Archive for the ‘God Is Love’ Tag
“Our Father Loves All Creation With Human Participation!” Pt 2
Audio Part 2A:
Audio Part 2B:
Full Audio Message:
Scripture: Revelation 4
Summary:
In this deeply pastoral and theologically rich message, Pastor Timothy Brassell continues his Lenten journey through the Book of Revelation, calling the Church to unlearn fear-based readings and rediscover the book as a revelation of God’s triune love—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
At the heart of this sermon is a needed reorientation: Revelation is not primarily about destruction, but about participation in God’s love through Jesus Christ. Pastor Tim reminds us that Jesus Christ is the key to understanding all of Scripture, and especially Revelation. The unveiling is not chaos for chaos’ sake, it is the unveiling of Jesus as both fully God and fully human, revealing that humanity itself has been lifted into God’s life.
A central theological truth runs through the whole message: God has made His life our life, and our life His life in Jesus Christ. As Thomas F. Torrance writes, “Jesus Christ has made our human life his own, that he might make his divine life ours.” The early church confessed this same mystery when Athanasius wrote, “For He became man that we might become god.” Pastor Tim makes clear that this does not mean we become God by nature, but that in Christ we are brought into real participation in His life.
From there, the sermon presses into a powerful reminder: grace is not a concept, it is a Person. Jesus Christ Himself is God’s grace, living and active in us through the Holy Spirit. Through Him, we are not merely forgiven, but transformed, empowered, and drawn into His ongoing life and mission.
Pastor Tim also reframes how we hear Revelation. Instead of beginning with fear, he asks us to begin with love: Do you see how much the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit love you? Revelation 4 gives us a throne-room vision of worship, sovereignty, and peace in the middle of a chaotic world. The 24 elders and living creatures show that all creation is ultimately gathered around the throne of God, giving glory to the One who is worthy.
The sermon also helps us understand that Revelation speaks through apocalyptic language, symbolic, not merely literal. Pastor Tim compares it to coded language, like that used in the Underground Railroad, meant to communicate truth faithfully in dangerous times. These symbols are not meant to confuse believers, but to strengthen them with hope: God is in control, evil will not win, and Christ’s people are called to endure with courage.
Even in the midst of chaos, Pastor Tim emphasizes that God is not absent. He is overseeing, redeeming, and working all things toward His purpose. In one of the sermon’s most memorable lines, he reminds us: “What matters more than your brokenness is Jesus’ fixedness.” That is why our lives matter now. As N. T. Wright says, “What you do in the present… will last into God’s future.” Our participation in Christ today is not wasted, it is caught up in God’s eternal purpose.
Finally, Pastor Tim brings the message into the present by naming some of the “beasts” of our own day: loss of meaning, isolation, consumerism, and the decline of embodied community. In response, the Church is called not to retreat from the world, but to participate with Christ in redeeming it through worship, witness, love, and real community. Even when the Church feels small or weak, it remains central to God’s purpose for the sake of the world.
Reflective Moment:
Take a moment to pause and reflect:
Have I been viewing Revelation through fear, or through the lens of God’s love?
Do I see myself as merely forgiven, or as someone sharing in the very life of Jesus?
Where is God inviting me to move from observation into participation?
Because of Jesus, you are not outside of God’s plan, you are included. Because He lives, you are not alone in the chaos, He is present within it. And because of His love, your life right now matters in His eternal purpose.
“Our Father Loves All Creation With Human Participation!” (Part 1)
Audio Part 1A:
Audio Part 1B:
Full Audio Message:
Scripture: Revelation 4 (CSB)
Summary:
On this Fourth Sunday in Lent, Pastor Timothy Brassell invites us into a deeper, often overlooked truth: God takes our humanity seriously, so seriously that He has united it to Himself forever in Jesus Christ. This powerful Gospel-Centered message reframes how we understand both the Christian life and the Book of Revelation. Rather than a book of fear or catastrophe, Revelation is unveiled as a vision of God’s extravagant, unconditional love. A love revealed in the person of Jesus Christ, who is fully God and fully human.
In Jesus, we see not only what God is like, but also what humanity is meant to be. Christ does not merely act for us; He lives with us and now lives through us by the Spirit. His life becomes our life, and His relationship with the Father becomes the relationship we are brought into.
As has been expressed in the theology of Gary Deddo (paraphrased), “Jesus Christ is not only the object of our faith, but the one in whom we participate by the Spirit.”
Pastor Tim emphasizes that the law of Moses pointed outwardly to what true humanity looks like, but only in Christ does that reality take root in the heart. Through the Spirit, we now participate in the very works of God, not as external duty, but as shared life with Jesus. At the heart of this message is a powerful call: Take Jesus seriously, and therefore take your humanity seriously.
This truth echoes the early church witness of Irenaeus of Lyons: “For the glory of God is a living man; and the life of man consists in beholding God.”
God has not abandoned creation. Instead, He has chosen to involve human beings in its care, redemption, and flourishing. In Christ, we are called to rule and serve creation in love, reflecting God’s own heart.
As T. F. Torrance reminds us: “He has made our human nature his own in such a way that in him it is sanctified and perfected.”
Revelation reveals a God who does not withhold love but lavishes it abundantly, even beyond what we can comprehend. This divine love confronts, corrects, and heals, not as punishment, but as the active expression of a Father determined to bring His children into fullness of life. Eternal life, as Pastor Tim reminded us from Scripture, is not merely future existence, it is relational participation in God now:
“This is eternal life: that they may know you, the only true God, and the one you have sent—Jesus Christ.” — John 17:3 (CSB)
Because Jesus has conquered death, we are freed from its fear. We are even invited to participate in helping others face death with hope, dignity, and peace, bearing witness to Christ’s victory in the most human moments of life.
Ultimately, this sermon calls us to see that:
- Revelation is not about fear—it is about love.
- Humanity is not disposable—it is redeemed and glorified in Christ.
- Our lives are not insignificant—we are participants in God’s eternal purposes.
God is not distant. He is actively drawing us into His life, through the Son, in the Spirit, so that we may live fully human lives that reflect His glory in all creation.
Key Themes and Reflection Questions:
1. Take Jesus and Your Humanity, Seriously 👤✨
- Theme: In Jesus Christ, God reveals both who He is and what true humanity is meant to be. To take Jesus seriously means taking our humanity seriously as well.
- Discipleship Question: Am I treating my life and calling as something sacred, the way Jesus does?
- #TrueHumanity #TakeJesusSeriously #FullyAliveInChrist
2. Revelation Reveals Love, Not Fear ❤️🔥
- Theme: The Book of Revelation is not primarily about destruction, but about the unveiling of God’s unconditional, relentless love for all creation.
- Discipleship Question: Do I read Scripture through fear, or through the lens of God’s love revealed in Christ?
- #GodIsLove #RevelationRevealed #NoFearInChrist
3. Participation, Not Performance 🤝🌿
- Theme: The Christian life is not about external rule-keeping but about participating in the life and works of Jesus through the Spirit.
- Discipleship Question: Am I trying to perform for God, or am I learning to participate with Him?
- #LifeInChrist #ParticipationNotPerformance #WalkWithJesus
4. Called to Rule by Serving Creation 🌍👑
- Theme: Humanity is entrusted with overseeing and serving creation in love, reflecting God’s care and purpose in every detail of life.
- Discipleship Question: How am I reflecting God’s love in the way I treat people, creation, and everyday responsibilities?
- #ServeAndReign #CreationCare #KingdomLiving
5. Victory Over Death—Live and Die Well ✝️🌅
- Theme: Because Jesus has conquered death, we are freed from fear and can live and even face death, with hope, helping others do the same.
- Discipleship Question: How does Christ’s victory over death shape the way I live today?
- #VictoryInChrist #NoFearInDeath #LivingHope
Reflective Moment:
Take a moment to pause and reflect: God is not holding back from you. He is not measuring out His love in small portions. He is lavishing it, pouring it out beyond what you can contain. In Jesus, your humanity has been taken up, healed, and destined for glory. Your life matters. Your participation matters. Every moment matters.
So today, consider this: Where is God inviting you, not just to believe in Him, but to participate with Him? And as you step into that invitation, remember: You are not walking alone.
You are living the very life of Christ—through the Spirit—unto the Father.
Our Father’s Hope For All: In Relationship With The Trinity! Part 8
Part 8A:
Part 8B
Full Message:
Main Bible Verses: John 14: 15-26 Romans 12 Romans 13
Introduction:
“The Triune God of love brought his creation into being for the sake of loving fellowship. Created in the image of God, we humans are able to exist in a fellowship of covenant love (agape) with our Creator and each other. However, through Adam and Eve (representing all humanity), the power of evil got a foothold in God’s good creation, reaching down into the roots of human nature. Foreseeing this tragedy, God began to implement his plan to rescue humanity and bring final judgment upon evil. These goals would be achieved by God working in and through the Son of God incarnate as Jesus Christ, and the subsequent ministry of the Holy Spirit in and through the church…….
We receive all that Christ has done for humanity by participating in the ongoing ministry of the Holy Spirit. Beginning in Acts, the New Testament tells the story of the church’s participation in the Spirit’s ministry (and so the mission of God) during the time stretching from Jesus’ resurrection-ascension and sending of the Holy Spirit to Jesus’ promised return in glory. During this “time between the times” the church is given a down payment (first fruits) of the Spirit so that during this present evil age (when evil has not yet fully passed away and the kingdom is not yet fully manifested) the church can embody signs of the coming fullness of Christ’s triumphant reign in a new heaven and new earth.
As the church waits in hope for the age to come, it grows up into Christ, sharing in his glorified humanity. During this time, the Spirit frees and enables the church to worship God, witness to Christ and his coming kingdom, and participate in his mission to take the gospel to the far corners of the earth as God, by the Spirit, draws all people to himself. As God’s ambassadors of reconciliation, the church has the privilege of sharing in God’s redemptive mission, so that all might be reconciled to God.” ―The Church and Its Ministry, by Gary Deddo
Theological Theme:
God IS Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Love is not just a generic word or concept about a fuzzy feeling or sentiment you have. Love is bound up in the fact that God-Father-Son-Holy-Spirit IS LOVE. So love is this personal relationship with the ONE God Being in Three persons and the Three Persons in ONE God Being.
“The Christian God is a fellowship, a communion. This triune God has his being by being in relationships of holy loving. Those relationships are, in particular, eternally begetting, being begotten, and proceeding — each a unique form of holy, loving exchange. Those are the key words we have in allowing us to point to the amazing reality of who God is.” -Gary Deddo
“As God is in eternal loving relationship as Father, Son and Holy Spirit, so also he has made us to be in loving relationship with him and one another. As the Holy Spirit unites the divinity and humanity of Christ, so the Spirit also unites us to the Son so that we are united with each other as the body of Christ.” ―Eric Wilding – Grace Communion International
Christ Connection:
In the body of Jesus Christ, the Father, Son and Spirit is united with humankind. All humanity is accepted by God and the world is reconciled to God in Him. In the body of Jesus Christ, God took on the sin of all the world and bore it 2000 years ago. There is no part of the world, no matter how lost or Godless that has not been forgiven and accepted by God in Jesus Christ – reconciled to God in Jesus Christ.
“Thus in this oneness, Jesus Christ is the Mediator, the Reconciler, between God and man. Thus He comes forward to MAN on behalf of GOD calling for and awakening faith, love and hope, and to GOD on behalf of MAN, representing man, making satisfaction and interceding. Thus He attests and guarantees to God’s free GRACE and at the same time attests and guarantees to God man’s free GRATITUDE.” ―Karl Barth, The Humanity of God
“Because Christ has taken humanity into himself, we are partakers and participants in the divine nature with him. Because we are in Christ, because he is both the Son of God and the perfect human with us and for us in our humanity, we share in his perfect relationship with the Father. In Christ, we are the beloved children of the Father, in whom he is well pleased. And because we are united with Christ in his humanity, we share in the Trinity’s grace, love and communion.” ―Eric Wilding ―Grace Communion International
Missional Application:
We share in all that Jesus gives us by the Holy Spirit. “So we can say that the Holy Spirit humanizes by making us share in the glorified humanity of Jesus Christ”
“The Holy Spirit’s ministry is to deliver to us all the benefits of the work of Christ……When the Spirit acts, he acts in unity with the Father and the Son, bringing our worship all together in the fellowship of the Trinity….
Thus, we understand that when the Spirit of Jesus comes upon us, he enables us to respond fully to the truth and reality of who God is and who we are in relationship to God with all we are and have. If there is part of us that is not yet responding, whether it be body, mind or heart, the Holy Spirit works to bring us to the point that we respond in all that we are. The Spirit does not divide us. Rather, he heals and makes us whole, giving us human integrity before our Lord and God.” ―Gary Deddo
Conclusion:
“The doctrine of the Trinity means that relationship, that fellowship, that togetherness and sharing, that self-giving and other-centeredness are not afterthoughts with God, but the deepest truth about the being of God. The Father is not consumed with Himself; He loves the Son and the Spirit. And the Son is not riddled with narcissism; he loves his Father and the Spirit. And the Spirit is not preoccupied with himself and his own glory; the Spirit loves the Father and the Son. Giving, not taking; other-centeredness, not self-centeredness; sharing, not hoarding are what fire the rockets of God and lie at the very center of Gods existence as Father, Son and Spirit.”
— C. Baxter Kruger —
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