Weekly Devotion
1 John 1:5-7 (ESV)
5 This is the message
we have heard from him and proclaim to you, that God is light, and in him is no
darkness at all. 6 If we say we have fellowship with him while we walk in
darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth. 7 But if we walk in the light,
as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of
Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin.
John wrote three letters. In his first letter, believed to
be written in Ephesus, he encourages those in faith with these words. God is
light without darkness. I shared in the worship services a couple of weeks ago
that light is not the absence of darkness, but it is, in fact, the other way
around. Darkness is the absence of light. This is better understood when we
remember the words from John’s Gospel. “ The light shines in the darkness, and
the darkness has not overcome it” (John 1:5). When light is present, darkness
is pushed away.
In physics, light is a combination of color bands that our
eyes interpret. Perhaps then, the light we see as God is seen or interpreted by
our spirits? This doesn’t mean that light doesn’t exist when we can’t see it,
but it does mean that in order for us to walk in the light or to have
fellowship with God, we must see and respond to the light. John answers the
question “How?” in verse seven. The answer is simple and complicated, seeing or
interpreting something as the light is only possible by walking in the
light.
Let’s explore walking from a human, physical perspective.
Walking is considered to be a complex, coordinated, repeating sequence. Peter
Tyson, of NOVA, writes in his article Our Improbable Ability to Walk,
" that it is completely amazing that humans can walk upright. We only have
two legs, and our center of gravity is high off the ground. Yet we can walk.
Our ability requires coordination among multiple systems, including reflexive,
voluntary, neural, muscular, and skeletal.
I believe there must also be spiritual coordination. Our
spirituality is complex. It is impacted by our upbringing, hundreds of
messages, our own desires, and sin. Because of all of these impacts, it takes a
coordinated effort to walk in the light. This includes the following.
· Renewing our
mind (Romans 12:2). This means constantly realigning our thoughts and
perspectives to God, exemplified by the life and words of Jesus.
· Daily asking for
and receiving forgiveness (James 5:16).
Just as bodily walking requires effort until it becomes
natural and can be done without thought, spiritual walking does as well.
Remember the walking efforts of babies. It includes lots of falling down and
getting back up. Sometimes it includes holding on to tables and the wall as
supports to get back up. It includes crying and having someone around to wipe
your eyes.
In addition to the support from God, the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Spirit, you have your church family. Make an attempt to walk in
all ways. When you fall, call on God in all of God’s fullness and the faith
community. Set your eyes on the prize, which is, in John’s words, having
fellowship (partnership for mutual benefit) with each other, cleansing from the
blood of Jesus, God’s Son.
Have a blessed week, conscious of the light of God and in
your God-given power to walk in it.
Amen.
Tyson,
P. (2012, September 20). Our improbable
ability to walk. PBS.
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/article/our-ability-to-walk/
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