Occupation With
Christ; Motivation; 1 John 2:14
1 John
John has nothing to say to
the mature believer because the mature believer in the congregation is not
having a problem with the false teaching of the early Gnostic type of teaching
that was there, they are not having a problem with licentiousness; the mature
believers are doctrinally squared away and they apply the doctrine they know.
The second category, though, has some problems. These are the young men, the
adolescent believers. The summary issue if given in verse
13—“because you have overcome the evil one [Satan].” What that means
John is going to explain particularly in terms of the cosmic system, starting
in verse 15.
The more we have mastered the
basic spiritual skills the more we understand what God has done for us. Grace
orientation and doctrinal orientation work together. We understand more of what
God has done for us and that motivates us to truly love God. This has to do
with a deep and profound understanding of everything that God has done for us
in salvation, of the forty things that God has provided for us, all of the
spiritual assets that he has given us, and how to use them. We come to know
God; we move from just knowing who He is. Once we establish this in our soul,
when we really come to understand who and what God is, that motivates us to a
consistent love for all mankind based on Christ’s love, and our focus in on
Christ, then the last stage which is inner happiness begins to fall into place.
Inner happiness is the consequence of mastering these other skills. No matter
how difficult things around us might be we can have an inner stability,
tranquillity and contentment with or without. That is why Paul is able to say
in Philippians 4:12, 13 NASB “I know how to get along with humble
means, and I also know how to live in prosperity; in any and every circumstance
I have learned the secret of being filled and going hungry, both of having
abundance and suffering need.
This is the stage that we are
shooting for in the Christian life or Christian maturity. So John starts there.
“I have written to you, fathers…” This is an aoristic present tense, he is
writing at that particular moment, and he is going to express the purpose for
writing to mature believers, “because you know Him.” Here he uses a causal hoti [o(ti] to explain his reason for writing; “you know Him,” perfect active
indicative of ginosko [ginwskw], and there the knowledge has to do with
relationship, it is not just academic knowledge. This is a knowledge of believers
who have spent years studying doctrine and building a relationship with God,
and they know Him and understand Him. It says in the text: “because you know
Him,” and there we have a third person singular relative pronoun which sets up
a relative phrase: “because you have come to know the one who was from the
beginning.” The question is: is he talking about God the Father or God the Son?
Two things play into our
understanding that he is talking about the Lord Jesus Christ. First of all, he in going to mention the Father specifically at the
end of the verse. Secondly, there
is an issue facing the congregation that has to do with a false understanding
of who Jesus Christ is. We went through that at the beginning of the epistle.
There are a couple of verses we need to go to in order to establish eternality
in relationship to the Lord Jesus Christ.
Isaiah 9:6 NASB
“For a child will be born to us, a son will be given to us; And the government
will rest on His shoulders; And His name will be called Wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace.”
This is talking about the second person of the Trinity who will become
incarnate through virgin conception and birth, and be born in
The phrase we have in 1 John
So John is saying: “I have
written to you, fathers, because you know Him who has been from the beginning.”
This is the doctrine of occupation with Christ. There are passages we need to
keep in mind in understanding this concept.
Hebrews
chapter eleven detailed Old Testament heroes who did not give up despite
opposition. Hebrews 12:1, 2 NASB
“Therefore, since we have so great a cloud of witnesses surrounding us, let us
also lay aside every encumbrance and the sin which so easily entangles us, and
let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, fixing our eyes on
Jesus, the author and perfecter of faith, who for the joy set before Him
endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of
the throne of God.” The challenge her is to get our
priorities straight, to figure out what it is in our life that distracts us
from applying doctrine, from learning doctrine, from getting to Bible class. We
have to decide on our priorities and then make decisions about what we are
going to do in life, and not do, based on that. Ultimately we do this by
reaching this stage of occupation with Christ. At this point the writer of
Hebrews says we have to put our focus on Jesus Christ, He is the model for how
we face adversity. No person ever faced more persecution and adversity than the
Lord Jesus Christ and he did it in His humanity through the filling of God the
Holy Spirit. He was a model for us and He set the pattern and the precedent for
the spiritual life on the church age. So we have to come to understand who He
is, what He went through in His life and on the cross, because that is our
standard. We are to put our focus on Jesus.
It was for the joy set before
Him that Christ endured the cross. He put up with the rejection, the
opposition, and went through more torment and pain than any of us will ever go
through. He also went through the cultural shame that was associated with the
kind of death that He went through. In His humanity Jesus Christ was just as
much influenced by His culture as we are and in His humanity it was a shameful
way to be treated and to die. He did not consider that to be something to discourage
Him from fulfilling God’s plan for His life, so He endured the cross, all of
the physical suffering, the shame also applied to the degradation that He
endured as perfect righteousness bearing our sin in His body on the cross. 2
Corinthians
1 Peter 1:8 NASB “and
though you have not seen Him, you love Him…” This is the contrast. Peter
learned this in the episode with Thomas right before the ascension of our Lord.
At that point Jesus said: “Blessed are they who have believed having not seen
me.” It is one thing to believe like Thomas did because He saw the historical
evidence of Jesus Christ right before his eyes, but Jesus said it is greater to
believe on the testimony of others as opposed to having that personal
eye-witness empirical data before you at the time. So Peter says “though you
have not seen Him, you love Him.” It takes more to love someone you don’t have
empirical contact with. We only come to know that person because we read about
him. We know our Lord Jesus Christ only through what the Scriptures tell us. “…
and though you do not see Him now, but believe in Him, you greatly rejoice with
joy inexpressible and full of glory.” The interesting thing about the first epistle
of Peter is that the focus is on how to face adversity and suffering, and one
of the first things he focuses his readers on at the beginning of the epistle
is Jesus Christ and their love for Him, because they had come to know Him even
though they did not have personal appointments with Him. So it takes more to
love someone we do not have a relationship with.
John
Then John goes on to talk to
the young men in 1 John 2:14, the adolescent believers.