Does Theology Divide or Unite us? Follow or Unfollow, Part 1

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Does Theology Divide or Unite us? Follow or Unfollow, Part 1 Message by Tom Mercer February 25-26, 2017 Leader Notes John 17 Here are several things to keep on your radar: This week starts a new series up to Easter. After Easter, we will start on a series on the family and marriage. Busted. Some of you haven t been taking Attendance. We are watching. we are coming after you. Well we really aren t coming after you, but it really does help us if you take attendance and let us know who is in your group. NEW DATABASE. We are in the process of changing our church database. This will certainly change how we take attendance, monitor who is in your group, etc. I will keep you updated when this officially changes over. Don t worry, we will train you as soon as we can. Upcoming all church events. Just keeping you in the loop and share these with your group so they can sign up. Parenting Conference: September 22-23. Dr. Tedd Tripp, author of Shepherding a Child s Heart, will be our guest speaker. INTRODUCTION As your group time begins, use this section to introduce the topic of discussion. 1. Do you agree that what you believe determines what you do? If so, why do we say we believe things that we do not practice? Romans 7:14-25 is the apostle Paul s expression of his struggle with what he believes and his sinful nature. You might want to take your group to that passage and talk through different struggles each of us have. Maybe we believe that debt is bad, but we keep using our credit card for things we can t afford. Or maybe we believe that divorce is wrong, but our situation is the exception to the rule.

2. Do you ever think about what you are passing on to the next generation or to the people around you? Why or why not? One of the ways we steward the message of the gospel is by taking an active role in communicating the story of God. We are, in word and deed, to pass on the gospel not only to those around us but also the generation that comes after us. We see in His prayer from John 17 that Jesus was very concerned about this message goes on, not only because He prayed for those that would come after Him, but because He prayed for the gospel to shine out in the unity, glory, and faith of His followers. UNDERSTANDING Unpack the biblical text to discover what the Scripture says or means about a particular topic. Have a volunteer read John 17:1-26. 3. As you read Jesus prayer, what do you learn about Jesus concern for believers? How does that change or challenge your values or your prayer life? Have a volunteer read John 17:11-23. 4. In your opinion, what beliefs are essential to keep Christians unified? Are any beliefs worth separating over? Here are some categories that you might want to use when talking about what beliefs are essential and what are not. You might want to talk with your small group and put certain topics under each category. If you re really crazy, get out a white board and create some columns and have fun. Biblical Convictions (Essential/ Objective) Without these biblical truths, Christianity and the ability to glorify God no longer exists. Biblical convictions are the doctrines held to be right or true by the church throughout the centuries. Personal Convictions (Situational/Subjective) How does God want me to live in the gray areas of life that are not specifically spelled out in Scripture? Personal convictions are based upon scriptural truth and applied to an individual believer s life. Biblical Beliefs (Non-essential/Objective) True believers in Christ may disagree on these theological beliefs or systems of belief. Biblical beliefs are things that can be demonstrated in Scripture, but are nonessential providing room for differing theological positions.

Personal preferences (Autonomous/Subjective) What do I like, and want, and choose? Personal preferences are things that relate to our convenience and comfort. BIBLICAL CONVICTIONS AND PERSONAL PREFERENCES Personally Subjective PERSONAL CONVICTIONS Biblically Objective BIBLICAL CONVICTIONS Alcohol? Dancing? Cards/Dominoes? Gambling? Internet/Social Networking? Language? Music/Movies? Clothing? Politics? Education? (Public, Private, Home) The Trinity Deity and Humanity of Christ Holiness of God Total Depravity of Man Substitutionary Atonement Salvation by grace through faith alone Sanctification of Believers Physical Resurrection of Christ Physical Return of Christ PERSONAL PREFERENCES BIBLICAL BELIEFS Kind and price of car, clothes, cosmetics Flavor of ice cream Kind of pet? (none, dog, cat, bird, fish, reptile, rodent) Leisure time? (sports, hobbies, service, study) Toilet paper/paper towels to unroll from front or back side? Style/Genre of music and instruments Creation (6 days, 6 ages, evolution) Personal Holiness? (faith, works, Holy Spirit) Biblical Interpretation? (literal, figurative, mystical) Mode of baptism? (immersion, sprinkling) Role of Women? (women s ministry, deaconess, pastor) Form of church government? (Congregational, Elder) Rapture of the Church? (Pre/Mid/Post Tribulation) Second Coming of Christ? (Pre/A/Post Millennial) 5. Why do you think unity is so important to Jesus? How can we encourage unity for the next generation? 6. How does our unity in the church (or lack of it) affect the power of the Gospel? 7. Why do so many churches struggle to be unified? What does a lack of unity communicate about the way we view God and the Gospel? Jesus prayer shows His deep concern for unity among the relationships of His followers. Unity is not sameness, nor does it mean holding the same opinions, agreeing on every matter. Unity among Christians means acting out of their relationship with Jesus loving one another with Jesus love, obeying His commands, and working together in His redemptive mission. Love for Jesus, faithfulness to Him, and a sense of needing one another to do His work will unite His people in ultimate service and glory to Him.

APPLICATION Help your group identify how the truths from the Scripture passage apply directly to their lives. Have a volunteer read John 17:17-19. 8. To be sanctified means to be set apart. How can you be set apart as a Christian and yet still engage with the unbelieving members of your oikos? Why is that so difficult? Romans 12:2 tells us to not be conformed to the world but to be transformed by the renewing of our mind. This might help us understand how we interact with a culture that has a different set of values and how we are be set apart. We must understand that being in the world, but not of it, is necessary if we are to be a light to those who are in spiritual darkness. We are to live in such a way that those outside the faith see our good deeds and our manner and know that there is something different about us. Christians who make every effort to live, think and act like those who do not know Christ do Him a great disservice. Even the pagan knows that by their fruits you shall know them, and as Christians, we should exhibit the fruit of the Spirit within us. Sometimes when we hear we are set-apart we think we have to reject everything the world does. We have to be nonconformists. Being in the world also means we can enjoy the things of the world, such as the beautiful creation God has given us, but we are not to immerse ourselves in what the world values, nor are we to chase after worldly pleasures. If the world wears buttons and bows, we don t wear buttons and bows, or if the world wears lipstick, we don t wear lipstick. We try to show ways in which we are different from the world. But that s not what the Bible is talking about. It s not just a matter of being different from the world; we are to go beyond nonconformity to transformation. That fits with everything the Scripture tells us of being salt and light to the world. Something that is transformed is something that is changed 9. Pastor Tom talked about the difference between being nice and being kind. Can you think of a personal situation that needs your kindness instead of your niceness? Explain. Just as a reminder Kind people are focused on others. They want to help people who are in need. Nice people are focused on themselves. They do nice things so that others will think they re nice. Kind people are strong. Nice people are weak. Kind people are selfless. Nice people are selfish. Kind people feel empathy. Nice people are narcissistic. Kind people have a full measure of joy. Nice people settle for less. Kind people are motivated by love. Nice people are motivated by fear. 10. In John 17:24, Jesus expresses his heart for the lost. Share with your group the name of one person from your oikos who doesn t know the Lord and then spend some time in your group praying for each person by name.

COMMENTARY John 17 17:6-7. The disciples heard about God and his plan from the Son. Most sons probably reflect their fathers, perhaps in facial features, height, hair color, personality, and sometimes even world view. Jesus specifically identified his task in the world as one of revelation to a select group of people chosen by the Father. God took human form to communicate with the world. The first act of the Son in drawing disciples unto himself in the vibrant relationship of new life was to tell them and show them what the Father is like. Believers are gifts from the Father to the Son. All people belong to the Father by creation, but those who trust in the Son and relate to him by faith become God s children by redemption. 17:8. Jesus spoke only what his Father had told him. He can describe his own teaching ministry by saying, I gave them the words you gave me. In this verse the Lord also talked about edification. When Paul stayed three years with the Ephesians declaring God s truth, he followed the example of Jesus who did the same thing with these disciples (Acts 20:17-21). 17:9-10. The Lord also spoke of intercession. Verse 9 contains the curious phrase, I am not praying for the world. We should not infer here that the Lord never prayed for the world. This particular prayer focuses on those believers you have given me and emphasizes again the reality of the Bible s teaching on election. The switch to the present tense is an important notification of the Lord s on-going ministry. One paraphrase of this verse says, And all of them, since they are mine, belong to you; and you have given them back to me with everything else of yours, and so they are my glory! What a stunning reality! Faltering, failing, sinning human beings represent the glory of the holy Son of God! 17:11. Jesus brought before the Father the fact that his people would be staying in the world after he left. The word world occurs eighteen times in this prayer. This is a strong testimony to the importance of the context of our lives and ministry. The address Holy Father is unique here in the New Testament. The NIV Study Bible says, The name suggests both remoteness and nearness; God is both awe-inspiring and loving. 17:15-17. How is it possible to be in the world and yet not of the world? These verses answer that question. Whatever the biblical doctrine of separation might mean, it certainly does not mean isolation. Jesus prayed not for removal from the world but for an awareness of its evils so they could be avoided. The danger is not the general presence of evil but the evil one. The New Testament indicates that the world is in the ultimate control of the prince of the power of the air who does battle against the living God by affecting the lives of his people. The antidote is sanctification. 17:18-19. From the very first days of Christianity, true believers have practiced separation by infiltration. The Father sent the Son into the world and now the Son was sending the believers into the world. Here the Lord introduced the word sanctify in different verb forms. In effect, he said, Lead these disciples to an act of dedication as I have dedicated myself to your work. Then as they live their lives for you, Father, they will ultimately enjoy the fixed and final dedication you bestow upon them. 17:20 21. If we had any doubt that this prayer applies to believers today, it is erased by verse 20.

The heart of this final paragraph of the chapter focuses on unity the ultimate demonstration of God s work through his people in the world. We learn here that body unity is patterned after divine unity. The absolute oneness of the Father and the Son will now be spiritually transferred to believers for a specific purpose spiritual unity. The union of the church is not patterned after some earthly organization or any well-meaning intentions of humanity. God joins our spirits through the Holy Spirit because Jesus blood is thicker than water and thicker than human bonds. 17:22. Christian unity is facilitated by glory, first given to Christ and then in turn to the disciples. Glory (doxa) in this context is not an absolute attribute of God but a relative possession that can be reassigned to believers. Some interpreters see heaven here, but there would be no point in such a futuristic view with respect to the mission statement of verse 23: to let the world know that you sent me. Peter wrote that the divine nature was already in us as a result of regeneration, so we already have a measure of the glory of Jesus himself. 17:23. We also learn in this passage that body unity is a witness to the world. Like a set of matched mixing bowls, we are the smaller one that fits into Christ who fits into the Father. Mixing bowls may provide too mundane a metaphor here, but Jesus teaching about the vine and the branches in chapter 15 is affirmed by this prayer of chapter 17. The unity of believers calls forth a recognition of God s hand by observers in the world even while the church is on earth. Just a few hours before this prayer, Jesus told the disciples, By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another (13:35). 17:24. Furthermore, body unity will be complete only in heaven. If the disciples listened to this prayer, they may have remembered Jesus teaching from chapter 14 as he promised them they would eventually arrive at the place where he was going. He wanted them to see him there. They had seen him scorned and hated on earth. Soon they would see him killed and buried. But they had never seen the splendor of heaven and his role as the Son of the Father. We see just a touch of humanity in this verse. Just as we invite our friends home to show them how hard we have worked to make it attractive and comfortable, so Jesus looked forward to the time when all his people would be in his Father s house. What a reminder that our Lord was always a pilgrim and stranger on earth. Now he prayed for guests to visit his eternal home. Notice also that heaven is heaven because of the presence of the Savior, not because of any other physical or material accoutrements. The glory of verse 24 seems different than what we saw in verse 22. Here believers observe it but do not partake in it personally, so we focus now on an attribute of deity. The glory and splendor that belong to Christ in heaven are a gift from his Father. This gift was motivated by love that the Father had before the foundation of the world. Before Adam, the Father loved the Son. This love will continue throughout all eternity so that believers may see its effects in the heavenly position afforded the Messiah. 17:25 26. Again we find the contrast between the world and disciples we saw in verses 9, 14, 16. The words Righteous Father in reference to God appear only here in the New Testament. They appeal to the justice of God. The world will be excluded from final glory because it has rejected the only means of grace. But the disciples, and all believers, live life with a divine viewpoint because they have known the incarnate God. The exegesis of the Father that occupied Christ s ministry is both complete and continuous. Complete in the sense that the incarnation demonstrated what God was like to those who would listen. Continuous in

that it will go on as long as the world lasts. The impact of the latter part of the verse suggests that the very person of Christ lives in us. Through that inseparable union, we are recipients of divine love. The church of Jesus Christ dare not let the pagan society preempt its keynote theme of love. The love of God in the Son and consequently in the church marks Christians and enables them to reflect and communicate God s love.