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God's Love and Man's Love

Question

1 John 4:7-21

Key Verse: 4:7

 

“Dear friends, let us love one another, for love comes from God. Everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God.”

 

STUDY QUESTIONS

 

1.  Read verse 7. What does it mean that man's origin is in God? (Ge

    1:1,27) What does it mean to be born of God? (Jn 3:3) What is the

    origin of love? Why must we love one another? How can we?

 

2.  Read verse 8. Why does one who does not love not know God? Why must

    love be rooted in God's love? How is man's love different from

    God's love? Think of some examples of selfish love.

 

3.  Read verses 7-8. What do these verses teach about God? About love?

    What does it mean that we are commanded to love? (Jn 15:12) Think

    of some examples of real love.

 

4.  Read verses 9-10. How has God shown his unselfish love among us?

    What did it mean to God to send his Son? As an atoning sacrifice?

    How does this give us life?

 

5.  Read verses 10-12. How is God's humbleness revealed in his love?

    (Jn 1:3,4; Php 2:7) In view of God's love, what ought we to do?

 

6.  Read verses 12,17-18. Why is it unnecessary to cling to icons or

    religious pictures?  How can we know God whom we can't see? How can

    we grow in love?

 

7.  Read verses 13-16. How is forgiveness related to love? (8,9) How

    can we know that God lives in us? What does it mean to acknowledge

    that Jesus is God's Son? What does it mean to rely on God's love?

 

8.  How is God's divine initiative revealed in his love? (10,19) How

    did Jesus love others first? How can we? Read verses 11-12 again.

    How can God's love be made complete in us? (16-17) Why does love

    drive out fear?

 

9.  What does God command those who receive his gift of love to do? Why

    is this an imperative? How is this different from man's love?

 

 

 

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Message

1 John 4:7-21

Key Verse: 4:7

 

“Dear friends, let us love one another, for love comes from God. Everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God.”

 

    As we know well, St. John was a politically ambitious person. He

wanted to be Prime Minister of the earthly messianic kingdom he thought

Jesus would establish. At that time, he was competitive, selfish and a

man who was seeking self-glory. But John came to realize that God made

his one and only Son, Jesus Christ, the atoning sacrifice for our sins.

He realized the love of God. He realized the grace of our Lord Jesus

Christ who obeyed God's will unto death, death on the cross.  Most

importantly, his spiritual eyes were opened. When we read the book of

Revelation, we see that he was full of heavenly vision and described

God's glory and his majesty and his love for human beings; he also

wrote that the new heavens and the new earth would come, the stormy sea

would disappear and there is no tear in the kingdom of God. In today's

passage, St. John describes those who are born of God and those who are

not born of God. Finally, he urges us to grow in the love of God. When

we study this part prayerfully, we learn that our substance or

existence originated from God. Those who do not know that they

originated from God do not know where they came from and where they are

going back to. They also do not know what to do while on earth, except

for hating others. May God bless us to know that we are born of God. In

short, our original being is from God.  Since God is love, we must grow

in the love of God. We must love one another.  That should be our

lifestyle on earth.

 

First, the origin from God (7).

 

    As we studied last time, men of wisdom and sagacity had searched

for the First Cause (Prima Causa) for over 3,000 years. Their main

purpose was to know the origin of the world. But they failed to grasp

what the origin of the world is. One African-American, Alex Haley,

wrote a novel, "Roots." He wanted to know his "roots," that is, where

he came from. He found that his ancestors were all Africans. He found

his origin in his own way. But he could not find the true origin of

mankind, except for his being an African-American. He was so serious

about his origin or the roots of mankind. But without God he could not

find answers, just as those men of wisdom and sagacity in the past.

 

    The Bible says God is our origin. Genesis 1:1 says, "In the

beginning God created the heavens and the earth." In this verse, the

phrase, "In the beginning," has deep meaning. We can understand "at the

beginning" easily. But "in the beginning" implies when there was no

time and space, before the creation of the world. In short, "in the

beginning" is God's right time. Genesis 1:1 says, "God created the

heavens and the earth." This verse declares that God was the First

Cause and God. Without him, they do not know God, nor do they know why

they are existing or working hard.

 

    Here we must know that we are born of God. The words, "born of

God," have their deep philosophical meaning. "Born of God" explains the

cause of origin, and that man came from God and goes back to God. Look

at verse 7. "Dear friends, let us love one another, for love comes from

God. Everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God." St. John

clearly tells us that we are created by God in his image. Since the

attribute of God is love, we also must love God as God loves man. On

the other hand, whoever does not love does not know God.

 

Second, those who are not born of God (8).

 

    Here we learn that there are two kinds of people. First is those

who do not know God and hate one another. Second is those who know God

and his attribute and love one another. Let's think about the first

kind of people who do not know God and hate one another. There are many

kinds of love. Sometimes people say, "I love you," when it is not love,

but just physical gratification. Sometimes people say, "I love you,"

but man's love is nothing but romance and it is temporal.  Basically,

man's love is self-centered. We like Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet."

Romeo belonged to the Montague feudal territory. And Juliet belonged to

the Capulet feudal territory. Their family feud developed to the brink

of a war at any time. But by chance, Romeo and Juliet fell in love.

Their romance was so tearful and tragic. Their romance was known to the

world as love beyond death. But from the worldly point of view, men

must be loyal to their king, next to their family, next to their

friends. But Romeo only loved Juliet, and finally ended up committing

suicide when his love was not fulfilled. We can say that Romeo's

romance was not of God.

 

    Among those who do not know God, who is love, many bridegrooms say

to their new brides, "I love you. What can I say more than this?" But

they were not born of God. They do not have God's love in their hearts

as their substance. So when time passes by, many tragic events happen

between bridegrooms and brides. One woman coped with impossible family

survival in Siberia. She and her husband were medical doctors. Medical

doctors' and teachers' pay was the same in the former U.S.S.R. The

family immigrated to the U.S.A. The husband had been a medical doctor

in the former U.S.S.R. But his license was not recognized in America.

So he had to study medicine all over again. His beloved wife worked in

the factory during the daytime. During the nighttime, she worked as a

nurse's aide.  In this way, she supported her husband's education until

he graduated from an American medical school and finished residency

training. Since his wife had been so sacrificial, the husband must love

her dearly, so dearly. He must live a life of giving thanks. But a

strange thing happened. The day the husband was accepted as a medical

doctor in a certain hospital, he openly despised and rejected his

sacrificial wife. Now the doctor lives all by himself, looking for a

kind of American foxy woman. Here we can see one whose origin is not of

God. Fallen man does as his origin and substance direct him. In short,

he is directed by his sinful nature.  We cannot condemn the doctor as

wrong, because when he is compared with worse sinners of the world,

whose origins are of the devil, he is a good man. But from God's point

of view, he could not see his wife's sacrificial love and hard work,

taking two jobs for ten years. We cannot but say he is really a selfish

man and his origin is of the devil. Endless are the stories of those

whose origin is not of God.  Let's stop here.

 

Third, those who are born of God (7-9).

 

    Let's think about those who are born of God. One Monday, Dr. Joseph

Chung reported in his testimony that he was very poor in his medical

school days.  So Dr. John Jun invited him to his rented room, where his

pretty much grown-up sister and older brother were also living. Dr.

John Jun's family income source was his mother, who sold wine and

noodles for laborers on the corner of the street. All of them lived

together in a rented studio apartment for two years. The amazing thing

is that Dr. John Jun's older brother never complained; instead, he

always encouraged Dr. Joseph Chung to study well and to pass the AMA

(American Medical Association) examination, which was his dream. It is

indeed amazing. Such koinonia was there. Then God blessed Dr. John

Jun's brother, and now he is a multi-millionaire who owns four

companies. Because of Dr. John Jun's mother's good influence, Kwangju

UBF members were greatly inspired to love one another.

 

    It was October 9th, 1965. We studied John chapter 3. John 3:16

pierced our souls. So we decided to invite abandoned and lonely people

and have a beautiful heavenly banquet. Finally we came to the

conclusion that we should invite men with leprosy. And we prepared very

delicious food and began to invite lepers. But no leper believed that

he was invited. At first, our UBF koinonia members were afraid to touch

them. We only tried to persuade them with the word of God to come to

the heavenly banquet. They were so broken and abandoned and sick with

loneliness, they never believed such an invitation was for them. Then

the senior shepherd ordered all the members to go and grab them and

bring them into the center by dragging them. So we went out and grabbed

them and dragged them to the center. We gathered 65 lepers and we had a

heavenly banquet. At first, the men with leprosy did not smile. But Dr.

Joseph Chung and Shepherd Moses Kim and several others sang beautiful

Korean folk songs. Then they felt that our activity was not a kind of

social propaganda, but it was from our hearts. They began to smile.

After dinner, they talked a long time with us. They mainly talked to us

about their sickness of loneliness, more than leprosy. The senior

shepherd was a little bit afraid of contracting leprosy, because we

grabbed them and wrestled with them to bring them to the center. But

the senior shepherd prayed that nothing would happen. Then the Holy

Spirit helped us not to contract leprosy. It is easy for us to eat with

beloved ones or superior ones. But it is not easy to eat with lepers.

More than the lepers, Kwangju students received God's command, "My

command is this:  Love each other as I have loved you" (Jn 15:12). From

that time on, loving one another was really beautiful. They had no

lustful desires. Young men called young women, "sister." Young women

called young men, "brother." It is an unbelievable story. But it is a

true story, nothing but a true story. Missionary Sarah is one of the

witnesses.

 

Fourth, the evidence that Jesus is the Son of God (10-12).

 

    How do we know that God is love? Verse 10 says, "This is love: not

that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning

sacrifice for our sins." The thought of this verse is repeated so many

times in 1 John. We must review this verse one more time. Sometimes we

become like Martin Luther, who said, "If I were God, I would destroy

all mankind twice a day." But love is this: God sent his one and only

Son as the atoning sacrifice. In this short sentence, we learn that God

is love. Many of us have children. Sometimes we are uneasy to send them

to babysitters. We wish our children would be okay. When we meet them

again at night, if they are well, then we are very happy. If they are

not well, then our hearts are so painful. From parents' point of view,

it is very natural. But man's love is basically selfish. Two weeks ago,

at our Monday fellowship leaders' meeting, the question was asked, "Can

any of you give one of your children as a ransom sacrifice?" For a few

minutes, no one said anything. Finally, each one was very frustrated in

his soul. Especially, Missionary Wesley's big eyes blinked faster and

faster. How can it be that we make one of our children a ransom

sacrifice?

 

    But God sent his one and only Son into the world. When God sent his

one and only Son into the world, he had to deprive him of all his

glory, power and honor of the kingdom of God. When God sent his one and

only Son to this world, he did not send him to a rented apartment, but

to a stable of an animal, and when he was born he was laid in a manger.

It was the beginning of atoning sacrifice. The climax of atoning

sacrifice was shedding his blood on the cross. But renouncing the glory

and power of the kingdom of God was the same for Jesus as shedding his

blood on the cross, because it required divine humbleness. One Ph.D.

student studied 16 years for a Ph.D. But his advisor did not pass his

dissertation. Then the student shot his advisor to death. How beautiful

it is that the advisor bore with such a slow student for 16 years. It

was indeed great that he did not dismiss him. But the student was not

humble enough to honor his professor, who had long-suffering patience,

and shot him to death. But Jesus, according to Philippians 2:7,

"...made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being

made in human likeness." We mourn that Admiral Boorda committed suicide

when his pride was hurt. But Jesus, from the position of God, humbled

himself and became a servant.  In the beginning, Jesus was with God.

This Jesus is the very God who created the heavens and the earth. John

1:3 says, "Through him all things were made; without him nothing was

made that has been made." Not only so, he is the author of man's life.

John 1:4 says, "In him was life, and that life was the light of men."

Jesus gives his life to each of us and the precious meaning of life to

each of us. Amen. But this great God humbled himself from God the

Almighty to a menial servant. At that time, the nuance of "servant" was

indeed terrible. Servants were considered as sub-human beings. The fact

that God sent his one and only Son Jesus Christ as the atoning

sacrifice convinces us more than enough that God is love and the grace

of our Lord Jesus Christ is higher than the sky and wider than the sea.

Most importantly, he is a humble God.

 

    Therefore, when we say we believe in God, the most important thing

is the realization of God's being as love and acceptance of loving our

brothers as ourselves, especially one's wife. Love requires tremendous

life-giving sacrifice.  Tremendous life-giving sacrifice does not stop

with sacrifice itself. It convinces us that we are born of God, and we

feel that God's love is growing in our hearts. Look at verse 12. "No

one has ever seen God; but if we love one another, God lives in us and

his love is made complete in us." This verse sufficiently explains that

we have never seen God, but we can believe that there is God. People

want to see and then believe in God. So they make multi-millions of

idols. Among them, Aaron was the representative who made a golden calf

(Ex 32:4). But by looking at a sleepy Buddha idol, we cannot

acknowledge God's presence and his love. By looking at icons our

spiritual eyes are not opened. We only try to find out which icon's

eyes are well drawn.

 

Fifth, grow in the love of God (12, 17-18).

 

    Here, St. John asserts that God's love must be made complete in us.

Look at verse 12 again. "No one has ever seen God; but if we love one

another, God lives in us and his love is made complete in us." Again,

verse 17 says, "In this way, love is made complete among us so that we

will have confidence on the day of judgment, because in this world we

are like him." St. John also used the words, "perfect in love" (18).

This tells us that we must grow in the love of God. When we are born of

God and we acknowledge the love of God, naturally we want to love

others. But the attempt to love others is like a baby in diapers

wanting to love his toys. There are many more people who are born of

the world, not of God. They hate the children of God, who are born of

God, intensely, day and night. It is not easy to love these people. The

only solution is that we must grow in love. Then we can embrace any

kind of people. There is a story. One boy was beaten up and used as a

babysitter and cook for eight years by his step-mother. His step-mother

did not allow him to study during the night. One night, he was

discovered burning kerosene oil in order to study English. His

step-mother came in and stopped him from studying English. She said,

"You have no hope by studying English like that.  I have been an

English teacher at a high school for 20 years, and I don't understand

English well. But you are a kind of bum. For you, trying to study

English is in vain." The step-mother's intention was to stop him from

burning too much kerosene oil. He put out the kerosene lamp and

pretended to sleep. After 40 minutes, he again lighted the kerosene

lamp and began to study English. Then his step-mother came in and

kicked his left eye with her feet, until blood flowed out from the eye.

From then on, the boy's left eye was blinded. At that time, he said to

his step-mother, "Who knows a young man's future? Who knows but that

God would help me to study English and someday teach American

students?" His cry was from his soul. Since then, his tragic moment

motivated him to study English harder than before. God had mercy on him

and introduced Jesus as his personal Savior through English John's

gospel study. The point is not this sad story. The boy became a servant

of God. He wanted to forgive his step-mother. But it did not work as he

wished. He struggled to forgive his step-mother every night for 13

years. Finally, he read the scene of Jesus Christ becoming the atoning

sacrifice on the cross. He learned that he was a selfish and revengeful

Christian. He accepted Jesus' love. Since then, he became a student

evangelist, giving up his pastorate.  To grow in love is a great

battle, maybe the hardest battle. But we must complete the love of God

in our soul. We must perfect the love of God in our soul.

 

Sixth, he loved us first (8-21).

 

    Sometimes we wonder why we must love God and our brothers. Rather,

it seems better to punish those who do wrong and hate them until they

repent. But love involves forgiveness; whether he repented or not, we

must love God's flock.  Again, let's ask the same question, "Why must

we love God and others?" Look at verse 8. "Whoever does not love does

not know God, because God is love." God loved us. So we must love God

and our brothers. This is the key point of the entire teaching of

Christianity. Sometimes hatred comes into our hearts when we see

unthankful people. But we should not hate them. We must love them.

 

    Read verse 9. "This is how God showed his love among us: He sent

his one and only Son into the world that we might live through him."

Love is victory without fighting. In short, love has its divine

initiative. One strict father never forgave his second son for stealing

money from his wallet one time. When his second son came and begged

forgiveness with many tears, his father said, "Well, I will see whether

you do such a thing again during the next three years." This is not

love.  This is legalistic hypocrisy. God loved us first. This one fact

shows us that God is God, and God is love. In John's gospel, the story

about Jesus and the Samaritan woman is indeed inspiring and

unforgettable. For the last 35 years, we have used this story as our

main lecture several hundred times during conferences, both winter

conferences and summer conferences. It is because Jesus loved the

Samaritan woman first. Jesus wanted to visit Galilee. If Jesus walked

from Judea to Galilee on a straight course, it took only three days.

But bigoted Jews wanted to avoid walking through the land of Samaria,

thinking that the Samaritans were the lost 10 tribes who mixed blood

with the Assyrians. So in order to avoid Samaritan territory, they took

six days to go around Samaria to Galilee. But Jesus did not mind

passing through Samaria. Jesus and his disciples walked from early

morning until noontime. They had no food. So the disciples went into a

village to beg some food. Jesus was sitting by the well which was

called Jacob's well or the well of romance, because Jacob saw Rachel at

a well and kissed her and wept with a loud voice (Ge 29:11). The well

was situated in the valley between the mountain of blessing, Gerizim,

and the mountain of curse, Ebal. When Jesus was in deep meditation, a

woman came to draw water. Jesus first spoke to her, "Would you please

give me a drink?" (Jn 4:7) The woman answered, "You are a Jew and I am

a Samaritan." At that time, the Jews did not associate with Samaritans.

Also, it was traditional that men not talk to women in public. But

Jesus spoke to her first in order to give her living water welling up

to eternal life. Jesus knew her past. Jesus knew how lonely she was.

Jesus knew she was lost. But Jesus wanted her to come to know the love

of God and receive eternal life and the kingdom of God as her

inheritance. The problem was that she was so wounded and hurt; she was

totally unlikely to accept Jesus' word. Rather, she could have said,

"What do you mean by that, 'Give me a drink'?" But the woman was melted

by Jesus' love, which took the initiative to speak to her first and she

was fully evangelized and became a missionary to her own village

people. It is indeed an amazing story that the Son of the Holy God

spoke with the most smelly woman at the well of Jacob. We call this

God's initiative. Jesus loved us first. So we must practice God's

initiative and we must put ourselves in divine discipline to learn

God's initiative. This is the first step of learning the love of God.

 

    Look at verse 21. "And he has given us this command: Whoever loves

God must also love his brother." Here we must know that God's word is

absolute and it is imperative. It is not at all an encouragement or

psychological manipulation.  God's love and worldly love are different.

Worldly love depends on each individual's decision. But God's love is a

commandment. When we keep this commandment we will come to know the

truth and the truth sets us free (Jn 8:31,32).

 

    May God richly bless you to practice God's love. May God move your

heart to remember that our origin is of God. May God erase all the

hatred toward others in your soul so that you may be happy all the

time. May God help you practice the love of God.

 

 

 

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