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“The Heart of the Gospel”
John 3:14-21
Those very special verses...
The Golden Rule
The Great Commission
John 3:16
Our focus: "For God so loved the world..."
The Context:
Jesus has been speaking to Nicodemus
Jesus recalls the story of the Israelites, judged for idolatry and bitten by serpents, who only had to loo...
To donate to Concord UMC, click HERE.
“The Heart of the Gospel”
John 3:14-21
- Those very special verses...
- The Golden Rule
- The Great Commission
- John 3:16
- Our focus: "For God so loved the world..."
- The Context:
- Jesus has been speaking to Nicodemus
- Jesus recalls the story of the Israelites, judged for idolatry and bitten by serpents, who only had to look to the bronze serpent Moses placed on a pole to be healed (Numbers 21)
- In coming to see Jesus at night, Nicodemus had moved from darkness into the light
- The Heart of the Gospel
- For God so LOVED...
- For God IS..
- Love stretches back through eternity past, BUT God chose to share that love by creating others with the capacity to love each other and to love Him
- For God so loved THE WORLD...
- NOT "worldliness!"
- God so loved every fallen, broken person that has ever been or ever will be; though He hates the evil that we do, he loves each and every person He created so much that He bore our sins in Christ on the cross.
- Are we sharing God's Love?
- Are we sharing and living the message that God loves everyone He created?
- Or do we send the message that God only loves some?
- We are all human. We have our "comfort zones."
- Christians have a reputation for being a clique. Is that fair?
- Are we sharing God's love within our fellowship?
- John 13:34 "A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you..." How well are we doing this?
- Christians have a reputation as divisive and combative, with churches splitting even over little things. Is that fair?
- Are we sharing the kind of love God has?
- God's kind of love is not content with those that already share in it.
- God's kind of love is explicitly self-sacrificing. How many times have we placed our wants before others' needs?
- Jesus said, "Be ye perfect, as your Father in heaven is perfect." (Matthew 5:48) Many Christians, including Methodists, understand that to mean "perfected in love," so that every decision, every action, has love of God and love of others as its motivation.
- Example: In 1st-century Rome they practiced sex-selective infanticide. Imagine living in a world so callous that the cries of abandoned infants are ignored as an accepted, necessary part of a "modern society." Then imagine this one, crazy group of people who start to say, "we will take them! Don't kill them!" That was a shock to the Roman world that left an impression of God's kind of love. And such extravagant love went on to transform the world...
- That is the kind of love that can fill our hearts, our minds, our very lives... if we let it.
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