1 John 1:5--2:14 · Walking in the Light
The Joy of Shared Truth
1 John 1:5--2:14
Sermon
by Paul E. Robinson
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The chasm between the realities in which two different people live can be vast. Such was the case in July of 2000 in Pompano Beach, Florida. Jamie Dean Petron, aged 41, had killed and injured two victims in a robbery there, when he then forced his way into the home of seventeen-year-old Althea Mills, who was there with some younger relatives. 

Althea was threatened by the gunman, but she said that she kept taking comfort from a verse of scripture she had learned, 2 Timothy 1:7: "... for God did not give us a spirit of timidity but a spirit of power and love and self-control." 

In the midst of this horrifying circumstance, Althea quietly began teaching her eight-year-old cousin to pray. Overhearing what she was doing, the gunman began to ask Althea about repentance and forgiveness. She then told him about God's forgiveness offered in Jesus. For 51 hours Jamie Petron held this family hostage, apparently even making some attempt to pray. Sadly, the gunman finally took his life to end the ordeal.1

Think of the gap between Althea Mills and Jamie Petron's realities and experiences! I have been impressed all my life by the difficulty of transferring hope and faith and truth from one person to another, from one brain to another, from one soul to another. Have you noticed that, too? 

I will never forget that walk across the bridge over the BargeCanal by the locks in Baldwinsville, New York. I was a young teenager returning from a summer ecumenical service at the Baptist church. I had my Bible in hand and suddenly a humbly dressed man stopped me on the sidewalk and said, "Son, can you tell me what's in that book?" From the mind of a youth to the mind of an elderly man, toughened and hardened by the rough edges of his life, is a far piece. I felt it then, and I felt it some years later, only from a different direction. 

When I was going through my most difficult spiritual desert, when faith seemed an inaccessible goal, I turned to people who seemed to possess faith. Those who knew me well eagerly turned to me to share their faith. Yet, not much of their enthusiastic sharing of faith made it across the gulf, even when I was eagerly reaching out for it. That, I found, was primarily God's business. 

Do you know what I'm talking about? 

The author of the first letter of John is trying with all his might to bridge that chasm between him and his readers. You can see some of that in the fact that he dispenses with the usual salutation at the beginning of his letter and plunges right in immediately: 

That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon and touched with our hands, concerning the word of life -- the life was made manifest, and we saw it, and testify to it, and proclaim to you the eternal life which was with the Father and was made manifest to us -- that which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you.... -- 1 John 1:1-3a (RSV) 

Do you hear that? He's trying in every way to convince his readers that what he's talking about is real. He and other disciples have heard and seen with their very eyes and touched this word of life, this Jesus. Such enthusiasm, yet such awareness of how impossible it must come across to others -- just too good to be true. Will anyone ever believe it? 

Have you ever had such an overwhelming experience that when you begin to tell someone about it you realize that there is no way to get it across to them? As you earnestly recount this great event, you notice the glazed look in their eyes, confirming your worst fears. They want to understand, but ... 

I really believe that this is the basic issue we face today in the church as we seek to get the gospel message out. The words of scripture and our experience of the Holy God are light years from what's going on in the minds of those young adults driving cars with the "thump, thump, thump" bass sounds we hear a half mile away.

The gap between these words of scripture and the world you children and youth sitting here in church today live in is huge! The question is whether the church is willing to take the time and energy to do whatever it takes to bridge that gap and enable the message to get through to you. 

The author of First John had the motivation to do so, and verse 4 tells us what it was: "And we are writing this that our joy may be complete." There really is a tremendous joy in finally connecting with another person with the truth of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. There is a great exhilarating rush of joy in knowing that another person has gotten a glimpse of the possibility of hope and peace through putting one's hand in the hand of God through Jesus Christ.

Our world is desperately searching for the real and the true. And one of the things that makes the search so difficult is the media and Hollywood, which are making the unreal so real that no one is sure what is real and what isn't. This spills over of course into the spiritual, as well. 

A recent special issue of Forbes Magazine had as its theme, What Is True? It reminded me of Pilate's question spoken when dealing with Jesus, "What is truth?" (John 18:38). This issue of Forbes was a fascinating compilation of articles about what is real in the digital age. One of the articles was by Danny Hillis, a designer of one of the fastest supercomputers in the world. He told of going to Disney World with his children. His young son Noah made the intriguing comment: "Dad, this is a fake Disneyland." A fake Disneyland. Does that make Disneyland real? Is it?

He also told about his five-year-old daughter, India, who one day showed him her craft project, an animal made from fresh fruit. "It's a dog," she told him. Sensing his puzzlement she added, "Well, actually, it's a banana. If you make a banana into a dog, it's a dog. But it's still a banana." Did you follow all that? Danny Hillis concluded his article with these two sentences: "I have learned to relax, and enjoy the ambiguity. I no longer believe in the Real."

Danny Hillis does not have a corner on that mindset. The world is coming to assume that when you get down to the basic structure of things there may very well be just a Star Trek holodeck, and what seems real is just a bunch of zeros and ones in a computer or just a bunch of chemicals randomly forming things, as beautiful crystals are formed on a string dangling in a supersaturated solution of salt and water. Is that really all there is, as the old song goes? People today hover between a fear and a belief that that is so. If we as disciples of Jesus Christ do not share the Good News, who will? 

Remember that hymn: "What a fellowship, what a joy divine leaning on the everlasting arms...." It is a great joy and leads to great fellowship, when instead of hesitantly leaning on technology and layers of images, one "gets it" and is able to cross the great chasm, take the leap of faith, and dare to lean on the everlasting arms, the real, present Holy Spirit of God. 

Saint Paul wrote in his letter to the Philippians, "... complete my joy by being of the same mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind" (Philippians 2:1 RSV). 

Being of one mind does not mean that we will all agree on the details of the great mysteries of life and death. But it does mean that we will be a fellowship that stands joyfully and faithfully under the guidance and love and challenge of the Holy Spirit, ready and eager to walk in the footsteps of Jesus, as best we know how. 

That, my friends, is the Church at its best. What a fellowship, what a joy divine, leaning not on drugs or hype or a Sabres or Bills win, or a good salary or even a job; leaning not on the good life, the test coming out well, or the pet surviving; leaning not on good weather for the party or a good outcome of the conversation with a child or parent or boss. 

The fellowship the writer of First John is talking about is a fellowship that deepens by leaning together on the everlasting arms of God, seen, heard and touched in Jesus, and proclaimed by those first disciples. Those first disciples were hoping and praying that those who have not touched or seen or heard with their own eyes might believe their testimony, even as Jesus told doubting Thomas, "Blessed are those who don't see and yet believe...." 

Those first disciples are rooting for you and for me today. Do you hear them? Will we respond with faith? Ah, the joy of sharing the truth of God, even across the eons of time.


1. Found in The Interpreter, November/December 2000, p. 20.      

CSS Publishing Company, Sermons for Sundays in Lent and Easter, by Paul E. Robinson