Description
What kind of love marks someone as a true child of God? In this message from 1 John 3:11–15, we saw that love is not just a nice Christian idea—it is an identifying mark of genuine spiritual life. Jake, Matthew, and Sam discuss yesterday’s sermon, unpack the main points, and go beyond yesterday with additional insight into the text.
John contrasts Abel and Cain to show that rightly ordered love flows from faith in God, while hatred reveals a heart opposed to God. Abel’s righteous life exposed Cain’s evil heart, and that contrast led to conflict. In the same way, Christians are called to love God, love the people of God, and live in a way that makes that love obvious. But that kind of love will not always be celebrated by the world. John reminds us that when we live with visible devotion to God, we should not be surprised if the world hates us. This passage calls us to a dangerous kind of love—one that validates spiritual life in us and exposes idolatry in others.
Message Highlights:Love is a family trait. John says love for the brothers is not just a command to obey but a test of genuine conversion. It is evidence that someone has passed from death to life.
Cain and Abel show two spiritual families. Cain and Abel had the same earthly family, but their actions revealed different spiritual families. Abel lived by faith and offered God his best; Cain’s evil deeds were exposed by Abel’s righteousness.
Rightly ordered love creates contrast. When someone truly loves God and lives for His glory, that life creates a contrast with people who do not. That contrast often creates conflict.
The world may hate real Christian love. John warns believers not to be surprised when the world hates them. The love he is talking about is not just generic kindness, but visible devotion to God and to the people of God.
Love for the people of God reveals spiritual life. John presses the church to examine whether they genuinely love fellow believers. A lack of that love may reveal a deeper spiritual problem.
Main Point: Rightly ordered love validates spiritual life in us and exposes idolatry in others.
Practical application:
Do not measure love by how comfortable it makes people feel. Abel’s faithfulness made Cain uncomfortable, but that did not make Abel unloving. Faithful love may expose sin and create tension.
Do not see other people’s godliness as a threat. When someone else’s devotion to God exposes your compromise, do not resent them. Let their example help you pursue holiness.
Ask what your love says about your spiritual condition. Do you genuinely love the people of God, or do you find devotion to God annoying? That response may reveal more than you think.
Embrace being different. If you love God deeply and love His people visibly, the world may not understand you. John says that should not surprise us.
Let the cross motivate courageous love. The Lord’s Supper reminds us that Jesus gave Himself for us. His sacrificial love strengthens us to live boldly, even when love for God brings opposition.
Resources Currently Available at the Veritas Church Bookstore:
1 John - The Gospel-Centered Life in the Bible
1-3 John - Knowing The Bible 12 Week Study
1,2, & 3 John For You - God’s Word For You
Don’t Follow You Heart
1-3 John ESV Scripture Journal
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