The Father Who Loves You
(Would You Become a Child of God?) (Based
upon John 1:10-12)
Personal Introduction
One of my all time favorite bands in my non-Christian days was
a band called Everclear. They were best known for their hit,
“Father of Mine? in which the singer describes growing up without
knowing his dad. Well, in that same album was a song that
struck me as interesting, a song titled “Why I don’t believe in
God? I thought it was a hate filled Bible bashing based song
but I was all too shock to learned that the song was talking about
not having a father. So, it’s with those who have been hurt
during their experience of not having a father, that I wrote this
sermon in mind.
Main Message
In today’s world, growing up without a dad has become
the norm. We live in a time where two parents family are becoming
much more rare. Divorce; having illegitimate children, separation
and other occasions have made its mark upon our culture. But
what effect or impact has it made to our society? Or, more
to the point concerning the topic of this sermon, what has it done
directly to the victims that are the most venerable ones of all,
the kids and the children of those missing daddies?
My message here isn’t one that’s political or
one of social works either. The job done by many advocates
for the family such as Focus on the Family is to be commended.
Those brave souls work hard for many years trying to fix the many
social ills and problems attacking the family today. But,
being led by the Spirit, I feel that there is another side, another
angle or front to be confronted in this troubling dilemma concerning
growing up without a father. And this message, hopefully by
the grace of God, would address the emptiness of those who were
fatherless in their teenage or childhood years.
Many downplay the effect of losing a father.
Too often, those who do so try to draw a rational defense by appealing
to personal experiences. “It didn’t effect me!? they cry.
If you’re one of them, then it’s good to hear that no harm was done
to you. But to those who have been affected, it’s for you
that I pray to God dearly about, that He would touch and also transform
your lives.
After all, who wants to be a bastard child?
Obviously, it would seem that no one in his or
her right minds would want to be one. The effect of it could
be long lasting.
It’s been observed that many of the staunchest
atheists lacked an appropriate father figure in their lives.
Either the dad was a totalitarian, abusive figure or the father
was always distant and far away or there wasn’t any papa around
at all. Names like Fidel Castro, Chairman Mao and famed atheist
Auguste Comte usually arises. And don’t forget the young bastard
that grew up to murder countless lives- Adolf Hitler himself.
Or what about the philosopher who influenced him greatly, Friedrich
Nietzsche?
Nietzsche? The famous professor of philosophy
who wrote strongly hate-filled books against God? Yes, being
a child without a father affected him deeply and much of his views
later in life. In an autobiography fragments dated 1868-1869(his
early years as a student) Nietzsche wrote, “My father, a Protestant
clergyman in Thuringia, died all too soon, I missed the strict and
superior guidance of a male intellect.?
Many others like him can attest to the spiritual
depravity Nietzsche experienced. To be loved by someone, to
have someone in their lives guiding them and providing them support—that
is a real need; and so is the need of having a Father who receives
them openly and whole heartedly as “my dear child?
Do you want someone to love you as his own child?
Would you know how to respond to the one who loves you dearly?
Or would you shut the door to your heart to the very one who’s been
knocking at it all these years?
Like most of those who have been orphaned, Jesus
Christ too, knows what’s it’s like to be rejected. He died
on the cross for our sins and can relate to our sufferings.
God’s Word said that though “He was in the World, and though the
world was made through him, the world did not recognize him.?(John
1:10) Think about that. You might not have ever thought
much about Jesus Christ, but think about the idea that Jesus Christ
the Lord and Savior, being rejected! “He came to that which
was his own, but his own did not received him.?(John 1:11)
And why did he come in the first place?
It’s because of God’s love, His gracious and
amazing love for the orphans of this universe. Just look at
how lost man is when human fathers aren’t around in our lives.
What else but the word chaos and disaster should be used when describing
the conditions of being disconnected from the heavenly father above?
And that’s what the world has become. The world has become
chaotic and it is loss. We are bastards in the universe…and
it doesn’t end just there. There is still a ray of hope?yet
to all who received him, to those who believed in his name, he gave
the right to become a child of God.?(John 1:12)
Would you receive Jesus? Would you allow
the Holy Spirit to transform you as a child of God? Though
being a Christian doesn’t necessarily mean you will find a human
father, it’s great to know that your new Father is now God himself!
If you have chosen to become a child of God through Jesus dying
for your sins, you’re now one those “children born not of natural
descent, nor of human decision or a husband’s will, but born of
God.?(John 1:13)
--Jimmy Li
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