HIGH FIVE! (GYM this morning… LEARNING this afternoon… CHURCH this evening…)

Here’s a rich, grounded look at 1 John 2:12–17, a passage that feels small on the surface but carries enormous spiritual weight. It’s one of those moments where John pauses his argument, looks his community in the eye, and says, “Let me remind you who you are—and what’s at stake.”
Below is a clear, structured exploration that ties together identity, spiritual growth, and the danger of misplaced love.
Significance of 1 John 2:12–17
1. John affirms their identity before giving any correction
John addresses “children,” “fathers,” and “young men”—not as biological categories but as spiritual stages.
Why this matters
- He wants them to stand firm, so he begins by reminding them of what is already true.
- Spiritual growth is not about earning identity but living from identity.
The three groups
| Group | What John says | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Children | Your sins are forgiven; you know the Father | Foundation: forgiveness and belonging |
| Fathers | You know Him who is from the beginning | Depth: long-term intimacy with God |
| Young men | You are strong; God’s word lives in you; you’ve overcome the evil one | Strength: active spiritual battle and victory |
John is saying: “Wherever you are in your spiritual maturity, you already have what you need to resist the world’s pull.”
2. The command: Do not love the world
This is the heart of the passage.
John is not talking about creation, people, or culture. He means the world-system—the pattern of life that ignores God and elevates self.
Why this warning matters
Because love is a limited resource. If your heart is full of the world, it cannot be full of the Father.
John is not scolding; he’s protecting.
3. The three temptations that shape the world
John names them with surgical precision:
1. The desires of the flesh
The pull toward physical gratification without boundaries.
2. The desires of the eyes
The pull toward coveting, comparison, and wanting what dazzles.
3. The pride of life
The pull toward status, self-importance, and identity built on achievement.
These are the same three temptations:
- Eve faced in Eden
- Israel faced in the wilderness
- Jesus faced in the desert
John is saying: “The enemy has no new tricks—just the same old ones dressed up in new packaging.”
4. The world is passing away
This is the ultimate reason not to love it.
John contrasts:
- What is temporary (the world and its desires)
- What is eternal (the one who does the will of God)
He’s not trying to scare them. He’s trying to reorient their desires toward what lasts.
Putting it all together
1 John 2:12–17 is a pastoral moment:
- John affirms their identity
- He strengthens their confidence
- He warns them about misplaced love
- He calls them to eternal perspective
The message is simple but profound:
“You belong to God. You are forgiven, strong, and victorious. So don’t waste your love on things that won’t last.”
A leadership and personal-growth angle (which I know resonates with you)
This passage is a blueprint for spiritual leadership:
Identity before instruction
You lead best when you remember who you are in Christ.
Discernment about desire
Not everything that glitters deserves your affection.
Strength rooted in the Word
Victory comes not from willpower but from truth living inside you.
Long-term perspective
Leaders invest in what endures, not what fades.

Thank you for TODAY… ASH Wednesday means something to me personally… during COVID, I tried going to my Church in Hershey… NO LUCK… NO SERVICES… Luckily, I stumbled across the Church that I belong to TODAY… IT WELCOMED ME!

THANKS BE TO GOD.
(Let’s GO!!! SCHD)










































































































































