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Summary: What we are, and whose we are will not be fully evident until the Lord returns for His own. Then we shall see Him as He is. Then we shall be transformed, and fully conformed to His image.

PRIVILEGE AND RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE HOPEFUL.

1 John 3:1-3.

“Behold,” says John. Pause for thought and reflection. For it is indeed a wonderful demonstration of God's love that “we” should be called the sons of God (1 John 3:1).

This was not what we deserved, but as we know from other Scriptures, it was ‘while we were yet sinners’ that Christ died for us (cf. Romans 5:8). This is addressed to Christians, of course: we who “were” sinners, but who are now ‘made righteous’ by the blood of Jesus (cf. Romans 5:19). The prodigal son desired to be restored to his father as a servant (cf. Luke 15:18-19), but when we come to God through the Lord Jesus Christ we are brought into all the privileges of son-ship.

Yet these privileges also carry responsibility (cf. 1 John 3:13).

Fathers and brothers have been known to bury an empty coffin in a gesture of rejection when a member of their family becomes a believer. Peer pressure is exerted against the new convert by former friends. Even employers use their economic advantage to try to extinguish the light of the new Christian.

The fact of the matter is that society feels threatened by the Christ within us. The world hates us because it hated Jesus first (cf. John 15:18-19). The world “knows us not, because it knew Him not” (1 John 3:1).

Those who are beloved of Christ “are” the sons of God (1 John 3:2).

Upon self-examination we may not feel as if we are sons of God, but the Christian does not live by his feelings. It may not look to ourselves that we are any such thing, but the whole creation awaits the manifestation of the sons of God (cf. Romans 8:19). What we are, and whose we are will not be fully evident until the Lord returns for His own.

Then we shall see Him as He is – not as he was, despised, rejected, mutilated and crucified, but as the risen conquering glorified Saviour. Then we shall be transformed, and fully conformed to His image.

Meantime, however, we are not to be idle. We have been made holy by Christ, but we are also to pursue holiness (1 John 3:3). The work of sanctification, which is God's work for sure, requires our participation (cf. Philippians 2:12-13).

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