Love and Obedience

Year C - 2021-2022  •  Sermon  •  Submitted   •  Presented   •  31:46
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John 14:23–29 CEB
23 Jesus answered, “Whoever loves me will keep my word. My Father will love them, and we will come to them and make our home with them. 24 Whoever doesn’t love me doesn’t keep my words. The word that you hear isn’t mine. It is the word of the Father who sent me. 25 “I have spoken these things to you while I am with you. 26 The Companion, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you everything and will remind you of everything I told you. 27 “Peace I leave with you. My peace I give you. I give to you not as the world gives. Don’t be troubled or afraid. 28 You have heard me tell you, ‘I’m going away and returning to you.’ If you loved me, you would be happy that I am going to the Father, because the Father is greater than me. 29 I have told you before it happens so that when it happens you will believe.

Love and Obedience

Leonard Sweet wrote:
The Danish sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen (1770-1844) is the only non Italian sculptor commissioned to have one of his statues erected in St Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican. He was not allowed to sign his “Monument to Pope Pius VII” because he was a Protestant; not Catholic.
What Thorvaldsen is most known for, however, is his Christus carving known popularly as “The Resurrected Christ.” You can see it today in the cathedral of Denmark's magical city Copenhagen. Thorvaldsen wanted to create the greatest statue of Jesus ever made. Out of clay he molded a monumental, majestic figure with regal gestures: his face tilted upward in triumph, his hands raised in power and authority.
But a funny thing happened on the way to the unveiling. A partially opened window in his ocean side studio let night fog and sea spray work their way with the clay. When Thorvaldsen returned to his studio after a brief absence, the upraised hands had drooped. They no longer commanded, but welcomed. The confidently upturned face had lowered itself onto the Savior’s chest.
The face was no longer that of a King wearing a crown, but a compassionate shepherd worrying about his sheep. At first Thorvaldsen agonized over the time wasted and the need to begin again. But the more he looked at the statue shaped by the mist, the more he realized that this was a more accurate Jesus than the one he had originally conceived. So instead of the inscription "FOLLOW MY COMMANDS" on the base of the statue, he chiseled another message: "COME UNTO ME." (1)
Do you like to be loved?
Do you like to hear people say that they love you? Whether it is our spouse or a child or a grandchild we really do like to hear someone tell us that they love us.
As great as it is to hear someone tell us that they love us, it’s even greater when someone does something that proves their love for us. I don’t think nothing proves someone’s love for you than when they do something totally unexpected and only because they love you.
Love and Obedience
In our Scripture this morning Jesus ties together love with obedience. In this passage there are some nuggets of gold that we need to pull apart as we seek to apply them to our lives.
We live in a unique time. It’s a time where we can look back and celebrate what God has done. It’s a time when we celebrate what God is doing right now. It’s also a time where we look forward to what God is going to do.
In our culture today there is a lot of upheaval going on. Things that the culture as a whole once considered as sinful and wrong are now accepted and celebrated. Bedrock things like marriage has been redefined. States are legalizing drugs that at one time sent countless thousands to jail.
In the church there is a popular opinion that ultimately everyone will make it to heaven. It comes from the idea that since God is love then he would never condemn anyone to an eternity in hell. There are those who promote the idea that Christianity is just one of many ways to get to God. If you are a good Christian, or Buddhist or Muslim, that it really doesn’t matter ultimately you’ll find God in whatever faith you’re in.
The Disciples that Jesus was speaking to where entering a period of uncertainty. Jesus has been talking about his death. In John chapter 14 talks about leaving. It’s here in this great chapter that John records Jesus promise that the Holy Spirit will be coming. It’s in those periods of uncertainty that we often want to get back to the basics of life.
I don’t know about you, but when I’ve gone through times of uncertainty and upheaval, I look for the basics of life and faith. I look for those bedrock things to hang onto. I think Jesus understands what the Disciples are feeling. Back in verses 1 -4 Jesus addresses that fear and uncertainty when He told them:
John 14:1–4 CEB
1 “Don’t be troubled. Trust in God. Trust also in me. 2 My Father’s house has room to spare. If that weren’t the case, would I have told you that I’m going to prepare a place for you? 3 When I go to prepare a place for you, I will return and take you to be with me so that where I am you will be too. 4 You know the way to the place I’m going.”
There is great comfort in those words. We often hear them read at a funeral for a believer. Do you realize that isn’t just some future promise, but that it is a present reality? Jesus is there now preparing a place for you and I, for those of us who are Christians.
Thomas in verse 5 I think speaks for all the Disciples when he says “Lord, we don’t know where you are going, so how can we know the way?” They weren’t getting it; they weren’t understanding what Jesus was talking about. They’re not to unlike people today. We get so caught up in the present, in the here and now that we can’t see where God is working and calling us to.
Jesus said there in verse 6 one of the foundational truths about Christianity. Christianity doesn’t make an exclusive claim on being the only way to God just because we think that is the truth. We make the claim that Jesus is the only way to God because that is what Jesus said. Jesus says there in verse 6:
John 14:6 CEB
6 Jesus answered, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.
I don’t think it could be any planner than what Jesus said there. Jesus is the only way to God. I think that one of the questions that we need to answer is what does it mean to be a Christian. What does it mean for us who have received the promise to claim the title of Christian?
It’s easy in our culture just to state your opinion and claim that to be a fact. People do that all the time to justify what they believe and do. The thing about opinions is that everyone has one. If we operated just on our opinions then we’d have a royal mess when it came to the church. We can see what happens in our country when everyone operates based on their own opinions. What a mess we have.
It’s important that we base our opinions on the facts that are found here in God’s written word. Jesus said in verse 23
John 14:23 CEB
23 Jesus answered, “Whoever loves me will keep my word. My Father will love them, and we will come to them and make our home with them.
It seems like a very plain statement but I think there is a whole lot more there.
It’s easy to say that you are a Christian. It’s actually pretty popular to say that.
The title or tag that you add to yourself describes you. If you claim in the political world that you are democrat then that would tell others what positions you support, your philosophy about government and its involvement in our lives. If you say that you are a republican that it would tell others about the positions you support and your philosophy about government and its involvement in our lives.
There is a huge argument going on in our society today about which public restroom that a person should use based on who they feel that they are. To be honest I don’t understand the confusion that someone who was born a boy can feel that they are really a girl or vice-versa. I believe it reminds me of the brokenness found in our world today because of result of sin.
I believe what Genesis tells us:
Genesis 1:27 CEB
27 God created humanity in God’s own image, in the divine image God created them, male and female God created them.
When sin came into the world back there in the Garden of Eden it broke that perfect image that God created mankind with. There has been a lot of vile and hateful things said against people who struggle with who they are. You might know someone or even have someone in your family who is struggling with this. Rather than hating them and speaking ill of them we should love them because they are loved by God.
Love them and pray for them. And it goes deeper than the “love the sinner, hate the sin” idea. If we believe that God can forgive sin, if God can save the gossip, the liar, the arrogant, the adulterer, the alcoholic then he can save the one caught up in sexual sin, not matter what that sexual sin is. We believe in a God who can transform people’s lives by the mighty power of the Holy Spirit working in their lives. Love them and pray for them. Don’t stop praying for them.
Jesus said
John 14:23 (CEB)
23 Whoever loves me will keep my word.
If a person is calling themselves a Christian and yet they are not obeying Jesus teachings they are simply fooling themselves. Being a Christian means more than calling yourself a Christian, it means loving Jesus and that love is evidenced by obedience to Jesus teaching.
I read a news story this week about the Archbishop of the Catholic Church in San Francisco. San Francisco is not a place that we think of being conservative by any stretch of the imagination. The news article stated that the Archbishop wrote a letter to Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the House of Representatives. He told her to not present herself to receive communion because of her stance on abortion. He had given her a chance to repudiate her stance on abortion but she did not so she is no longer able to receive the Lord’s Supper.
Do you remember the encounter that Jesus had with the crippled man at the pool of Bethesda? He was waiting beside that pool for an Angel to come and stir the waters and hope that he could get into the water first and be healed. Jesus comes along and tells him to stand up and the man is healed. Later Jesus encounters that man again in the Temple and he says to him “See, you are well again. Stop sinning or something worse may happen to you.” (John 5:14). When Jesus has come into your life it’s time to stop sinning.
This loving and obeying is very important because Jesus says it three times in this chapter. In verse 15 Jesus says: “If you love me, keep my commands.” In verse 21 Jesus says: “Whoever has my commands and keeps them is the one who loves me.” And in our text this morning Jesus says: “Anyone who loves me will obey my teaching.”
Where does this loving and obeying start? One of the Pharisees trying to test Jesus asked him to name the greatest commandment. Jesus responded to him in Matthew 22 verses 36-39 with these words:
Matthew 22:36–39 CEB
36 “Teacher, what is the greatest commandment in the Law?” 37 He replied, “You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your being, and with all your mind. 38 This is the first and greatest commandment. 39 And the second is like it: You must love your neighbor as you love yourself.
To love Jesus begins with loving God with our entire beings. Notice the three parts of that love. Our heart, the place of all our emotions, the very core of our being. Our soul, our spiritual self. Our mind, our intellect, our knowledge. Loving God with our heart, soul and mind is loving God with every aspect of our lives.
It’s really important to get this because so many people try to compartmentalize their lives. They live their lives with this little corner of their lives that they label Christianity and the church. On an occasional Sunday they’ll come to church and get a refill for that little part of their life and they think that’s it, that’s all they need to do. They leave church and head back to their regular day to day living and that compartment for God and church is closed and they think nothing more of it until they need their conscience soothed again and they come back to church to get another refill.
Another common way we see this is when a person lives with open sin in their life and then every once in a while they come to church and the praise God and enjoy the service. Then they head back to their day to day life, not changed. They talk about God and how much they enjoy worshipping Him yet they still deny the fact that they are living in open rebellion to God. They live with the idea that God understands and will excuse them. Jesus says “Stop sinning”.
Loving God the way Jesus talked about is loving Him with every aspect of our lives. We can’t compartmentalize it, it’s all or nothing. That’s why Jesus told us to take up our cross daily and follow him. That means we die daily to our own wants and desires, we die daily to our own will and we say yes to God’s will daily.
Jesus didn’t stop just with loving God with our entire being. He said that the second command is like the first one, it’s “love your neighbor as yourself”. He said that this second command is just like the first. I would dare say that you can’t obey the second command if the first one is not a reality in our life. This second command comes from Leviticus 19:18 where God said:
Leviticus 19:18 CEB
18 You must not take revenge nor hold a grudge against any of your people; instead, you must love your neighbor as yourself; I am the Lord.
Loving someone like that, not seeking revenge or not holding a grudge goes against our natural tendency. Jesus in his Sermon on the Mount lays out the framework of His commands. In Matthew 5 Jesus talks about this not seeking revenge or holding a grudge when he says “If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also.”
Let’s make this real practical for a moment. What do you do if someone is driving too slow or if they cut you off and don’t use their turning signal? Do you smile and wave at them. What do you do if someone barges in front of you at the check out at Walmart? Do you smile and let them go?
Jesus throughout his Sermon on the Mount talks about really practical aspects of living the Christian life, this life of holiness.
If you truly are a Christian, if you truly love Jesus then the proof of that love will be in your obedience to His teachings. The great thing about that proof is found later in our text. Beginning in verse 26 Jesus says:
John 14:26–27 CEB
26 The Companion, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you everything and will remind you of everything I told you. 27 “Peace I leave with you. My peace I give you. I give to you not as the world gives. Don’t be troubled or afraid.
You don’t have to do it yourself! God does it through you by the power of the Holy Spirit. If you're a Christian this morning, then God wants you to be filled with the Holy Spirit. We call that entire sanctification; it's dying to yourself and living for Christ. It's allowing the Holy Spirit to come and take possession of every aspect of your life. Jesus was speaking to the Disciples just before he ascended to heaven and told them in Acts 1
Acts 1:8 CEB
8 Rather, you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth.”
In John he tells them that the Holy Spirit, the Advocate, the one who comes along side us will teach them and remind them everything that Jesus said to them. In Acts he tells them that they will receive power.
To live the Christian life is to allow the Holy Spirit to fill you full to overflowing. It’s yielding your life to His work within you. To obey Jesus teaching begins with saying yes to God and no to your own desires.
Have you said yes to God? Are you taking up your cross daily and following Jesus? Have you surrendered your life to the Holy Spirit? Do you need a fresh filling, a fresh anointing of the Holy Spirit’s power in your life? Come and pray while we sing.
(1) The Scope of Love - Leonard Sweet
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