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Devotion January 31st

TUESDAY 31st

 

1 John 1:3

 

‘. . . that which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you too may have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ.’

 

The word ‘fellowship’ comes from the Greek ‘koinonia’, John uses it twice here in verse 3 and then again in verses 6 and 7 in this same chapter. John is using it as we discovered in the last devotion to highlight the special and particular bond that is to be found among those who make up the Church which is the body of Christ, the communion or the community of the saints, the saints being those who have been called out of the world to form the ‘ecclesia’, the Church.

 

The Church is universal, in that it consists of all who have believed in Jesus, but it is also local in that it refers to a local gathering of believers, and fellowship, the importance of it and the desire for it should be our priority. The world is becoming increasingly hostile towards those who proclaim the name of Jesus and who stand up for righteousness, and unless we keep ourselves in a place of fellowship with one another and with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ,  we will find ourselves increasingly becoming easy prey to the attacks of everything and everyone which is becoming anti-God in our society.

 

The fellowship of the saints in a local Church gathering is vital and therefore should be a priority in our weekly agenda. Yes, there are genuine reasons why we may not be able to attend every week, but there should never be a reason not to attend at all unless of course due to extreme circumstances such as illness.

 

It is in the place of regular fellowship that we can truly get to know one another to be able to support, encourage and comfort one another. We need each other,

 

The Hebrew writer expressed the importance of Christian fellowship with these words, ‘And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.’ The lack of meeting together with other believers is considered here to be a bad habit, it is being neglectful to one’s soul, it speaks to me of one’s lack of concern for their spiritual well-being. In the physical we yearn for community, we ensure that we maintain health through eating well and maintaining a well-balanced lifestyle. O how more vital is it for us to yearn for spiritual fellowship, to maintain our spiritual health and to live a well-balanced Christian lifestyle.   

 

As a pastor, I can only encourage all who read the daily devotions, to seek to make every effort to be in the House of the Lord, especially on the Lord’s day, to be in fellowship with brothers and sisters to not only worship and exalt the Lord together but to be equipped, encouraged and strengthened, renewed in the evil days in which we are living. Please don’t allow yourself to become easy prey to the devil who is prowling around like a roaring lion seeking those who he can devour.

 

Recently I was going through some of the notes that I have scribbled down over the last couple of years and came across this one, I hadn’t noted where I got it from but it is so applicable to the importance of fellowship, ‘A bundle of sticks cannot be broken, but separated they can be snapped’. Think about it, are you trying to survive as a Christian in this world like a single stick, don’t, one day you will find yourself broken, your relationship with God broken, get back into fellowship and be a part of the bundle again.

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Devotions

Devotion January 30th

MONDAY 30th

 

1 John 1:3

 

‘. . . that which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you too may have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ.’

 

As we commence this new week, I want to return in our devotion back to verse 3 of this opening section of John’s letter and to consider the word ‘fellowship’.

 

John says that as a result of what he and the disciples had witnessed, he wanted to proclaim it so that his readers may believe and as a result enter into fellowship with them (the disciples) and which would also include fellowship with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ. Two-thousand years later as we come to respond and believe the testimony of the disciples and place our faith and trust in the Lord Jesus Christ we too enter into this place of fellowship, fellowship with one another as the family of God and with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ.

 

Christian fellowship is the highest expression of fellowship that can be discovered and enjoyed in the world, for it is a fellowship that comes from out of the intimacy of a real, genuine relationship with the triune God, and involves all who have come into a real and personal relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ.

 

We can and should enjoy the company of other people in so many different ways, there is the uniqueness of an individual family, there can be the camaraderie that can form out of a relationship with others who are likeminded in support of a cause or out of a common goal such as the following of a particular football team or other sporting activity, but however strong the bond of fellowship may seem to be in any of these other causes, they will never be, nor should never be equal to the fellowship that should spring out of true believers being united together in Christ, for this as only come about at a great cost, the shed blood of our Saviour, for, through his death he has not only reconciled us to God, but he has enjoined us together to be his body, the Church.

 

Paul who spoke much of the Church and its uniqueness says that we as believer’s need each other, we need to be connected to one another. Listen to what Paul has written in his letter to the Corinthian Church, ‘For just as the body is one and has many members, and all the members of the body, though many, are one body, so it is with Christ. For in one Spirit we were all baptized into one body—Jews or Greeks, slaves or free—and all were made to drink of one Spirit . . . as it is, there are many parts, yet one body . . .  If one member suffers, all suffer together; if one member is honoured, all rejoice together . . . now you are the body of Christ and individually members of it.’ (various verses from chapter 12)

 

We will consider this further in our next devotion.