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Octavius Winslow

1 John 5:1

1 John 5:1
Octavius Winslow June, 22 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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June, 22 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about love for fellow believers?

The Bible teaches that true love for God includes love for His children, as seen in 1 John 5:1.

1 John 5:1 states, 'Every one that loves him that begat loves him also that is begotten of him,' indicating the necessity of loving other believers as an expression of our love for God. This love transcends differences in creed, denomination, or personal attributes, for it is rooted in the shared identity of being adopted children of God. When we recognize the image of Christ in fellow believers, our hearts are drawn toward them as members of the same family. Thus, our affection for others stems from the divine presence within them—the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. This divine love not only reveals our spiritual relationship but serves as evidence of our having passed from death unto life in Christ.

1 John 5:1

How do we know we have passed from death unto life?

We have passed from death unto life when we love fellow believers, indicating the presence of the Holy Spirit in us.

The assurance that we have passed from death unto life is closely linked to our love for one another, particularly fellow believers. According to 1 John 5:1, our love for God naturally extends to His children, manifesting as love for those who share in the faith. This act of loving transcends denominational divides and reflects the reality of the Spirit of God dwelling within us. When we recognize and affirm Christ's likeness in other believers, it is a sure sign of our union with Him. If our hearts are cold toward other Christians, it raises questions about the authenticity of our faith. The Spirit of God yearns for unity among believers; thus, our loving relationships with one another can serve as a profound assurance of our own adoption and acceptance in Christ.

1 John 5:1

Why is love for others important for Christians?

Love for others is a fundamental expression of our faith and evidence of our identity in Christ.

For Christians, love for others is not just an ethical obligation but a vital expression of faith rooted in our relationship with God. As articulated in 1 John 5:1, loving fellow believers demonstrates the authenticity of our love for God Himself. This love is evidenced by our willingness to see Christ in others, regardless of differences in background, belief, or social status. It reflects the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, which compels us to unite with the body of Christ and builds up the Church. When love is absent, it raises concerns about our spiritual state, as loving others is integral to living a life that honors God and fulfills Christ's commandment to love one another. Therefore, our love for others serves as a witness to both our faith and our relationship with the one who first loved us.

1 John 5:1

“Every one that loves him that begat loves him also that is begotten of him.”

— 1 John 5:1

THE feeling here referred to is a love to the saints, as saints. Whatever natural infirmities we may discover in them, whatever different shades of opinion they may hold to us, and to whatever branch of the Christian Church they may belong, yet the feeling which is to establish our own divine relationship is a love to them as brethren. Irrespective of all dissonance of creed, of denomination, of gifts, of attainment, of rank, of wealth, of nation—when we meet in a Christian professor the image of Christ, the family-likeness, our love will prompt us immediately to recognize that individual as a believer in Jesus, and to acknowledge him as a brother in the Lord. And what are the grounds of my affection? I may esteem his character, and prize his gifts—may admire his talents, and feel there is an assimilation of disposition, of taste, and of judgment—but my Christian love springs from an infinitely higher and holier source. I love him because the Father is in him, because the Son is in him, because the Holy Spirit is in him. I love him because he is an adopted child of the same family; a member of Christ, and of the same body; and a temple of the same Holy Spirit. I love him that is begotten, because I love Him that begat. It is Christ in one believer, going out after Himself in another believer. It is the Holy Spirit in one temple, holding fellowship with Himself in another temple. And from hence it is that we gather the evidence of our having "passed from death unto life." Loving the Divine Original, we love the human copy, however imperfect the resemblance. The Spirit of God dwelling in the regenerate soul yearns after the image of Jesus, wherever it is found. It pauses not to inquire to what branch of the Christian Church the individual resembling Him belongs; that with which it has to do is the resemblance itself.

Now, if we discover this going out of the heart in sweet, holy, and prayerful affection, towards every believer in Christ—be his denominational name what it may—the most to those who most bear the Savior's image—then have we the Spirit of Christ dwelling in us. A surer evidence we cannot have. There is the affection which surmounts all the separating walls of partition in the Church, and in spite of sects, and parties, and creeds, demonstrates its own divine nature and heavenly birth, by its blending with the same affection glowing in the bosom of another. And where this love to the brethren exists not at all in any Christian professor, we ask that individual, with all the tenderness of affection consistent with true faithfulness, where is the evidence of your union with the body of Christ? You have turned away with contractedness of heart, and with frigidity of manner, if not with secret disdain, from one whom God loves, whom Christ has redeemed, and in whom the Holy Spirit dwells, because he belonged not to your sect. Yes, you have turned away with coldness and suspicion from Christ Himself! How can you love the Father, and hate the child? What affection have you for the Elder Brother, while you despise the younger? If you are a living branch of the same vine, can you, while cherishing those feelings which exclude from your affection, from your sympathies, and from your fellowship, other Christians, more deeply wound Jesus, or more effectually grieve the Holy Spirit of God, by whom they are "sealed unto the day of redemption"? Perhaps you have long walked in darkness and uncertainty, as to the fact of your own personal adoption into the family of God. Anxious fear and distressing doubt have taken the place of a holy assurance, and a peaceful persuasion that you were one of the Lord's people. In endeavoring to trace this painful state of mind to its cause, did it never occur to you, that your lack of enlargement of heart towards all saints, especially towards those of other branches of the same family, has, in all probability, so grieved the Spirit of adoption, that he has withheld from your own soul that clear testimony, that direct witness, by which your interest in the covenant love of God, and your union with Christ, would have been clearly made known to you? You have grieved that same Spirit in your brother, who dwells in you, and upon whom you are so dependent for all your sweet consolation and holy desires; and He has suspended the light, and peace, and joy of your own soul.

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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