Grace to You Resources
Grace to You - Resource

Let’s bow in prayer.  Father, we do thank You for the love of Jesus, something that the world indeed knows nothing about but that we experience every waking moment of every day. How grateful we are for the joy and the privilege of living within the sunlight of that love, feeling its warmth and its life-giving properties.

We are grateful, Lord, that we can be here tonight because of that love; that from all of this world, with all of its problems, You have called us to gather together in the name of Jesus Christ this night for fellowship and study together in praise to You. Lord, how rich it is to be here and how, indeed, Your grace is sufficient for every trial, for every anxiety. And we rejoice in all the provisions that are ours in Christ. Lord, bless our time tonight; enrich us because of it. We pray in Christ’s name, amen.

Tonight we come to our subject – the last subject that we will deal with in our preliminary study to Ephesians; this little study – that we’ve done several weeks now really kept going on and on; we didn’t expect it to, but the Lord led in this – on the body of Christ. And very frankly, folks, for those of us who are Christians, I don’t feel there is any more important series than this. And I trust God that you are learning these truths, that you are not merely hearing them and walking away and saying, “Wasn’t I inspired,” and, “Wasn’t it nice? But I don’t remember anything.” If that’s your case, you better get those tapes and listen to them until you understand this most significant concept of the body of Christ.

Now, tonight we come to the last study, the last general subject, although it may not be the last particular message. This is the last subject we’ll deal with in the body series, “The Fellowship of the Body.” The fellowship of the body. Let’s bow in a word of prayer as we begin our study.

Lord, we thank You for fellowship, and we pray, Lord, tonight, that you will teach us by Your Spirit, that we might not be taught by human mind or a human wisdom, but that we might speak the wisdom of God, the oracles of God in truth. And, Lord, that we might have the understanding of the Spirit to grasp these truths and apply them to our lives we pray in Christ’s name, amen.

Now, we have said many times – and I want you to think with me; I’m not going to attempt to entertain you, but I am going to attempt to teach you some principles that are absolutely essential. Now, we have said many times that the true Church is one body. All the members of that body are members of one another, like a human body. No member of the body of Christ exists detached from the rest of the body. We are all members one of another, and no one member can escape his responsibility toward all the other members. We have said that the health of the body, that its witness and testimony is absolutely dependent on the faithful ministering of all of the members to one another.

Now, we have talked about two kinds of unity: positional unity and practical unity or what we are in position and what we are in practice. Now, we talked first of all about our positional unity. That is by the very fact that we are believers in Christ, we are one in position. That is, we have all been placed into the body of Christ by the Holy Spirit. We are all positionally in the body, and our positional unity is manifest by the fact that the one same Spirit placed us into the body, and that one same Spirit dwells within all of us.

So, from a positional standpoint, we are one, all having been placed into the body by the same Spirit, all having the same indwelling Spirit within us, all being redeemed, all being children of God, all being members of the body of Christ. That’s positional unity. We are a unit. We are a unit by virtue of salvation.

But then on the other side, we want to talk also about our practical unity. Though we are one in position, unfortunately we are not one in practice. Now, the practical unity of the body is manifest by two things. Now, these are very important. One of them is service, and the other is fellowship. The practical unity of the body is manifest by two things: service, and by that we mean the ministering of our spiritual gifts to each other; the second one is fellowship. That means sharing our love with each other. Service, the ministering of gifts; and fellowship, sharing of our love.

Now, in our first message on the idea of unity, we spoke – or really the first message on the body concept, we spoke of our positional unity. And I told you that we are one in Christ. We are all members of the same body; we are members of one another. We were all baptized by the same Spirit; we all possess the same indwelling Spirit; we all have the same life – eternal life. We all have the same head: Christ, who is the head of the entire body.

Positionally, we are one. No question about that. All Christians are one in Christ. But that positional oneness is no guarantee at all that we are one in practice. And I don’t need to tell you we aren’t one; all you need to do is look around and see all the little denominations and all the little organizations, and all the little cliques of people, and all the ones who stand over here and say, “We don’t associate with those,” and the others who say, “We don’t associate with you either; so, we’re both happy.” And you have all of this fractioning. Practically we’re not one.

And when Jesus prayed in John chapter 17 and verse 21, he said, “Father, I pray that they may be one.” Now, he was not praying for our positional oneness, was He? That’s accomplished by salvation. He was praying that we would act like one, that we would be one in practice as we are in position. So, really, when we’re talking about the body, we’re talking about the importance of practical oneness; that is that we are really one in practice, not just in position.

So, the theme of what I’ve been trying to say to you for several weeks has been the fact that we ought to be one in practice. Now, we’ve already talked about the first thing that manifests our oneness: service. We spent three weeks on the spiritual gifts. We’ve learned much about service, how you minister your gift. We’ve learned what the gifts are and what they aren’t, and what the basic operating principles are.

Now, every believer has certain grace gifts, certain spiritual gifts, pneumatikon. Spiritual gifts which we are to minister to each other. And by that ministering to each other, we are, in effect, bringing about this practical oneness. So, for the last three weeks we have emphasized and studied the various gifts and their principles.

Now, since we have covered the positional unity and also the first phase of practical unity – service – that leaves us only with the second one to cover, and that we’ll cover tonight, and that’s fellowship. That’s the only subject we haven’t tapped in terms of our practical unity. There are only two things that make us one: that is service and fellowship. And we’ve covered service; so, tonight we want to talk about fellowship.

Now, the word for fellowship in the New Testament is an interesting word; it’s the word koinōnia. Koinōnia means communion or fellowship. It means intimate communication. That’s what fellowship is. And when God designed men, He designed them for fellowship.

In Genesis chapter 2, I think it’s verse 8, where God says, “It is not good for man to be alone.” Man was not made to be isolated. Being alone is not the will of God. People were made for fellowship. And the Church, the body of Christ, is a body for fellowship. The Church is to be a fellowship. Not a building where you all alone walk in, listen, and all alone walk out, but a place of fellowship.

Larson says an interesting quote that Stott puts in his book One People. It says this, “The neighborhood bar is possibly the best counterfeit there is to the fellowship Christ wants to give His Church. It’s an imitation, dispensing liquor instead of grace, escape rather than reality - but it is a permissive, accepting and inclusive fellowship. It is unshockable. It is democratic. You can tell people secrets, and they usually don’t tell others or even want to. The bar flourishes not because most people are alcoholics, but because God has put into the human heart the desire to know and be known, to love and be loved, and so many seek a counterfeit at the price of a few beers.” If I can add an editorial comment, because they haven’t really seen the real in the body of Christ.

Now, this need for fellowship is the genius of the Church, but may I quickly add that it is not met by the Sunday services or the typical mass aggregations of unrelated, disconnected people. So, there exists in the Church today a desperate need for personal, intimate, fellowship. And this fellowship, like the ministering of the gifts, is intrinsic to the manifestation of our practical unity. Fellowship is absolutely essential to the life of the body.

Now, I want to share with you five areas that the New Testament teaches us about fellowship: its basis, its nature, its danger, its responsibilities, and its result. Five specific areas on which the New Testament teaches regarding fellowship: it’s basis, what fellowship is based on; it’s nature, what it’s like; its danger, what interrupts it; its responsibilities, what do I have to do to maintain it; and its results, what happens when we are in fellowship. And we’ll go as far as we can to night.

First of all, I want you to see the basis of fellowship. What is it based on? And I want you to look at 1 John chapter 1. 1 John chapter 1. You’re going to have put on your thinking cap and screw your brain down tight because we’re going to talk about some things that you’re going to have to think with me on.

Now, what is the basis of our fellowship? There’s a lot of phony fellowship going on today. You read about it in all of the ecumenical nonsense that’s going on, where people are getting together on all kinds of pretenses; that’s not true fellowship. You read about it sometimes when so-called evangelicals decide that they’re going to cooperate with liberals in certain ventures; that’s not true fellowship either.

The basis of our fellowship is not the need of our community; the basis of our fellowship is not some kind of a common goal for social ends. The basis of our fellowship is not that we’re in the same denomination. The basis of our fellowship is not that we’re not in any denomination. What is the basis of our fellowship? Is there really a legitimate basis? Not just ecumenical hash, is there really a legitimate fellowship? Well, I think there obviously is. The basis of fellowship is clearly delineated for us in the first chapter of 1 John.

Now, let me remind you that the word koinōnia or fellowship means commonness or a mutual communication. Koinōnia means commonness. I’ll give you a couple of other forms. Koinōnos means a partner, just a different form, and koinōneō the verb means to share. So, the idea of koinōnia is just sharing partnership, commonness, fellowship, communion, whatever you want to say.

Do believers then have a common ground? Do they have a koinōnia or a koinōnos? Are we partners in something? Do we have something that we can share? It often looks like we don’t, but in fact we do. Because our fellowship is graced – is based on the same common ground. And I want you to see this in 1 John chapter 1, and verse 3. Here is the ground of our fellowship. Now, John is relating the Gospel that he’s heard back in verse 1. He said, “That which we have heard and seen and our hands have handled concerning the Word of life we declare unto you.” And he says it again in verse 3, “that which we have seen and heard declare we unto you” – in other words, “I’m giving you my firsthand experience with Jesus Christ.” He’s proclaiming the Gospel. And the reason he’s proclaiming the Gospel is, “that ye also may have” – what? – “fellowship with us: and truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ.”

Now, John is coming along here, and he’s writing this letter, and he says, “I’m declaring unto you the Gospel.” And the Gospel was about the Word of life, verse 1, who is Jesus Christ. He says, “I’m declaring unto you the Gospel. And the reason I’m doing that is because the Gospel is the basis of fellowship. I want you to know the same God and the same Christ that I know in order that we may have common ground for fellowship.”

You know something interesting? You probably never thought of it this way, but the proclamation of the Gospel is not an end in itself. “The reason,” John says, “we preach the Gospel is in order to have something else.” And it is what? Fellowship. The whole point of the preaching of the Gospel was to create a fellowship. And how ludicrous it is to accept the atonement of Christ and to accept all that He’s done for us and then whack ourselves off from the fellowship that we have been introduced into.

The proclamation of the Gospel, then, is not an end in itself; the proclamation of the Gospel had a goal, and the goal of the proclamation of the Gospel was to create a fellowship. Not an organization, but a fellowship. Not a hierarchy, but a fellowship. Not a structure, but a fellowship. Not an organizational chart on a printed sheet, but a fellowship. And that beautiful, meaningful fellowship created by Christ and His disciples, in the days that He was here on earth, was not to be limited just to them, but all of us who came after and believed in Christ were to be introduced into that very same fellowship. It was for all generations to provide fellowship between them and God and Christ and each other.

Notice verse 3 again, “that which we have seen and heard declare we unto you” – we preached the Gospel – “that you may have fellowship with” – whom? – “with us.” In a sense, we are in the fellowship of the apostles. We’re a part of their fellowship. But our fellowship is not only together; it’s with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ. We’re all wrapped up in a total fellowship involving the Father, the Son, and every other believer in history. This is our fellowship.

So, you see, the end of the Gospel proclamation is not just salvation but fellowship with God, with Christ, and with all other believers. That’s exactly what – that’s exactly what salvation did for you. Did you know that? It made you a part of a fellowship.

You had no fellowship with God prior to salvation. You had no fellowship with Christ prior to salvation. You had no fellowship with believers. When you became a believer, automatically, at that instant, you entered into fellowship with God, fellowship with Christ, and fellowship with every other believer, and that fellowship is eternal.

So, what then is the basis of our fellowship? It is one word: salvation. That’s the basis of our fellowship. A common Savior, a common God, a common faith. Fellowship.

Now, our fellowship originates with God. It was God’s design to bring us into fellowship, wasn’t it? The apostle Paul, writing in 1 Corinthians 1:9 says this, “God is faithful” – this is beautiful – “God is faithful, by whom” – oh this is good – “you were called unto the fellowship of His Son Jesus Christ our Lord.” Don’t you like that? God is faithful, and so He reached down, and He called you to be a part of the fellowship of His Son. Oh that’s beautiful.

You know, we’re not detached from God, are we? We are in the fellowship, friends. God is not some cosmic deity way – we’re in the fellowship. It’s a beautiful thought. Through His sovereign grace He brought us into the fellowship.

You say, “How did He do it?” Well, it was by faith in Jesus Christ. God designed to call us; we put our faith in Christ, and entered into the fellowship. Titus 1:4, listen to this, “– to Titus, mine own son” – here it comes – “after the common faith” – after the common faith. Every one of us comes to God the same way, right? By faith. Common to every one of us. How did we enter into the fellowship? By the common faith.

We all came to the same God through the same Christ with the same faith. And that’s the basis of our unity. Each of us is saved by grace through faith, and that’s the basis of our fellowship. A common Father, a common Savior, a common faith, a common salvation.

And even though we’re different, and even though you say, “Well, my – my salvation wasn’t any rubberstamp deal” – it was unique; you’re right. Every salvation of every individual is as unique as that individual and as God’s love for that individual. And yet, there’s a commonness in all of it, isn’t there?

You say, “Well, wait a minute now, is our fellowship just with the Father and with the Son and with each other? What happened to the Holy Spirit?” Well, that’s taken care of real well. Listen to this: 2 Corinthians 13:14, “The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit.” Do you know what communion is? Koinōnia fellowship.

So, our fellowship is with Christ, God, and the Holy Spirit, and each other. We have fellowship with the Trinity; that’s the basis of our fellowship with each to her. I mean it’s an exciting thing to realize you’re in fellowship with God, isn’t it? Positional fellowship. I’m in the fellowship. You know? I’m in it. I’m a part of it.

And I want to expand this thought for just a moment. We’ve seen that fellowship is a specifically Christian word. That it refers to that common participation in the grace of God, in the salvation of Christ, in the blessing of the indwelling Spirit. It’s all a common participation. We all experience it. Our fellowship with each other stems from our fellowship with the Trinity. This is our fellowship.

So, the apostolic objective in all preaching was to create a human fellowship – watch it – arising spontaneously out of a divine fellowship. The divine fellowship existed, and because of the divine fellowship reaching down to man, a human fellowship existing with that fellowship came into being. You might put it this way: fellowship is not just one aspect of the body; it’s the goal of the whole Gospel to create a fellowship.

Now, John reviews this thought. And we’re back in 1 John 1 again. In verse 5, “This then” – here it is again, see? “This then” – going over it again – “is the message which we have heard of Him and declare unto you, that God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all. If we say that we have fellowship in Him and walk in darkness, we lie and do not the truth: but if we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us from all sin.”

Now, what is this saying? It’s saying this: some people counterfeit the fellowship. Look at it closely, verse 6: “If we say we have fellowship with Him and walk in darkness, we lie and do not the truth.” You know, there are some people who come along and say, “Oh, I’m in the fellowship,” and they’re liars, counterfeit. It’s counterfeit. There are an awful lot of counterfeit fellowships. The ecumenical movement would be the classic example. There’s an awful lot of counterfeit fellowship.

Now, some people say that this verse refers to believers. That verse 7 refers to a believer – and verse 6 refers to a believer who is a believer but who walks in darkness. Other people say it refers to an unbeliever. Now, may I add this? There are acceptable scholars on both sides; it is a very difficult issue. I do not intend to tell you that I have all the solutions. I do intend to give you what I feel is the best interpretation but I cannot be totally dogmatic. You must, as the Spirit of God directs you, consider it yourself.

But the question here – and this is where you have to think with me – the question here is this: does this refer to a believer who is out of fellowship, or does it refer to a counterfeit believer who’s not even a believer at all? That’s the issue. If we make it a believer, then in verse 6 it’s this, “If we believers say that we have fellowship and walk in darkness” – that is we say we’re in the fellowship but we sin – “then we lie; we’re not in the fellowship and do not the truth.” Verse 7, “But if we walk in the light” – that is if we believers who are redeemed and saved keep on walking in the light – “as He is in the light, then we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us from all sin.”

So, you have two possibilities. Now, the question is simple: does this refer to believers? I feel the answer is no. I do not feel that 1 John, in this particular portion, refers to believers, and I’ll show you why. Particularly look at verse 7, “If we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us from all sin.” There you have a conditional statement: “If we walk in the light, His blood cleanses us.” That would mean, if it’s talking about a believer there, that if a believer didn’t walk in the light, his sins would be unforgiven. You see?

In other words, the cleansing is conditional on the walk. So, if a believer does not walk in the light, if he strayed over into the dark deeds, the blood of Christ would stop cleansing him. Well, friends, that’s theological suicide. I do not believe that any believer can be characterized as in the darkness in this text. Let me show you why. In Acts 26:18, to begin with – I’ll read these to you, just jot the text down; you don’t have to look it up – Acts 26:18, “– to open their eyes” – this is why Paul preached – “to open their eyes” – to the Gentiles – “to open their eyes and to turn them from darkness to light.” Salvation is a turning from darkness to light. All right?

1 Thessalonians 5:4 and 5, stay with me, now watch it, “But ye, brethren” – to the believers – “are not in darkness.” Verse 5, “Ye are all sons of light, and sons of the day: we are not of the night, nor of the darkness.” Is a believer of the darkness? No, he is not of the darkness. He is of the light. He is of the day.

One more, Colossians 1:12 and 13. Listen to it, “– giving thanks unto the Father, who hath made us fit to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light: who hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of His dear Son.”

Now, according to those passages, the believer has no part in darkness. We’re in the light. We are in the light. So, these verses, back to 1 John, do not then have primary reference to believers who are out of fellowship. They have primary reference to unbelievers who claim to be a part of the fellowship but who obviously, by walking in the darkness, prove that they are not part of the fellowship.

Now, notice how it reads when you consider it to be an unbeliever? Verse 6, “If some unbeliever says that he has fellowship with Christ and walks in darkness, it’s obvious he lies and doesn’t do the truth. But we believers, walking in the light, as He is in the light, have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Christ cleanses us from all sin.” Walking in the light, friends, is not an option in the Christian life; that is the Christian life. Do you see it? Any believer is walking in the light, and the blood of Christ is cleansing him.

You say, “Yeah, I may be walking in the light, but what happens when I sin?” Well, once in a while you can do the deeds of darkness, but you are in the light. Listen, friends, if being a believer isn’t being in the light, what is it? We are in the light, and consequently the blood of Christ cleanses us. It’s not saying, “If you believers keep your life pure, you know, and” – I mean after all, that would be ridiculous. If we kept our lives pure, we wouldn’t need the blood of Christ to cleanse us. Right? If that referred to a believer, why would he say, “If you walk in the light” – which means, you know, constantly doing what God wants, why would the blood of Christ keep on cleansing us? We wouldn’t have anything to cleanse if that meant a believer’s walk. That’s a position of a believer; he is in the light. We’re in the light, and the blood of Christ does cleanse.

Then in classic apostolic fashion, John gives to those unbelievers an invitation to come into the true fellowship, verse 9. Now he says, “You’ve been faking it. How would you like to be a real part? Here’s how: if we confess our sins, He’s faithful and just to” – what? – “forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from” – how much unrighteousness? – all unrighteousness.

Now, some people say, “Well, that refers to a Christian. And if a Christian confesses his sins, then he’s forgiven.” How much is he going to be forgiven of? What does it say? All. So, if he did it once, how many times would he have to do it again? If he’s forgiven of all unrighteousness – you see, once you confess your sins, what are you forgiven of and cleansed of? All unrighteousness. It doesn’t leave a whole lot left.

Verse 9 is an invitation to the counterfeit fellowship to come into the real fellowship by confessing sin. Then in turn, God forgives and cleanses. And the verb there is linear; it keeps on cleansing. Keeps on cleansing. Keeps on cleansing from all unrighteousness. To say that a believer has to keep on confessing for forgiveness is to make forgiveness contingent on confession. Did you get that? If that’s a believer, then it means every time you sin, you have to confess to be forgiven. And I read several books this week that said that. That you have to confess to be forgiven.

I don’t believe that. I don’t believe a Christian has to go through his life constantly, constantly, constantly asking God, “Please forgive me, please forgive me, please forgive me.” You know what you’re doing? You’re making a mockery out of the cross. Jesus said, at the end of the cross, “It is finished.” Once you confess and ask forgiveness, He cleanses you from all sin. And to deny that, I believe, is to deny the full work of the cross and the word that says all our sins are under His blood.

Now, let me show you something interesting. You say, “Well, gee, I didn’t think 1 John was written to an unbeliever.” Well, the first chapter has application to an unbeliever obviously. We’ve just seen that. But now watch how he changes and talks to the believer in verse 1 of chapter 2. Now, “My little children, these things write I unto you” – you see a transition there? Sure – “that ye sin not. If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous.” Does he say that we need to – we little children need to confess? Does it say that there? It just says, “Now, getting to us, little children, we have an advocate.” You see the difference? So that you don’t stack up two sins in a row every time you sin; it’s under the blood, just as fast as it happens.

You say, “That sounds like license.” No. No. It doesn’t work that way. Now, look at verse 12 of chapter 2, “I write unto you, little children, because your sins” – what? what’s the key word there? – “are.” “I write unto you, little children, because your sins are forgiven because you confessed them.” Is that what it says? What does it say? “For His name’s sake.” Just because of who Jesus is and what he did, little children, they’re all forgiven. Do you see that in the life of a believer, forgiveness is not contingent upon confession? You don’t need to ask God to forgive you; He did.

Confession – you say, “Well, shouldn’t I ever talk about my sin?” Of course you should. You just go to Him and say, “God, I’m sorry, and I repent.” But you don’t have to say, “Please forgive me, please forgive me, please forgive me.” He already did. He already did.

Let me show you. Romans chapter 4. I want you to watch this because it’s very important. And I told you we were going to have a short message tonight, and I meant it. Romans 4 – you’ll see –  maybe – Romans 4:6, “Even as David also describeth the blessedness of the man, unto whom God imputeth righteousness apart from works” – now listen, here it comes – “saying, ‘Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not impute sin.” Now, who is that man? That’s the believer. And God never imputes one single, solitary sin against any believer any time. You can’t stack them up, friends. And they’re not forgiven on the basis of confession; I can’t see it.

Colossians 2:13. Listen to this, Colossians 2:13 says it – here it comes, you ready? – “And you, being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh” – watch this – “hath He” – that is Christ – “made alive” – now watch it – “having forgiven you all trespasses.” Did you hear that? How many? All.

Now, when did He forgive them all? When you were saved. Now, watch this. One more – and there are more than just these – Ephesians 4:32, listen to this; this is really something – “and be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath” – what? – “forgiven you.” Hath. What tense is that? Past tense.

All your sins are forgiven. Your sins are forgiven. You don’t ever need to ask God to forgive your sins. Do you like what Paul says in Romans 5 when he says, “In this grace in which we stand”? We stand in grace. We do not beg God to forgive. Oh, yes, we ask him with humble hearts to lead us, to guide us, to instruct us, to reveal His will to us. And then when we fail in those areas to follow Him, we get on our knees and in sorrow we cry out in repentance, don’t we? But we don’t beg Him to forgive us. We say, “God, I’m sorry; I want it to be different. I agree with You; I acknowledge my sin, and I thank You for already having forgiven me.” You see? It’s exciting.

You see, that’s why no believer ever has to worry about losing his salvation, because as soon as the sin comes long, it’s forgiven. So, fellowship, then, is based upon God’s grace. That’s going more into 1 John 1:9 than we anticipated. Fellowship is based on God’s grace. It is based on my personal faith in Christ; it is based on confessing my sin one time and asking Him to forgive me and come into my life. And then He keeps on and cleanses me from all unrighteousness.

And then do you know what happens when I do that? I am in the fellowship. That’s exciting. And my fellowship is with God; and you’re in fellowship with God. It’s terrific, isn’t it? With Christ – I love that – with the Spirit, sweet fellowship. And with everybody else who’s in the body. And do you know how long this fellowship’s going to go? Forever. And it’s only going to get sweeter, because when we get to heaven, everybody’s going to get in on it. See? That’s the goal of the Gospel, friends, to create an internal fellowship. Did you know that? True fellowship isn’t based on church membership; it isn’t based on religious deeds; it isn’t based on good works; it isn’t based on church attendance. It isn’t based on claiming to be in the fellowship. That’s counterfeit. It’s based on salvation.

Now, I want you to keep in mind the concept of confession, though, because we’re going to see how even in a believer’s life, though we do not ask for forgiveness, we need to open up our hearts and admit to God our sin. And we’ll see that in weeks to come. What is the basis of fellowship then? Salvation.

I’m going to close right there, and next week we’ll talk about the other areas. I told you. Because I want to say a couple of more things, and then I want to – No, I’m just kidding. But I want you to get a grip on this theme.

And I want to say this as we close our message tonight, there may be some of you here tonight who aren’t in the fellowship. And may I please say to you with all the love that I can in my heart, I do not want you to get the idea that we feel our fellowship is exclusive. It’s not an “Us four, no more, shut the door.” Not at all. It’s not a – it’s not a super sanctimonious kind of sectarianism. Not at all.

Listen, the fellowship that we have with Jesus Christ is something that we want every single one of you to have. Somebody probably asked you to come here tonight. If you’re not a Christian, you’re not in the fellowship. The fellowship of all those around the world who love Jesus Christ. Somebody probably asked you to come. And you know why they asked you? Because they loved you and because they wanted to open up the fellowship a little bit and get you in it.

You say, “Well, I’d like to be in the fellowship. My heart is lonely, I hunger for answers, and I want to know truth and reality. How can I get in the fellowship? I’ve tried to tell you tonight: by believing that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and falling down on your knees before Him and saying, “Christ, I confess my sin. Please forgive me; come into my life.” And in the split second when that happens, you will come into the fellowship. And from then on, every sin that come into your life will be forgiven instantly. And some day, when you leave this world, you’ll enter into the presence of God and eternal joy forever. That’s what the fellowship’s all about.

We don’t want to keep you out; we want you in. We’re here to share with you. And if you don’t know Jesus Christ tonight, then you’re not in this fellowship. I beg you, in Christ’s stead, receive Him. Ask Him to cleanse your life, forgive your sin, place you into the fellowship of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Let’s bow in prayer.

Father, tonight we just have rejoiced. We’ve learned some things tonight, and we rejoice because we’re in the fellowship. Not because we deserved it; oh, we didn’t deserve it; we know that. Not because we were worthy of it; far from that. But because You called us by Your grace and love into the fellowship of Your Son. Oh, Father, what a joy that is. Thank You. And then to think that You just keep on cleansing us. What a thrill.

Well, we realize, too, that there perhaps are some here tonight – we know there are – who aren’t in the fellowship, who don’t know what it is to walk and talk with God, who don’t know what it is to just feel the love of Jesus Christ and His arms about them, who don’t understand the precious sense of the indwelling Spirit and all the power that He gives. Father, tonight I pray that they might come into the fellowship.

This sermon series includes the following messages:

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Unleashing God’s Truth, One Verse at a Time
Since 1969

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