God Is Love

God is love, and the one who abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him. (I John 4:16b)

God is love. Three simple words that very well may be the deepest, most profound revelation in all of reality. John says he knows this revealed truth about God because he has seen it, heard it, touched it. “We proclaim to you what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, what we have looked at and touched with our hands, concerning the Word of Life.” (I John 1:1, 3) It is because of the incarnation of Jesus Christ – God made man – that we can know and experience the deepest mysteries of God’s own inner life. His love is not like our love. His love precedes all human response and is freely offered to all, regardless of the condition of its object. “God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.” (Romans 5:8) The incarnation of Jesus did not occur because he was drawn to us. It occurred because he was thrust outward by his love. His desire was to abide with us, as one of us, so that we could abide in Him. Continue reading God Is Love

Living Stones

And coming to Him as to a living stone…you also, as living stones, are being built up as a spiritual house for a holy priesthood. (I Peter 2:4-5)

Peter’s first epistle was addressed to several Christian communities scattered throughout Asia Minor. From his description of their former lifestyle (1:14, 18; 4:3) it seems clear that these believers were predominantly Gentile in background. Peter, of course, was a Jew by birth and, prior to Christ, would have been raised to see the temple in Jerusalem as the center of worship of the Lord. Built of stone, the temple was meant to be the perpetual dwelling place of the glory of God. It is no accident that Peter speaks of Christ metaphorically as a “stone.” He is the real Temple, the fullest expression of God come to earth. Alive from eternity past and resurrected from the dead, Jesus Christ is a “living” stone, and as the foundation of the church he is strong, durable, and firm. Continue reading Living Stones

The Saints Come Marching In

It was given to [the Bride of Christ] to clothe herself in fine linen, bright and clean; for the fine linen is the righteous acts of the saints. (Rev. 19:8)

Today, the Church celebrates All Saints Day, where we remember those who walked faithfully for Jesus before us, knowing that we will ultimately see them in the future. The book of Revelation labels the saints as victorious (15:2) and “conquerors” (e.g. 2:7). The irony throughout the book is that these “conquering” saints are constantly being persecuted and killed. In what ways are these defeated people conquerors? Because in the end, Jesus is victorious in establishing a new earth. Conquering is not asserting their force, but yielding themselves in obedience amidst persecution. Just as Jesus conquered through death on the cross, the saints likewise conquer. Continue reading The Saints Come Marching In

The Gift-Giving Gift

To each one of us grace was given according to the measure of Christ’s gift. (Ephesians 4:7)

The marvelous mosaic of people that makes up the body of Christ was never meant to be a colorless uniformity. God’s desire has never been to run the nations through his salvation factory and reproduce identical little Christian replicates. Yes, the body is marked by a Spirit-enabled unity (v. 4), but within that unity is a remarkable diversity, one that is based on more than merely different cultures, experiences, and personalities – it is based on the various gifts Christ has distributed for the enrichment of our common life together in him. But all our various gifts come from Christ’s one, true Gift: the Holy Spirit who enables both our unity and diversity. Continue reading The Gift-Giving Gift

A Heart Like His

Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations. (Matthew 28:19a)

The Great Commission, the parting command of the resurrected Christ to all who would follow him, has been the impetus behind all evangelism, missions, and discipleship for the two millennia of the church’s existence. These words were not a suggestion, not a platitude, not some mere truism. Rather, these words define the outward thrust of the church’s joint life as Christ’s body. He didn’t say, “Make your buildings comfortable, your programs relevant, your hospitality warm so that they will come to you.” Those things are all good, but his command was to go out. Into all the world, in fact. Not discriminating by color, race, or culture. His command is to go and let the light of the gospel penetrate into every corner of the world…through us. It’s an amazing command. Continue reading A Heart Like His