Tag Archives: First Epistle of John

Facing the Truth about Sin

There was no “Delete” key in the first century.  So, when John wrote: “and the blood of Jesus, His Son, purifies us from all sin” (1 john 1:7b), he needed to clarify what he meant.  John knew people would read that and ask if he was claiming that followers of Jesus become sinless.  So he explained:

If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us.  If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.   (1 John 1:8-9)

There are people who claim to follow Christ and also claim to be sinless.  John says those folks are deceiving themselves.  More than that, he says  “the truth is not in [them].”  It’s important to understand that John is warning such people that they have not truly begun a relationship of faith with Jesus.  How can he be sure?  Jesus gives the Holy Spirit,  the “Spirit of Truth,” to everyone who truly believes and follows Him (John 14:17).  Jesus promised his followers, “But when He, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all truth.”  (John 16:13a).   Someone who is self-deceived about sin is almost certainly also self-deceived about his relationship with Jesus.

But those who have the Spirit of Truth, will experience His Truth as it pertains to their condition, whenever they sin.  They will be painfully aware that they have sinned again (and again)!

John reassures such people that, as we acknowledge our sin (confess, or agree with what the Spirit has shown us), God is faithful to forgive us.  “Faithful” means we can count on Him to do so.   God also is just.”  How can it be just for God to keep on forgiving us?  God forgives us with complete and perfect justice because “the blood of Jesus”  (v.7) has paid the full penalty for our sin.  Do you struggle to wrap your mind around that?  Me too.  But it is the truth.

And it gets better:  John says, God, Who faithfully forgives us with justice, then “purifies us from all unrighteousness.”   When you screw up and sin, don’t you feel dirty?  Don’t you feel as though you are smeared with a stain that you cannot wash away?  Despite how you feel, the truth is, God lovingly washes you clean.  He restores you and gives you a clean slate.  It is hard for us to feel clean, and yet, in truth, we are clean.  Amazing…

But, you may be wondering, how often can we expect God to keep doing that for us?  Look back to the quote above and see it for yourself:  He cleanses us from “all unrighteousness.”  The word, all, literally means “each and every one.”   More amazing…

The more the Spirit makes us aware of how often we sin, the more the message of God’s forgiveness, His justice and His washing seems.  Amazing and very, very humbling.  But true.

How You Walk

“Let’s eat Grandma!”  Put one comma in that disgusting sentence and it makes all the difference for Grandma: “Let’s eat, Grandma!”  What makes all the difference in 1 John is understanding the word, walk, in these verses:

If we claim to have fellowship with him (God) yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not live by the truth. But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, his Son, purifies us from all sin. (1 John 1:6-7)

John wrote this letter to tell about a special relationship he and others have with God, that he calls “koinonia,” or fellowship (See: Flood Muck and Koinonia).  John wants you to have that same fellowship with God, too.

We proclaim to you what we have seen and heard, so that you also may have fellowship with us. And our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ. (1 John 1:3)

But how do you know if you have that fellowship or not?  John says you can tell by “your walk.”  He says, since God is light, since in God there is no darkness (See: Light Reading), the people who have this fellowship with Him do not “walk in darkness.”

But what does that mean, exactly?  Do you walk in darkness?  Are you a liar?  Have you been fooling yourself?  What does John mean by “walking?”

When John says “walk” he is talking about the regular direction and character of your life.  “Walking in darkness” means living a lifestyle at odds with the direction and character God intended for us humans when He designed us.  “Walking in the light” refers to a lifestyle that is harmonious with what God intended.  For example, one who walks in the light would tend to love those who treat him badly.  One who walks in the darkness would try to get revenge against them.

WATCH OUT!  IT IS EASY TO MISUNDERSTAND THIS!

First, John is not saying that if you try real hard to be good, then you will earn a relationship with God!  Rather, he says that when you have a relationship with God (the one that comes when you trust Jesus Christ), you can tell it by the change in the direction and character of your life.  The “koinonia” relationship one has with God causes him to turn around, and heading toward the light and away from the darkness.

Secondly, “Walking in the light” It does not mean living a totally sinless life, but, rather, a lifestyle that tends to be harmonious with God’s design.  Do you see where he says “the blood of Jesus purifies us from all sin”?  Doesn’t that mean we live a sinless life?  No way, and John is going to explain that further in the next verses.  Notice that John does not say the blood of Jesus purified us from all sin, but that it purifies us.  The form of the word he uses means that this purification happens in a continuous way, as we walk in the light but still sin.

You have seen offers online to clean viruses off your computer. But unless you get an antivirus program that continuously does that, keeping your computer clean every time it was attacked, it would quickly become hopelessly corrupted.  That’s how the blood of Christ works to purify us from sin when we “walk in the light.”

So, John wants us to ask, which direction are you walking?  Toward the light or away from it?   Don’t fool yourself or lie to others about this.  If you see that you are walking in the darkness, don’t try to turn yourself around.  Ask Jesus to do it, and trust Him.  You will soon see the difference.  You will see it in your “walk.”

When Jesus spoke again to the people, he said, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.”  John 8:12

Why Bother?

When someone forwards me an email, if that thing has a guilt trip in it, telling me what a terrible person I am if I don’t forward it to 12 friends in the next 15 minutes, even if I really liked it, I delete it.  I hate the way they try to manipulate you in those things.  Hate it!   No, the only time I’ll forward something, or share it on Facebook is when it has brought me pleasure and I can’t wait for my friends to experience that same pleasure.  Even better is being there when they watch it.  I love watching what happens on their face.

When I experience something really cool, I look for chances to tell somebody else.  (“Hey! you’re not going to believe what they do to a shrimp po’ boy in this place…”)   Why?  It feels good; it increases the joy of having found it in the first place.  I’m just guessing you feel the same way, right?

Well then, you won’t be surprised to read why John decided to write the letter included in the Bible, called 1 John. (We’ve been going through 1 John here.  The first post about it is “Been There, Done That“)   He said:

We write this to make our joy complete.  (1 John 1:4)

A lot of people think the writers in the Bible are going to be shouting at them and scolding them.  That’s why they don’t read it.  They assume it will be about as much fun as going to the principal’s office in grade school.  Or getting chewed out by a cop after they blew through a stop sign.

But that’s not why John wrote.  He’s experienced something with Jesus and he can’t wait to tell you about it.   He wants to see your face light up like his did.  When you read through 1 John, make sure you hear it in that tone of voice.

By the way, if you don’t forward this to 12 people in the next 15 minutes, or share it with all your friends on Facebook, you are a worthless slimeball and all your toenails will turn black.

Flood Muck and Koinonia

After the flood hit Longmont Colorado,  houses down along the river had 3 to 4 feet of river muck inside and needed to be shoveled out.  Furniture needed to be removed, washed and dried or thrown on giant, growing piles of trash.  Drywall had to be cut away.  Incipient mold had to be treated. Homeowners saw all that needed to be done and despaired.  But then neighbors began to gather and spontaneous groups of volunteers showed up from churches across town.  They grabbed shovels, waded into the muck and began to work.  Others set up cleaning stations.  Food tables appeared and soon were loaded with sandwiches and fresh water.  After a long day of work, those workers, covered with mud, were smiling with exhaustion and satisfaction.Flood Workers

There is a special kind of relationship that is formed when people work together.  The Greeks had a word for it: koinonia.  That word shows up a lot in the Bible.  Most of the time it is translated into the English word, fellowship.  But fellowship is a pretty weak word.  Don’t think standing around chatting and sipping tea.  Think shoveling muck together, struggling, helping, working and laughing.

Now, imagine having a relationship like that with God!  John says Jesus makes that possible:

We proclaim to you what we have seen and heard, so that you also may have fellowship with us. And our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ.  (1 John 1:3)

Can you picture yourself sharing a smile of satisfaction with God at the end of the day?  John wants you to know about that.  More than knowing, he wants you to have that.  Chew on that…

Been There, Done That

You remember the scene in the movie, Titanic, where the cocky oceanographer guys were skeptically interviewing Rose Calvert, the fictional character who had survived the disaster?  Once they began to realize she was for real, they presumed to tell her what the sinking would have been like, using their finest computer simulations.  She listens quietly.  Then, with exquisite understatement, she says, “Thank you for that fine forensic analysis, Mr. Bodine.  Of course, the experience of it was somewhat less clinical.  There is no substitute for personal experience.  No so-called expert or scholar can ever come close to knowing, not like the person who was actually there.

That’s what makes the Apostle John so interesting.  These days, we have self-proclaimed experts and scholars who presume to tell us what Jesus was really like, or even that He never really existed!  Those guys get a lot of exposure in magazines and news shows.  But John was there.  Look at how he begins his letter, the one called 1 John in the Bible:

That which was from the beginning (he’s talking about Jesus), which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked at and our hands have touched—this we proclaim concerning the Word of life. – 1 John 1:1(with my added emphasis and explanation)

Even back in John’s day, there were people who called into question the identity or personality of Jesus, who presumed to redefine Jesus according to their own preconceived ideas.  John said, “Baloney!  I was there; I knew Him, I saw Him, I touched Him.  And I know from first-hand experience that the Man called Jesus, is the “Word of Life!””

Let’s spend several days examining some of the best stuff from 1 John.  I hope you will share this with people you know who may have questions about Jesus.  John knows what he’s talking about: he has been there and done that and got the t-shirt.