22 October 2021

Guard the Flock (The 2nd letter of John)

 The Book of 2 John: Guard the flock



  1. 1. INTRODUCTION 

Thank you to each of you who is joining us in this study of John’s writing which is labelled 2 John. For those on YouTube, if you haven’t yet read this little letter, which is the only chapter of this book, please pause your playback, read the chapter, and then re-join us. Thanks. 

Welcome back. 

Like always when we turn our attention to a new book of the Bible, we ask the basic questions, who wrote this, to whom, and what are the circumstances that caused the author to write this?

Who and to whom?

The language of the letter is Johanine, without question. The topics include love and truth, information given from the beginning, and false deceivers who are named as antichrist. It’s all there, and those who have been with us for a few weeks, who studied John’s first letter will recognize those topics and when you read the 2nd letter will agree that it seriously sounds like the apostle of love. You are in agreement with most of the commentators out there. 

The question is asked, why is there any question about the authorship at all? Answer: the opening introduces the author as “the elder.” That’s a term never used elsewhere by John, who was already of a rank higher than that, but I’ll explain in a few minutes why I think John used that term as I unpack the topic of the government of the early believers. 

OK, so John in the author of the book, and he’s the author of the Gospel of John as well as the Book of the Revelation and the other two letters, 1 John and 3 John which we will learn next week. That’s five of the 27 books of the Newer Testament. Almost 20 percent… that’s significant. 

Now the question of ‘to whom’ did he write this?

The chosen lady is our translation, and so it sounds like a particular woman. The greeting is common in those days, like we see in Titus or Philemon, and thus makes sense that the word we translate ‘lady’ should actually be a person, and thus, many scholars use the name “Cyria”, the transliteration of the word, as her name. It was a somewhat common name in those days. And that works for me. 

I used to teach and still very much allow for the interpretation that this is a metaphor for the church in a particular area, perhaps in Turkey where John longed to visit again from his probable location in Ephesus, and this is one of the two thoughts most have on this subject. Whichever view you take, the issue is not worrisome enough to supplant us from the study of the content and the purpose of the letter.

What is contained in this little letter?

John reiterates four topics we are used to reading from him, 1) faith itself being maintained (.1-2, 4, 9), 2) obedience to the command to love (.5-6), 3) rejecting worldly living (.7), and 4) renouncing sin (.10-11)

The reason for the writing is hinted at in verses 7 to 11 and seems that the congregation to whom John is writing is actually doing a great job in hospitality. They were hosting folks who were traveling and speaking, visiting congregations, and keeping the fellowship of the believers intact. If I read this correctly, the hospitality they extended is never criticised but also allowed for their being vulnerable to infection from wrong teachers. We’ll get to that in that section. 

Let’s dig in.

Verse 1: The elder. John is well-enough known to leave his own name out. Sounds like his use of the phrase “the disciple whom Jesus loved” in the Gospel to self-describe. As I said, his rank was already known as ‘apostle’ by the time he is writing this, so why the use of the term ‘elder?’ The Greek word is ‘presbyter’ which we later use in church language to define a movement later a denomination as Presbyterian. 

Let me unpack church government, not a usual consideration of our studies, but worthwhile, especially as John gave us this term today.

There are three terms used in the Newer Testament that might be confusing. They are elder, shepherd and overseer. Those Greek words are presbyter, poimen and episcopos. Sometimes the last is also translated as bishop. 

Here are those words in context.

Matthew uses presbyter 12 times, Mark 7 times, Luke 5 times, John did not use the term in his Gospel. Each of those refers to the category alongside the members of the Sanhedrin, and other notables in the Jewish community in the First Century. In the book of Acts, presbyter is used first of the non-messianic folks who ruled, and then the term was used in the messianic community to denote leaders there as well. 

John used the term 12 times in the Revelation and of course Paul and Peter used it often as well. Each time the term refers to a member of the community of faith who is given leadership function. It seems to me that the role of the Jewish elder now was transferred to the messianic elder very neatly.

Oh, of note, is that Peter identifies himself as a ‘fellow elder’ (1 Peter 5.1) and that helps me see John in this letter today using that term. We’ll see that again in a moment.

The second term is ‘shepherd’ and I see it most clearly used in the Newer Testament in Yeshua’s self-description in John 10. There we see the one who gives his life for his sheep. Peter used the term to address the leadership in 1 Peter 5, and we should read that here:

1Pet. 5:1   Therefore, I exhort the elders among you, as your fellow elder and witness of the sufferings of Christ, and a partaker also of the glory that is to be revealed, 2 shepherd the flock of God among you, exercising oversight (episcopos) not under compulsion, but voluntarily, according to the will of God; and not for sordid gain, but with eagerness; 3 nor yet as lording it over those allotted to your charge, but proving to be examples to the flock. 4 And when the Chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the unfading crown of glory. 5 You younger men, likewise, be subject to your elders; and all of you, clothe yourselves with humility toward one another, for GOD IS OPPOSED TO THE PROUD, BUT GIVES GRACE TO THE HUMBLE.”

Here we see all three terms mixed easily in Peter’s vocabulary. Elders, shepherds and overseers, all applied to the same people. It’s an advisory and teaching based on John 10 and the words of Messiah to Peter, and now Peter is passing those on to the elders under his charge.

In 1 Timothy 3, the term ‘episkopos’ is used to refer to one who exercises oversight. Epi (over) skopos (to see) is the Greek. It’s also translated ‘bishop’ in the KJV. Paul then defines the role of the overseer and it’s the same as the role of the elder. And in fact, Paul in chapter 5 of 1 Timothy changes the noun to ‘elder’ and continues his teaching about the overseer. 

There seem to be two offices in the local community of faith: elder and deacon. Deacon means ‘servant’ and they were first appointed to support the apostles in Acts 6. The other local office is one of the three terms, and later on the church might have made them layered, but biblically the elder is the shepherd is the bishop. One office, different functions, one Lord of all.

Back to our text, when John calls himself ‘The elder’, he’s saying I’m an authority, actually ‘the elder’ (definite article is attached) and probably the senior member of the leadership team that cares for and shepherds the community represented by the lady or Cyria. Remember Peter called himself ‘fellow elder’ and that’s likely what John is saying, but the other elders might have honoured him as senior as would be natural in human society to the eldest among them. 

The use of ‘elect’ for Cyria and the use of ‘her children’ in verse one make me think that Cyria is a personification of the church and her children are the disciples she is making each day, each week, each decade. Even if someone sees Cyria as a person, ‘her children’ go well beyond any natural function and represent the church either in her house, or more likely the church in its locality there.

(Smalley says this: “The general character of 2 John suggests almost without question that the letter is addressed to a community and its problems, rather than to a person or family. Note also (a) the language of vv 1–3, 13, which is more appropriate for a church group than for an individual; (b) the interchange between singular and plural in vv 4, 5, 8, 10, 12, 13, which points in the same direction; (c) the reference in v 5 to the “new command” given by Jesus to his disciples, which suggests that a congregation is in mind. cf further Brooke, 167–69.”

Verses 1 and 2, John pings his regular theme of ‘truth.’ John does not alone mention and teach truth, especially the use of the term by Yeshua in John’s Gospel. But these numbers matter. Matthew uses the term 1 time, Mark twice, Luke thrice, and John 17 times! Get it? John believes that truth matters and that Yeshua emphasized it in his hearing. 

John uses it five times in four verses to start here. It’s as if he’s saying, “What I’m about to tell you is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth so help me God.” 

Personal story. When I was raised as an Orthodox Jew, here in Kansas City, from where this broadcast today is being recorded, my family raised me to believe and practice the truth. My mother would catch me in a questionable statement and would ask me if I were lying by saying in English and Yiddish, “Honest emes?” Emes is the Yiddish word for the Hebrew ‘emet’ or ‘truth.’ It was as if she were giving me a 2nd chance to fess up to what was apparently obviously to her a misstatement. In modern vernacular we interject with ‘You’ve got to be kidding!’ or “For real?” In modern Hebrew we answer with ‘b’emet’ (as if to seal the statement with the honesty label). 

John is saying that of his letter. It’s wrapped in the truth of God, of Yeshua and of what he had been taught. 

If John is known for any theology though, it’s the theology of love. Love is his definition of how we should treat each other. Love is how the world will know if we are his disciples. 

John alone quotes this from Yeshua at the Passover seder

“A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another, even as I have loved you, that you also love one another. By this all men will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.” (John 13.34-35)

In Leviticus we were to love our neighbour as ourself. (19.18) But in the New agreement between man and God, and between man and man, after Yeshua died and rose again, we are to love our neighbour as he has loved us. That’s massively different. That’s all in!

John reminds us that truth is right yet without love we are a simple noisy gong of truth telling. (.4-5)

In verse 6, John reminds the lady Cyria and the believers in her city that they have learned this lesson of love ‘from the beginning.’ That’s both from John’s beginning and the church’s beginning.  It all starts with God’s love. (John 3.16)

Then verse 6, ‘that you should walk in it.’ It’s not enough to have a belief in God or a belief in love; it’s right that our lives should characterize this. We should ‘walk it out.’ You’ve heard this so often that the cliché may make you not hear it any longer. “Don’t just talk the talk; you have to walk the walk.” In other words, words are ok, as long as they match how you live. The number one issue most unbelievers have with your faith is not that you believe one thing or another, but that you are a hypocrite. You fall short of your own standards. 

John is saying “you’ve heard this from the beginning, from the first lesson I gave you, now keep it front and center today.’ 

The fable, the apocryphal story is told of the old apostle John being carried into a town to visit and the crowds came out to meet him who had walked with Jesus decades earlier. They cheered him as he was carried on a stretcher into the middle of the gathering. They said, “Oh great apostle John, please teach us.” He sat up and raised his hand skyward and said, “Love one another.” And he lay back down. The crowd marvelled and whispered to one another, “Great lesson.”  John was taken away.

The next week at the gathering the same scene took place and again the crowd hushed to hear the declaration by John as he sat up, “Love one another.” Again the whispered to one another, “Great lesson.” Again John was taken away.

The third week, at the gathering, the same scene. Again John sat up and declared, “Love one another.” One brave young man shouted from the back, “Great apostle John, you told us that last week. Haven’t you got anything else to teach us?” The apostle sat back up and said, “Young man, when you practice love for one another, when you learn that lesson, we will go on to another.” 

Dear friends, that’s what I hear in “from the beginning” in verses 5 and 6 today. Learn that lesson, then we will go on.

The warning

The second half of the letter is to be understood as a warning. Cyria’s folks, the disciples in that city, are wonderfully welcoming and charitable and practicing hospitality. As a result, some bad teachers, as John calls them deceivers. The Greek word is ‘planos’ and refers to their wandering, almost like a vagabond or tramp. Then by implication they ‘wander’ away from the truth. And worse yet, they deceive others. So ‘watch yourselves’ (verse 8) which is plural and thus a warning to the whole Body of messiah.

What is the warning? What is the red flag about which we should be aware? The same as we saw in 1 John over and over, the false teaching of the Gnostics who did not believe Jesus was the Messiah and anointed from his birth through to his eternity. They did not believe Yeshua as Messiah was born in the flesh, but rather that Yeshua became the Messiah when he was baptised and thus Messiah was not born of flesh. They had a (mis)understanding of the dual nature of Yeshua being both human and divine. 

What action does John recommend the believers there to take? Refuse to welcome these folks. Don’t let them take advantage of you. They do not know God, not really, and their intention is to harm you and your faith. 

I was pondering this last week in Texas as I was continually harassed about Australia and the draconian and military horrors that apparently are abounding on the news media in their in boxes and televisions. On enquiry I discovered a video that was being shown over and over to highlight Australia’s lockdown and a crowd scene of police stopping a protest. Arrests took place etc. I thought about it over and over as so many in Texas mentioned it to me and I wondered if this kind of dramatic reporting and hostile conclusions might be in John’s mind today. 

Don’t let false teachers, or as many use the term, ‘fake news’ infect your views. 

Now please, don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying anything political or a video shown on a television network is to be equally compared to John’s warnings about the Gnostics and their theological infection of the minds of believers in Ephesus and around the known world in the First Century. 

What I am saying is that the warning about not letting wrong information or ‘not truth’ into our ears is still valid. This is an application of this verse; it’s not what this biblical verse is teaching for its day. 

When we ponder the equivalence from then to now, substantially, the warning is loud and clear. Don’t learn Gnostic teaching from New Age folks. Don’t give your mind to those who teach the ‘wrong Jesus’ or as Paul warned “another Gospel.” 

Let me remind you of an old imagery that may help. Hang out with those with whom you disagree if you can help them. Or let’s use a very clear fire and ice image. You are on fire for the Lord. You may hang out with those who are icebergs as long as you are melting them. When they start to freeze you over, it’s time to get out. 

John said in verse 11, “whoever greets him shares in his evil works.” 

Finally, John ends as is typical of epistolary models in those days, with farewells, both from himself, wishing to visit her and the community of faith there, and from the believers where John is. 

What do we learn today? 

Yeshua is the one who represents truth and who shepherded the people of God in the Older Testament and into the current age of grace. He calls others to shepherd the people of God and as such John issues a warning to the folks across the region to keep love and truth as the focus of their faith. Stay away from false teachings. Stay connected to the Lord of life and to one another. 

My friends, that’s how I want to live today. And I hope you do also. 

INVITATION

Dear friends, if you’d like to have the forgiveness and the fellowship about which I spoke, you can do so today. Just now you can pray and find that the God of love extends his life to you in giving you pardon for all your sins. That forgiveness will usher you into the freedoms of knowing the God of love. Isn’t that a wonderful idea?

If you’d like that, please pray and ask God to forgive you your sins and to make you born again. 

Then let us know you have done this, won’t you? Write to us (admin@jewsforjesus.org.au) and tell us you have prayed for the first time. We want to send you some literature and welcome you to the family.  

And if you have any questions, use that same address, ok?

And join us next week as we look specifically at the 3rd letter of John.  It has a Lot to say to us in the 21st Century, as Covid and all kinds of other topics stay in our conversation.

Until then, Shabbat shalom.

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Actual text


2John 1    The elder to the chosen lady and her children, whom I love in truth; and not only I, but also all who know the truth, 2 for the sake of the truth which abides in us and will be with us forever: 3 Grace, mercy and peace will be with us, from God the Father and from Jesus Christ, the Son of the Father, in truth and love.


2John 4   I was very glad to find some of your children walking in truth, just as we have received commandment to do from the Father. 5 Now I ask you, lady, not as though I were writing to you a new commandment, but the one which we have had from the beginning, that we love one another. 6 And this is love, that we walk according to His commandments. This is the commandment, just as you have heard from the beginning, that you should walk in it.


2John 7   For many deceivers have gone out into the world, those who do not acknowledge Jesus Christ as coming in the flesh. This is the deceiver and the antichrist. 8 Watch yourselves, that you do not lose what we have accomplished, but that you may receive a full reward. 9 Anyone who goes too far and does not abide in the teaching of Christ, does not have God; the one who abides in the teaching, he has both the Father and the Son. 10 If anyone comes to you and does not bring this teaching, do not receive him into your house, and do not give him a greeting; 11 for the one who gives him a greeting participates in his evil deeds.


2John 12   Though I have many things to write to you, I do not want to do so with paper and ink; but I hope to come to you and speak face to face, so that your joy may be made full.


2John 13   The children of your chosen sister greet you.


16 October 2021

Final chapter of 1 John

The Book of 1 John: Stay the Love Course Together



LESSON Five: It’s who you know


 To watch this on video:

https://youtu.be/qdkUJWsKSBg


  1. 1. INTRODUCTION 

Thank you to each of you who is joining us in this study of John’s writing which is labelled 1 John. For those on YouTube, if you haven’t yet read this chapter of the book, please pause your playback, read chapter 5, and then re-join us. Thanks. 

Welcome back. 


Today we wrap up our five-week study of this small and powerful letter from the Apostle of Love, the aged Apostle John, who was the youngest of the original 12 disciples whom Yeshua chose back in the days of the Gospels. We have listened to the primary dual declarations of John, God is Light and God is Love. 


2. Faith is the victory

Let’s read this chapter and see what the lines mean.


Verse 1: Whoever believes… John’s continuing thought, in the Gospel that bears his name, in the book of the Revelation and certainly in this first letter of his, is that we should believe. What and what not to believe, that’s significant also, but don’t miss this. FAITH, the summary of our beliefs, is (verse 4) how we win, how we overcome, how we are going to make it. It’s not the academics; it’s not the religious rituals that are salvific. It’s not our yichus (our heritage and our genealogy), but rather how we actively respond, heart to heart, that is, our heart saying “yes” to God’s information and his heart. We respond. And our response is a faith-filled ‘yes’ to the Almighty. 

Paul also linked faith and love with regularity, like in 1 Thes 1 constantly bearing in mind your work of faith and labour of love and steadfastness of hope in our Lord Jesus Christ in the presence of our God and Father.” (1 Thes. 1.3)

Of course, the most ‘famous’ if we can use that expression is in 1 Corinthians 13 where Paul says, “Now abide three things, faith, hope and love, and the greatest of these is love.”


Then John says a ‘what’ we need to believe. Jesus, Messiah, born of God. In other words, striking at the false teachers who taught that Jesus as the Messiah could not have been physically born. What they meant is that the God-part (modern new age folks use the term “The Christ”) of what Jesus became had nothing corporeal about him. He couldn’t be flesh and blood; he was Spirit, they would insist. So this notion of a birth canal birth of the son of God is outrageous to them. If you believe Jesus AS MESSIAH was born, then you are on the team of real faith. If not… good luck.


Now you may be unclear about what John is saying, since he (and James before him) have been teaching about love of neighbour and particularly real relationships with others as evidence of the new birth. What he is saying in verse 1 is that good works alone is not enough; a person has to believe, and to believe correctly. Faith without works is dead. Works without faith is helpful but equally dead to the doer. Faith with works is alive.


One more comment on verse 1, and that is in human terms, a person who says he loves another must, should, will be known by, the love that person has for the other’s child or children. Psychiatrists regularly report the failures of this in the world of step-children who come along with the new partner, but who the new adult in the family does not love. You love a person? Great. Demonstrate that by loving the children of that person. That’s where rubber meets the proverbial road.


Verses 2 and 3, we see the word ‘commandments’ three times. This word causes many to react with worry and fear. That’s exactly not what John wants for us. He is saying that the commandments are not the 10, not the 613, but the two, and they were given by his Messiah to love God and to love your neighbour. End of story. When you read his word, don’t think mitzvot, don’t think Torah or Talmud. Think of Yeshua. It’s about love, not about worry and fear. 


Remember this from last week:

There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves punishment, and the one who fears is not perfected in love. (4.18)


I’m not afraid of losing my salvation. I’m not afraid of failing God since I know both of us. Me—regularly and dismally self-centered; He—wonderfully full of love and grace. What is my calling? To ponder me or to ponder him? We love because he first loved us. NO FEAR!

When John tells us “This is the love of God to keep his commandments” I have to remember those two real mitzvot. His love is my morning and my evening. His death and resurrection is my October and my April; his peace is my winter and summer, my rainstorm and my sunshine. “Through all kinds of weather, it doesn’t matter at all, just as long as we’re together, it doesn’t matter at all!” I’m with God, and he is the One about whom I dream and think and live and move and have my being. Amen?


I didn’t like the lyric from a praise song back in the 70s, but with kindness today I don’t mind its particular sentiment: “Let’s forget about ourselves and concentrate on him and worship him…” I still believe we need to have self-care which made me wince when we were singing, “forget about ourselves.” However, I get it; ponder God and not you. Ponder the reality of his love and actions of love and you will concentrate on him and that will lead to worship. Hallelujah!


Verse 4, faith overcomes the world. Faith is the victory. Faith in what? In the love and power of the crucified. And the word ‘overcome’ here is from the Greek word “NIKE” which along with the swoosh and Michael Jordan himself put that word into our sports minds. Clever, and helps me remember who and what wins. 


I’m reminded of the story of a retreating soldier in the 4th century BCE in the army of Alexander the Great. The general approached this reluctant military man and asked him his name. “Alexander” was the reply of the young and fearful man. The general replied, “Soldier, either get out there and fight, or change your name!”


Winners fight and win. Our victory is in our faith. 


Remember John told us “The Son of God appeared for this purpose, to destroy the works of the devil.” (1 John 3.8)

Our victory is hiding in the shadow of the Crucified and Victorious Saviour. Verse 5 says, ““Who is the one who overcomes the world, but he who believes that Jesus is the Son of God?”


  1. 3. Belief leads to life

Then we move from faith and love to the end game, the end result of our faith and this teaching sermon from the Apostle John. What’s the point of this? Verses 12 and 13, if you believe in the right Yeshua, then you have eternal life. That’s it. Life that started way back when, into which you were placed by faith and by the acceptance of the community, that faith leads to life. To life eternal. Not a maybe about it. Faith is a victory, the championship has been won, the gold medal is in your family trophy room, the pleasure of God is shown in his smile and his extended arms to you… you don’t need to fear. You have life. 


John loves this thought. He taught it through the words of Yeshua in his Gospel. 

During the story of Nicodemus, the rabbi who came to Yeshua by night, John inserts these words of our Master, citing the Torah’s book of Numbers, chapter 21, “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up; so that whoever believes will in Him have eternal life.” (John 3.14-15)


Faith leads to life. 


Again John in the Gospel:

“The thief [that’s Satan] comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I came that they may have life and have it abundantly.” (10.10)

That’s where God wants you to live today and tomorrow. It’s early morning for some of you; it’s midday in New Zealand, and 6 pm for me in Houston Texas. He wants you to live, both positionally, in the realm of heaven, and practically in the realm of earth. Yes, you sit in heavenly places in messiah, and yes you can live victoriously today in Sydney, in Port Macquarie, in Adelaide and here in Texas. 

Back to verse 6, who is this One? As I stated in chapter 1, I’m not impressed with John’s construction of this sermon or this letter. He wanders a bit much for me, but hey, he’s old and I’ll cut him some slack. In fact, a lot of slack. Who is this One? He’s the One who came in water and blood.

There are many interpretations of course, like baptism and communion, or baptism and the spear when water and blood came flowing from the Crucified, but this from Stephen Smalley, 


“The true identity of Jesus, the writer appears to be saying, is only to be discovered by looking at the whole of his life, including its end. He came by water and, triumphantly, in blood; at this point the essential divinity of the human Jesus is most fully revealed and most fully victorious. Such a disclosure also applies to the work of Christ. He came not only with baptismal water, the timeless symbol of cleansing, but also in the actual, historical means for achieving this, the blood which “purifies us from every sin” (1:7; cf 4:10).”


 Here’s another citation

“Brown (109–123) argues instead that an unbalanced reading of John’s Gospel had led the heretically inclined members of the Johannine circle to believe that the human existence of Jesus, while real, was neither limited nor salvifically significant. Thus, the writer of 1 John accompanies statements implying the preexistence of Jesus with others which stress the earthly career of the incarnate Word; and Christ is presented not only as revealer, but also as redeemer. So here Jesus is found to be truly human (baptized in water and crucified in shed blood); but this “human modality” belongs to the one who, as also truly divine, both reveals and conveys eternal life (1:1–2; 5:20).”


These are important stakes to place in the theological trafficway of lessons countering the false teachers along the path. Yeshua ever was (long before his adult baptism) and ever will be (after the spear, but not communion) in his redemption. The water and blood testify about the One. Don’t get him wrong. Don’t get this information wrong or you will be fearful. If you get him right, you will love one another right. Because you will be inspired (the Spirit in you!) because the Spirit is the Truth. Together Son and Spirit testify of the Father’s love. 


  1. 4. The confidence of being his

Knowing what you need to know might help you get through school, and knowing who you need to know leads to a comfort and an assurance that goes beyond anything else you can experience in the world. They say, “it’s not what you know, it’s who you know!” And in a way that’s the truth. Knowing God is who he claims to be and knowing Yeshua as God’s answer and fullness is so substantial; it’s hard to put this down. Eight times in chapter 5 the word ‘know’ is used, and it’s the culmination of John’s thoughts in this letter, in which he has used the word a total of 39 times!


And remember it’s not academic. It’s personal. Look at verse 20. “That we may know him who is the truth.” 


Almost finally, God answers prayer. And this is a confidence, John writes. The Greek word we translate ‘confidence’ is another compound word

“παρρησία; parrēsia, parrēsias, hē (pan and rēsis; cf. arrēsia silence, katarrēsis accusation, prorrēsis prediction”

This is not exactly the constitutional phrase ‘freedom of speech’ but rather a freedom that is a release from bondage so that we can speak the truth, to our parents, to our children, to our colleagues at work and others. 


 Let me ask you, what is the confidence you have with your Father in heaven? Do you feel comfortable asking him for a loaf of bread? Do you think he will give you a stone instead? Will you ask for good gifts? Will he instead give you the summary of bad things? Not at all. If you know him, you can ask of him things that are consistent with his good nature and his plans for your uncle and your children. That confidence is in knowing who is who in the Kingdom of God. 


Remember, prayer is not about getting things, but about getting to know the Almighty. Prayer is not shopping lists sent to the supplier to fulfil. Prayer is communication with the God who was, and who is, and who will be in his fullness. What’s he thinking? What does he plan to accomplish in the next few months? I want to hear him and get to know him and be with him in the next scene of life. 

And I want others to stay the course, too, so John reminds us about sins that lead to death, and that we should convey our desire to the Lord that all of us should make it to the end. 


Verse 21 stands out in both its simplicity and its challenge. The first commandment is to love God with everything we have, heart, soul, mind and strength. The first two in the Big 10 are God is, and have no other gods, and certainly then make no idols. Idolatry is so easy of a trap into which to fall; God wants his people to love him pre-eminently. He wants you to know him and to love him. Don’t go for idols, whether a moment with a celebrity or a moment of zest due to thievery or adultery, don’t go for the quick fix with heroin or alcohol now that we have passed Freedom Day. 


You want freedom? Little children, guard yourself from idols. Don’t choose a false flag of the wrong nation to honour. Don’t bow to things that don’t satisfy. Their cisterns are broken; their worth limited. You want life? Follow Yeshua and love one another.  


So God wants us to stay the love course together with one another until Messiah returns. Will you join us? Will you be confident in the Lord? God’s promise is eternal life (Chapter 2: 25). Let’s live in that today. 


INVITATION

Dear friends, if you’d like to have the forgiveness and the fellowship about which I spoke, you can do so today. Just now you can pray and find that the God of love extends his life to you in giving you pardon for all your sins. That forgiveness will usher you into the freedoms of knowing the God of love. Isn’t that a wonderful idea?


If you’d like that, please pray and ask God to forgive you your sins and to make you born again. 

Then let us know you have done this, won’t you? Write to us (admin@jewsforjesus.org.au) and tell us you have prayed for the first time. We want to send you some literature and welcome you to the family.  

And if you have any questions, use that same address, ok?


And join us next week as we look specifically at the 2nd letter of John.  It has a Lot to say to us in the 21st Century, as Covid and all kinds of other topics stay in our conversation.

Until then, Shabbat shalom.

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Bibliography

Smalley, Stephen, 1 John, Word Biblical Commentary Series, Thomas Nelson, Grand Rapids, 1973. 

Weirsbe, Warren, Be Real, Victor Books, David C. Cook, Colorado Springs, 1972. 

Also, to see the whole book in one short graphic and wonderful summary, watch this video:


Actual text

1John 5:1   Whoever believes that Jesus is the Messiah is born of God, and whoever loves the Father loves the child born of Him. 2 By this we know that we love the children of God, when we love God and observe His commandments. 3 For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments; and His commandments are not burdensome. 4 For whatever is born of God overcomes the world; and this is the victory that has overcome the world — our faith.


1John 5:5   Who is the one who overcomes the world, but he who believes that Yeshua is the Son of God? 6 This is the One who came by water and blood, Yeshua the Messiah; not with the water only, but with the water and with the blood. It is the Spirit who testifies, because the Spirit is the truth. 7 For there are three that testify: 8 the Spirit and the water and the blood; and the three are in agreement. 9 If we receive the testimony of men, the testimony of God is greater; for the testimony of God is this, that He has testified concerning His Son. 10 The one who believes in the Son of God has the testimony in himself; the one who does not believe God has made Him a liar, because he has not believed in the testimony that God has given concerning His Son. 11 And the testimony is this, that God has given us eternal life, and this life is in His Son. 12 He who has the Son has the life; he who does not have the Son of God does not have the life.


1John 5:13   These things I have written to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, so that you may know that you have eternal life. 14 This is the confidence which we have before Him, that, if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us. 15 And if we know that He hears us in whatever we ask, we know that we have the requests which we have asked from Him.


1John 5:16   If anyone sees his brother committing a sin not leading to death, he shall ask and God will for him give life to those who commit sin not leading to death. There is a sin leading to death; I do not say that he should make request for this. 17 All unrighteousness is sin, and there is a sin not leading to death.


1John 5:18   We know that no one who is born of God sins; but He who was born of God keeps him, and the evil one does not touch him. 19 We know that we are of God, and that the whole world lies in the power of the evil one. 20 And we know that the Son of God has come and has given us understanding so that we may know Him who is true; and we are in Him who is true, in His Son Jesus Christ. This is the true God and eternal life.


1John 5:21   Little children, guard yourselves from idols.



12 October 2021

Movie: The Father with Anthony Hopkins













On the airplane to the US, I watched the 2020 movie called “The Father.” It was an amazing film that stars Anthony Hopkins as an aged and aging 80-year-old. In the middle of the long-haul flight from Sydney, it took more of my energy to sort than most movies these days. An almost psychodrama of family dynamics, it’s definitely not your ordinary Hollywood flick. 

The main character, Anthony, is also the lens through which we see the characters and all the scenes, no matter the timeline. What I mean is that the timeline is a bit confusing, which makes sense if we are seeing things as Anthony tries to see them. The movie Sliding Doors starring Gwenyth Paltrow about two different lives lived is simple compared to this one.

 

The back-and-forth mingling of scenes and what might be-- or might have been-- is a study in what makes Florian Zeller tick. He wrote the play “The Father” and is the co-author of the screenplay with Christopher Hampton. His madness, more than a study of dementia and Alzheimer’s, is in view. Whatever you couldn’t follow in the 90-minute movie perhaps will drive you to pause the playback and rewind a bit, or even watch the movie a second or third time. I don’t think you will be disappointed.

 

I am not familiar with the singing of Maria Callas whose recording of “Norma, “Casta Diva” seemed to be a highlight, along with Bizet’s “Je Crois entendre encore.” The music was unknown and seemed to be repeated, but maybe my ignorance played into the effects as well. Anthony had great love for all the music he played. I wonder why Zeller chose those works particularly. I’ll ask others later.

 

By the way the cast includes Olivia Colman and Olivia Williams (do we really need a double Olivia at this point?), Mark Gatiss, Rufus Sewell and Imogen Poots. It bordered on a play by Edward Albee or Sartre and asked the same question of many of their works. 

 

What is true? That theme of struggling to sift through the scenery and the characters, of finding one’s way in a troubled, albeit simple, chicken-for-dinner world, jumped out at me at almost every turn. Finding truth is not only an ancient Greek concern. With all the strident accusations in these days of ‘fake news’, the question is not baseless. What is true in 2021? What is true in your world? And beyond that, what is truth?

 

For instance, did Anne finally move to Paris? Is Paul the husband or is it James or…even Bill? The very clever mingling of the cast and the mental weakening of Anthony helped me to ponder the “What is truth?” question.

 

I loved the repeated opening of the drapes whether in the flat Anne owned or Anthony owned or even in the hospital or home. A simple dramatic device, but I felt it was as if to say, let’s get a picture of the real world through the eyes of Anthony. His struggle for “What is truth?” kept repeating itself.

 

The use of the repeated references to the ‘walk in the park on such a lovely day’, and to the watch that is stolen or misplaced both remind me of the ordinary parts of time and days, and to be honest, of life, actually. In the midst of normal, how do we find truth and reality? You who are reading this blog post, how do you find it yourself? 

 

For me, it boils down to this. Beauty might be in the eyes of the beholder, but truth is not. 

 

I taught high school mathematics in the 1970s and each problem had a solution, and if a student showed me their work in ‘draft’ form and they came to the solution for a problem, whether in logic, or in geometry, in algebra or any of the disciplines of mathematics, I was able to give them a very good score. Being true mattered, and math gives us the opportunity to speak to it. But truth itself--- that’s another matter. 

 

True religion is one of the themes of my life as I turn 70 next month. I don’t want to go through the motions; I don’t want to live one more day without God’s all-consuming fire within me. Living honestly and personally—that’s how I’m going to make it in the last chapters and scenes of my life. Quoting Casting Crowns above about ‘through the motions’ haunts and motivates me. Will I live as if I have only an audience of One? 

 

You see, a biblical character named Pontius Pilate asked that same question that I see Zeller asking. The scene in the Bible is the last day of the 30-year life of Yeshua, the messianic hopeful many call Jesus to this day. He was brought before Pilate, and this dialogue takes place.

 

“Therefore Pilate said to Jesus, ‘So You are a king?’ Jesus answered, ‘You say correctly that I am a king. For this I have been born, and for this I have come into the world, to testify to the truth. Everyone who is of the truth hears My voice.’ Pilate said to Him, ‘What is truth?’ And when he had said this, he went out again to the Jews and said to them, ‘I find no guilt in Him.’” (recorded in John chapter 18.37-38)

 

What is truth? Is that a philosophical question or one of even more significance? Pilate, the Roman governor over that part of ancient Israel (as we know it today) is conducting his own investigation after some of the Jewish leadership brought Jesus to him that Passover morning.

 

George Beasley-Murray wrote this about that setting: “Jesus is not speaking of truth in an abstract, or even general way, but specifically in relation to his ministry. He came among men with a mission from God to bear witness to the truth of God’s saving sovereignty, and to reveal it in word and deed.” Again, truth then is not a philosophical tenet, but a representative of the authority of God in this world, even in my world!

 

Pilate seems to shrug his shoulders and ponders like so many have before and afterwards…”What is truth?”

 

This question is answered earlier in that same short biography by John in the setting of the Last Supper. Jesus, whom his disciples would have called Yeshua, is seated with them. He has served them for years and even earlier this evening. He washed their feet. He taught them and even informed them that his time was coming to an end. He said, “ ‘In my Father’s house are many rooms, if it were not so, I would have told you. I’m going to prepare a place for you. If I go, I will come again to receive you to myself, that where I am you may be also. And you know the way I’m going.’ Just then, Thomas, one of the 12 asked him, ‘Lord, we don’t know where you are going, and how do we know the way?’ Yeshua answered, ‘I am the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father but by me.’” (John 14.2-6)

 

There it is! The claim of Truth is one that Yeshua makes about himself. He is not saying, “what I say is true.” He is not saying, “I have a philosophy class I want you to sit and learn and grow in metaphysics with me.” He is saying to the effect that if you are serious about truth, and the Kingdom of God, then follow me. I’m the way. I’m the truth. There is no truth apart from Yeshua. He alone is the key to the kingdom of God and to the truth that settles a man’s soul and gives us clarity in a muddled and increasingly muddying world.

 

You want truth, Pilate? You want truth, Anthony? You want truth, Zeller? Look to Jesus. Learn his ways; learn of him; see what and how and when and why he did what he did. Get to know him through the writings in the Word of God (The Scriptures) and pray to the Father of Lights, the Lord of creation and parks and Sydney and even Hollywood. Prayer is a way to learn about God, and to focus your being on him. That’s the truth. That’s the life. That’s the way. 

 

The Father? Our heavenly One is the One to know. See things from his point of view. Let him open the curtains in your life and you will see all things clearly. 

 

As we Aussies say, ‘strewth!’

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