Deep Truth: NAME
Deep Truth: NAME
Deep Truth: NAME
NAME: ___________________________
Deep Truth
Jesus came to rescue and redeem his creation
Most of us come to realise that what we claim to believe about Jesus has
implications for our friends who hold different beliefs. In a world where so
many people have such different views, how could it be possible that one
view is greater than any others? Is there really only one way, one path,
which leads to God? Is believing in God enough? Does what we believe
about Jesus make that much of a difference?
Our understanding of Jesus is critical to our relationship with God and the
above are some of the questions that are addressed in the portion of John’s
letter that we come to today.
Scripture: 1 John 2:22; 4:1-3; 4:9-10
The first test is the ethical test, and for the last few weeks we’ve been drilling
down on this question: How do you live? Do you have a deep walk—a walk of
obedience?
The third test is a doctrinal test: What do you believe? This is the test of our
passages today, and what we will discover is that to live the deep life is to be
rooted and grounded in deep truth. Deep truth has everything to do with our
understanding of who Jesus is.
At the time that John wrote this letter, there was a crisis in the church. There were
those who were leading people away from what Jesus taught about himself, and
the nature of their false teaching is found in these verses: “Who is the liar? It is the
man who denies that Jesus is the Christ” (1 John 2:22); “Every spirit that
acknowledges that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is from God, but every spirit
that does not acknowledge Jesus is not from God” (1 John 4:2–3).
These teachers were denying that Jesus was God in the flesh, as he claimed to be.
There was a certain brand of teaching at this time that argued that Jesus was
really just a person who at the time of his baptism became inhabited by the Spirit
of God, but God’s Spirit left him before the crucifixion. They believed that for
God to connect himself with the material world, human beings, and suffering
would somehow diminish his nature—that coming down to earth as a human was
beyond his station.
John’s reply to this false teaching is clear, definitive, and filled with conviction! To
abandon Jesus’ claims of divinity is to let go of the possibility of living the life that
God has for you. The Incarnation is the deep truth that John urges his followers to
keep at the very centre of their faith and at the core of their lives.
Discussion Questions
c) If believe that God became a man isn’t a selfish, exclusive claim intended
to put people off, what is it?
[DEEP TRUTH – 1 JOHN: GO DEEPER IN CHRIST] 3
a) Read what Jesus says about himself in John 14:9. How does that address
what we are talking about?
b) Read 1 John 2:22. Why do you think John uses such strong language here?
c) Read 1 John 4:1-3. How have you seen this test work for you in determining
truth from a lie?
a) Name practical ways we “live through him” (verse 9). In other words, what
does this look like in our lives?
b) How does the Cross help define what love is (verse 10)?
c) Read Psalm 85. Why is it so important to understand both God’s justice and
love?
Teaching Point Three: Through Jesus, God makes the world right again
Discussion Questions:
a) Jesus did not live like the physical world is an illusion. Give some
examples.
b) How does the restoration of the human heart through the forgiveness of sin
have implications for the physical world as well?
that Jesus is the Christ—God made flesh: our greatest hope, and the greatest
hope for the entire world.
Action Point:
Share with the group one person you would love to
better understand who Jesus is. Pray for that person
and for ways to demonstrate who Christ is to them by
your words and deeds.
How can you show love and goodness on a daily
basis with the hopes of gaining a voice in the world?
What new thing might you do? What might you stop
doing? Discuss your answers in your group.
- Study by Tom van Antwerp, with JoHannah Reardon