Parker's sermon on 3 John addresses the Reformed doctrine of Christian fellowship, arguing that genuine spiritual communion must be grounded in doctrinal truth rather than mere affability or agreement to disagree. The preacher identifies three benchmarks of fellowship established throughout John's epistles: adherence to the truth about Christ's person (His divine-human nature as God manifested in flesh), understanding of Christ's redemptive work (His accomplished salvation through propitiation and imputation of righteousness), and practical love evidenced through support of faithful gospel ministers. Parker emphasizes the doctrine of imputed righteousness—the forensic legal reckoning of Christ's merit to believers—as foundational to standing justified before God, noting that believers are "clothed in his righteousness" and need fear no judgment since their only plea is "Christ died for me." The sermon uses 3 John's commendation of Gaius and condemnation of Diotrephes to illustrate the necessity of discerning fellowship: believers must support those who preach the gospel faithfully while refusing religious fellowship with those who deny Christ's doctrine, regardless of their personal charm or prominence. Parker grounds this in the conviction that doctrine itself—derived from Scripture, not human opinion—establishes the church and makes true fellowship possible.
“Our fellowship has to be established in the truth. John basically brought forth three benchmarks of fellowship in 1st John. It's light is first. We walk in the light. That light means truth.”
“I stand before God, and the metaphor goes like this in the Bible, clothed in his righteousness. That means the merit of his work, as my sins were imputed, charged to him, his righteousness has been charged to me. so that I'm saved and perfectly righteous based upon a work that I personally had nothing to do with, he did it all.”
“Walking with brethren in truth, being a fellow helper of the truth. Those who preach the gospel, those who preach the doctrine of grace...we ought to receive such that we might be fellow helpers to the truth.”
“Gospel fellowship, spiritual fellowship, is love in the truth. And that's where it's got to begin.”
True Christian fellowship is built upon walking in the truth and mutual love for one another in Christ.
3 John 1-8, 1 John 1:5
Christ's atonement is sufficient because it fully satisfied God's justice and secured the salvation of all for whom He died.
Romans 3:23, Matthew 1:21, Romans 8:32
Understanding imputed righteousness is crucial because it represents how believers are declared righteous before God, solely through Christ's merit.
Romans 4:6, 2 Corinthians 5:21, Philippians 3:9
3 John highlights the importance of providing support to those who preach the Gospel as an expression of Christian fellowship.
3 John 5-8, 2 John 10-11
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