B, Easter 4 - 1 John 3:16-24 "Pleasure and Peace"
In the hymn “Lead us Heavenly Father lead us” by James Edmeston, there are three verses based on the Trinity. The third verse focuses on the Holy Spirit and it reads...
Spirit of our God, descending,
Fill our hearts with heavenly joy,
Love, all other love transcending,
Pleasure that can never cloy:
Thus provided, Pardoned, guided,
Nothing can our peace destroy.
The line
“Pleasure that can never cloy” has always stood out, probably because of the
word “cloy”. It’s a word that isn’t
familiar in our language today. However,
it means to be become sickly sweet, over the top, nauseating, disgusting, or
tire from excess. So the line says
“Pleasures that can never become sickly sweet and disgusting.”
This line
addresses the line before, “Love, all other love transcending, Pleasures that
can never cloy. It seems there is plenty
of love out there today that is nauseating and over the top but before us here
in the text is love that transcends all love that is fake and fleeting.
In 1 John
3:16 we hear, “By this we know love, that
he laid down his life for us, and we ought to lay down our lives for the
brothers.”
Let’s take an
audit of your love life in comparison to this verse. What do you love? What is your pleasure? Jesus laid down his life and now we OUGHT to
do it for others. Ought is another word
that stands out. One would expect it to
read, we should or must do the same.
Ought here comes from the Greek word ophelos from where we get the name
Ophelia. It means “to help” but not from
a sentimental or feel good motive but as an obligation as what one owes. So again, what do you love? What is your pleasure? What do you owe to the Lord for all his
steadfast love toward you?
Saint Paul
tells the church in Romans... Owe no one
anything, except to love each other, for the one who loves another has
fulfilled the law. For the commandments,
“You shall not commit adultery, You shall not murder, You shall not steal, You
shall not covet,” and any other commandment, are summed up in this word: “You
shall love your neighbour as yourself.”
Love does no wrong to a neighbour; therefore love is the fulfilling of
the law. (Romans 13:8–10 ESV)
Do I love God
in the way that God loves me? How do I get that desire to lay down my life for
others when every waking fibre in my body wants nothing of laying down my life
for anyone or anything? What pleases God
and what pleases me are two different things.
Maybe it’s okay to lay down my life for others, but only if there’s a
benefit for me, my family, my community or even my country!
Love, all
other loves transcending, pleasure that can never cloy. It seems our pleasures are not just cloy,
but they have completely clogged us up! Therefore,
the love God wants is not love as our society would have us believe today.
But let’s not
focus on others but on ourselves, myself and yourself. How do my pleasures and fears shape me? What truths do they reveal about you and me
before God? What do you owe God for the
removal of your debt of sin?
The text
continues, “But if anyone has the world’s
goods and sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart against him, how does
God’s love abide in him?” (1 John
3:17 ESV)
Notice how
all our daily bread, given to us by God; our food, our shelter, our time and
our possessions are called goods.
However, these goods stop being good when our pleasure in them make us lose
sight of what pleases God. The question
is asked, “How does God’s love abide in you?”
Then follows,
“Little children, let us not love in word
or talk but in deed and in truth.” (1 John 3:18 ESV)
Our words and
what we say stands and falls before God’s word.
As we have heard Paul has reminded us of the commandments in our debt to
love. God’s love in Jesus’ death has
fulfilled the law yet the law still stands to show us why we need continuing
steadfast love because we constantly turn to what pleases us rather than what
pleases God.
Take for
instance the two commandments, you shall not murder and you shall not commit
adultery. These two commandments on the
surface are quite literal and we all know what they tell us.
But we gain a
deeper understanding of our feelings where murder is the ultimate bad feeling
and sexual desire and its fulfilment is the supreme good feeling. Any feelings
coming from within, from any bad feeling through to murder, from the simplest
of good feelings through to sexual climax can be condemning cloy or perverse
pleasure built on a love that serves and pleases us rather than God.
Jesus takes
the ultimates of our feelings and condemns all degrees, from the least to the
greatest, as he speaks to the people at the Sermon on the Mount.
We hear, “You have heard that it was said to those of
old, ‘You shall not murder; and whoever murders will be liable to
judgment.’ But I say to you that
everyone who is angry with his brother will be liable to judgment; whoever
insults his brother will be liable to the council; and whoever says, ‘You
fool!’ will be liable to the hell of fire. (Matthew 5:21–22 ESV)
“You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall
not commit adultery.’ But I say to you
that everyone who looks at a woman with lustful intent has already committed
adultery with her in his heart. (Matthew 5:27–28 ESV)
Our
pleasures, both what we believe to be good or bad, condemn us when we take the
goods of God and make ourselves gods of all good and evil.
What is the
truth of our motives? Are we motivated
by a fear that is based on love and reverence for our Father who is in heaven
or on a fear that is frightened of death?
On the other end of the scale, is our hope of heaven based on a love and
desire to be with God forever or is heaven a place of more selfish pleasure for
you?
I hope you
can see the greatness of your ongoing debt because of your dubious motives, but
also the pleasure of God to clear the debt in Jesus Christ.
So what deeds
do we need to perform here when our hearts condemn us? To what truth do we need to turn so we might
not be “liable to the hell of fire” as Jesus so bluntly puts it! And how do we actually turn to this truth?
The pleasure
of God is a pleasure that brings peace and this peace comes through true
love. This is not love that self serves
and looks within. This is not a love
that serves the feelings as the ultimate but a love that can shape feelings so
you can look out of yourself, love God and serve your neighbour. It’s the love I desire every day but one
which I struggle to keep hold of too.
I encourage
you to keep on in the struggle by not looking into yourself for answers, rather
because you don’t find answers in yourself look into the truth of God’s word so
you might do the deeds that truly please God.
So let’s
return to the text again, “By this we
shall know that we are of the truth and reassure our heart before him; for
whenever our heart condemns us, God is greater than our heart, and he knows
everything. Beloved, if our heart does
not condemn us, we have confidence before God;
and whatever we ask we receive from him, because we keep his
commandments and do what pleases him.”
(1 John 3:19–22 ESV)
God is
greater than our heart. He is greater
than our feelings and our thoughts and our words. And so feeling condemned or not we are the
beloved of God. God loves you, and me,
and he gives us freedom to ask and receive from him.
So what do
you think we should ask him that should please him? One hundred million dollars! An endless packet of lollies, block of
chocolate or sexual potency!
No! Rather we
can ask for a deepening understanding of God’s word and a desire to immerse
ourselves in it as our daily bread! A
willingness to share our goods rather than hoard them as evils! Forgiveness of our sins and a willingness to
forgive others as God has forgiven us. To be led towards God’s kingdom rather
than our fickle kingdoms of feelings that at best become cloy and at worst lead
us away from God! And deliverance from
evil, especially from the evil within to the holiness and joy found in God.
But the
question remains, “How do I get the will or the power to ask?” To find out we go back to the only source of
truth, God’s word because we do what pleases God.
And
this is his commandment, that we believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ
and love one another, just as he has commanded us. Whoever keeps his commandments abides in God,
and God in him. And by this we know that he abides in us, by the Spirit whom he
has given us. (1 John 3:23–24 ESV)
What is God’s
pleasure is that we recognise what we owe, or what we ought to do, and confess
our sin. The focus here is not on you or
me but on Jesus and how he has cancelled our debt at the cross. The recognition of our cancelled debt brings
praise and thankfulness. Praise is
practically telling others about your debt and how God has cancelled it in
Jesus’ death and resurrection.
And how do we
do this? Well it’s actually not us; our
human spirit, our heartfelt desire, or our feelings. Rather it’s that God abides in us because he
has given us his Holy Spirit as we are told in God’s word.
This is the
point of the last verse of the hymn “Lead us Heavenly Father lead us”
The Holy
Spirit descends to us and brings us hearts of joy, and love, love that
transcends, giving us pleasures that never cloy. Our Heavenly Father provides, Jesus pardons,
and the Holy Spirit guides. He guides us
to Jesus, he guides us in our confession of sin, he guides us in our confession
of God’s forgiveness, and he guides us in our forgiveness of others, so we can
love and lay down our lives for others.
It all comes
down to the Holy Spirit awakening in us our need for salvation, forgiveness,
and our need to forgive. We cannot love
God unless we receive the forgiveness of sins.
You cannot love God unless you receive the forgiveness of sins. I cannot love God unless I receive the
forgiveness of sins. Amen.