From the Archive:

Am I Walking in the Light?
When you sin, do you approach the Father with a view of yourself as His enemy? Do you approach Him as one on the outside of fellowship with him? When a child of God sins, is he immediately and necessarily lost—cut out of fellowship with God? One does not have to be taught this in order to begin to relate to God in this way. If this does describe your understanding of sin in the life of a child of God, please stop reading this article and read 1John 1:1-2:6.
Really. Please. Take your time.
What John has to say is relevant for saints who are asking themselves whether they are truly in fellowship with the Father. My interest in addressing this topic is to encourage fellow disciples in their walk in the light. This was John’s purpose: “I am writing these things to you so that you may not sin.” (1John 2:1 ESV).
God’s people do not walk in darkness (1John 1:5-6). If we walk in darkness and claim fellowship with God, we live a lie. If we continue in sin, refusing to confess, refusing to repent, and consistently bearing bad fruit, we are walking in darkness and do not have fellowship with God. John’s message is a wake-up call for any who would wish to ignore his or her own sin.
Here is my technically literal translation of 1John 3:6 —“Everyone who abides in Him does not sin; everyone who sins has not seen Him or known Him”. In isolation, this sentence would seem to imply that any child of God who sins is at once lost. However, a technically literal translation does not necessarily make for a good translation. By reading this inspired book in the order it has been written, we will benefit from the way John defines his own terms. In 1John 1:1-2:6, John addresses the matter of sin that is in the life of one who has fellowship with God.
We who walk in the light and who have fellowship with one another are people whose sin Jesus cleanses (1:7). If we suppose that John is only referring to sin prior to our covenant fellowship with Christ, then 1:8 makes his meaning clear. We (the very same people who walk in the light) would be lying if we said that we do not have sin. Pause for a moment to appreciate God’s wondrous grace toward us! None of us who walk in the light avoids sin absolutely. Yet, we have fellowship with God and each other and the blood of Jesus cleanses us! Since a person who walks in the light also has sin, John must mean something more than an instance of sin in 3:6. One who abides in God will not be impenitently steeped in a life of sin. “No one who abides in him keeps on sinning” (3:6 ESV).
Such an understanding is consistent with John’s purpose in this book. John is aiming to reassure those who are true children of God. He has proclaimed the word of life so that we may have fellowship with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ (1:3). In 5:13, John reiterates his particular concern that we “may know that [we] have eternal life”. This is why the subject of sin in the life of a Christian is addressed. If we are immediately and necessarily lost each time we sin, then there is little to no assurance. We would be in a lifelong game of spiritual roulette, given that the return of Christ or our death could come at any moment. Further, we would be relating to God, not as his children or his friends, but would be regularly approaching him as his enemies. Those consequences are not merely daunting; they are inconsistent with the peace described for all who are in Christ.
Marriage is meant to teach us about Christ and the church. My wife and I have fellowship with each other. When either of us has sinned against the other, we have not ceased to be married. We have not divorced or separated. We confess our wrongs and forgive within the relationship. We do not approach each other as enemies, but as husband and wife—not merely offering the possibility of fellowship, but seeking reconciliation in light of the relationship that already is. Children of God have an advocate within the relationship (2:1). He has already died for us (2:2). We have already been justified through faith. We have already been united with him.
Permit me a reference to a conceptually parallel passage in Romans. Before Paul addresses the problem of sin and suffering in the life of a Christian (the subject matter of Romans 5-8), he reminds us, “Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ” (Romans 5:1). This is where he then urges those in Christ to perceive themselves as reconciled already—not as enemies any longer (5:10).
What does all of this stir within me in regard to sin? John does not take our responsibility lightly. We are to confess our sins (1:9). John’s admonition to walk as He walked (2:3-6) implies a transformed life. John’s teaching about sin in the life of a faithful disciple is effective for overcoming sin. My wife’s grace toward me should not be seen as excusing or enabling sin. On the contrary, such grace strengthens me for spiritual growth. How much more does God’s grace transform me! On the cross, we have seen the cost and the glory of God’s grace toward us.
So we walk in its light. As Horatio Spafford put it so encouragingly, “My sin—O the bliss of this glorious tho’t—My sin, not in part but the whole, Is nailed to the cross, and I bear it no more. Praise the Lord, praise the Lord O my soul!”
masemvenuso@gmail.com
Sobering: How Blind We Humans Can Be!

How’s Your House?
The Sovereignty of God
The Crisis of Disappointment
I Guess This is My Life Now
When I am feeling uncomfortable, I find it difficult to remember how it felt to be comfortable. Perhaps some examples from my own life will sound familiar to you. By day three of a head cold, I can no longer remember what it feels like to breathe through my nose. At this point, I am tempted to think, “I’m sure it was nice breathing through my nose, but I guess this is my life now.” When I am eating tortilla chips or popcorn, something gets stuck among my teeth and gums and no matter how skilled I am with toothpick or floss—it holds fast. The ache is still there the next day, and again I think to myself, “Eating was fun while it lasted, but now every bite hurts. I guess this is my life now!” By this point in my life, I’ve experienced this phenomenon time and time again, so I ought to know that these discomforts don’t last forever; but in the moment, it feels quite permanent. “I guess this is my life now.”
I have experienced the same phenomenon in my spiritual life. Weeks full of discouragement can go by. Whether it is caused by my friends, by my community, or by my own attitude, I sense the same idea creeping in – “I guess this is my life now.” A month into a breakneck schedule of work, travel, activities, and evening plans, I begin to wonder what life must have been like when I had time to pray, meditate on God’s Word, and invest in my family. “Time must have been nice while I had it, but I guess this is my life now.” As my head hangs in shame after I became impatient or angry for the fifth (or fiftieth) time that day, a heavy fog settles in my mind, saying “I never will escape this sin. I guess this is my life now.”
But in saying this, I have accepted a lie. Yes, we experience troughs and valleys in all kinds of areas; but this does not mean we have to stay there! We are not meant to “settle in” to the valleys. When we find ourselves in a valley, we are meant to appeal to God for the path back up the mountain! When we are trapped in sin, we can confess it to God, confident that He is faithful to forgive us (1 John 1:9). When we are distracted, we can heed the instruction given to the church in Ephesus: “Remember therefore from where you have fallen; repent, and do the works you did at first” (Revelation 2:5). When we are discouraged, we can find rest and hope in God because his steadfast love never ceases and he is our portion (Lamentations 3:22-24)!
I do not deny the difficulty of life’s valleys, nor do I want to downplay just how “stuck” we can feel in the moment. However, when we find ourselves there, we must fight the urge to shrug our shoulders and say, “I guess this is my life now.” Imagine how different the Luke 15 story of the Prodigal Son would be if—when he was at his lowest, sitting with the pigs and wishing he could eat their food—he had said, “I guess this is my life now.” Instead, we see he remembered the one person who could save him from the wretched situation he had brought upon himself – his father.
Friend, whether you’re discouraged, distracted, or trapped in sin, look to your Father. Through Jesus, he continually extends his hand to welcome you, forgive you, and redeem you for his work. This is your life now.
nadiestel@gmail.com
“Now may the Lord of peace Himself give you peace always in every way. The Lord be with you all.”
2 THESSALONIANS 3:16