Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Anger
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Anger
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Karen and I had a residence director in college named Phil.
Phil is one of those people that is so comfortable being himself that it’s off-putting for a young man very full of himself but totally insecure.
Phil never argued with anyone.
If he knew the truth, he was at peace whether or not you accepted it, and if he didn’t know something, he would admit it.
He is kind and generous, and he doesn’t change who he is to get anyone to like him.
Have you ever known someone like this?
How do I become more like that?
John’s letter has been helping us see that the culture Jesus is shaping in the church should be different from the culture in the world around us.
The world’s culture is being shaped by insecurity, fear, anger, and hatred.
It is desperate for certainty.
But what kind of culture could we shape if we had more Phils, people who are certain of who they are, and certain that they know truth, and live in truth, and walk in the light, free from darkness and besetting sins, walk in love, free from self-centeredness, fear and hatred?
John has told us in his letter that these are marks of those who know Jesus, believe in Jesus, abide in Jesus.
We have fellowship with God and His children.
We are loved, forgiven, and free.
John closes his letter by telling us that we can live in certainty when we know God and His Son Jesus Christ.
Six Certainties: “We Know”
that you have eternal life - 13
that He hears us in whatever we ask - 14, 15
that we have the requests we have asked of Him - 15
that everyone born of God does not keep on sinning - 18
that we are from God - 19
that the Son of God has come and has given us understanding - 20
These six certainties come to us when we come to know God, as we abide in Jesus.
1 John 5:20 (ESV)
And we know that the Son of God has come and has given us understanding, so that we may know him who is true; and we are in him who is true, in his Son Jesus Christ.
He is the true God and eternal life.
Let’s look at these six certainties to see how they lead us into knowing God and how they can shape a culture of life and love in our world.
You Have Eternal Life
This is the promise of many religions, fairy tales, and epic searches.
From Gilgamesh to Eos and Tithonus to Qin Shi Huang (first emperor of China) to Ponce de Leon to Dr. Strange, the search for eternal life spans all cultures and times.
How can we know we have it?
As John says in verse 20, God is the true God and eternal life.
John is a Jew, whose God is Yahweh, the Ever-Living One, the one true and living God.
He is eternal life.
John realized that Jesus is the Son of Yahweh, who shares in His nature.
He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life.
To know Him is to have eternal life.
When you are certain you have eternal life, you free from fear and self-protection.
But eternal life is also a life lived in a new reality.
We live by eternal values, perspective, and qualities right now in this world.
You are free from the futility that dominates most people’s lives.
You are in communion with the eternal God.
This communion is like an ongoing conversation.
He Hears Us
There is nothing better than knowing that you’ve been heard.
You feel accepted and valued.
Consider knowing God hears you.
This is a great promise.
But John makes this promise conditional.
This is a big loophole for God.
What if I don’t ask according to His will?
Does He hear me?
How do I know that I am asking according to His will?
Let’s filter this through the end goal, that we would know God truly, we get our answer.
“He who is in ‘fellowship with God, who has received life from the Father, knows that he may address God in confidence.
Prayer becomes not only a time for petitioning but of yielding one’s life to the will and work of God.
Prayer made in these circumstances is always heard because it is God’s will that is begin done and his intention for humankind that is begin met.
‘When we learn to want what God wants, we have the joy of receiving his answer to our petitions.’
(Marshall, p. 245)” (Glenn Barker, Expositor’s, p. 354)
God is not trying to trick us or withhold anything from us.
Like a parent that waits to give what is asked until he hears the “magic words”.
His goal is that we would grow in knowing Him.
The more we grow in knowing God, the more confident we are that we are asking according to His will in our prayer.
We Have the Requests
What requests?
Those that are according to His will.
What are those?
John identifies one particular prayer request that God grants.
When you see a brother or sister commit a sin, what is your first reaction?
Do you preach to them, condemn, or criticize them?
Do you avoid them, abandon them, and ignore them?
John says our first response should be intercession.
We are seeking restoration.
[Why shouldn’t I just leave someone’s personal life alone?
Our culture values independence and personal autonomy.
John’s culture valued community.
Our sins are never secret.
When we have done wrong, it isn’t a personal problem.
The choices we make affect the whole community.
We can lead others into sin by our example.
We can cause others pain or confusion.
But even the sins we keep secret aren’t a personal issue.
Every thought and secret action forms my inner person.
When we sin in secret, we are becoming double minded.
Our heart becomes divided.
And this will affect our relationships.
Every sin is community business.
If a brother or sister sees you committing a sin and they take you aside and offer to pray for you, submit to their love and mercy and confess your sin humbly, repent and return in faith.]
John says there is another kind of sin: “sin that leads to death”.
We should understand what this means.
Using the context of John’s letter as our guide, he has warned us of denying/renunciation of Jesus Christ, hate for a brother, refusing the testimony of God.
Making a habit of sinning in these ways denies God’s offer of eternal life in Jesus and will only result in death.
For anyone committing a sin that leads to death, we are asking for God to grant them repentance and faith.
Life will follow.
But for a brother who isn’t living in rebellion to God, but simply makes a wrong choice, we pray for them that God will give that one life.
God restores that one.
How many Christians have been left unrestored because the church, because we, have not prayed for them?
Everyone Born of God Does Not Keep Sinning
Here’s the result of God granting the request we bring about a brother or sister who commits sin.
He will grant them the grace to be restored.
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