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First John again. Last week, our purpose was to
marvel at the fact that we had received a letter from Apostle
John, that when he wrote that general letter, it continued
to be received by God's people for millennia. And that we asked
the question, are you as excited as they would have been back
then to receive such a letter? You look into the Word of God,
understanding or comprehending with some sense of awe at what
you're holding there in your hand and what privilege it is.
to have not just one sliver of the mind of God, but what we
know to be the full counsel that God desires us to have, the full
explanation of his mind, of his history, of prehistory, pre-our
history. Do you take up the Word of God?
I know that from some of y'all's reaction and some of y'all's
feedback to those questions that were posed that there has been
some renewed, some refreshment in terms of how we look at the
scriptures that we have there on our stand, next to our bed,
or as we walk by. a renewed attraction to picking
up the Word and seeing it with that kind of interest that we
should have in the Word of God. So praise the Lord for that.
I give all the credit to God and all the praise to God for
bringing those thoughts to bear on all of us. Look at the word
of God as if it has been sent to you because it's been sent
to you, as if you've gotten the letter because you got the letter.
And we sit in a very unique position in history in that we received
all the letters. They're not being developed anymore.
We received all the books and all of the accounts and all the
Gospels and all the law. It's there for us to study. It's
there for us to learn about God. And so that was essentially catching
up last week. We did a little bit of combing
through just as an overview. The purpose of John's letter
was, he states his multiple purposes, but You could probably sum it
all up in the idea that John is intent to present information. that would bring about full and
complete joy in God's people. And it would also bring about
certain reactions to the truth that's being presented. So we
pointed out that John is very stark and very black and white
in his presentation of the word. And that is a comment that is
usually made about this particular letter, that John being considered
eminently mystical or very loving and tender in his terms, here
seems to come forth in a very black and white sort of strict
set of repeating imperatives and didactics. There's just not
a lot of wiggle room here with John. And I believe that I personally
have connected to why that is. And it has to do with what we'll
study today, which is found in the very first verse of the first
three verses is kind of where we'll be. It has to do with John's
presentation of our eternal union with Christ and his eternal humanity. which is the image that the Godhead
put forth, that they would, the Son of God, as he exists and
coexists, coequal in the Godhead, with all the glory in that essence
that makes up the Godhead, there would be, the Son of God would
take up an image, that would express the full spectrum of
God's glory that he wished for us to see or that we could even
handle. It's far beyond, I believe, what we can perceive, but it
has been provided from all eternity. So let's get into it, and I'll
kind of give some thoughts that I believe would get us there. To a comprehension, of why John
is so adamant in his imperatives as he presents them. It's not one of those things
that you would actually... The more you ponder it, the less
you wonder at how stark the imperatives are and how clearly defined everything
is. You actually wonder, as I've
been wondering the last few days, why are we not cut down just
upon the very first wrong thought or the very first desire to follow
the world and lust after the world? Why are we not cut down?
We are in an eternal union with God. It actually illustrates very
well the long-suffering and patience of God to us. It actually serves
to put forth a better understanding of how kind and how loving and
how patient He is with us. But the first few verses here,
John says, that which was from the beginning, which we have
heard, which we have seen with our eyes, and which we have looked
upon, and our hands have handled of the word of life. For the life was manifested and
we have seen it and bear witness and show unto you that eternal
life, which was with the father and was manifested unto us. That which we have seen and heard
declare we unto you. And so that you really think
about it, John, the Apostle John did craft the perfect way to
open the letter. If that doesn't grab your attention,
that which was from the beginning. So when all of this that exists
was created, and he uses the term was from the beginning,
indicating that he already existed, he didn't begin to exist with
the beginning, but he already was, If that doesn't grab your
attention, to ponder that when all this came to be and was brought
about, there was this man, this figure, this image,
and that image was manifested in time and could be seen and
could be heard, could be handled, could be interacted with. If
that doesn't grab your attention, What can be done for you? What
more of an introduction could you want than to be told in plain
language, there's this being that existed before creation
and we have seen it with our eyes and we have heard him and
walked with him and handled him and interacted with him and we're
going to declare him unto you. It's pretty remarkable. And my
hope is that as we marvel that receiving a letter from an eminent
apostle, that we would marvel at this introduction, that we
are being called to ponder this being that has been manifested
to us by direct witnesses. John was human. And we have to
accept the fact that though he was an apostle, he would still
be pulled by the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes,
the pride of life, that he would still be magnetized in his flesh.
to that, the apostles don't ever dismiss that condition of being
in the flesh. In fact, they admit to it frequently. Paul probably makes the greatest
admission of them all when he says, when he laments that he
lives in this body of death, who will free me from it? I thank
Christ. So we know that he personally
felt the weight of the imperatives that he was about to issue. He
himself was under the imperatives that had come from other apostles'
writings as well. John read the letters that circulated
from Paul and James and others. By this point, we believe, Paul,
I believe John is at Ephesus. It's how it's understood where
he was actually stationed during this time of his life and writing
this letter. And so he would be familiar with and under the
imperatives that have been issued. He would have taken the information
that was revealed to other apostles and he would have reacted to
it by obeying the word that had been issued. And so it's not
as if he is just in this void issuing commands to the people
and saying, you're going to have to obey these things. He is very
much as an elder in a church or a shepherd in a church would
be under the same weight of reacting to and obeying the word as it
goes forth. Every believer's faith would
be tried and purified for the glory of Christ. And the apostles
were no exception. In fact, they were made the greater
example for us. They were, many of them, most
of them martyred, if not all of them persecuted unto death,
so that their faith could play out before witnesses, and we
would know the extremes to which we might be called ourselves
to obey. that we, um, you have not resisted
unto blood. Um, you haven't been killed for
your faith, Paul says. Uh, but they were, and many have
been, um, called upon to pay the ultimate price, um, in the
refinement of their faith. So John knows he's serious about
what he's issuing here. It's not a casual letter that
he's sending out. And so, um, He had probably been in strife
with others. He had felt the kind of friction
that can develop between brothers and sisters in a church. he wasn't oblivious to that.
But by this stage in his life, so he's an elderly apostle at
this point, he also understood how to best overcome the evil
one. He was already refined and at an advanced stage of the testing
of his faith. So John isn't going to put forth
dubious information to undergird our reaction and obedience to
the truth, he's gonna put forth refined information, inspired
information, and praise God that it is testable and provable. What did John know to do by experience
at this point when he issues the letter? Well, one of the
mistakes that many have made through history
is to open a book like this and say, okay, the elder John, elect
for the sake of truth to all that's in us, and grace be with
you, mercy. Oh, here's a directive. Here's an imperative. And say,
okay, that's what I'm going to preach. I'm going to preach about
what we got to do with this information. We got to go do. or to open another
portion of scripture and say, oh, Paul, chapter one, two, three,
that's a lot of information. Oh, here we go, walk worthy.
And to just cut over all that information and all that doctrine
and all that face-to-face time with Christ, with God, and all
of the links that God makes for us. The temptation is to just
kind of skip over all that And I think you probably understand
what I'm talking about, and just start to find, okay, what do
I gotta do to go serve the Lord? What do I gotta do to obey? Okay,
these are the things you do, these are the things you don't
do, and so on. If you do that, you will not be able to obey.
You actually will not have a cause burning in your heart to follow
unto blood or unto death, or even unto peace and unity in
the body. The idea there is, let me think about something
I didn't write down for this, but I had been mulling it over
and did write out some statements, and what I concluded from my
own thoughts, and I think they'll be helpful here, is to say just
as faith without works is dead, works without understanding are
dead. They're worthless. There are no good and they're
not even sustainable. So what I mean by that is, um,
to, to come before the Lord, to present yourself before the
Lord and sing praises unto him, but have a very little comprehension
of how he's presented himself in his word or what he claims
to be to, to just say, things that you're unconnected to that
you don't understand, what pleasure do you suppose God would derive
from that? Now, it may do you some good.
You may enjoy the singing. You may impress others. There might be some effect in
the universe for that kind of activity, but what pleasure would
God take in ignorant worship? Actually, he speaks to that many
times. He speaks to times where Israel is going through all the
motions, but he's finding no pleasure in them and actually
abhors the loud clanging. He finds it annoying that these
foul smells are issuing up to him, which have no real love
for him or no real joy. It's like a It's like a man buys
this beautifully arranged, fragrant bouquet of flowers and gives
it to a wife that he doesn't care for, that he doesn't really
have any affection for, that he doesn't really have any interest
in the relationship with her. What's the value of that gesture?
If the woman understood the coldness, it would actually not just be
neutral, it would offend. And so the, What we'd want to
do here is not run to the imperatives and say, I can do these things,
and this is what God's looking for. God is very clear about
what he actually desires of us and what he's actually looking
for. And it's not sacrifice, or else we'd give it. It's not
a thousand sacrifices, or else we would give it. He's looking
for us to love him. to honor him, to respect him
in knowledge. I will sing with intelligence,
David, in the Psalms. I will sing with understanding.
That is a major point that's labored a time or two in the
Psalms. And so what John does is not just open
up, laying out imperatives. He opens up with information
about our union with God, our eternal union with God, and that
begins to underpin, that begins to inflame the heart, that begins
to give strength to our step, give strength to our arm as we
seek to then look for the imperatives as they will come to us. John's
purpose is that we would have full assurance that we may have
communion with God, that he has communion with us. And so he
lays that out in these first few verses very well. I'm not going to have the privilege
at this stage of where we are as a church to go verse by verse. with the kind of detail that
the Word of God is deserving of, it would really just drag
on a decade. I know by now, having studied
out part of verse one, that it would really take us—I did the
math—a decade to cover in detail everything that's in here. Our
minds would fragment so much over that period of time. And
so what I have to do is sort of gather up a lot of information
with not a lot of detail and look for some application for
you. What you learn about God in any part of the scripture
will help you with any imperative. So if you work out something
about God from James, It works for the imperatives in John,
okay? So it works for what Paul calls
us to. It works for the Sermon on the
Mount as Christ issued it to us. That's one of the beauties
of digging into Peter is that as you dig into Peter and learn
about God, you will have underpins, you will have energy, you will
have undergirding for applying all the imperatives no matter
where you find them. So when you find them in the Psalms, and
you go back to 1 John, or you go back to Ephesians, or you
go back to 1 Peter, or wherever we're at, to the Minor Prophets
has been a big subject for us, you will find the strength, the
will, the energy, and the cause to do much with what you read. And
so we won't get into real deep detail,
Um, the course I think we should take today is to actually do
what we did last week and just to highlight and magnify Jesus
Christ. So, um, we're going to do that
through various scriptures that put him forth in his true state.
Um, that would be before time during his incarnation and after
time concludes. Um, when, because, The claims
of the Godhead are, I am that I am, and I am the Alpha and
the Omega, the beginning and the end. There is a lot of crossover. You can't put God in eternity
of antiquity and say, look, we're going to look at God there because
that's not how it works with the eternal Holy God. He is across the entire span.
And so for human frame, for our frame of mind, we'll try to put
it into that kind of space. But here's what John is communicating.
And what he communicates here is to serve the purposes, the
stated purposes of his letter. What he's saying in those first
few verses is we have seen and heard and handled the actual,
the only true, the living and invisible God. We've seen him,
we've handled him, not One of the persons, not part of God,
the invisible God, has seen fit to manifest himself and to communicate
himself entirely and fully to us. And John's claiming, we've
handled him, we've seen him, we've heard him, and we'll show
him to you. It's the actual, only true and living and invisible
God. Here's some detail that you have
to really dig into, but I'll just lift it out into these statements
for us. The Father, the Son, and the
Spirit co-equal, co-eternal form the
singular self-existing essence, okay? There are persons that
they are happy to be within that unified essence. This is very
difficult stuff to communicate, just so you know. I'm on the verge of tears because
I know that it's just too wonderful. It is very far down the hallway
of mysteries. It really makes you a child. It makes you a child just to
be in the presence of minds that comprehend it better, that contemplated
it deeper. But even they give up. They stop at some point and say,
I'm not fit for this. My faith gets me to here. I'm not even know if I'm supposed
to be in here. Many of them say that, they say, I don't know. I don't know if I'm supposed
to even be touching these things. I think so. But this is as far
as I am willing to go is how they typically portray it. The
father, the son, and the spirit co-equal and co-eternal. The singular self existing essence
was fully expressed. They, if you can use the word
chose, they, brought about that they would fully express and fully set forth into a perceptible
form, their full glory and beauty, their full perfections, their
full qualities. He who already was from the beginning
and had existed forever in an incomprehensible state of union
with humanity, after whose image the Godhead fashioned man, the
word of life, the eternal life, is what we are declaring to you,"
says John. For divine communion, that's
why, for overflowing joy, for personal holiness, for full assurance
of salvation, for enduring faith in the name of the Son of God. So let's also set him forth in
scriptures from God's own mind. Let's set him forth before the
congregation and enjoy and marvel at. Let me just say this again. I hate to keep qualifying things,
but The whole Bible could be read this morning, the whole
Bible in response to what was just said. It all is proof, all
of it, everywhere, open anywhere. It all is proof of the great
and enduring and eternal union of God with humanity. When did Christ, when did the
Son of God, God the Son, begin to identify with humanity? Have you thought of that? Was
it when God finally made Adam? Well, that doesn't work because
they said, let us make man in our image. They didn't take on the image
that they had fashioned Adam into. They made Adam into the
image that they had already taken in eternity. Again, so we have been unified. We have had a union with God. God has been unified to humanity
for all time. But for all time doesn't work
as a term in God's realm. So we are stuck in a lot of terminology
that that fails to convey. You go write this all out and
you will find how your words fail you very quickly. And you
know that you're beyond your depth. You know that you're out
of your depth. You know that it cannot be conveyed. But nevertheless,
it's worth the doing. It's worth the trying to put
it forth. For God to be holy means that
God has always been holy. He did not become holy. For God
to find anything about God in the scripture, and it's not something
that he grew to become, he is. That's why he uses terms like
I am that I am. You can ponder that one for a
long time. We ought to ponder those things for a long time.
I am he who was, I am he who is, I am he who will ever be,
and many other statements that we won't even refer to by flipping
to them. I am the same today forever.
There are so many scriptures. I am the Lord God, I change not. There are so many proofs in the
scripture that allow us to say, If God says he is love, he has
ever been so. If God says, I am long suffering, he has ever been
so for all eternity. If he says that he has been found
in the fashion as a human, there is a connection for all eternity
to that. That is as real as the incarnation of Christ in time. He has ever been expressed in
human form. in body and soul. He walked among
us as the son of man and endures even now as the scripture puts
him forth as the prince of the kings of the earth. And though
glorified, he is still the son of man. And there is proof, there
is proof for his personal interest in the imperatives that he calls
you to and that he will support you in it. Here's God, the God-man
in eternity and at creation. If you turn to Micah 5.2. Micah 5.2 says, but thou Bethlehem
Ephrathah, though thou be little among the thousands of Judah,
Yet out of thee shall come forth unto me, that is to be ruler
in Israel, whose goings forth, whose issuings forth have been
from of old. And that word there is simply
antiquity. But he further qualifies antiquity.
What degree of antiquity? Well, from everlasting antiquity.
from perpetual antiquity, is how that is phrased there. Go to John 1, 1 through 4, and
we'll read as it was read by our brother Noah, the gospel of John 1, 1 through
4. Very familiar with this, but
in light of what was read out of John's letter, it would be
worth seeing how he put it forth here. 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 that was made. In him was life,
and the life was the light of men. That is as clear of a statement
as Paul puts forth in Ephesians, the third chapter, verse nine. He says, in something that he's
saying, in the continuation of something that he's saying, he
says, and to make all men see what is the fellowship of the
mystery, which from the beginning of the world hath been hid in
God, who created all things by Christ Jesus." So he is there
in and from the beginning doing that work. Proverbs 8, if you
want to turn there. In Proverbs 8, and we're looking
at verses 22 through 30, here is the Son of God personified
as wisdom, This is a very poetic language. You can feel the mystery of it
all as you read through it. Verses 22 through 30. The Lord possessed me in the beginning
of his way before his works of old. I was set up from everlasting,
from the beginning, wherever the earth was. When there were no depths, I
was brought forth. When there were no fountains
abounding with water, before the mountains were settled, before
the hills was I brought forth. While as yet he had not made
the earth, nor the fields, nor the highest part of the dust
of the world, when he had prepared the heavens, I was there. when
he set a compass upon the face of the depth, when he established
the clouds above, when he strengthened the fountains of the deep, when
he gave to the sea his decree that the waters should not pass
his commandment, when he appointed the foundations of the earth,
then I was by him as one brought up with him. and I was daily
his delight, rejoicing always before him." Christ is our wisdom,
as Paul establishes in 1 Corinthians twice in that book. I can just read this one, Genesis
1.26, and God said, as we quoted, let us make man in our image
after our likeness, and let them have dominion over the fish of
the sea and over the fowl of the air and over the cattle and
over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creepeth
upon the earth. Man was made in the image of
God, indicating that God already had possessed an image through
which he would express himself. You can take that reality and actually consider any part of
the created universe and ponder what it exists for. What are
sheep? Are they a convenient way for
God to then later think about communicating that he is the
shepherd of the sheep? Or are they created because he
is the shepherd of the sheep from all eternity? You can do
that with any part of the universe, practically. And you can ponder
and ponder and enjoy that reality. I am that I am. I change not. His creation is a manifestation
of who he is and who he has ever been. And we ought to value that. In this verse in Genesis, we
have a clear glimpse into the mystery of our eternal union
with God in the person of the Son of God. The self-existing
and invisible God already had a manifested, expressed
image, a human form after which he fashioned Adam. Just enjoy it. Just ponder and
enjoy that reality that Adam was made after a human form that
God had already possessed for all eternity. Adam was made according to a
form that the invisible God had chosen through which to reveal
all the glories and perfections he wished to communicate. We
have this out of Colossians 2.9, for in him, dwelleth all the
fullness of the Godhead bodily. In Christ dwells all the fullness
of the Godhead in a bodily form, bodily. And here is the God-man incarnate. If you would go to Hebrews chapter
one, we actually have a few readings there through parts of chapter
two. I've been, I've had to be selective,
and so here in Hebrews chapter one,
verses one through three, we read this very frequently, and
so here they are again. God, who at sundry times and
in diverse manners spake in times past unto the fathers by the
prophets, hath in these last days spoken unto us by his son,
whom he have appointed heir of all things by whom also he made
the worlds who being okay. My heart has rejoiced so much.
I hope that you catch the joy that is available to us. And
these statements who being the brightness of his glory, and
the express image of his person and upholding all things by the
word of his power, when he had by himself purged our sins, sat
down on the right hand of the majesty on high." He is the express
image of the person of God. verses eight through 12 of that
same chapter. But unto the son, he God sayeth,
thy throne, oh God, is forever and ever. A scepter of righteousness
is the scepter of thy kingdom. Thou hast loved righteousness
and hated iniquity. Therefore God, even thy God,
hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows. And thou, Lord, in the beginning
hast laid the foundation of the earth, and the heavens are the
work of thy hands. They shall perish, but thou remainest,
and they shall all wax old as doth a garment, and as a vesture
shalt thou fold them up, and they shall be changed, but thou
art the same, and thy years shall not fail, declareth God. to God the Son. Chapter 2, 9-18, bearing witness still to the
same fact that he is everliving and everlasting, but we see Jesus,
who was made a little lower than the angels for the suffering
of death, we see him crowned with glory and honor that he,
by the grace of God, should taste death for every man. For it became
him, for whom are all things, and by whom are all things, and
bringing many sons unto glory, to make the captain of their
salvation perfect through sufferings. For both he that sanctifieth
and they who are sanctified are all of one. for both he that sanctifyeth
and they who are sanctified are all of one, for which cause,
because of that, he is not ashamed to call them brethren, saying,
I will declare thy name unto my
brethren. In the midst of the church will
I sing praise unto thee. And again, I will put my trust
in him, And again, behold, I and the children which God hath given
me." When did he begin to become our
brother? When did Christ, when did the
Son of God, God the Son, begin to become our brother? He ever was and ever will be. You have such a union with Christ
that he has been your brother forever. You have such a union
with him that John can't think of another way to make his imperatives,
but to be perfectly stark and clear. There is no softening
if the union is eternal. He should be able to snap his
fingers and say, actually, we should marvel that we're not
bound in chains to do good, that we're not actually guarded over
by angels all day long with a sword to do good. It really is remarkable
that we are given such liberty. And why would that be? Because
God is not interested in compliance. He's interested in love out of
obedience, as John will illustrate. Compliance is nothing to him.
To do good works out of threat is not pleasurable to God. But to communicate himself and
his union to us in such a way that we that we declare with
John, that we catch with John the energy of and the significance
of, behold, what manner of love the Father has bestowed upon
us, that we who are but dust, we were formed from dust, that
we should be called with the Son of God, sons of God, that
we should be included as sons and daughters of God himself. What love is that? Who wouldn't
obey? Who wouldn't lay down their life
readily? Who wouldn't be about the father's
business? Who wouldn't? We could be compelled to do it.
It's of no good. It's of no use. It's not even
that good. You know that as parents, you've
known it as children of parents, that if you were made to do something,
there was no heart in it, there was really no real accomplishment
in it, that the thing got done, but there was really no good
exchange in that. Continuing with Hebrews chapter two, For as much
as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself
likewise took part of the same, that through death he might destroy
him that had the power of death, that is the devil, and deliver
them who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject
to bondage. Are you afraid of death? Well,
he bound to us has destroyed death. He has tasted death for
us. Wherefore, in all things, it
behooved him to be made like unto his brethren, such as his
union, that he will raise us to his degree of glory. He will let us inherit with him. He will, he will bring us to
the father and show his glory to us and, and, and, and draw
us into paradise. But such as his union with us
also that he is not, he is not, he did not shy from lowering
himself to our level. He did not count himself above
bringing himself down to lower than the angels to be beaten,
to be abused, to be killed for us. His union in paradise with
us, it's beautiful, it's wonderful, but how horrible is his union
with us as our brother? here in this fallen and cursed
place. There's some stuff that transcends
here, that he left his glory for a time to be here. So unified
is he with us, such is his commitment to his union, that not only is
it eternal, but it's practical. It works out in time in a way
that abuses him, that demeans him, that puts him down. You know what? As you read this,
he was okay with that. He is so committed to this. God
is so personally invested in this. He's okay. It became him. for whom are all
things, and by whom are all things, and bringing many sons unto glory,
to make the captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings. I will declare thy name unto
my brethren, in the midst of the church will I sing praises
unto thee, and again I will put my trust in him. For verily he took not on him
the nature of angels, but he took on him the seed of Abraham,
Wherefore, in all things it behooved him to be made like unto his
brethren, that he might be a merciful and faithful high priest in things
pertaining to God, to make reconciliation for the sins of the people. For
in that he himself hath suffered being tempted, he is able to
succor them that are tempted. Such is his union with us from
all eternity, that he entered into the whole spectrum. Whatever had to be transcended,
he entered into it willingly and gladly for us. How will you
then respond to love your brethren? How will you then respond to
you pull any imperative out of the scripture? How are you going
to respond to it? Seeing how willing he was How
could you deny him? And I think that's what's in
operation in John's mind when he puts forth stark, hard, full
stop commandments. His thinking, look at what he
transcended. Look at how he lowered himself
to our level. Look at how he tasted death.
Of course we will respond. Of course we will give. all energy,
we will give all attention to living this way. Let's see him finally as Alpha
and Omega, just a few more verses, Revelation chapter one. We are unified for all eternity
with this being, supreme and honorable and holy
being. You are a speck of dust. You are nothing. Have you pondered
how nothing you are? How in how remarkably worthless
cells are? that they can just lose their
moisture and go away and blow away as the wicked blow away,
as the grass blows away, as the wicked blow away like chaff.
That's the worth of a cursed human. It's so nothing in comparison
to God. And yet we find in 1 John, that
we are in a union with this being. Now, Revelation 1.8, I am Alpha
and Omega. The beginning and the ending,
saith the Lord, which is and which was and which is to come,
the Almighty. If you found out that you were
related to someone very important to you, that would impact you. I think just as humans, we, oh,
that's your brother? I don't know why, but we have
an interest in what our connections are to prominent families or
to important people. I am the alpha and the omega.
the beginning and the ending sayeth the Lord. You are related
by his choice to the being that ever was and ever will be who
has no beginning and no ending. Rejoice, rejoice at your connections. Rejoice at your union. Verse 10, John says, I was in
the spirit on the Lord's day, and I heard behind me a great
voice as of a trumpet saying, I am Alpha and Omega, the first
and the last. And he says to John, what thou
seest, write in a book and send it unto the seven churches, which
are in Asia. And John says, and I turned to
see the voice that spake with me, And being turned, I saw seven
golden candlesticks. And in the midst of the seven
candlesticks, one like unto the son of man, clothed with a garment
down to the foot and gird about the paps, about the chest with
a golden girdle, with a gilded belt that is given to a champion. His head and his hairs were white
like wool, the wisdom. of all ages and of all the Godhead
portrayed in hairs white as snow, white like wool. And his eyes
were as a flame of fire, able to pierce through and see it
all and judge it all right. And his feet like a defined brass
for the crushing of the nations, for the destruction of his enemies. as if they burned in a furnace.
It's molten. It crushes, it destroys. This
is who you are connected to in eternal union. This is the mighty
Christ, the Lord of the universe. Your brother, your real, not
theoretical, but your real practical, willing, loving brother who has
overjoyed to be your brother, who is delighted to have sons
and daughters to bring to the father who is interested in showing
his glory to them in paradise. As if they burned in a furnace
and his voice is the sound of many waters. And he had in his
right hand seven stars, and out of his mouth went a sharp two-edged
sword. He is called the Word for a reason,
and his countenance was as the sun shineth in his strength.
And when I saw him, I fell at his feet as dead. And he laid his right hand upon me,
saying unto me, fear not, fear not. I am the first and
the last. I am he that liveth was dead,
but behold and behold, I am alive forevermore. Amen. So, so valuable is the statement
that Christ makes here that he amends himself. He certifies
himself, his own words. I am alive forevermore, amen. And I have the keys of hell and
of death. Okay. Do you seek a union with
something as petty as your besetting sin? Is that what you want union
with? These are questions for me. I'll speak them out loud to you.
Do you want union with, I don't know, the world and the stuff
in the world, the things of the world? It's geopolitics, it's
wars, it's monies, it's pleasures. Is that what you want union with?
then go have it. But you can't have it with God
as well. And that's the starkness of John, is you can't both love
God and hate your brother. If you do, you're a liar. You
can't walk in darkness and say that you're in the light. If
you do, you're a liar. And actually, you're full of
darkness and you haven't seen the Father. That's this, I believe,
our union to Christ for all eternity. And by all eternity, it's perpetually
both directions. We have to think about it in
those terms. I don't know that God thinks about it in those terms.
Your union to God through his eternal humanity, through his
eternal love, where he has held us forever in his mind and held
with joy the secrets of the pleasures and the paradise that would be
revealed to us. Our union to that makes our union
with the world impossible. You cannot have both. And to
John, it's that obvious. You cannot be unified to both.
And so he just simply says, no, no more sin. I'm writing you
these things. so that you won't sin. I'm writing
you these things so that you will increase in joy to a fullness. I'm writing you these things
so that you'll have full assurance, so that you will know that you
know Him, and so on. We will take some time to get
to John's actual imperatives, but I'll try to gather these
things back up next time. I have the privilege of being
in the pulpit so that we can actually get to some of that. But in a very practical way, love not the world or the things
of the world, If a man loves the world, the love of the father
is not in him. That's the most practical thing I can communicate to you.
Love not the world. Love the brethren. Love one another
as God for all eternity has loved you. Love them when they draw
you into paradise. Love them when you draw yourself
down to their level. Enter into the sufferings of
your brothers and sisters. Christ did. Christ, who is a
million trillion times more eminently worthy than you are, came down
to where you are. Love one another as Christ loved
the church. and gave himself for it. A command
to the husband to love the wife that way. But half of us are
wives and half of us are husbands. We may freely apply the principle.
Love. And John will work that out.
He gets into some realms where he even, he gets stark about
how love and fear work. How love and fear work and which
one operates better. He wants us in a state beyond
being afraid to sin. He wants us in a state where
love is motivating all of our actions and guiding us through
our life. That's it. I will pray to God
for another opportunity to get into this book. May God bless
the teaching of His Word. I would encourage you to get
some Gil and some Henry commentary. There are many other good ones.
They are a little on the lighter side, not that they're not profound,
but they're good to read. Keep in 1 John. Stir up your own heart to revisit
these things and see the starkness that's there and the and the
intensity that's there and remember why it's there. It's there because
you have been joined to the I am that I am. He has
willingly, no one compelled him. He has willingly joined himself
to you. Therefore live as if that's your
reality because it is your actual practical reality. Our father will obviously need
your help to know how to begin applying this truth of our union
with you for all eternity. We praise you. We give you thanks. We ought to give you every minute
of our lives, every thought that we can conjure. And we ought
to give you every ounce of energy we have in every day. We should
give ourselves to rejoicing, to giving you thanks, to sacrificing
the sacrifice of praise before you continually, to sending up
that sweet-smelling savor of prayer at all times. Every manner
of prayer should come from our lips all the time, constantly. We should engage every battle
willingly and happily, though it cost us our life, knowing
that you have joined yourself to us in love, for all eternity
in both directions as we conceive of it. We thank you, Father,
for the congruency of your word that every place we checked to
build this message, we found that the word corroborates the
word, that there was no detail so small that the word did not
confirm itself. And we thank you for that, Father.
Thank you that we may have the confidence to know that You desire
communion with us, a fellowship with us, a fullness of joy for
us, but it will call us to cast off sin. It will call us to walk
in the light. It'll call us to love, not the
world or the things of the world. It will call us to deny ourselves
and our flesh with greater intensity, and there will be joy to be had.
Bless the preaching of your word. We ask, Father, that you would
grant of the Helper, your Holy Spirit, to lead us into truth
and to enlighten us, to open our eyes, that we may see you
as you ought to be seen, and that you may be worshiped as
you ought to be worshiped. In Christ we pray, amen.
Our Eternal Union with God
Series Exposition of 1 John
1 John 1:1-3 (more to come...).
| Sermon ID | 101723112576381 |
| Duration | 1:02:55 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | 1 John 1:1-3 |
| Language | English |
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