"Just As He Is Holy"
All Saints Day [Observed]
Twenty-First Sunday after Pentecost
November 6, 2011
1John 3:1-3

The first thing to do is see. Don’t just look. Really see. See what
kind of love God the Father loves us with. See that this is love we
have from Him because He gives it to us. That’s what John says in the
Epistle reading: “See what kind of love the Father has given to us.”

That’s a word you should think of when you think of the Father: given.
We have what we have because He has given it to us. John is telling us
about the kind of love we have from the Father. It is love He has
given us. What kind of love is that? Love that is free. Love that is
not forced on us. Love that doesn’t expect something of us first.

It’s simply love that is given. That’s what God likes to do, give. He
gives. He loves. He showers down upon us His love. He’s a giving God.
He’s a loving God. See what kind of love this is!, John says.

What kind of love is it that He’s given us? The second thing we will
see is that we are children of God. Why are we children of God?
Because we are called children of God.

It’s interesting, isn’t it, that we are called children of God? Why
doesn’t God just make us His children? Why aren’t we just naturally
His children? In one sense we are. Everyone is a child of God.
Everyone was created by Him. But John is being more specific here.
He’s talking about us Christians. We are children of God, but we have
to be called children of God to be so.

The reason this is is because we ran away from home. We were created
by God, in His eternal family, but we renounced our inheritance. We
struck out on our own. It’s tempting to blame this on Adam and Eve.
They’re the ones who sinned in the Garden. They’re the ones who messed
it up for the rest of us. This is true. But it’s also true that we are
more than ready to follow in their ancestral footsteps. We sin. We go
our own way. We shy away from God our Heavenly Father.

And so He calls us. He calls us His children. He restores us to His
eternal family. See what kind of love this is. It is love that doesn’t
just take for granted that we are His children because He is our
Father. It is love that seeks us out. It is love that says, “Even
though My precious children have gone away, I love them. Even though
they rejected My Fatherhood and My love I have given to them, I will
continue to love them. I will remind them who they are. I will call
them My very own children.”

When God says something, it is what He says it is. So when here in the
Epistle reading we’re told that we’re called children of God, well,
that’s what we are. God calls us His children, His children is who we
are.

There’s something that goes along with being the children of God in
the world. The world doesn’t know us. John says that plainly. How are
we to take that? Is it a good thing? Kind of like, we’re covert
operatives in the world for God? Or is it a bad thing? Perhaps along
the lines of, we’re children of God but we have a kind of reverse
identity crisis: we know who we are but no one else does. How are we
to relate with others?

On whether the world not knowing us is a good thing or a bad thing,
John doesn’t just say that the world doesn’t know us, he says that the
reason the world doesn’t know us is because it didn’t know God. It’s
plain that this is a bad thing. The world not knowing God is the
problem. The world not knowing God means they don’t know His love He
gives to them. Not knowing God means not knowing that He is their
Father and they are His children.

We know this. We know that the world doesn’t know God and we therefore
know that the world doesn’t know us. That’s a bad thing. It’s not a
good thing. In a sense we’re covert operatives. But in a another sense
we are the people who show the world what it means to know God; what
it means to be children of the Heavenly Father; what it means to live
as ones who receive love from God and are called by Him to be His
children.

This is why John reiterates that we are God’s children: “Beloved, we
are God’s children now.” This is who we are. This is who we are even
now, even as we live and breathe in this world. We are the children of
God even as we live among those who do not know God, who do not know
who we are. If you ever have a bit of an identity crisis, know that
you are in good company. Your brother and sister Christians are in the
same boat with you. You are the children of God, even now.

Even so, there’s another aspect to put in the mix. You might very well
be having an identity crisis because though you are a child of God,
you are not who you will be. You are the recipient of God’s love. You
are His child. But what you will be has not yet been revealed. So, we
know who we are, but we don’t? How’s that for an identity crisis?
“Beloved, you are, even now, the children of God! But!, you are not
who you will be”?!? At this point if we had been listening to John’s
Epistle being read we might have been tempted to interrupt. “John, can
I get to you explain what’s going on here?”

He does exactly that. John tells us another thing we know, identity
crisis or not: “we know that when He appears we shall be like Him.”
Who we will be will be revealed when Christ appears again. Who we will
be will be like Jesus. That’s some kind of statement. We will be like
God. It’s really interesting how John comes full circle here. That was
the problem old Adam and Eve were having. Satan convincing them to
partake of the fruit, because, after all, then you will be like God.
John here is doing the opposite of Satan, however. He, under
inspiration of the Holy Spirit, is stating the reality of what God
Himself will bring about: we will be like God. It won’t come through
the eating of any fruit of a tree of knowledge. It will come about
through God bringing it about in Christ coming again on the Last Day.

When He comes again in glory, how is it that He will bring it about?
As John says: “because we shall see Him as He is.” This is an amazing
statement. We shall see Him as He is. It’s not really so much amazing
because we will see God face to face; although that will be pretty
amazing! It’s really more amazing because of what God does to make
this happen. It’s not so much that He will transport us to heaven, and
then, voilà!, we will be in the presence of God. It’s that He will
show us who He is in the Second Person of the Trinity. In Jesus we
will see who God is. We will see Him as He is. And then, astonishing
as it is, we will be like Him!

This God stuff is first and always about Jesus. Being the children of
God is never apart from God being our Heavenly Father in Jesus. God is
not just our Father. He is our Father in His Son. We are not just the
children of God. We are God’s children in Jesus, the Son of God. It’s
in a similar way to those Beatitudes we heard Jesus speak. We are not
just blessed in a generic way. We are blessed specifically in Christ.
It is because of the One speaking the Beatitudes that we are the
blessed who are the poor in spirit, etc.

This is the kind of tension the Beatitudes bring to bear on our lives.
We are blessed. Of that there is certainty. We are also poor in
spirit. We mourn. We hunger and thirst for righteousness. We are meek.
The Beatitudes paint a portrayal of us Christians as ones who don’t
necessarily look particularly blessed. That’s why there’s hope. John
says, “everyone who thus hopes in Him.” He is stating this in the same
way he has stated God’s love and we being God’s children. We hope in
God. It’s certain, but doesn’t always seem so. We are blessed, but
doesn’t always appear to be.

Hope is one of those things we’d probably just as soon do without.
There’s a sense of expectancy. But you never quite know for sure until
it actually comes about, don’t you? When you hope for something, you
want it to happen but don’t know for sure it will happen until it
happens. The word John uses, though, isn’t ‘for’ but ‘in’. We hope in
God. We don’t hope for Him, as if we hope He’s real. We hope in Him.
It’s altogether certain even if we may feel like we’re not all
altogether certain of it. With God hope is a thing of certainty. Not
because we hope really hard. Because of God. Because His call to us to
hope is grounded in His promises. Remember the kind of love we have?
It is love He has given us. Remember what that means for us? It means
we are His children. He calls us His children. He calls us to hope.

What comes out of this hope is what today’s celebration in the Church
Year is all about. The celebration of All Saints. Saints are holy
ones. John says that “everyone who thus hopes in Him purifies
himself.” This word ‘purify’ comes from the Greek word for ‘holy’ and
it’s where we get our English word ‘saint’. A saint is one who is
holy; one who is pure.

How does one become pure, holy? Is there anything you need to do? Is
there any way to get rid of all the filth and the sin? Is there any
way to purify yourself, to make yourself holy? As it happens, there
is. In living your life as God has called you to live, it’s all about
the hope. “Everyone who thus hopes in Him purifies himself.” John here
is talking about the life we live. We normally call it sanctification.
Living in a way pleasing to God. Living in accordance with the Ten
Commandments. Living this way doesn’t save us, but it does indeed
purify us. We don’t live this way in order for God to love us but we
do live this way because God loves us. It is absolutely appropriate
that we Christians be exhorted to live godly lives in order that we
may walk in a manner worthy of our calling.

That it’s all laid out in the Ten Commandments is a tremendous
blessing. It’s a blessing to know that instead of seeking my neighbor
harm I should help him in his need. It’s a blessing that instead of
seeking gratification outside of the bond of marriage God gives
wonderful blessings within the bond of marriage. It’s a blessing to
know that instead of deceiving others I should be speaking what is
true and good. It’s a blessing to defend others and put the best
construction on their actions rather than tearing them down. It’s a
blessing to be happy for others in what they own and be content with
what we own. It’s a blessing to give thanks for and to honor and obey
our parents and those in authority over us as servants God has placed
in our lives for our good.

These are the things that make up the purified life of the saints of
God. These are the examples given us from the saints who have gone
before us.

We have seen what kind of love the Father gives us. We have seen that
He calls us His children. We have seen that the world doesn’t know us,
even as it doesn’t know God. We have seen that what we will be has not
yet appeared, but will when our Lord Jesus Christ appears and we will
be like Him, because we shall see Him as He is. This is the hope we
have. We hope in Him because of His promise. In this we are purified,
made holy. In this way we are saints.

You will wake up tomorrow a saint of God. Tomorrow you will wake up
and you will live another day as you have done before. You will sin.
You will not live in purity as God calls you to live. So how does that
square with you being a saint? Because you are already a saint. When
God calls you His child He declares you holy. The hope you have in
Christ is hope based in the promise of God that you will be like
Christ. In this life there is always that tension of being saint and
sinner simultaneously. All the more reason for hope. All the more
reason to know that your true hope is in Christ, not in yourself. In
this life, as one who is a saint, you are more and more sanctified,
made more and more holy, conforming to the image of God’s
only-begotten Son.

It’s an amazing thing, as all of this is amazing. See what kind of
love the Father has given us, that He has made us saints. See the kind
of love in calling us His children through His Son Jesus Christ. We
know the promise is reliable, that He will come again in glory. We
know it’s true because we know what He has already done, just as He
promised. He suffered, He died, He rose. To make us holy, just as He
is holy. He did all this to give us ears to hear our Heavenly Father
call us His children. Amen.

SDG


--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
6801 Easton Ct., San Diego, California 92120
619.583.1436
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
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