows he is ignoring the truth. But this man deceives himself. He actually believes that he can no longer sin, that there is no longer any possibility of evil in him. I’ve heard some people in that camp describe it by saying that God no longer sees their sin as sin, so therefore it isn’t sin. They are perfect and cannot sin.

This self righteousness goes by a lot of names and has found it’s way into a lot of churches and false teaching. Ironically, many call themselves “holiness” practitioners. Some think that salvation eliminates the penalty of sin, which it does, but then think that a subsequent spiritual baptism eliminates the presence of sin, irregardless of their actions. But whenever this self righteousness occurs, the one who makes this false claim loses immediately that fellowship which gives Christianity it’s life. He loses his power, his influence, his vitality, and his effectiveness as a Christian.

John once again gives a remedy for this broken fellowship with God. Vs.9, “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” Now the word confess does not necessarily mean to ask for forgiveness. Christ’s work for us upon the cross has already done all that is necessary to forgive us. What God wants us to do is to look at the sin before us and call it what he calls it. That means to agree with God about it, and that is what the word confess means: Fess comes from a root which means “to say,” and con means “with.” “To say with” God what he says about this thing, that is confessing sin.

When we confess our sin, it says He is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. We are forgiven for our sins by faith in what Christ has done on the cross to atone for our sins. There He removed the penalty of our sin. To cleanse us is to wash us. And here Jesus cleanses us from the practice of our sin. Jesus illustrated this washing in the Last Supper, on the night He was betrayed.

Gathered with his disciples in the Upper Room, he took a basin and a towel and girded himself and set about to wash the feet of the disciples. You recall, as he came to Peter, Peter shook his head and said, “No, Lord, you will never wash my feet,” (John 13:8). Jesus then said these significant words, “If I wash do not wash you, you can have no part with me.” Peter, always going overboard, said, “Lord, if that’s the case, then wash me all over.” Again the Lord has to correct him. “No, Peter, he that is bathed does not need to wash again.” That first cleansing of redemption, that coming to Christ which washes away the guilt of the past, that is “bathing all over.” Jesus said he that is so bathed does not need to wash all over again, but he does need to wash his feet. This is what John is talking about — this repeated washing of the feet. Being cleansed from traipsing in sin as we walk in this world. It is illustrated in the ancient practice of washing at a public bath, then when walking back to your home, your feet get soiled. So though you have been bathed, you need to have your feet washed. We have been made righteous by faith, but in practice we grow soiled in this world we live in. To retain fellowship with God, we need to confess it as sin, and be cleansed.

The third false profession is found in vs.10, “If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar and His word is not in us.” This false profession is of the man who rationalizes his sin. Once again, it results in breaking fellowship with God. In this third case, the person is saying, “Of course, I know I can sin as a Christian. I know I need the light of the truth. But when I stop to look at my life, and examine myself, what I see is not sin. Weakness and failure perhaps, but not sin. I may have to admit that I have been weak, but I have not sinned.” This what John means: “If we say we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us.”

This is the exercise of the human mind which we call rationalization, the tendency to categorize wrong so that it sounds better, and evil so that it looks good. We redefine sin according to our definition, rather than according to God’s. We relabel sin as something that doesn’t sound so bad. We hold our sin to a different standard. We have no problem usually seeing sin in other people, just not in ourselves. Others have prejudices; we have convictions. Others are prideful; but we have self-respect. Someone else may be lazy, but when we do not want to do something, we say we are too busy. When someone else goes ahead and acts on his own, we say he is presumptuous; when we do the same thing, we have initiative. When someone else gets angry and blows up, we say he has lost his temper; but when we do that, we are merely showing righteous indignation. And as long as we can find a nicer label we never will treat the thing like the sinful cancer that it is.

We make excuses for our sin due to our circumstances. But the truth is, we do not like our circumstances. We don”t like where God has put us. We don’t like the people or the pressures we have to live under, we don’t like the circumstances that surround us, and we refuse to accept them. That is the real problem. Therefore, we are not interested in Christ’s power to live in the circumstances we find ourselves in. But Romans 14:23 says that whatever is not of faith is sin. Therefore, when we refuse to see our sin as sin, we make God a liar and His word is not in us. We call our sin ok, so that means God is a liar because He says sin requires death. We are back in the darkness again, His word is not in us. We create our own standard for sin.

But thank God there is a remedy which John gives us in the second chapter. Vs.1, “My little children, I am writing these things to you so that you may not sin.” The solution is to come back to the word, the things which John has written, so that we may see sin for what it is, that you will see God’s standard for sin, that having a love for God you will not sin. When you come to know God and love God as we should, then we won’t want to sin, to bring shame upon the name of God. When we have fellowship with Him, we don’t have a desire to sin.

But if we do sin, and no one on this side of heaven is free from sin, then we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous. Advocate is from the Greek word “parakletos”. It means to come alongside. Jesus comes alongside us to help us get back up on our feet and walk with the Lord again. He is a faithful friend who sticks closer than a brother. He is our Helper, our Shepherd. He walks with us, and is there to pick us up and clean us up when we fall.

And note that John says He is Jesus Christ the righteous. His righteousness is so expansive, so great, that it is more than enough to cover our sins. When we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, because His righteousness is more than enough, not only for our sins, John says, but for the sins of the whole world. That shows us the magnitude of Christ’s righteousness. He is God, and is eternal, the maker of life, so that His righteousness is more than equal to the sins of the world. That is a tremendous thing, beyond our comprehension. But it is given to us as a comfort to those who fall into sin, that God’s mercy and grace are more than sufficient to forgive even the worst of sinners, because Jesus Christ is the Righteous One who is able to atone for all the sins of the world and still have an unlimited supply left over.

Listen, God made us for fellowship with Him. In walking with Him, in fellowship with Him, we have life more abundantly. In fellowship with Him we have joy and peace and hope. But Satan as the god of this world has devised a strategy to lure you back to the darkness, to cause you to turn off the light, to redefine sin, to rationalize sin. Whatever lie he has to make he will make it. But his strategy is always to lie. Notice that in each of the remedies John identifies a lie as part of the problem. In vs.6 he says, “If we say that we have fellowship with Him and yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth.” In vs.8 he says, “If we say that we have no sin, we are deceiving ourselves and the truth is not in us.” In vs. 10, “If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar and His word is not in us.” That’s the progression of the lie of the devil. We lie to others, we lie to ourselves, and then we even get to the place where we call God a liar. How can we have fellowship with God when we live a lie? God is light/truth, and in Him is no darkness at all.

But thanks be to God that His love for us is so great, His desire for fellowship with us is so great, that He has made a way for us to be reconciled to Him, to restore that fellowship with Him. We confess our sins, we are forgiven and cleansed of our sin, and we have His presence with us to help us when we sin to get back up and come back into fellowship. But it starts with walking in the truth, the light, even as He is in the light. When we walk with Him, we follow Him, stay close to Him. We may not understand everything. We may not know why we have to deal with some things, or go through some things, but we continue to walk with Him, to follow Him, to pattern our lives according to the example we see in Him. Because He is Light, and when we walk with Him we walk in the Light. I pray that you will walk in the Light this week. And if you sin, you have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous, confess your sins to Him that you can be restored to fellowship. There is no other way to joy. Don’t believe the lie. Believe the truth and walk in it. Walk in the truth, and you will have fellowship with God, that your joy may be complete.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

The foundation of fellowship, 1 John 1:1-4

Apr

2

2017

thebeachfellowship

I don’t feel that we need to spend too much time introducing the first epistle of John. Obviously, we have just finished the gospel of John which has taken us over a year and a half, and totaled some 70 sermons. Additionally, we are studying Revelation on Wednesday nights, which of course is written by the Apostle John as well. So we should be well versed with John by now and not need much introduction. But what I want to do is to fill in a few months before the summer season with a short book, and 1John seemed to be a good fit for a number of reasons. Other than the two I just mentioned, there is a principle which states that in the gospels the good news is proclaimed, and in the epistles the gospel is explained. So while John’s gospel was still fresh in our minds, I thought it a good idea to study John’s epistle, which might give us additional insight into both what we have learned from his gospel, and what we are still learning in Revelation.

John writes this letter possibly to the Ephesians, where he spent his later years. He writes as a father-like figure, probably due to the fact that he was quite old by this time. But as you study this letter, you recognize that he is very concerned about authentic Christianity. That the walk of Christians match the talk of Christians. He makes it clear you cannot have one without the other.

He was writing in an age when false teaching had crept into the church. Merely 50 years or so after Christ, and already the church was being corrupted by false teaching. In particular, there was the teaching known as Gnosticism. This false doctrine taught that the spirit and the body were independent of one another. Gnosticism taught that matter is evil and spirit is good. Therefore, the spirit of man is imprisoned in an evil body. The purpose of their teaching was to say it was possible to have a spiritual experience which was not dependent upon your physical actions. So the result was, they claimed to be spiritual, to be Christian, and yet lived in sin because they said the body was carnal. So there was this disconnect between what they believed and how they acted. And they had taken this idea to the point of even denying that Jesus Christ had come in the flesh. In their doctrine, He was a phantom, a spirit which took on the form of a man, but wasn’t really a man at all. So it was a very deceptive doctrine, which seduced men and women to resign themselves to living in the flesh in sin, and yet claim a spiritual experience which was acceptable to God.

John however, wants to establish the distinctions of the reality of the Christian faith. The gospel not just producing a spiritual life irrespective of how one lives, but an authentic spiritual life which is manifested in the physical. There is spiritual life, but it is revealed in the physical and flows from the spiritual and consequently your physical life is illustrative of the spiritual reality within. Gnosticism said that they were two planes of existence which did not connect. John makes the case that which is of the spirit will have a physical component, and if there is no physical component, then there must be no spiritual. The physical is evidence of the spiritual.

A good illustration of that is Jesus said in Matthew 9 it is easy to say your sins are forgiven. That’s the spiritual component. Who can argue with that since it cannot be verified with the eyes or the ears. But He said it is another thing to say to a paraplegic, take up your bed and walk. Jesus said so that you may know that the Son of Man has the authority to forgive sins, “Rise, take up your bed and walk.” The gospel has then not only the power to forgive the penalty of sin, but to provide the power over sin, so that we might live sanctified, authentic Christian lives. It provides not only the spiritual benefit, but it’s manifested in physical deliverance as well.

So John is concerned with authentic Christianity. Authentic Christianity is living in truth, righteousness and love which we will see John develop as we go through this epistle. But as he begins this letter, he is careful to establish the basis for authentic Christianity, and that is a relationship with God. Without the basis of a right relationship, your life will not produce truth, or righteousness or love.

The most important things in life are not really things at all- they are the relationships we have. God has put a desire for relationship in every one of us, a desire He intended to be met with relationships with other people, but most of all, to be met by a relationship with Him. Unfortunately, people are always trying to fill this God sized hole in our hearts with everything else. But nothing can fill that emptiness but Jesus Christ. So John wants to establish right from the beginning of this letter that authentic Christianity is founded on a right relationship with God.

We are going to use the words relationship and fellowship somewhat interchangeably in this study today. But fellowship is the word John uses in vs 3,6, and 7. Fellowship is the primary subject of the whole chapter. The Greek word for fellowship is probably familiar to you all, which is koinonia. It means sharing, communion, participation, fellowship, or communication. You cannot have fellowship with God unless you have a right relationship with God. You cannot share in God’s life, unless you have as the basis a right relationship with Him. Fellowship is salvation in its widest embrace; includes justification, includes holiness, it includes being in the church of the believers.

So John’s prologue starts with establishing the basis of fellowship. Our basis of fellowship with God is a relationship with Jesus Christ. And John introduces Him in vs.1 as the Word of Life, “that which was from the beginning.” This is an obvious parallel to his gospel, in John 1:1 where we read, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by Him, and without Him was not anything made which was made. In Him was life, and the life was the light of man.”

In a sense, John condenses that broader statement concerning the origin of Jesus Christ, and just says “That which was from the beginning, the Word of Life.” It includes of course, all that he has said in John 1:1. John is referring to the eternal nature of Jesus Christ. He was in the beginning, which is before anything was created. Jesus was with God, and He was God. He was the Word made flesh. He was the Life, by which all was created. He is the source of all life, even eternal life because He is God. He is the Way to God, the Truth of God and the Life of God.

But what he adds to those divine qualities is yet another dimension of Jesus Christ; that He was not only fully God, but fully man. He says, “what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, what we have looked at and touched with our hands.” John speaks now of the physical nature of Jesus, born a man, born of a virgin, suffered in the flesh, made like us in every respect, and yet without sin. In John 1:14 we see the parallel statement, “And the Word became flesh, and dwelt among us, and we saw His glory, glory as of the only begotten from the Father, full of grace and truth.”

This is a tremendous concept, that the eternal God of the universe became man and dwelt among us here on Earth. And these disciples such as John were eyewitnesses to His glory, and they talked with Him, touched Him, saw Him, ate with Him and lived with Him. They knew Him fully as a man. And yet He was also fully God and they recognized that He was God. Peter said in 2Peter 1:16, “For we did not follow cleverly devised tales when we made known to you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we were eyewitnesses of His majesty.” They were eyewitnesses. Did you ever consider that a man could be sentenced to death on the basis of two eyewitnesses? Jesus had over 500 eyewitnesses to His resurrection. So the basis for our fellowship with God is our relationship with Jesus Christ. We believe in Him, that He is God who came in the flesh, and offered Himself as a propitiation for sin, and on the basis of our faith in Him, we are given justification. We have imputed righteousness by which we can be accepted by God, and have fellowship with God.

This desire for fellowship was initiated by God. He desired fellowship with us. So in order that we might have fellowship God sent Jesus to take away our sins. So John adds in vs.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.” As John just indicated, Jesus existed prior to His incarnation in the flesh. He was from the beginning. He was the Word of Life, speaking all things into being. But the Word of Life became flesh and dwelt among us. He manifested Himself to the world, because God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believes in Him, should not perish, but have eternal life.

Manifested means that He made what was invisible, visible. The Way to God was hidden, but He became visible. The truth of God was manifested to man. Jesus, who existed eternally, became visible to man. The Light of God became visible. And we beheld His glory. And I submit to you it was because God desired fellowship with us. He loved us. We could not climb to heaven, so God descended unto man. He came down to our level, so that we might know the way to God. So we might have a relationship with God, and fellowship with God. He desired a relationship to us. Someone said, it is no surprise that men seek to have a relationship with God, but it is amazing that God should stoop to have a relationship with man.

And John witnessing this manifestation has to proclaim it. So next we see the communication of fellowship. This is the good news of the gospel. These disciples, these ordinary fishermen that Jesus revealed Himself to, are commissioned to be His apostles, to communicate the invitation of the gospel to the world, so that all who receive it are made part of this fellowship, even His church. Vs.2, “and we have seen and testify and proclaim to you the eternal life, which was with the Father and was manifested to us—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.” This is the mandate and the mission of disciples, both then and now. To proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ. To communicate the good news, that God has made it possible to have fellowship with Him, to have a relationship with Him. It is not just “for us four and no more.” But it is good news to all people, to all nations of the earth. We are His ambassadors, proclaiming that fellowship with God is available to all who believe.

Fellowship is salvation in its widest embrace; it includes justification, includes sanctification, or holiness, it includes being in the church of the believers. First John talks of having fellowship with us, then with God. Because you first became friends with someone who knew Jesus, and they introduced Him to you. John is introducing you to Jesus, inviting you to have a relationship with Him. And that is indicative of authentic Christianity; if you belong to Christ, you cannot help but to witness for Christ. To become friends with us, means you must become friends with Jesus. I cannot separate my Christianity from my relationships. I must say I find suspect those Christians who seem to maintain close friendships with those who are agnostic, or who are antagonistic towards Christianity. I don’t see how light can have fellowship with darkness. But be that as it may, our relationships should mirror our relationship with God. There should not be any disconnect between what we profess on Sunday and our profession on Monday.

There is another aspect of fellowship I think John is presenting here; a bit understated perhaps, but certainly implied. And that is the fellowship of family. Our relationship with Christ makes us children of God. Being born again of the Spirit He then becomes our Heavenly Father. That is the basis for our fellowship. We are the family of God. Vs.3, “and indeed our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ.” Someone said that Peter portrayed our relationship in the New Testament as the Kingdom of God, Paul presented it as the church of God, and John portrays it as the family of God. All speak of the same thing; the same fellowship. But John presents us as being born of God, becoming sons and daughters of God, and having that fellowship based on adoption as children, we have a special relationship of family, by which we can cry “Abba, Father.”

All of us are related to someone. We live in families. Children are related to their parents, and parents to their children. Why? Because they share the same life, the same characteristics and nature. And that is what makes a Christian, to share the life of God by relationship to a Person, the only Person who has that life, the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God. At the close of this letter John tells us, “He who has the Son has life; he who has not the Son of God has not life,” (1 John 5:12). It is that simple. No matter how religious you may be, you must be born again. You do not have life if you do not have the Son, you are not a Christian. John makes this crystal clear at the beginning of his letter, calling us back to these fundamental things.

Lastly, let us look at the joy of fellowship. Vs.4, John writes, “These things we write, so that our joy may be made complete.” Don’t misunderstand this; John isn’t talking about happiness, but he is talking about joy. There is a fundamental difference between happiness and joy. Happiness is based on circumstances which constantly change. Happiness is temporary. Joy is eternal. God never changes. The devil tries to seduce you with happiness. God woos you with the promise of joy. The result of fellowship with God is fullness of joy. This joy is an abiding sense of hope and contentment and satisfaction based on God, as opposed to happiness, which is a temporary cheerfulness based on circumstances.

I am constantly dismayed by the popular demand for happiness. Ask any parent what they want most for their children, and they will usually say, “I just want them to be happy.” Folks, I want to urge you to set the bar a little higher than that. A lot higher actually. Because sin will make you happy for a season. Alcohol or drugs will make you happy for a few hours. Immorality may make you happy for a few minutes. Money can make you happy temporarily. Actually, I think it is more true to say that the lack of money can make you unhappy. But irregardless, circumstances can make you happy for a while, but joy is an enduring condition despite circumstances.

Psalm 30:5 says, “Weeping may last for the night, But a shout of joy comes in the morning.” In other words, happiness and sadness are emotions that rise and fall with various circumstances. Sometimes you can experience both almost simultaneously, or at least one right after the other. But joy comes when you consider the future you have in Christ. Hebrews 12:2 says we are to “fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of faith, who for the joy set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.” Joy is confidence in tomorrow; hope that is set before us, when God will make all things right, when God will answer every question, when God will wipe away every tear, when God will reward good and punish evil. And although our circumstances will change, and our emotions may rise and fall here on this earth, our joy is set before us, and it offers us contentment and satisfaction, and joy in knowing that we are known, and part of the family of God. Joy in knowing God has set His love upon us, and it will never change or fade away. Joy in knowing that He is keeping track. Joy in having fellowship, intimacy with God, being able to talk to Him 24/7, about anything, and knowing that He still loves me. He considers me righteous. He considers me His son.

This invitation to fellowship is open to all who will receive Jesus Christ as their personal Savior. It is open to all who want to have a relationship with God. It is made possible through faith in Jesus Christ. On behalf of God, I offer that relationship to everyone here today who will confess their sin and trust in Jesus Christ to forgive them of their sin. By faith in what Christ did on the cross you can be made righteous before God, and being made righteous, you are adopted into the family of God, that you may have fellowship with your heavenly Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ, and with His church. Examine yourselves this morning, and see if that fellowship is a reality in your life. Is it a fellowship based on a relationship? That relationship with God is possible through faith in Jesus Christ to all who confess their need for a Savior and trust in Him.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

The restoration of the fallen disciple, John 21:15-25

Mar

26

2017

thebeachfellowship

This is the last message I will preach in the book of John. I think, if I counted correctly, today’s sermon is number 70. I didn’t plan it that way, but if it’s true, I think it’s pretty cool we ended up with 70 exactly. The number 70 indicates perfection, by the way. (ha, ha)

But seriously, it is with a certain sadness that we finish this book today. There is no more satisfying sermon series in my estimation, than studying one of the gospels. I think we will be beginning the gospel of Mark sometime near the beginning of summer. That is the only gospel, in fact the only book in the New Testament, that I have not preached through.

John however, ends his gospel a little differently than some of the others. He doesn’t focus on the Savior ascending into heaven as one might expect, but rather he ends with a focus on Peter, the fallen disciple. He spends this last passage showing us Christ’s compassion and grace towards that disciple that needed restoration.

And I think that John chooses to focus on Peter’s restoration because restoration is really the purpose of the gospel. And to that purpose Peter is emblematic of all of us. He is the prototypical disciple. He is in this portrait a failed disciple. He has fallen, he has failed to live up to his promises, he has denied Christ on three separate occasions. Yet Peter is beloved by all of us because he is so much like us. He has all the failures that we are so familiar with in our own lives. He overestimates his strengths and underestimates temptation. He thinks he’s more committed than he is. He thinks he loves the Lord more than he does. He thinks he can face any trial triumphantly; but he finds out he can’t. By the time we get to this point, even though he has seen the risen Christ, he is really a broken man. In fact, it’s possible that even the triumph of Christ’s resurrection has accentuated Peter’s despondency at failing Him in some way.

So John focuses on Peter’s reconciliation as the last message of his gospel, perhaps because he knows that it will prove invaluable in the ages to come to so many other disciples, who like Peter, find themselves at some point in their lives having failed in their Christian life. And John wants us to know, that just like Peter, we can find forgiveness, reconciliation and usefulness again through Jesus Christ.

I don’t want to take the time to recap all the events that has brought them to this beach on this particular morning. But I would like to pick up where we left off last time, with Jesus appearing on the beach after a long night of fruitless fishing, and having breakfast waiting for His disciples, after instructing them how to catch 153 large fish.

Verse 15 picks it up after they have finished eating breakfast, probably lounging on the beach, talking with one another. And suddenly, Jesus speaks to Peter publicly, in a way to produce a public restoration, so that the other disciples would know that Peter was reconciled to Christ again. And this is important. Luke tells us that Jesus had already appeared earlier to Peter privately. So this is not just for Peter’s benefit, but for the disciples benefit as well, as Peter was their leader. And furthermore, it is for our benefit, that we might know the desire God has for us to be reconciled with Him, and to restore our usefulness to Him.

We see in this exchange between Peter and the Lord, three questions, three affirmations of love, and three exhortations. Three as a number, indicates divine completeness. But more importantly, I believe, three corresponds with the number of times Peter denied the Lord. I think what Jesus is doing here is purposefully asking Peter three times, in order to completely expunge the three denials. Christ isn’t so much rubbing Peter’s nose in it, as He is giving Peter a chance to fully repent. True repentance is essential to restoration. Partial or half hearted repentance will leave a bitter taste in the mouth that if not dealt with, will produce eventual bitterness. God wants full repentance so there can be full restoration.

Remember, Judas was also sorry for his betrayal of Christ. And that betrayal and Peter’s denial are only a handbreadth apart. The difference is that Judas was sorry and wept bitterly. Peter was sorry and repented. One was destroyed, and the other was restored.

I also think that there is an echo of a principle here that Jesus taught in Matthew 18. Where if a brother sins against you, you speak to him privately. If he rejects that, you take another person and go to him a second time. And if he rejects that, you take him before the church. Three opportunities for repentance. Because the purpose of church discipline is reconciliation, not punishment.

So Jesus has the opportunity to take Peter to task for his failures. He has the right to disqualify Peter from further office. But He doesn’t do that. Instead of asking Peter if he is really, really sorry, if he is willing to pay the penalty to be allowed back in good standing, instead of demanding that Peter do some sort of penance, Jesus just wants Peter to come to love Him more than anything else. That is really the full extent of the law, isn’t it? To love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, your mind and your strength. Jesus said in Matt.22 that is the whole law. So if sin is breaking God’s law, then the solution is to love God more, in order that we might fulfill the law.

So Jesus wants to bring that principle to bear in order to produce restoration. So He asks Peter, “Simon, son of Jonas, do you love Me more than these?” Jesus calls Peter by his old name, Simon, which meant shaky. Jesus had renamed him Peter, which meant Rocky, or the Rock. But now He calls him by his given name, his full name, Simon, son of Jonas. He called him by the name that signified his actions. Peter had gone back on his commitment to the Lord, he had even gone back on his ministry. He had gone back to his old career. And so the Lord calls him out in a subtle kind of way, “Simon, do you love me more than these?”

There is a lot of debate as to what is meant by “these.” I think the most straightforward answer is “more than these” represents the 153 fish laying on the shore. It was a mountain of fish. The other disciples were probably oohing and ah-ing over them, counting up how much a haul like that might be worth at the market. It probably represented a lot of money. So do you love Me more than these fish, more than your career, more than your the self sufficiency represented by his boat and nets and the large catch of fish.

But Jesus has also subtly used another word in His question, “do you love Me,” and that is the Greek word agapao, which means the highest degree of love. It means a sacrificial love – a love of the will. Simon, are you willing to love me sacrificially, even to the point of giving up this career, this source of income, this self reliance?

Well, Peter is still smarting from the fact that he had failed miserably to measure up to that kind of love as he had boasted of in the Upper Room on the night of Christ’s betrayal. So his answer, I think, reflects this new found humility. He says, “Yes, Lord; You know that I love You.” Peter, however, uses a different word for love, the Greek word “phileo” which means brotherly love, or a familial type of love. It’s less strident than the sacrificial love Jesus is asking for. And I believe it’s because Peter has lost his confidence in the strength of his love. He knows that his love failed and so he offers a less strident promise of love.

But Jesus is gracious, and He accepts Peter’s response without rebuke, and gives him an exhortation. “Tend My lambs.” The emphasis of the word translated lambs indicates a little lamb. I tend to think it has the quality of helplessness, or innocence. Feed or tend, my little ones. The exhortation is to take on the job of a shepherd. Rather than be a fisherman, it’s a calling to be a shepherd. That’s what a pastor is, by the way. He is an under shepherd.

Peter will say to the elders of the church later on in his epistle in 1Peter 5:2, “shepherd the flock of God among you, exercising oversight not under compulsion, but voluntarily, according to the will of God; and not for sordid gain, but with eagerness; nor yet as lording it over those allotted to your charge, but proving to be examples to the flock.”

I will say this without any sense of arrogance, the shepherd is not a sheep. He is given responsibility for the feeding and tending and care of the sheep. He is given responsibility for the safety of the sheep. It is a serious charge, and one that should not be taken lightly. God will hold the shepherd to a stricter standard, and a greater condemnation. “Let not many of you become teachers knowing that as such we will incur a stricter judgment.”… says James 3:1.

But what is amazing here is that Jesus takes this broken, failed disciple, and He restores him, not just to reconciliation, but to usefulness. Not just to some behind the scenes position, but Jesus puts Peter at the fore front of His church, to be the leader again, not just as leader of this motley group of 11 disciples, but of the first church in Jerusalem. God uses the weak things, and the the foolish things, to shame the wise and the strong.

That offers hope for all of us broken disciples here today. God has a plan to restore you, to be reconciled to God, and to be used by Him for His kingdom. No matter how many times you have fallen, or how many times you have failed Him, Jesus stands ready to forgive and restore you. God loves you so much, He has already punished His own Son so that He might restore you to usefulness. Isaiah 53:5 says, “But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the LORD hath laid on him the iniquity of us all.” Whatever sin you have committed, Jesus paid for with His life, that you might have everlasting, abundant life, knowing that He loves you and wants to be reconciled to you. And if you will submit to that, He will use you and give you a purpose that has eternal rewards.

Well, you know the story. Jesus asks Simon Peter the same question again. ““Simon, son of Jonas, do you love Me?” Though Jesus accepted Peter’s answer the first time, He isn’t satisfied with Peter’s lesser degree of love. So He asks again if Peter agapao’s Him. Does he sacrificially love Him. Christ wants Peter to love Him with all His heart, all His soul, all His mind and all His strength. He isn’t satisfied with a sentimental love. He isn’t even satisfied with a passionate love. But He wants a love of the will. A committed love that will endure no matter the cost.

Why does Jesus make such a big deal out of love? Because love is the ultimate motivator. The motivation of money just makes you a marketeer. The motivation of popularity makes you an entertainer. But the motivation of love for Christ makes you leave everything, sacrifice anything, for His sake. And that is what God wants from us. He wants an unwavering love from His bride that will endure through sickness or in health, in poverty or in wealth, unto death us do part. He doesn’t want to guilt trip us into serving Him. He doesn’t want to legally require us to serve Him. He doesn’t want to force us to love Him. That isn’t real love. But real love is it’s own motivation. It’s a change of heart, a change of desires, and that is to please Him because we love Him. To die before we bring shame upon Him.

Maybe this time Peter tries to say it with more conviction in his voice, but he ends up saying the same thing. I am fond of You. I love you like a brother. You’re like family. “Yes Lord, You know that I love you.”

Once again, Jesus accepts Peter’s lesser response and says virtually the same thing He said before; “Shepherd My sheep.” Perhaps the emphasis on the commandment is somewhat stronger in this second command of Christ because you will remember that Jesus said if you love me you will keep My commandments. So maybe Jesus is saying, “Ok, Peter. You SAY you love Me, then keep My commandments, and that command is to shepherd My sheep.

It’s like Paul said in 1Cor, 9:16, “For if I preach the gospel, I have nothing to boast of, for I am under compulsion; for woe is me if I do not preach the gospel. For if I do this voluntarily, I have a reward; but if against my will, I have a stewardship entrusted to me.” True shepherds are not hirelings. They have a stewardship, and the love of Christ compels me to fulfill it. And I think that is what was being impressed on Peter.

A third time Jesus asks the question, ““Simon, son of John, do you love Me?” This time though, Jesus changed the word for love to that which Peter had been using. Jesus used “phileo”. He came down to Peter’s level. God knows that we can’t meet the level of commitment that we should meet. And so rather than making us climb up to heaven, God comes down to the level of man. But John says that Peter was grieved because He said to him the third time, “Do you phileo Me?” Peter is grieved, because He knows that Jesus knows his heart – that he is less committed than he should be. And yet Jesus is merciful and gracious and comes to accommodate his weakness so that he might be reconciled to God.

Peter’s response shows that grief, saying, ““Lord, You know all things; You know that I love You.” He still confesses a phileo love for Christ, but he confesses something more important than that; “You know all things.” The Lord knows our hearts. He knows our weaknesses. He knows if we really measure up to what we claim to be. The Lord knows our hearts and yet He still loves us.

Peter’s response is an echo of Jeremiah 17:9 which says, “The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?” Well, we don’t really know our hearts, I’m afraid. We think more highly of ourselves than we ought to. But the Lord knows our hearts, and yet He still loves us. We are like Hosea’s wife of whoredom; lusting after the world and the things of the world. Never ceasing to have eyes of adultery. And yet God loves us, even sometimes from afar, taking us back and caring for us even when we are all used up and spent and no longer much good for anything anymore. Yet He still loves us, and reconciles us and restores us to usefulness.

Jesus repeats for the third time; “Tend My sheep.” Take care of that which I love. If you love Me, you will love your neighbor as yourself. Tend My sheep. Whether you are tasked with being a pastor, or a teacher, or just a disciple within the flock, we are all tasked with tending to His sheep. To love one another. Love is manifested in service to His church. Jesus said they will know you are My disciples by your love for one another, as you care for one another, and tend to one another.

Well, we could just stop there. But John makes two quick final points. Jesus not only calls us to love Him, but secondly He calls us to sacrifice and then finally He calls us to obey. The second point then is found in the exchange starting in vs 18, “Truly, truly, I say to you, when you were younger, you used to gird yourself and walk wherever you wished; but when you grow old, you will stretch out your hands and someone else will gird you, and bring you where you do not wish to go.” Now this He said, signifying by what kind of death he would glorify God. And when He had spoken this, He *said to him, “Follow Me!”

Peter had boasted before the crucifixion that he would follow Jesus to the death if necessary. He would die before denial. But of course, he failed that test when it came and he denied the Lord three times. Now after Peter’s confession of love three times, Jesus tells him that he will be called upon to sacrifice his life for the Lord.

Tradition tells us that Peter was crucified upside down on a cross, at his own request, so that he would not share the same type of death as Christ. He didn’t feel that he was worthy to die as Christ had died. But whether or not that is true, we aren’t sure. But we do know from what Jesus prophesied that Peter would die a martyrs death when he became old. And I read someone last week that said that he felt Peter would have been glad to hear that. To know that he would be given another opportunity to sacrifice everything for the Lord. I was sort of taken back by that statement, but the more I thought about it, the more I could see it as a possibility. Peter did love the Lord. And I believe that he had meant it when he said he would die for Christ. But when the moment of truth came he failed to follow through. And I’m sure that he wished he could go back and do it again, this time gladly offering himself as a sacrifice for the sake of the gospel. Now, Jesus was offering him the chance to make that sacrifice after all. To claim the victory over fear and selfishness. So I think perhaps it was a more encouraging statement to Peter than what we might think.

I don’t think that martyrdom is something most of us will ever be called on to do. But I do know that being willing to take up our cross and follow Jesus, regardless of how great the cost, is something all disciples are called to do. In fact, three times in the gospels it is recorded that Jesus said, “If anyone wishes to come after Me, he must deny himself, and take up his cross and follow Me.” Matt.16:24, Mark 8:34, Luke 9:23. That’s what agapao love is, sacrificial love. Willing to lay down your life for HIs sake.

Paul defines such love in Romans 12:1, 2, “Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship.And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.”

The final point John indicates in this passage is that we are called to obey. Regardless of what we see other’s doing. Regardless if it seems we are all alone in suffering, or how great the sacrifice. Just obey. If you love the Lord, you will obey.

Vs.20, “Peter, turning around, *saw the disciple whom Jesus loved following them; the one who also had leaned back on His bosom at the supper and said, “Lord, who is the one who betrays You?” So Peter seeing him *said to Jesus, “Lord, and what about this man?” Jesus *said to him, “If I want him to remain until I come, what is that to you? You follow Me!”

A life that is truly dedicated to the Lord is compelled by love for Christ, characterized by sacrifice for Christ, and content with following Christ in obedience. To obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams. (1Sam.15:22) Jesus said, “If you love Me, you will keep My commandments.” (John 14:15) Follow Me. That’s a pretty simple directive, isn’t it? Just keep on keeping on. Satan may get you to stumble, you may be a weak disciple, but if you fall, get up, brush yourself off, repent and keep on following Jesus. You may not have all the love that you know you ought to have for God. Just love Him with the love you have. Follow Him with the strength that you have. Jesus will take care of your sin, He will pick you up when you fall, but just keep on following Jesus until Jesus comes back or you go to Him. He is the way, the truth, and the life. Follow Him.

This is how you show that you love the Lord. This is how you grow your love for the Lord. You do as He did. You go where He went. You love as He loved. You imitate Him. You emulate Him. You follow in His footsteps. Peter said as much in 1Peter 2:21 saying, “For you have been called for this purpose, since Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example for you to follow in His steps.” You pattern your life as He lived His. Follow Him. That’s what produces agapao love. Not conjuring up some sort of passion or sentimentality. But just follow Him. Don’t quit. Never stop. No matter the cost, no matter the sacrifice. Just follow Jesus.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

The key to fruitfulness, John 21:1-14

Mar

19

2017

thebeachfellowship

In last week’s sermon, we said that the last section of chapter 20 taught five principles of the gospel. And one of them was the abiding presence of Christ. That is an essential doctrine of the gospel; that Jesus Christ is alive, that though He died on the cross, He arose from the dead, and ever lives to make intercession for us.

That’s an important doctrine, because it reveals that Christ has procured two essential things for the Christian life. One; that the death of Jesus Christ provided the payment for the penalty of our sins. But two, His resurrection has provided new life for those who have been forgiven. Jesus died on the cross that we might die to sin, and that our penalty for our sin would be paid. But Jesus rose from the grave to show that we have new life, a life free from sin and death, a life of fruitfulness and purpose and eternal reward.

The reason we are given new life is so that we may have a life of fellowship with God. Our justification is the beginning of spiritual life. But God desires not just that we have the forgiveness of sins, but that we enter into the relationship of communion with him, constant communion with him. True spiritual life is life in communion with God. That is what enables this new life to be the abundant life which Jesus promised. It’s abundant, because the Lord is with us, in us, and working through us. You cannot have more abundant life than that.

So that is what John is illustrating in this record of yet another post resurrection appearance of Jesus Christ. It is obviously additional confirmation of His resurrection, but even more importantly, it serves to teach us the presence and power of Christ that is available to us, even though He has ascended into heaven.

Now notice that John intentionally uses a word to describe Jesus’s appearance which helps us to understand this principle. Twice in vs.1 and again in vs.14 John uses the word “manifests” to describe Jesus’s appearance. On the one hand, we might recognize that means He suddenly appeared, as if to say He was instantly there. But more importantly than that, it means that He simply made what was there already visible. He made the invisible, visible. That is the important thing; Jesus is always there. He is always with us. We may not see Him, but like Thomas discovered in last week’s message, Jesus was aware of all that he had said to the disciples in Jesus’s physical absence. So as both Moses and David stated in the OT, the Lord will never leave you nor forsake you. He is always with us, whether we see Him manifested in presence or in power or simply known by faith, He will be with us always. Jesus said in Matt.28:20, “lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.”

Now while it is easy to proclaim such principles in times of peace and plenty, it is another to hold to such belief in times of feeling abandoned, or discouraged, or frightened, or in persecution. I’m not sure what the disciples were feeling as we catch up to them in vs.2, but I assume it might have been a little bit of all of the above. The last time Jesus had appeared to the disciples was the second Sunday after His resurrection. Eight days after the resurrection, on a Sunday evening, Jesus appeared in the locked room to meet with Thomas who was disbelieving the disciples report of the resurrection. And so Jesus made a divine appointment to reconcile Thomas.

But now it’s probably been a couple of weeks or more since that day. Jesus was on the earth for a total of 40 days after His resurrection. And John tells us in vs.14 that this was the 3rd time that He had appeared to the 11 disciples. We don’t know how long had transpired between the eighth day and this day. But we do know that Jesus had told the disciples in Matthew 28 to go to Galilee and that He would meet them there on a particular mountain. And we can surmise from vs 14 that they had been waiting for Jesus to show up at the mountain as He indicated, but He had not yet appeared. It might have been a week or more that they had sat on this desolate mountainside waiting for the Lord. There probably wasn’t much to eat. It might have been the same mountain that Jesus fed the 5000. There were no supermarkets out there. And the boys managed for a few days, and then they began to get hungry, frustrated and tired of waiting.

So Peter wakes up one morning, looks down the mountain at the Sea of Tiberius below, also known as the Sea of Galilee, and says, “I’m going fishing.” And the other six disciples that were there with him said, “We will come with you.”

By now, we all should realize that Peter was a natural leader. If Peter said it was a good idea, then everyone else did too. Peter is always presented first in any list of the disciples. It was because he was a natural leader. He was probably a pretty big guy, a strong man. Verse 11 makes it sound like Peter pulled the net to shore all by himself. I’m not sure that’s what it means, but that’s a possibility. But no doubt he was a big, strong guy. A courageous man. He wasn’t afraid of too much. He hardly ever held up his finger to see which way the wind was blowing. He just jumped in. And the disciples followed his leadership.

But we also ought to learn a lesson from this. There are a lot of men out there that are natural leaders that have found their way into the pastorate across this country. They may have a natural talent for communication. They may be funny, they can tell interesting stories. They may have a natural talent of convincing people to follow them. They may be exciting to be around. It’s easy to follow charismatic people. But they may not always be acting on behalf of God. They may be acting on their ego, or on their appetite, or they may be on a power trip. And we need to be careful to discern whether or not such men are being led by God or not.

Well, it’s obvious to me that Peter was not being led by God. He was led by his appetite. He was led by his desire to do something, to make something happen. Nothing was happening on that cold mountain. And down at that lake he knew he had his little fishing boat docked and ready to go fishing.

Another lesson to be learned is that man’s timing is not always God’s timing. Peter was ready to get moving. It had been weeks since the crucifixion, Jesus hadn’t shown up again and Peter was restless. But to move when God hasn’t told you to move is a foolish thing. As a pastor, as the leader of this church, I can assure you that I constantly have to check my motivation. Is it God appointed, or man appointed? Is it God’s timing, or my timing? In my opinion, most of the time God seems to move really, really slow. And sometimes He seems really late. I hate hearing these self righteous types that always pontificate about how God is always on time. I don’t doubt that God is always on time. But I do believe that God has a different time piece than what we use. Peter said as much in 2Peter 3:8 when he said, “But do not let this one fact escape your notice, beloved, that with the Lord one day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years like one day.” I think it’s possible Peter learned that valuable lesson on this very fishing expedition. God’s clock looks a lot different than our clock. So learning to wait on the Lord’s timing is a difficult thing for us, as it was for Peter and the disciples.

Another lesson to be learned from this is that man’s talent is worthless in the new life of a Christian without God’s authorization. Peter and all of those guys with him were experienced fishermen. They were professional fishermen. They had made a career out of it prior to becoming disciples. But they were supposed to be fishers of men now. They left their nets, remember, and followed the Lord. That occasion was another fishing expedition when Jesus told Peter to cast on the other side of the boat and Peter said, “Lord, we’ve been fishing all night and caught nothing. And we are expert fishermen. But to show what an understanding guy I am, I will do it at your request. Just to show you I know what I’m talking about.” And on that occasion, they caught so many fish that the boat started sinking. So afterwards when Jesus said, “Come and follow Me and I will make you fishers of men,” they left their fishing business and followed the Lord.

But now here they are after the resurrection, obviously still not getting the connection as to what this post resurrection ministry is all about, and so Peter thinks he’s going to take matters into his own hands and get the ball rolling. He decides to go back to his old profession. After all, they are going to need to eat. They have to make a living. Jesus isn’t here to feed them, so they have to make a living. Makes perfect common sense. If we had of been there, we would all have said, “Wait for us, we’re coming too.” Especially Nick. He always wants to fish.(!)

And yet all the natural talent in the world couldn’t fill their boat with fish. They caught nothing. And they fished all night long. Not a bite. Nothing to show for it. I think the lesson is pretty clear. Our talents, our wisdom, our experience, are useless in the Christian life if they are not directed by the Lord as He would have us to work. I don’t care how much talent some musician may have. I don’t care how much ability to communicate a person may have.

You know, there is a worksheet that has found it’s way in many churches where you can supposedly discover your spiritual gift. And maybe you have done that worksheet. I did it once. Let me tell you something. That’s man’s approach. God doesn’t use a worksheet. He doesn’t look at your natural talents or abilities. He looks at your potential. He looks at your heart. He looks at your willingness to be used and to serve. He looks at what He can do through you, and not what you can do without Him.

Don’t misunderstand a very important distinction. Natural talents do not equate to spiritual gifts. Spiritual gifts are things that God wants you to do which you may not have any talent to do naturally. So God gives you the Holy Spirit to equip you and lead you and develop you to do what He wants you to do. It’s not of the flesh, but of the Spirit. God doesn’t look at your capability, but your capacity. Your willingness to be obedient to Him. Then He will fill you with the power to do it. A work of God doesn’t come from you, it comes through you from God.

A good illustration of that is found in the last chapter. In John 20:22, it says Jesus breathed on the disciples and *said to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit.” So they received the Holy Spirit then, several weeks before Pentecost. Then on the day of Pentecost, in Acts 2:4, it says that they were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages as the Holy Spirit was giving them utterance. See, the principle is having the right capacity, and being yielded to the Lord in obedience, He is able to fill you to fulfill His purposes. He is able to give you the talent or wisdom or strength to do what He wants you to do. And as we see in Acts, this unlearned fisherman named Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit, stands up and preaches from the word of God and has an unbelievable harvest of 3000 souls. That’s the secret of fruitfulness that is being taught here in this passage.

So back to our story, they worked all night but were unfruitful. They accomplished nothing because they were relying on their own experience and talent and wisdom. And then Jesus appears. He manifests Himself to them, standing a hundred yards away on the shore. They don’t know it’s Jesus at first. That’s been the typical response at all Jesus’s appearances. No one recognizes Him until He is ready to be recognized. But Jesus has been there all night long. Watching them, listening to them, waiting for them to get tired of doing it their way. Waiting for them to come to the realization that they had accomplished nothing. And then Jesus kind of rubs it in, just a little bit. He calls out to them, “Hey guys, do you have any fish?”

And the disciples have to say what no fisherman ever wants to admit; they had caught nothing. I’ve asked Nick that very question many times before, and he never gives a straight answer. He always start talking about the one that got away. No fisherman likes to admit failure. So they said, “No.” I bet they said more than what John records for us. But maybe it’s better he didn’t record it. I’m sure they had a few choice words to say though when Jesus responded, “Cast the net on the right-hand side of the boat and you will find a catch.” But again, discretion being the better part of valor, John simply records that they cast their net on the other side and then were not able to haul it in because of the great number of fish.

Listen, the point is not fishing on the right side versus the left side. It’s not one method over another method. It’s not one program over another program. The answer to fruitfulness is not a children’s ministry or a youth ministry or this program or that program. The point is it’s God’s way or no way. If you want real fruitfulness in God’s church, you need to do it God’s way. You may have a lot of activity, you may have a lot of enthusiasm, you may have a nice boat, and a lot of people rowing and shouting commands. But if it’s God’s church, you better do it God’s way. God has a blueprint for the church. And I got to tell you, most churches don’t have a clue what that is. But if you want your life to count for the kingdom of God, then you better find His blueprint and stick to it.

Isaiah 55:9 says, “For as the heavens are higher than the earth, So are My ways higher than your ways and My thoughts than your thoughts.” So also if we are going to see fruitfulness, we need to make sure we rely not on common sense but on uncommon grace. 1Cor. 1:27, “but God has chosen the foolish things of the world to shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of the world to shame the things which are strong, and the base things of the world and the despised God has chosen, the things that are not, so that He may nullify the things that are, so that no man may boast before God.”

Now what does fruitfulness look like? Well, it may not look like what you think. Let’s notice what happens here when the disciples obey Christ. First, it produced recognition of Christ. John immediately recognizes when they start hauling in this load of fish that it has to be the Lord. He tells Peter, and Peter gets so excited he puts on his clothes and throws himself in the water and starts swimming to shore. He wants to be first to see Jesus. I will say that I love Peter’s enthusiasm. He may not have been the sharpest tool in the shed, but he was enthusiastic. And I think this shows how much he loves the Lord.

Listen, when real fruitfulness happens, it produces the realization of Christ likeness in His people. That is what fruitfulness looks like. It’s not just converts. It’s not members. It’s not the size of your building or your congregation. But people recognize Christ in your church. Fruitfulness produces the nature and character of Christ in the church which is recognizable. And secondly, it produces love for the Lord. You know how you can tell Peter loved the Lord? He left his boat, he left his nets, he left this incredible haul of fish. Peter didn’t care about fishing anymore. He didn’t care about his career anymore. He cared about being with Jesus.

Well, I’m sure some smart guy out there is saying, “Well sure, but fruitfulness is also defined by 153 fish.” But I would suggest that it isn’t the numbers that we should focus on. I’m suggesting we focus on the abundance that the Lord provides, and particularly the capacity of the nets. The text says that even though all those fish were in them, they did not break. In other words, the Lord increases your capacity. That’s the true nature of a spiritual gift. It’s not a natural thing, it’s not according to natural causes, but when you are yielded and obedient to what God wants you to do, He increases your capacity. Matt. 13:12, “For whoever has, to him more shall be given, and he will have an abundance; but whoever does not have, even what he has shall be taken away from him.”

When Peter got to shore, he discovered that the Lord already had a fire going, and fish and bread already cooked ready to eat. And the Lord told them to come and eat breakfast, and to bring some of their fish as well.

Listen, we can read a lot of things into this breakfast that aren’t necessarily there if we’re not careful. But what I can say with certainty is that the Lord wants us to bring to Him our contribution, but it is His grace that provides the resources that we need for our new life in Christ. He is the provider, He is the means of power, the means of provision. He wants our contribution, but mainly, I think He wants our fellowship. He wants communion with us. Jesus said to the church in Laodicea in Rev. 3:20, “Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and will dine with him, and he with Me.”

We tend to use that verse as an invitation to unbelievers. But in reality it is an invitation to believers, to a busy, self absorbed church that has no time for real fellowship with the Lord. He is calling us, knocking on our heart’s door, wanting to have intimacy and communion with us. That is the purpose of the gospel. To restore us to the relationship man enjoyed with God back in the Garden of Eden. To restore us to fellowship with Him. And when we abide with Him in fellowship, we will have fruitfulness in the church.

Jesus talked about this relationship of fruitfulness and fellowship in John 14:15, and I will end with this passage as a summary of the message this morning. Jesus said, “If you love Me, you will keep My commandments. 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. I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you. After a little while the world will no longer see Me, but you will see Me; because I live, you will live also. In that day you will know that I am in My Father, and you in Me, and I in you.He who has My commandments and keeps them is the one who loves Me; and he who loves Me will be loved by My Father, and I will love him and will disclose Myself to him.”

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

The first Sunday service, John 20:19-31

Mar

13

2017

thebeachfellowship

In today’s passage, we are continuing to look at the first day of Christ’s resurrection from the dead. He arose early in the morning on the first day of the week, that is, of course, Sunday. Last week we saw Mary Magdalene and John and Peter’s response to the resurrection. But in presenting the chronology of the events on this most important of days, John does so in such a way as to teach a lesson. He is teaching, in this last section of chapter 20, the gospel, and he does so by showcasing for us the first Sunday church service in the New Testament period.

We meet as 21st century Christians on Sunday’s to celebrate the Lord’s Day, so named because He arose from the dead on the first day of the week. And so John is showcasing this first church service on Sunday, and he does so by giving us a classic sermon outline, featuring five principles of the gospel, followed by a personal illustration of the gospel, and then a closing synopsis of the gospel.

As we look at this passage, we see that the disciples are gathered together on Sunday evening, and they have locked the doors for fear of the Jews. This is a closed door church service. And John tells us why they have locked the doors, because of the fear of the Jews. What that means is that the Jewish religious leaders are incensed over Jesus having risen from the tomb, they have paid off the Roman soldiers to lie about it, and they might very well have schemed to arrest or even put to death the disciples so that they might not broadcast Jesus’s resurrection.

But I think that God has intentionally put the disciples there at such a time to set an example for generations of Christians yet to come that we might meet on Sundays to assemble together for fellowship and to worship the Lord, and to proclaim the gospel. The gospel, by the way, meaning simply the good news of God’s plan, the Way of life, the Way of salvation.

Now there are as I said five principles of the gospel that are being taught here. The first principle of the gospel being presented is the assurance of the presence of Christ. The whole premise of the gospel is that Jesus has triumphed over death, so that we might not fear death. He died on the cross, but He also rose from the dead. And so as the disciples have heard testimony earlier from Mary that she had seen the Lord, and heard from Peter and John that the tomb was empty, they were certainly talking among themselves as to what to make of all of this. And as they meet together, behind locked doors, suddenly Jesus appears in their midst.
Luke’s gospel tells us that the disciples were alarmed. They thought they were seeing a ghost. And so Jesus says to them, “Peace be with you.” And when He had said this, He showed them both His hands and His side. The disciples then rejoiced when they saw the Lord. (vs20).

This was a direct fulfillment of the Lord’s prophesy in which He said “If you destroy this temple, in three days I will raise it up again.” But it is also a fulfillment of the promise in Matt. 18:20 which says, “For where two or three have gathered together in My name, I am there in their midst.” And while that was true for the disciples, that is also a promise for all who believe in the gospel even today. We believe that the Lord is with us today as we gather in His name. He is present with us when we have Bible study on Wednesday evening. He is present wherever and whenever we gather together as a church. And we can be assured of that because He rose from the dead.

Much is made by theologians over the fact that Jesus appears in a locked room without having to go through a door. They attribute this ability to the nature of His resurrection body, and offer us the hope that we too will one day have a body that can walk through doors. But I would say such a view is shortsighted. Jesus had power to walk through doors before His death. The fact that He appears in such a way is just further evidence that He is Jesus. I will say this about His resurrected body. He does not seem immediately recognizable in any of the post resurrection appearances unless He produces some evidence of who He is. In this case, He shows His wounds, which are unmistakably those of His crucifixion. They are convincing proof of His resurrection and identity.

And as modern day Christians, we are promised of His living presence with us, that He will never leave us nor forsake us. And we can rely upon that promise because He lives, because He arose from the dead, and was witnessed alive not only by the disciples gathered there, but Paul tells us in 1 Cor. 15;6 that He was seen by 500 people at one time after His death. The great principle of the gospel is that Jesus is alive, and He is with us, and because He lives He can assure for us the benefits and blessings of the gospel, and that one day we will be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is when we are resurrected even as He was.

The second principle of the gospel presented to us is that He gives us not only His presence, but His peace. Twice Jesus says, “Peace be with you.” Anytime you see something stated twice in scripture you can rest assured that it is a undeniable promise that will surely come about. The first peace that Jesus gave was to quiet their fear, to calm their alarm. The second peace is to assure them of their peace with God.

This great promise is reiterated in Romans 5:1 which says, “Therefore, having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.” Men are searching today for peace – peace of mind, peace with men, peace from strife and war. “Peace, peace!” they cry, but there is no peace. But Jesus said in John 14:27, “Peace I leave with you; My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Do not let your heart be troubled, nor let it be fearful.”

How can Jesus give this peace? Because He took the offense of our sin against God upon Himself. He bore God’s wrath towards our sins upon His shoulders, bearing our sins upon the cross, paying the ultimate price on our behalf. And His resurrection is evidence that God was satisfied by His sacrifice for sin, that we might be made right with God, justified by faith in Christ, so that we have peace with God.

So we might know that if God is for us, who can be against us? If God so loves us that He spared not His only Son, what have we to fear? We have an Advocate with God, even Jesus Christ our Intercessor, so that we need not be afraid of anything. God is for us. We have peace with God. What a great tenet of the gospel; the peace of God has been established for us through Christ.

Thirdly, we have through the gospel not only the presence of Christ with us, and the peace of God with us, but we are given the same purpose which God gave Christ. Vs 21, Jesus says, “as the Father has sent Me, I also send you.” Jesus Christ came to Earth with a specific purpose; that is that He might manifest to the world the truth of God. Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth and the life, no man comes to the Father except by Me.” Furthermore, He said, “I have come that you might have life, and have it more abundantly.”

Listen, this is what the world doesn’t understand about the gospel. The gospel is God’s plan for man, to give him life, abundant life. It is God’s plan to restore man to the innocence of the Garden, to restore man to the joy before the fall. It is God’s plan for man to have a life of joy and peace and all the blessings which God originally designed man to have but were taken away by man’s fall into sin. The gospel is not just a list of what you can’t do. It is a list of promises of what God will do, when man comes under His plan of reconciliation.

2Cor. 5:17 says, “Therefore if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creature; the old things passed away; behold, new things have come. Now all these things are from God, who reconciled us to Himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation, namely, that God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and He has committed to us the word of reconciliation. Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God were making an appeal through us; we beg you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God.”

This is our purpose, having been reconciled to God, we become ambassadors of Christ to the world, so that we might announce to all men the promise of reconciliation. We are ambassadors. We have the same ministry that Christ had. We tell the world the truth of God, we tell the world the promise of the gospel, the hope of the gospel.

Listen, some of you are missing out on your purpose. And you wonder why your Christian experience seems lacking. Perhaps it’s because you are not recognizing that just as Jesus was sent to a lost and dying world to tell them the good news, so He has sent us also. We are not saved just so we may selfishly bask in the love of God for us, and reap all the blessings of God for ourselves, like the lepers in the OT that found the enemy camp deserted and full of food, knowing that their own people were starving. But it is better to give than to receive. It is better to serve than to be served. There are hundreds of men and women that you come into contact with everyday, and God has sent you to them to tell them the gospel of salvation. We have a commission to be ambassadors for Christ, to carry on His work, His ministry of reconciliation. I hope you take that commission seriously. I hope you understand your purpose is that Christ is sending you to tell your lost family, your lost friends, your lost coworkers, your lost neighbors about the good news of the gospel. If we would all take seriously this commission, that Christ is sending you, I think we would soon have to move to a bigger building to hold all the new converts.

Fourthly, the principle of the gospel presented here next is the means by which we are able to fulfill this purpose, and that is the gift of the Holy Spirit. John says in vs.22, And when He had said this, He breathed on them and said to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit.” Someone once said, I think it was Alistair Begg, that the difference between the OT and the NT is that in the OT we were given the law but we couldn’t perform it, but in the NT we are given the gift of the Holy Spirit that we might do the works of God.

It’s interesting that when Jesus gives them the permanent presence of the Holy Spirit to dwell in them, He breathes on them. There seems to be in the language a deliberate reference to Genesis 2, when God made Adam and breathed in him the breath of life, and man became a living soul. Paul speaks of this parallel in 1Cor. 15:45, saying “So also it is written, The first MAN, Adam, BECAME A LIVING SOUL.’ The last Adam became a life-giving spirit.” Jesus breathed on the disciples, giving them the Spirit to dwell permanently in them.

It’s also interesting in light of what Jesus said earlier about us being sent as He was sent, to notice the parallels between Jesus’s ministry and the disciples’ ministry. Jesus you will remember, after coming up from the water of His baptism which symbolized the resurrection, had the Spirit descend upon Him in the form of a dove. And immediately He went out into the wilderness being led by the Holy Spirit and for 40 days He was tempted. It’s interesting that the disciples receive the Spirit through Christ breathing on them, and then they will wait for 40 days before receiving power through the filling of the Spirit on the day of Pentecost. So again, we have the same benefit for our ministry that Christ had in His. After the forty days, Luke 4:14 says, “And Jesus returned in the power of the Spirit into Galilee.” And such power is given to us as well that we might fulfill the ministry of Christ.

The last principle of the gospel presented here is that of authority. Jesus says in vs.23, “If you forgive the sins of any, their sins have been forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they have been retained.” What Jesus is saying here is not that we have the power to forgive sins. The Bible makes it clear in many other places that only God has the power to forgive sins. But rather He is saying that as we fulfill our ministry of the gospel, to share the good news, that we have the authority to announce the forgiveness of sins for those that confess Jesus as Lord and have faith in Him.

We have the authority of the gospel to say that if you confess your sins He is faithful and just to forgive you of your sins and cleanse you from all unrighteousness. But there is also the flip side to the gospel. If you reject Jesus as your Lord and God, then we have the authority to tell them that they are still in their sins.

That’s the message that Peter and the apostles had after Pentecost. They spoke with authority. They spoke with the authority of the Holy Spirit. They preached with the power of the Spirit, and through the authority of the Word of God. And we have that same resource. So many people want to focus on the apostles speaking in tongues as their manifestation of the power of the Spirit. But I would suggest that more significant was the message of the sermon Peter preached. Suddenly this backwoods, unlearned fisherman was preaching a message, quoting and interpreting scripture and people’s hearts were cut to the quick under conviction of their sins. People weren’t saved by hearing someone speak in tongues, they became saved by hearing the gospel preached. That is power. The Holy Spirit works through the gospel, works through the scriptures, to bring men under conviction that leads to salvation. That is edifying to the body, and not just self edification. (Romans 1:16) “I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes…”

So those are the five principles of the gospel that John records for us here as he really begins to finish his gospel. And like any good preacher, he gives a personal illustration for his message; he presents the account of Thomas, who had been missing from the first service when Jesus appeared. And though Thomas knows well these disciples, having been with them constantly for three years or more, yet he rejects their testimony. When they tell him that they had seen the risen Jesus, he says quite callously that unless he sees the nail prints in His hands, and actually puts his finger in them, and unless he puts his hand into the wound in His side, he will not believe that they have actually seen Jesus alive.

Well, 8 days later, it’s once again Sunday evening. And the disciples are having the second Sunday service, and they have locked the doors again. But this time, Thomas is with them. And Jesus suddenly appears in the midst of them and says to Thomas, “Reach here with your finger, and see My hands; and reach here your hand and put it into My side; and do not be unbelieving, but believing.”

Thomas is undoubtedly taken aback. For one because he sees the risen Savior. But also because he hears the Lord repeat back to him the things he said privately to the disciples. And so he understands in a special way what it means to have the presence of Christ in his life. Realizing that Jesus heard him when he said that must have had a major impact on him. I would to God that we might realize that Jesus hears everything we say. That He is watching us, and walking among us every day. Jesus told the Pharisees in Matt.12:36 that they would give an account on judgment day for every careless word that they spoke. And Jesus told the 7 churches in Revelation, “I know your deeds.” He is described as walking among the churches, watching and hearing all that they have to say and do. If we truly understood that it would be hard for us to continue living the way we do, wouldn’t it? We need to realize the presence of Christ 24/7, as we go through our daily lives.

Well, Thomas suddenly doesn’t want to put his finger in the nail holes. He doesn’t want to put his hand in His side. Instead, Thomas gives the strongest confession of any of the disciples up to that point. He says, “My Lord and my God!” That is the confession that John has been working towards in the gospel up to this point. It’s to bring the reader to the point of confessing Jesus as our Lord and our God. That we might come to the place where we are willing to accept Jesus as our Master and Lord, that He has the right to determine for us what we can or can’t do. Because He is also God. He is the Creator of all things. He has formed us for His glory.

That confession of Thomas is what is meant by believing in Jesus. It is to declare Him as My Master, and My God. And therefore, my allegiance and commitment is given completely to Him. And having faith in Him, we are made righteous, we have peace with God. We are given new life by the Spirit of God. We are a new creation. Old things have passed away and all things have become new. We have new life in Christ, and a new purpose in life.

Jesus accepts Thomas’s confession. But He gives a rebuke for his lack of faith. Jesus says, “Because you have seen Me, have you believed? Blessed are they who did not see, and yet believed.” Listen, we need to guard against the fleshly desire of seeking of physical verification of the Lord like that which Thomas exhibited. We all get discouraged from time to time. We all may have doubts from time to time. To do so is human. But to stubbornly seek that is carnal. It is fleshly. It is to want special validation from God just for me, according to exactly what I think God needs to do. Jesus was gracious to Thomas. But that attitude is not what He desires.

A lot of Christians may feel like we are disadvantaged because we don’t have the physical validation that the early disciples had. We don’t have the physical signs of power perhaps. We don’t have the physical presence of the Lord. But Jesus is saying in this statement that not having Him physically here is not a disadvantage, but it is really a blessing. Blessed are they who did not see and yet believed. There is a special blessing for us Christians today that don’t have the physical evidence to validate or prove our faith. But then if we did, it wouldn’t be such great of faith would it? And we know that God rewards and blesses great faith. And that kind of faith is what is required. We believe the testimony of faithful men, trustworthy witnesses and the record of the scripture. God will bless you for it. Matt. 5:8, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.”
And that brings us to the conclusion, or synopsis of John’s gospel. It comes a chapter early. But it’s really like the conclusion of John’s gospel. He says in vs.30, “Therefore many other signs Jesus also performed in the presence of the disciples, which are not written in this book; but these have been written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing you may have life in His name.” 

Listen, these truths have been written that you might have life in His name. Abundant life. Real life. A life of joy and blessing. Jesus did not come to teach philosophy. He did not come to show us how to be prosperous or successful. He didn’t come as God in the flesh to make new inventions that would make our lives easier. He didn’t die to make us more comfortable. But He came that we might believe that He has come from God, to teach us the truth of God, that we might be reconciled to God, that we may have the new life which God has designed for us to enjoy, and that we might enjoy fellowship with Him forever. I hope that you have confessed Jesus as your Lord and your God, that you might have the life which He has died to procure for you. If you believe in Him, I announce to you by the authority of Christ that your sins have been forgiven you. But if you reject Him, I must tell you that you remain dead in your sins and will face the final judgment without Him. I pray you come to Jesus today and receive all that He has done for you.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

Resurrection Faith, John 20:1-18

Mar

5

2017

thebeachfellowship

The goal of the gospel is not just to provide us with an escape from hell. But to provide us with a new way of living, a new life. Jesus said, I came that you might have life, and have it more abundantly. Before we can have the life that Christ wants for us, we must be first justified, our sins atoned for, made acceptable to God, and that is only possible through faith in the cross of Christ. But the ultimate purpose of that atonement is that we become sons of God. As Jesus said in vs.17 of our text; “I ascend to My Father and your Father, and My God and your God.’” That we might have new life in Christ, as sons of God, doing the works of God. That we might be a testimony to the world of the power of salvation.

So in the gospel, the cross speaks to our atonement, our justification. And the resurrection speaks of our sanctification, our new life whereby we are given power over sin and over death, which we now live by faith to the glory of God.

As we look this week at the resurrection, I don’t want to focus merely on the chronology of the events and try to reconcile the various gospel accounts into one. But what I want to do is emphasize the new life that the resurrection promises. I would point out that on Saturday evening, as all the disciples went to bed, undoubtedly remembering the horrors of Christ’s crucifixion, undoubtedly despondent and without hope due to their Savior having succumbed to death, yet even in this darkest hour God was at work. God had a plan and in the deliberate sovereignty of God this plan was inevitably coming to it’s conclusion. As Jesus said in John 5:17 regards to the law of the Sabbath, “My Father is working until now, and I myself am working.” So even though His body was in the grave, even though it was the Sabbath, the plan of God was at work and succeeding.

Though in the minds of His disciples, and in the minds of His enemies, Christ was dead and buried on Saturday, little did they know that He was at that very moment taking captivity captive, that He had descended into the lower parts of the earth, triumphed over the very gates of Hell, and had taken the very keys of Hell and Death, “that through death He might render powerless him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and might free those who through fear of death were subject to slavery all their lives.”

The power of death and hell had to be broken, so that man might be able to truly live as God designed them to live. And for that freedom that was won at so great a cost, we celebrate the resurrection on the first day of the week. We celebrate the first day of being a new creation in Christ Jesus.

So it is with that sense of divine purpose we may view the resurrection. John says it was early on the first day of the week, that is Sunday morning, but while it was still dark. Jesus had said two days earlier on the night of His betrayal that the hour belonged to the power of darkness. And that darkness still covered the earth early on Sunday morning. Men were without hope, unaware that the Spirit of God was moving across that darkness, unaware of the great victory that had been won in the bowels of the earth as Christ took the keys of death and Hades. And since death could not hold Him, because sin had nothing on Him, in the first hours of a still dark Sunday morning, the Light dawned, Christ rose from Hades, and His Spirit returned once again to the lifeless body within the tomb. The wrappings of the grave clothes could not hold Him down. The heavy stone across the tomb could not hold Him in. According to Matthew 28 the earth trembled violently in a severe earthquake and an angel of God rolled away the stone and sat upon it.

Maybe Mary, having been shaken awake by the violent quake, comes early that Sunday morning while it was still dark to anoint His dead body with spices. She comes out of sorrow, without any hope, only despair. The early darkness reflects the despondency that gripped her soul. Christ had delivered her from seven demons. She had known the power of His life. But yet in the early morning darkness, doubt darkened her soul. She had believed on Christ for so much more than this. Her love for Christ had devolved to a sense of despair when she considered His body lain in the grave.

Finding the stone rolled away and the body of Christ not there caused her alarm and confusion. Her thoughts were that Jesus’s body had been taken. Mary’s thoughts focused on that which could be seen, verified. Someone must have taken His body, and so she ran and told Peter and John.

Mary’s faith, or lack of it, is so much like our faith. When the darkness pervades our lives, and our hopes are not quickly realized, we tend to look at what is visible. We tend to focus on the external circumstances and often misinterpret what is going on. We don’t see Christ working, we can’t see His power, or understand His plan. And in the darkness of our lack of faith we run to conclusions that are contrary to the promises of God. Christ had prophesied that He would die on the cross and after three days He would rise again, but Mary believed what she saw wth her eyes. She thought she made a rational conclusion from the circumstances which she witnessed, but she was in error.

Often events happen in our lives in a similar fashion. When darkness pervades our lives, God’s presence seems missing, God’s promises are forgotten, and we become confused, alarmed. We run away from the very place where God has brought us to show us His glory. We believe what our senses tell us, rather than have faith in that which is not seen. But Heb. 11:1 says, ”Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” Mary’s faith was founded on what she could see, what she could touch. Her faith was founded on her 5 senses, on her feelings.

Peter and John’s faith was in turmoil as well. Though John had been with Jesus at the cross, he must have been hit particularly hard by the graphic torture of the cross, having witnessed first hand the death of Christ. He would have seen the life leave Jesus’s body as He gave up His Spirit, as the evidence of death was revealed in blood and water flowing out of His side. Though he would have been moved as others were at the way Christ died, yet he would have known with undeniable certainty that Christ was indeed dead. He too had forgotten that this same Jesus who gave up His Spirit, had said He had the power not only to lay down His life, but to take it back up again. Such promise had been forgotten in his grief which overwhelmed him. John, who loved Jesus much, would have been most forlorn and disconsolate at His death.

Peter on the other hand was also undoubtedly crushed, not only because of the death of His Lord, but because of his own failure in Jesus’s final hours. His grief over the death of Christ was made even more bitter knowing that he had deserted Him and even disowned the Lord in the hour of His greatest suffering. So the news from Mary at such an early hour must have startled them both. Here was something that they could do, some action that they could take. To what purpose, I think neither gave much thought, but at the report of Mary they began to run towards the tomb.

One cannot help but wonder why John reveals the outcome of the footrace that occurred between him and Peter. Many commentators have speculated about his purpose in recording it. John outruns Peter to the tomb, then peeking in, stays outside, while Peter comes huffing and puffing up and barges straight inside.

Perhaps John is not so concerned with the physical accomplishment of the race as we might think. Maybe John is revealing the character or nature of the individuals. Even perhaps the character of their faith. Peter’s faith is passionate, impulsive, bold. John’s faith is eager to believe, but not quite as courageous, needing the stimulus of Peter.

However, perhaps more can be discerned regarding the true nature of each person’s faith by examining John’s use of the word interpreted “saw.” John uses three Greek words in this passage for “saw.” When Mary looked at the tomb and saw the stone rolled away, he said she looked, using the Greek word “blepo,” which means to clearly see a material or physical object. Mary was focused on the physical. And what she saw in the physical determined her faith.

John as well, when he first comes to the tomb is said to see the linen wrappings, and John uses the same word, “blepo.” At that point, the physical is evident to him as well, but he doesn’t yet go in. He doesn’t act on what he sees.

Peter however, barges straight inside the tomb and he sees the linen grave clothes and also the head scarf rolled up by itself. And John uses a different word for Peter seeing. He uses “theoreo” which means to contemplate, to observe, scrutinize. Peter senses that there is more than meets the eye, but he is puzzled and he isn’t able to come to a conclusion at this point. Maybe the eyes of his faith are clouded by his conscience.

But after Peter has gone inside, perhaps having said something to John, John goes in to the tomb. He sees the same things that Peter has seen. But now John uses another word to describe how he sees. It’s not “theoreo,” as Peter was contemplating, but it is “horaō”, to know, to perceive, to discern. He sees the same things that Peter saw, and the same things that Mary had seen, but while they went away unbelieving, the text says that John believed. He believed in that moment that Jesus had risen from the dead. He believed in faith.

What difference does their conclusions mean though? Should we make so much out of their responses? I would suggest that it makes a difference to Christ. Next week we will look at the next passage as Jesus comes to the disciples and Thomas isn’t there with the others. And because he didn’t personally see Jesus with his own eyes, he will not believe the testimony of the other disciples. So 8 days later, Jesus shows up again and specifically appears to Thomas and invites him to put his fingers in the holes in His hands, and the wound in HIs side. And of course, at that point Thomas believes and says “My Lord and My God.” A great confession, no doubt, but one that in Christ’s opinion was lacking in faith. And so Jesus says in vs.29, “Because you have seen Me, have you believed? Blessed are they who did not see, and yet believed.” And in that statement Christ reveals the nature of faith needed for future generations who will believe not on the basis of physical evidence, but on the basis of faithful testimony.

Mary, John and Peter all had the same experience at the empty tomb. They all saw the same things, but only John believes with the faith that God desires. John reveals the basis for that kind of faith in vs.9, which says, “For as yet they did not understand the Scripture, that He must rise again from the dead.” The point being that our faith is founded upon the Scriptures. This is the faith that God desires. And this is the faith which we are tasked with today. We don’t have the physical presence of God to bolster our faith. I would suggest that it is a failure of faith to seek after material manifestations of God. This desire to “experience God” while understandable from a human point of view, is not in accordance with the plan of God.

As we are told in 2Tim. 3:16, “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped for every good work.” The Scriptures are the complete revelation of God, and it is able to thoroughly, completely equip you for every good work. The Word of God is more than adequate for our faith. Our new life is lived by faith in the Scripture, not by sight. 2Cor. 5:7, “for we walk by faith, not by sight.”

Now though Mary has not risen to that degree of faith, Jesus will reveal Himself to her to increase her faith. But we should not be too emboldened by His special appearance, nor deprecating towards Mary who needs it. Because Mary did not have the completed Scriptures as we have. None of the New Testament had been written at that point. And so Christ, the living Word, provides for her what the written Word provides for us.

So in vs.11, we see Mary, back once again at the tomb, probably after John and Peter have already left, and she is weeping. She is still mourning Christ’s death, weeping over the loss of His body. And when she looked again in the tomb this time she sees two angels in white sitting. This “seeing” is the same as Peter’s “theoreo”, scrutinizing, observing the two angels in white. It’s doubtful that she recognizes them as angels, perhaps just seeing two men in white apparel and doesn’t know what they are doing there. She is trying to understand, but not clearly discerning what is going on.

And they said to her, “Woman, why are you weeping?” She said to them, “Because they have taken away my Lord, and I do not know where they have laid Him.” At that point, she becomes aware of Jesus behind her, but she thinks He is the gardener. That’s a pretty good indication she didn’t recognize the men as angels. She hasn’t discerned anything abnormal.

Someone the other night at Bible study brought up the verse in Hebrews 13:2 about angels which says, “Be not forgetful to entertain strangers: for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.” And the point I made in explaining it, was the phrase, “unawares.” The verse teaches that most of the time when we might encounter angels, we’re unaware that they are angels. So many people running around today claiming visitations from angels. But if you count up the number of times recorded in the Scriptures you will find only a few accounts of them in 6000 years. So beware of those claiming angelic visitations.

In fact, Paul warns against giving angels more credence than preachers of the gospel, in Gal 1:8, saying, “But though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed.”

So Mary didn’t recognize the angels, nor did she even recognize Jesus. “Supposing Him to be the gardener, she *said to Him, ‘Sir, if you have carried Him away, tell me where you have laid Him, and I will take Him away.’” It’s interesting that after the resurrection, Jesus is seen on numerous occasions (one commentator counted 17 times) and yet in every case He is not recognized initially. That should be a warning for those who suppose that they have seen some sort of apparition of Jesus. Unless He reveals Himself, we would not recognize Him in the flesh. Even those who had known Jesus in the flesh did not recognize Him after His resurrection unless He showed them His wounds, or in some other way manifested His identity to them.

How then does Mary come to recognize Him? When He calls her by her name. This is a direct correlation to what Jesus said in John 10:2, “But he who enters by the door is a shepherd of the sheep. To him the doorkeeper opens, and the sheep hear his voice, and he calls his own sheep by name and leads them out. When he puts forth all his own, he goes ahead of them, and the sheep follow him because they know his voice.”

Last Wednesday night we looked at Christ’s letter to the church of Pergamum in Revelation 2. And at the end of the letter, Jesus says, “He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. To him who overcomes, to him I will give some of the hidden manna, and I will give him a white stone, and a new name written on the stone which no one knows but he who receives it.” The hidden manna refers to the word of God, and those who believe it receive a new name from God.

Some commentators say that Jesus uses the Aramaic version of Mary, i.e., Miriam, to address her, and she responds in Aramaic, “Rabboni,” which means Teacher. She recognizes Him when He calls her by her name. Rom 8:30 says, “and these whom He predestined, He also called; and these whom He called, He also justified; and these whom He justified, He also glorified.” No one comes to Me, Jesus said, unless the Father calls him. The election of God is specific. He calls us by name.

But though the calling of God is effectual, there is still the problem of Mary’s ineffective faith. It is the faith of feeling, of physical presence. There is almost an obsession with Mary over the physical presence of Christ’s body. Even when He was dead, she is focused on the body of Christ. She wants to anoint the body. She is alarmed when there is no body in the tomb. She is confused, concerned.

So now when she recognizes she is in the presence of Christ, she immediately grabs hold of Him, as if to say I will never let go of His physical presence. And in our humanness, that is understandable. Who among us does not crave the physical closeness, physical presence of the Lord? How many have not thought, “Oh, if God would just reveal Himself to me, every thing would be ok. I could take what I am going through. I could deal with things, if I could just see the Lord in some manifestation of power or presence.”

But Christ rebukes Mary for that sort of thing, calling it clinging. He says, “Stop clinging to Me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father; but go to My brethren and say to them, ‘I ascend to My Father and your Father, and My God and your God.’” Jesus indicates the faith that is required in this new life will be a faith in Him who will not be visible, but invisible. Not a faith founded on a clinging, emotional, physical presence of God, but a faith founded on the inviolable promises of the Word of God.

Now much debate is given to this statement by Christ. First of all, the obvious meaning is that at that point He had just risen from three days in the grave, even from the depths of Hades, and He had not ascended to the Father. But it also means that the purpose of God was not that He would remain here in bodily form, but would ascend into heaven to stand as Mediator between God and man, our Great High Priest. He could not do that from earth, but His place was in heaven, far above all rule and authority on Earth.

But it also means that He would not be a physical presence here on Earth that we can see and hold onto, but rather our faith in what is not seen would be required in a life of faith. Thus, the just shall live by faith. And that which is seen is not faith, but that which is unseen. This will be the acceptable pattern of faith in this new resurrection life, that we might believe the testimony of faithful men, even the apostles, who would record their testimony in the gospels and epistles and that having believed the scriptures, we might receive the knowledge of God which leads to the full measure of salvation; not only justification, but a life of sanctification, culminating in our future glorification when we will be made completely like Christ at His coming.

So the testimony of faith is illustrated by Mary Magdalene, who comes afterwards to the disciples and says, “I have seen the Lord.” This is the basis for our faith. The testimony of faithful witnesses, who were willing to die for that testimony. And their testimony was accompanied by the signs of the apostles, with all miracles and signs and wonders, so that we might believe their word. So that by the testimony of the Scriptures, the nations of the world might come to know the knowledge of God that leads to salvation, that we might go into all the world and make disciples, teaching them to believe and observe all that Christ taught, as evidenced by the Word of God.

The resurrection teaches us that when we die to this world, we can live a new life in Christ. That new life begins at our justification, where we are declared righteous by the blood of Jesus Christ, and it continues through a life of sanctification, where we live righteously by the power of the Spirit of Christ, whereby we become conformed to the image of Christ, and ambassadors of the gospel to the world. But that new life is not automatic, it’s not being put into autopilot mode. It is a possible, though. When the just shall live by faith. And our faith is founded on the Scriptures, by which we may know God, and know the will of God. Don’t look for the physical to confirm your faith, look for that which is spiritual to inform your faith. The Bible says that faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God. That living, powerful source of faith is described in Hebrews 4:12, “For the word of God is living and active and sharper than any two-edged sword, and piercing as far as the division of soul and spirit, of both joints and marrow, and able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart.” Let us hold fast the Word of God, that our faith may be founded on the true and faithful promises of God.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |

Secret Disciples, John 19:38-42

Feb

26

2017

thebeachfellowship

We live in a society today when death is portrayed in movies and television with all sorts of blood and gore and people are unmoved by it. But on the other hand, in reality, in our day to day lives, we go to great lengths to avoid seeing death. If the average person even saw a steer killed and butchered they would probably be so sickened that they would swear off meat forever.

We have an unrealistic perception of death, and perhaps because of that, we have an unrealistic perception of life. Even in the death of a loved one, it is rare that we really see much of the person as they die, or after they are dead, but rather doctors and nurses and morticians whisk the body away as soon as possible and what we end up seeing eventually at the funeral doesn’t even look real anymore.

It must have been a tremendously shocking thing to witness the crucifixion of Jesus. The savagery of it is something that is hard for us to fathom. The suffering is something that would not be tolerated today even in the execution of the worst criminals. The Romans view of a merciful hurrying of the death of the victims was to break their legs so that they ended up suffocating due to the pain required to push their chest up enough to breath.

Christ, as we saw last week, gave up His life before the suffering or the soldiers finally took it from Him. But that doesn’t mean He didn’t suffer immensely. Not only did He suffer in His flesh, but He suffered shame that only a righteous God could suffer. To be holy and innocent of all sin and yet be stripped naked and condemned by your countrymen to death, and then have your mother and a few friends watch you in your agony is beyond our comprehension. But to have the wrath of God upon you as you take on the weight of the sins of the world is even more incomprehensible for our finite minds.

We are not given all the details of Christ’s crucifixion. Even if we piece together the four gospels there are still gaps in what God has given us. John says that there were many other things that he could have included, but that these were given that we might believe that Jesus was the Son of God and that believing we might have life in His name.

So as we come to this last section, the burial of Christ, it is important that we understand the full significance which John intends for us to gather from this passage. And I think that one of the main things that John wants to illustrate for us in the end of this chapter and the next chapter is the various responses of the disciples to the crucifixion and the resurrection. There are many different responses that are presented in chapter 19 and 20. And I think that John illustrates these various responses in order to show that salvation is an individual response to the gospel. Salvation did not come to all men simply through the cross of Christ, but salvation comes through man’s faith in what Christ did on the cross. Salvation requires more than a head knowledge, or an intellectual assent to the facts, but it requires a response of faith to the cross for it to be efficacious.

To become saved is to not only be justified by faith in what Christ has done for us, but to be saved is to become a disciple. To follow Christ, to follow His teachings, to be led by Him in all walks of our life. Jesus said in Matthew 28:19, “Go into the world and make disciples of all the nations…teaching them to observe all that I commanded you.” Discipleship then is the goal of evangelism. Not just to make converts, but disciples. Not just to have people raise their hand or repeat a prayer and then they have been saved from hell, but to have people become transformed into the image of Christ.

Now in this last section of chapter 19, we see two men, who are called secret disciples. I think that is somewhat of an oxymoron. But if we give them the benefit of the doubt, let’s say that they had come to a saving knowledge of Christ, but that faith had not become public, and therefore not transformative. I’m not sure such a thing is possible, but God knows the heart, not I, and He knows what are the intentions of the heart even before we act on them. So if John, under the influence of the Holy Spirit calls them disciples, then maybe they have been saved prior to the cross. However, I will remind you that in John 6, after Jesus said “my flesh is true food, and my blood is true drink,” it goes on to say in vs66 that after this “many of his disciples turned back and no longer walked with him.” So there is a sense in which you could be considered a disciple of Christ but not be saved and turn and walk away from the Lord. Not that you can lose your salvation, but that you never had it. You were considered a disciple because you were in the group, but you never truly believed unto salvation.

And I think that this is indicative of many in the church today. They have a head knowledge of Christ, they are following to a degree, holding on loosely so to speak to the things of God, but in times of difficulty they will expose their true nature; they will turn away and stop following. They will turn to something more palatable to their mind. Something not as demanding. And so we have churches filled with people who move from group to group, from church to church, always avoiding the rigors and demands of true discipleship.

So Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus were secret disciples up to this point. Whether they had truly been saved or not we don’t know, but we do know that as they came face to face with the crucifixion of Christ they came all the way into discipleship. At the cross of Christ they faced the true nature of Christianity, and they choose to identify and suffer with Christ.

Now who were Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus? Well, I’m sure most of you are familiar with Nicodemus. We met him in the third chapter, he came to see Jesus at night. And we are told there that he was a ruler, that means a member of the Sanhedrin. Jesus calls him a teacher. John also calls him a Pharisee. That means that he believed in the afterlife, and he practiced the law to the nth degree. In that famous discourse in chapter 3, Jesus told him that he needed to be born again of the Spirit. And so we can assume that message resonated with Nicodemus, and eventually produced saving faith.

There is one other note about Nicodemus in chapter 7, around vs 50, we see Nicodemus coming to the defense of Christ that He should be given a fair hearing before they judged Him. And in that passage, the Pharisees rebuked him for that defense. So at that point there is an indication of the Spirit at work in him, but he has not yet come forward completely as a disciple.

The other man we know less about. Mark tells us that Joseph of Arimathea was a prominent member of the Sanhedrin as well. Matthew says he was a rich man. And Mark also adds that he was waiting for the kingdom of God. That means he was looking for the Messiah. Some traditions say that Joseph and Nicodemus were actually brothers. They both were rich men, they both were members of the Sanhedrin. They both were very prominent in Jewish religion and society.

And because of those things, they had a lot to lose for becoming disciples of Christ. John says that Joseph was a disciple, but secretly for fear of the Jews. He doesn’t mean just the Jewish people at large necessarily, but the Jewish leaders, the ruling party. There were 70 men that were part of the Sanhedrin. And there were undoubtedly thousands of Pharisees. These were the leaders of the community, and these two men were considered the most prominent of the leaders. And so to come out publicly as Christ’s disciples meant the possible loss of their positions in society, their careers, and their wealth. So up to this point they hid their growing faith.

I think that it’s obvious God does not save us, He does not shine His light in us, that we might hide it under a basket. Jesus said in Matt. 5:14, “You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden; nor does anyone light a lamp and put it under a basket, but on the lampstand, and it gives light to all who are in the house. Let your light shine before men in such a way that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father who is in heaven.” So we are not saved to hide our discipleship, but to reflect the light of Christ.

The application to disciples today should be pretty obvious as well. Christ died to save us not just to escape hell, but that we might shine His light through us to the world by looking like Christ, by acting like Christ. That the world might see our good works, and bring glory to our Father in heaven.

What stops us from doing that? Well, it’s the same things that stopped Joseph and Nicodemus. They feared the excommunication of the ruling party. They feared what their community might say if they really stepped out and followed the Lord. They were afraid they might lose their friends. Lose their social standing in the community. And I’m afraid that the same concerns keep many of us from truly following Christ today. If we really gave Christ 100% it would cost us friendships or jobs or money or something that we hold dear.

You know, tradition says that these men did eventually lose all those things. Not as much is known about Joseph, but there are traditions about Nicodemus that say that as a result of his coming forward to claim the body of Christ and becoming a true disciple that he lost his position in the Sanhedrin, he lost his wealth, and one historian recounts one of his daughters being so destitute that she was seen picking grain from manure.

Jesus speaks of what it means to truly follow Him, to be a true disciple. In Matt. 16:24
Jesus said to His disciples, “If anyone wishes to come after Me, he must deny himself, and take up his cross and follow Me.”

So I think that Joseph and Nicodemus were at the cross. They would have had to have been there, to be able to respond so quickly to Jesus’s death that they were able to appeal to Pilate for His body and prepare His embalmment before nightfall and the Sabbath began. It’s ironic, all His disciples save John had fled Him in the darkest hour. And yet in the providence of God, these two fearful, secret disciples are the ones who are there to take Him to a tomb and prepare Him for burial.

Somehow in the death of Christ, these men’s reservations fell away. When they saw the way that He died, they must have come to the same conclusion that the Roman centurion did, saying, “Surely this man was the Son of God!”(Mark 15:39) All their reservations fell away. And in that moment, they realized that they had participated in some way in the crucifixion of the very Son of God. They knew that their sin had caused the death of God’s Son. And in light of that realization, they knew that their lives meant nothing if they were not sealed in Christ.

I can’t help but think that Nicodemus remembered what Christ had told him back in chapter 3:14, “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up; so that whoever believes will in Him have eternal life.” When He saw Jesus lifted up on the cross, I’m sure this statement came flooding back to him, and He realized not only the fulfillment of prophecy, but also realized that for the deathly sting of his sin to be removed, he had to look unto Christ as his Savior and Lord. That instead of death from the serpent’s sting he might receive the eternal life that God promised to those who believe in Him. And so I believe Nicodemus and Joseph came to complete discipleship when they saw Jesus hanging on that cross for their sins.

And that is where true discipleship starts for us as well. When we consider the horror of our sins, when we consider the Son of God taking my penalty by His death, when we consider the shame and suffering that we deserved, placed upon Him who did not deserve it, then the least that I can do is to follow Him in forsaking my sin, being willing to give up my hold on this life, so that I might have real life, even eternal life through Him.

So I think that Joseph and Nicodemus not only got a vision of the cross, but they considered the cost of discipleship in light of what Christ did for them, and they realized that whatever it cost them, He was worth it all. In Mark 15:43, it says Joseph went in before Pilate and gathered up his courage, and asked for the body of Jesus. I think it took a lot of courage to do that. Pilate had after all just condemned Jesus to death. What prevented him from doing the same to Joseph for revealing he was Christ’s disciple?

But it also took a lot of courage because it would have been known to all his colleagues in the Sanhedrin. With this one bold act, he pretty much sounded the death knell on his career. That kind of courage and commitment to Christ no matter how great the cost is what is required of disciples. Jesus said in Matt. 10:37, “He who loves father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me; and he who loves son or daughter more than Me is not worthy of Me. And he who does not take his cross and follow after Me is not worthy of Me.” So to take up your cross means to count the cost, and consider as Paul said the things I once thought valuable in this life as nothing but rubbish for the sake of knowing Christ. Phil. 3:8
“More than that, I count all things to be loss in view of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them but rubbish so that I may gain Christ.”

That kind of abandon in following Christ is illustrated in two sacrificial gifts that each man gave to the Lord in His death. First of all, Joseph gave Jesus his own personal tomb. If not for this act of love on the part of Joseph, Jesus’s body would have been dragged off to Gehana, a trash pile outside of town that was always burning. It was a picture of hell that Jesus had often referred to. But Isaiah 53:9 had prophesied that “His grave was assigned with wicked men,Yet He was with a rich man in His death, Because He had done no violence, Nor was there any deceit in His mouth.”

John gives us some information about this tomb. It was a tomb fit for a King. He says that no body had ever been laid in it. And he also mentions that this tomb was in a garden. It’s interesting that when the first Adam sinned it was in a garden, and when the second Adam atoned for that sin, He is laid to rest in a garden.The fellowship that had been broken by sin in the first garden was restored by atonement in the second.

So Joseph’s gift to Christ was fit for a King. A new tomb, in a garden. An extravagant gift to honor Christ as his King in death. And of course God used this gift of Joseph to prove conclusively that the resurrection of Christ had taken place. If Jesus’s burial had not been well known, there would not have been the numerous witnesses to His resurrection.

And then Nicodemus also gives an extravagant, sacrificial gift suitable for a king. John tells us that he brought a hundred pounds weight of spices, made from myrrh and aloes. Myrrh was brought at the birth of Jesus as well, by the wise men, who noted that a King had been born and came to worship Him. Now in Christ’s death, another wise man brought myrrh to honor the King. A hundred pounds weight would have represented a fortune in perfume. Much more than simply sprinkled in the folds of the shroud, it would have filled the tomb where Jesus’s body was laid.

And so I suggest that a true disciple is known by his extravagance, by sacrificial giving to honor God. Material things are recognized as merely offerings we give back to God. Whether it be our time, or treasure, we realize that no sacrifice is too great, when we consider the sacrifice He gave first for us.

When Joseph and Nicodemus stepped up to full discipleship, they claimed Christ’s body and boldly took on all the associations that came with that. So we too as Christians must claim His body, His church, and embrace all the associations that come wth that. All the stigma. All the social rejection. There is no cost too great for the sake of Him who suffered for me. It requires stepping out of our comfort zone. It requires fellowship in His suffering. It requires sacrifice of time, money and resources for the sake of the Kingdom of God. Being a true disciple requires that we lose our identity, and claim our identity with Christ. And when we give up our hold on this life and follow Him completely in true discipleship, then we will know the real, abundant life that God promises to those who trust Him.

I would ask you to consider your relationship to Christ this morning. Are you living in effect as as secret disciple? Are you trying to hold on to control of your life? Are you holding onto things that are keeping you from fully committing to the Lord? True discipleship demands our all, renouncing sin and clinging to the cross of Christ. And when that kind of commitment has been made in our life, then it will be revealed in an extravagant love for Christ that considers anything that was once considered gain as loss for the sake of knowing Him. I pray that today you see clearly what Christ did for you at the cross, and that you fully commit to take up your cross as well and follow Him.

Posted in Sermons | Tags: church on the beach, surfers church, worship on the beach |
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