Perceive what manner of love the Father has given us, that we may be called children of God! And we are! Therefore the world does not know us, for it did not know Him
First Epistle of John 3: 1, Concordant New Testament
I seem to have a Jesus issue. More than that, I seem to have an issue communicating Jesus to those who do not know Him as I do. I'll admit that my views of the Lord Jesus might sound a bit off the rails to those who have been accustomed to the traditional teachings of the mainstream church. I recently had the nerve to share with one of my gym friends a few pages written by the author J Preston Eby. His reaction to this was, shall we say, predictable. Predictable from the standpoint that I've seen this reaction before when I share what it is that I have come to believe about Jesus. For now, my association with the author Eby has made me misguided in the eyes of my gym friend. I get it. For I was once in his shoes, absorbing all which the church pastors fed me. In fact, I recall reacting in just the way he has whenever someone would introduce a teaching which went against what the church somehow "Authorized" as the acceptable gospel. There have been plenty of times where I have turned what should have been a simple discussion about the Lord into a full fledged argument. Therefore, I'm not at all surprised when someone attacks me due to my view of the truth of Christ which has been revealed unto me through the love of the Father. While I continue to adhere to a few of the core principals held dear by the church, that is where my affiliation with their theology ends. I'm referring to the false separation theology which continues to be spoken by those within the church. The idea that it is our sin which has separated us from God. I have referred to this teaching as one of the lies spoken by the church. As you might guess, I have been labeled as misguided for holding to this belief as well. But this is not simply some idea I've come up with on my own. The apostle Paul speaks to the truth of Christ living in him {Paul to the Galatians 2:20, Paul to the Romans 6:8}. Jesus Himself has spoken to the truth of our life within He and the Father {Johns Account 14:20}. These are passages of scripture which are either ignored or misrepresented entirely by the church.
To be clear, I have an issue with a teaching which speaks to the truth that Christ Jesus bled and died on the cross for the forgiveness of sin, but that continues to teach that the sin which Jesus died for continues to be an issue in our lives. I'll never be on board with that belief. In fact, it is this misguided teaching of the church which caused me to initially question the message I was hearing. It is also this teaching which eventually caused me to leave the church. In my mind, I had been lied to by those whom I had trusted to teach me about the Lord. So it is that I am not at all surprised when I see this teaching continued to be spoken by those who continue to fill the pews of the church and absorb its teachings. I was once there myself. My revelation of the truth of the Father came from conversations I've had with a trusted and dear friend. He spoke to the fact that we do not have a God of condemnation, but of love {First Epistle of John 4:8}. It is through His love for us by which He has dispatched His Son to be the propitiation of our sin {First Epistle of John 4:10}. The very definition of propitiation is the "Gaining or regaining" of favor or goodwill of someone. It is through Christ Jesus by which we have been redeemed in the eyes of God. Paul speaks to the truth that Christ has died to sin "Once for all time" {Paul to the Romans 6:10}. My gym friend usually bristles at this so called blasphemy. But what about our sin which we do every day? Yes, Paul speaks to that as well. He speaks to the truth of "How shall we who have died to sin live any longer within it?" {Paul to the Romans 6:2}. This is the Jesus issue which those within the church continue to have. The issue that despite giving Himself for the forgiveness of sin, that His sacrifice was in vain because sin remains the issue in the lives of the Lords children.
In this is love, not that we love God, but that He loves us, and dispatches His Son, a propitiatory shelter concerned with our sins
First Epistle of John 4: 10, Concordant New Testament
~Scott~








