Archive for the ‘John 14: 10’ Tag

“The God Who Is Communion: Unity Without Sameness!”

Think about the last time you sat across from someone whose life felt very different from yours. Maybe it was a family gathering that turned tense, a relationship that required more patience than you expected, or even a moment that should have felt close but didn’t. Different backgrounds, different temperaments, different ways of seeing God and one another. In those moments, difference can begin to feel like something we have to manage rather than something we are meant to receive.

Most of us carry a quiet resistance to difference. It rarely announces itself. We call it preference, wisdom, or personality. But underneath, it often reflects a deeper assumption: that unity and difference cannot fully coexist. That eventually one must give way to the other. That real community is something we are still trying to achieve.

God, through Scripture, tells a different story. At the center of all reality is not sameness, but communion. Not uniformity, but oneness. And it is this oneness, not sameness, that we are brought into in Jesus Christ.

God has made Himself known as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, not as a puzzle to solve but as a life to behold. Jesus says, “I am in the Father, and the Father is in me” (John 14:10, CSB), and He prays that we would share in that same life: “that they may all be one, as you, Father, are in me and I am in you… that they also may be in us” (John 17:21, CSB). We do not begin with speculation about God; we begin with Jesus Christ, who reveals the Father and makes known the life of the Spirit.

What He reveals is striking. The unity of God is not a flattening of distinction. The Father is not the Son, and the Son is not the Spirit. Yet they are perfectly, eternally one, not through sameness, but through self-giving love. The early church described this as the mutual indwelling of the divine Persons, each fully present in the other without any loss of distinction.

As Herman Bavinck observes, within God there is both absolute unity and absolute diversity. The divine being is one, yet it exists in three distinct persons, each fully possessing the one undivided essence. Within the one being of God, there is a perfect communion and a rich diversity of persons. This is the foundation of everything, and it reshapes how we see one another. If distinction exists within God Himself, held perfectly within His unity, then difference is not a threat to oneness. It belongs within it.

This unity did not remain distant from us. In the Incarnation, God did not set aside particularity in order to reach us; He entered into it. The eternal Son became this person, in this place, at this time. Distinction was not removed on the way to us, it was the very form of His coming. The One who holds all things together is the One who stepped fully into the particular.

This reframes how we receive one another. Paul writes, “Just as the body is one and has many parts… so also is Christ” (1 Corinthians 12:12, CSB), and “God has arranged each one of the parts in the body just as he wanted” (1 Corinthians 12:18, CSB). This is not accidental diversity; it is intentional participation. Each person, with their distinct gifts and story, is held within something greater than themselves.

Through Christ, we are not merely observers of this unity. Peter tells us that we have become “partakers of the divine nature” (2 Peter 1:4, CSB). By the Spirit, we are drawn into the Son’s own relationship with the Father. Our lives are caught up in the very communion that God is in Himself. Within that life, our differences begin to take on new meaning. They are no longer liabilities to manage but places of revelation. What we often resist in one another may, in fact, be an invitation into a larger vision of God.

Even in moments of tension or misunderstanding, God is at work. As can be seen in the Book of Revelation, His unveiling is never simply about exposing something; it is always about drawing us deeper into communion with Him. What is revealed in those difficult moments is often not just the other person, but our own resistance—the places where we have learned to withdraw rather than receive. Yet even this is grace. God reveals what is not of His life, not to condemn us, but to draw us more deeply into His life.

It is important to note that God does not encourage us to celebrate difference for its own sake but for His sake, as Revealed in Jesus. God delights in difference that participates in His love and unity. God celebrates communion—not chaos, not sameness, but difference held together in love. If we’re not careful, where “celebrating differences” and our distinction can go wrong is when we think that all differences are automatically good, that God affirms everything about human variation, or that difference itself is the highest value instead of relating with God as the highest value. That’s not quite right. Distinction that glorifies God is still something God must give us as a gift, and which He gives to us from the Father, through the Son, and in the Holy Spirit. It is not something automatic or natural, apart from God. It is something received in union with Jesus.

When we close ourselves off from difference in this particular way, we limit what God is showing us and seeking to make of us. But when we begin to receive one another in His shared love, even across the lines that make us uncomfortable, our vision is enlarged. We begin to see a unity that does not erase distinction, but is revealed through it, becoming more and more of who we really are by grace!

The Good News is that not only does God affirm and delight in real personal distinction within His own life, but God made us different on purpose, that we might be brought together as one in His love. You are not left standing outside, trying to create unity on your own. In Christ, you have already been brought into it. In your union with Jesus, you are already participating in the shared life of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. And every difference, held in love and received in faith, becomes part of a greater revelation—not a diminished picture, but a fuller one. Not division, but participation in the One who is, and always has been, perfect communion.