FOURTH
SUNDAY OF ADVENT - THE GIFT OF LOVE
CONNECT
I have preached Christmas messages now for 45 years. This year I asked the
Lord, “Help me approach this in a fresh way, a way that opens up the wonder of
Christmas to those who have heard the story more than I have preached it!
TENSION
Maybe Christmas has lost its wonder for you. The stress of the season has
caused the meanings of Christmas to dim under the weight of all you feel you
must do.
SOLUTION
The truth is that the story never gets old. Christmas is a wonder to imagine
year after year. This year our Advent
series is called “The Gifts of Christmas”;
today is the 4th Sunday, the Love Sunday. We will explore the gift of love and
let it fill our hearts again with the blessing of the coming of Jesus.
TEXT
Everyone please turn to 1 John 4:10 (NIV) and put a finger
or a marker there; I’ll get there is a bit!
INSTRUCTION
Advent means ‘arrival’ or ‘emergence’. Let’s see how
the word ’love’ is used in its arrival or emergence in the Old and New
Testaments.
One principle of understanding the Bible is called the
’Law of First Mention’. The first time something is mentioned, the way it is
used determines the way it will be used in the rest of the Bible.
R.T. Kendall explained that the “law of first mention”
is “a time-honored hermeneutical method” stating that “the way a word is first
used in the Bible will be the way this word is largely understood thereafter.”
Similarly, popular pastor David Jeremiah stated the
following about this principle, “Those who study the Bible in a serious way
sometimes refer to the Law of First Mention. It’s not so much a law, really, as
a common principle in the Scriptures. If you select an important biblical
word—say, worship—you’ll find that its first biblical appearance sets the tone
for all the richness of meaning that will emerge. Through the Word we go on to
find many new understandings and many variations on the theme, but the first
cut is the deepest; the First Mention gives us the essential picture.
In his commentary “The Genesis Record “, Henry Morris
stopped just short of claiming that a word’s fundamental meaning is inexorably
linked to its first mention. While discussing the Bible’s first use of the word
love, found in Genesis 22:2, Morris stated the following, “We have frequently
in these pages referred to the “principle of first mention,” pointing out that,
when an important word or concept occurs for the first time in the Bible,
usually in the Book of Genesis, the context in which it occurs sets the pattern
for its primary usage and development all through the rest of Scripture. If
this principle really means anything (and, in terms both of the doctrine of
verbal inspiration and of numerous clear examples, it assuredly does), then it
should certainly apply in a distinctive way to the word “love.”
Let’s see how the word ’love’ is used when it is first
mentioned in the Old Testament…
Genesis
22:2 (NKJV)
Then He said, “Take now your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love,
Jack Hayford writes… Only son” translates the Hebrew
word ’yachid’. Yachid describes Abraham’s unique miracle child, Isaac.
Zechariah describes that the Messiah will one day become to Israel’s repentant,
weeping citizens: a precious only son.
Zechariah
12:10 (NKJV)
And I will pour on the house of David and on the inhabitants of Jerusalem the
Spirit of grace and supplication; then they will look on Me whom they pierced.
Yes, they will mourn for Him as one mourns for his only son, and grieve for Him
as one grieves for a firstborn.
and
go to the land of Moriah and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the
mountains of which I shall tell you.”
Here the place where God told Abraham to sacrifice his
son Isaac is the same place where God sacrificed His own Son: the hills of
Moriah in Jerusalem.
Equally noteworthy is that the phrase ‘His only
begotten Son’ in John 3:16 in the Hebrew New Testament is: ‘His Son, His
Yachid.’
Now let’s see the first mention in the New Testament.
Let me talk about the NT timeline before we look at the verse.
The OT is recorded, for the most part, in
chronological order. This is not true in the NT. The four gospels all record
the life of Jesus but do so in their own unique way. They do not include the
same stories and sometimes in different order. Because of this, the events are
not in chronological order like the OT. You need what is called a ’Harmony of
the Gospels’ that arranges the events of Jesus’ life in chronological order. If
you look in a harmony you can determine the first mention of ’love’ in the NT.
John
3:16 (NKJV)
For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever
believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.
INSPIRATION
Wow, you can’t escape the parallel. The sacrifice of Isaac is a picture of the
sacrifice of Christ. Father Abraham offering up his ’only begotten son’, Isaac,
is a picture of Father God offering up His ’only begotten Son’, Jesus.
There are also some important differences. God
provided a lamb for Isaac; Jesus is the Lamb slain before the foundation of the
world. To Abraham, God is revealed as ’Jehovah Jireh’, the God who supplies. To
the world, God is revealed as the loving Father who has provided again!
I have finally gotten to our text! 1
John 4:10 (NIV) This is love: not
that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning
sacrifice for our sins.
This has always been and forever will be the message of
Christmas. Love has come!
APPLICATION
What do we learn from the ’law of first mention’ here?
Love is always a demonstration, doing something. It is
not simply a feeling or an emotion.
Romans
5:8 (NKJV)
But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still
sinners, Christ died for us.
1
John 3:18 (NKJV)
My little children, let us not love in word or in tongue, but in deed and in
truth.
1.
Love is demonstrated by giving.
John
3:16 (NKJV)
God so loved the world that He gave…
1 John 4:9 (NKJV) In this the love of God was manifested
toward us, that God has sent His only begotten Son into the world, that we
might live through Him.
2.
Love is demonstrated by sacrifice.
1
John 4:10 (NIV)
This is love: …that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice…
3.
Love is demonstrated by obedience.
1
John 2:5 (NKJV)
But whoever keeps His word, truly the love of God is perfected in him. By this
we know that we are in Him.
4.
Love is demonstrated by faith.
1
John 4:16 (NLT)
We know how much God loves us, and we have put our trust in his love…
ACTION
STEPS
Four
simple questions: Who? What? Where? How?
- Who am I giving to?
- What am I sacrificing?
- Where am I being obedient?
- How am I showing faith?
This leaves two more questions: When and Why?