Where We're At 2021

John 13:34-35 January 1, 2021 Pastor Ricky Alcantar
Thesis The church is worth sacrificial love and service because it is precious to God, essential to Christian maturity, and the vehicle of gospel mission, and we must push through COVID-era challenges to position ourselves for the mission God has ahead.
Series
Mission
Type
Tone
pastoraldidacticprophetic
Method
applicatorycanonical
What's in this sermon

The shape of the argument

44 units across exposition, application, illustration, theological claim, and conclusion. The pastor's argument is built from these moving parts.

Pastoral correction · unit #28
"Care expanded into concrete one-another commands. Ricky rapid-fires NT imperatives (bear burdens, teach, show hospitality, build up, pray) and applies them directly: don't defer care to leaders — you follow up, you reach out, you know people's details, you act."
Doctrinal loci· 10 surfaced
Ecclesiology · 33 Ethics / Moral Theology · 6 Soteriology · 6 Sanctification · 5 Christology · 3 Providence / Sovereignty · 2 Anthropology · 1 Bibliology · 1 Hamartiology · 1 Pastoral Theology · 1
Bible citations· 28
John 13:34-35 | John 13:34 | Isaiah 54 | Revelation 21 | Matthew 16:18 | Ephesians 5 | John 15 | Acts 2:47 | Ephesians 4 | Matthew 28 | Acts 1 | John 13 | Romans 12:10 | Acts 2 | 1 Corinthians 12 | 1 Thessalonians 4 | Romans 14 | Galatians 6 | 1 Peter 4 | James 5 | Galatians 5 | Colossians 3:13 | Ephesians 5:21 | 1 Peter 5
Illustrations· 4
  1. historical example · unit #1 — Churchill illustration establishing the sermon's rhetorical strategy: brutal honesty about challenges paired with relentless optimism about victory. Sets the emotional and structural template for what follows.
  2. hypothetical · unit #15 — Hypothetical illustration proving the church's irreplaceability. Ricky constructs an absurd best-case solo-Christian scenario (D.A. Carson, Chris Tomlin, resurrected Billy Graham as personal tutors) and asserts you would still be less mature than in a local church.
  3. personal story · unit #16 — Personal-story illustrations of why the church is necessary for maturity. Ricky offers humorous examples (bumper sticker anger, party exclusion) showing how the messiness of actual church life reveals sin and shapes character in ways solo Bible study cannot.
  4. historical example · unit #22 — Mark Dever illustration dramatizing the church's unique divine backing. Ricky recounts Dever's provocation at a campus fellowship (the promise is for the church, not para-church ministries) to establish that the church alone has God's guarantee of endurance through all trials.
Theological claims· 6
  1. Serving is legitimately harder in this season, and the pastor and his family feel it too. unit #6
  2. The church is precious to God because Jesus calls it his own and loves it as a bridegroom loves his bride. unit #10
  3. Because God demonstrated the church's preciousness by sending his Son to die for sinners, we must regard the church as precious. unit #11
  4. The church is not an optional enhancement to individual spirituality but essential to what it means to be a Christian. unit #12
  5. The gospel is the ultimate solution to the brokenness exposed in 2020, and every deep human longing is answered in the gospel of Jesus Christ. unit #18
  6. The church is God's design for how the gospel gets from the biblical text to the human beings who need it. unit #19
Quotations· 3
"For decades now, we've conceived of church not so much as something before which we are accountable and through which our Christian identity is realized, but as an optional enhancement to our own personally curated spiritual path." — Brett McCracken (unit #12)
"Church is not essential, we assume, because Christianity is just as easily practiced solo at home. Give me a Bible, some inspiring worship music, maybe a few spiritual podcasts, and I'm good. Do we really need the church to be spiritually healthy?" — Brett McCracken (unit #12)
"The gates of hell will not prevail against my campus fellowship." — Mark Dever (unit #22)
Read it

Full transcript

44,243 characters 44 units ~49 min reading time

0 · Ricky introduces himself, orients the congregation to the text (John 13), and frames the sermon as a departure from typical exposition — a state-of-the-church address about COVID-era challenges and the path forward

All right, so I'm Ricky. If you're new here, thanks for being here. Thanks for being in the house of the Lord today. Turn to John chapter 13. We're going to close out our series on mission this month, kind of a mini series on mission as we start the year.

We're going to close it out with a little bit— something a little bit different. We're going to have a really honest conversation about where we're at as a church, where we are facing challenges in the COVID era, and how to move forward together.

1 · Churchill illustration establishing the sermon's rhetorical strategy: brutal honesty about challenges paired with relentless optimism about victory

I've been reading a book on Winston Churchill and his leadership of England during World War II before America, dragging its feet, finally got into the war. And so for a period it was just England facing all of the sort of Nazi armadas and armies themselves. And he had a leadership quality that I want to try to emulate for our church this morning.

He was always brutally honest. With the British public about where they were, but he was also always relentlessly optimistic about their chances. He had the British public believing even if America never got in the war, they would win single-handedly against all of Europe, which I think is pretty remarkable. And I think that's helpful. It's helpful to just be honest and straight, like, this is where we're at, and this is why I believe that that we will not be defeated.

2 · First challenge catalogued: relational distance and accumulated loss

And so I'm gonna just be honest upfront at the top of the message here with some of the challenges that we face as a church in the COVID era. So I'm gonna just go through these. So the first one is that I think after a year of isolation, both physical and social and all kinds, we are feeling relational distance from one another in the church. If you're feeling that, I'm feeling that, I think we're all feeling that. Many of us have come out of 2020 with, you know, having endured some hits.

We got tagged a little bit. We may have taken financial hits or personal hits. We may have lost people. I know many people in our city especially have lost a relative in this last year.

3 · Second and third challenges: irreconcilable safety disagreements and community group struggles

We face a situation where we cannot, as a church, design a perfect safety plan or set of safety restrictions for our church that everyone will agree with. It's just, it can't be done. We have tried and it is not possible. In our community groups, we've had some good times of fellowship, but we've also had a number of groups and a number of members struggling to get traction in their group, just saying it's not the same to try to connect with a screen, or, you know, I can't go to somebody's backyard, or this isn't working for me for one reason or another.

4 · Fourth challenge: volunteer shortages

On our Sunday teams front, I think all Sunday teams over the last year have faced shortages because in terms of volunteer base, we used to have two things working for us as a church. One is we had a small, probably too small group of people that were super servants that would serve like every week, just crank it out. But many of those folks, some of them have been benched because maybe they're caring for an aging relative and they can't take on additional risk, though hopefully that will improve in the near term. Or maybe we've run into this thing a few times where you almost need more volunteers than normal because anytime somebody gets exposed, they may stay home stay home from church. Anytime somebody's sneezing, we're like, don't come, please don't come, no, no, no, you know. I feel warm today, okay, that's fine, you know, just, this is where we're at. And we also face an issue where about a quarter of our church is usually military or transient, people that are here temporarily, federal workers, that kind of thing. But one of the things that's happened is those waves are normally kind of on top of each other, keeping a constant group. But as the group that has been with us longest is kind of ebbing out, and I see some of you and I'm like, oh no, we're gonna lose them. As they're ebbing out, we have not, because of COVID got another wave of folks, of reinforcements, right? Because frankly, most people are not out there just checking out churches during the pandemic as a hobby. So if you're connected to a church, you're kind of plugged in, but if you're not, then you're waiting.

5 · Fifth challenge: the vicious cycle exemplified by kids' ministry

And then our kids ministry kind of exemplifies the catch-22 we're in with our volunteer base. Many of our folks at church, maybe you're here watching this at home, many folks are not attending because we don't have kids ministry, because maybe they've tried to bring their kids and it feels it's been a distraction, or they've tried to work through it, or one reason or another they're waiting for that. But we can't open more kids classes unless we have more people coming and more people volunteering. And so you end up in this sort of vicious cycle where, you know, folks aren't here and aren't involved, but then they And to get them back involved, we need people to bring them in the first place. And so you just end up like, ah, I don't know how to get out of this.

And I'm worried a little as a pastor that we, on a spiritual level, we could get caught in kind of a cycle as a church that becomes normal where people don't serve and don't participate in CG or don't participate in church because they feel disconnected. And so they back off, but because they back off, it furthers the problem of their disconnection. And I think that's what we're all gonna face coming out of this. And I think spiritually, as we've walked through the last year, we all face a drift towards sort of looking at the church through a more consumer lens, right? We can feel like, oh man, why isn't the library back up? Come on, library, you know? And we can kind of look at the services around and just be, ah, the church should be doing this. Why isn't this in place? And I'm just gonna be super frank with you. We've had a few folks that have attended our church tell us they're no longer attending because we don't have certain kids ministry classes or because we don't have certain ministries running and they're like, "I'm gonna go to a church that has that up and running." And maybe that's one end of the spectrum and then maybe on the other end of the spectrum, people are watching online and they're waiting to be able to reenter but they're waiting to reenter church life until a certain point until certain, you know, women's Bible studies are back or something. But we can't get those things up and running until we have more people participating. So we end up in this cycle.

Where this fits

Recent preaching context

The three sermons immediately preceding this one in the preaching schedule.

Nov 22, 2020
The thing we are most waiting for in our seasons of longing and uncertainty is not changed circumstances but God himself, who has already come to us in Jesus Christ and will one day close the remaining gap when he returns.
Isaiah 40:9-11
Dec 6, 2020
Christ was born for those far off, and the church is called to be faithful messengers who carry the gospel to unlikely people, confident that God will gather a glorious multitude from every nation, tribe, people, and language.
Revelation 7:9-10
Dec 20, 2020
Though circumstances may make it appear that God has forgotten his people, the incarnation and birth of Christ in Luke 2 demonstrates definitively that God always remembers his people, coming to the lowly, fulfilling his promises in greater ways than imagined, and lifting up the cast-down through the mission of his Son.
Luke 2:1-7
January 1 · This sermon
Where We're At 2021
The church is worth sacrificial love and service because it is precious to God, essential to Christian maturity, and the vehicle of gospel mission, and we must push through COVID-era challenges to position ourselves for the mission God has ahead.
John 13:34-35
Take it further

Discuss · apply · pray

Couples · three questions over coffee

Love Like Jesus Loved the Church

  1. What did you hear in this sermon about why the church matters—and where do you feel most resistant to that claim right now?
  2. In what ways have we drifted from each other or from our church family in this season, and what would it look like for us to love the church together the way Jesus calls us to?
  3. How can we pray for each other this week to recommit—one of us to something specific in service, the other to the grace we need to sustain it?
Draft · pending review
Sunday-evening family table

Why We Need the Church

For the parent

This card anchors in Ricky's core claim: the church isn't optional, it's essential to becoming who God wants you to be. Set it up by asking the prompt at dinner, then listen for what your kids think maturity and growth actually require — do they see the church as part of that, or separate from it? The goal is to help them realize that following Jesus isn't a solo thing.

Pastor Ricky said the church is like the way God designed us to grow up and become more like Jesus. Think of something you've learned or grown in this past year — maybe being braver, or kinder, or learning something new. Who helped you get there? A coach? A teacher? A friend? A family member? Now here's the real question: Who are the people at church who help you grow closer to Jesus? If you can't think of anyone yet, what's one person you could get to know better?
works for ages 7+ — younger kids may need help naming a specific person, but the basic idea of 'people help us grow' is concrete and accessible
Draft · pending review
Small-group discussion

6 questions for your group this week

  1. Pastor Ricky named some hard realities about where we are as a church right now — disconnection, volunteer fatigue, kids' ministry on pause. Which of these challenges feels most real to you personally, and why?
    → What has that challenge cost you or your family in the past year?
  2. Read John 13:34-35 together. What does Jesus say the world will know about his disciples by? And what do you think that looks like in a church community?
    John 13:34-35
    → When have you actually felt that kind of love from this church, or seen it lived out between brothers and sisters here?
  3. Pastor Ricky said the church is precious to God because Jesus calls it his own and loves it as a bridegroom loves his bride. If that's true — if the church is that precious to God — what should that change about how we regard the church?
    Ephesians 5
  4. One of the sermon's big claims was that the church is not optional to your Christian maturity — it's essential. How have you experienced that to be true in your own life? Where has the church been God's design for your growth?
    Romans 12:10
    → What area of your life right now needs the help and care that only the church can provide?
  5. Jesus commanded us to love one another 'as I have loved you' (John 13:34). What did Jesus's love cost him? And what does it cost us to love the church the way he did?
    John 13:34
    → What is one concrete way you could stretch yourself to love someone in this church family this week — through service, care, or commitment?
  6. Pastor Ricky laid out a plan to rebuild kids' ministry and community groups in the coming months. As you think about the mission God has ahead for our church, what role do you sense the Lord inviting you to play — and what would it take for you to say yes to that?
    Matthew 28
    → What's one fear or hesitation holding you back, and how might the gospel speak to that?
Draft · pending review
Daily readings · Monday–Friday

5-day reading plan

This week we meditate on why the church is worth our sacrifice: precious to God, essential to Christian maturity, and the vehicle of gospel mission.

Monday Ephesians 5

Paul opens Ephesians 5 by calling husbands to love their wives *as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her.* The image is unambiguous: Christ's love for the church is the measure of all earthly love. If the church is worth Christ's self-giving, what does that tell us about how we should regard it — not as an optional gathering, but as the beloved bride for which he poured out his blood?

Tuesday Matthew 16:18

On this rock, Christ says, *I will build my church, and the gates of hell will not overcome it.* Jesus stakes his own name and victory on the church's permanence. In a season when the church feels fragile — when volunteers are stretched thin and participation has fractured — we need to remember: Christ's own resurrection power is bound up with the church's existence and mission. Our labor in the church is not fighting against entropy; it is partnering with the One who has already won.

Wednesday Acts 2:47

In Acts 2, the early church *grew* because they were *praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people.* The church was not a hidden club; it was the visible, tangible carrier of gospel credibility and attraction. When we serve the church, teach in the church, show up in the church, we are stewarding the very means by which the world sees Jesus. Our faithfulness in this season positions us to be the conduit of gospel mission ahead.

Thursday 1 Thessalonians 4

Paul writes to Thessalonica about *how to live in order to please God* — and immediately he moves to how we *love one another* and *encourage one another.* There is no Christianity without Christianship, no faith lived in isolation. Maturity, growth, holiness — all of it is bound to the presence and care of other believers. If you have any need for growth in your faith, God's design is to meet you through the church.

Friday Romans 12:10

Paul's command is precise: *Be devoted to one another in love. Honor one another above yourselves.* This is not conditional love. It is not love contingent on the season being easy or volunteers being plentiful. In this COVID season, when serving is harder and disconnection is real, we are called to the same sacrificial posture Jesus embodied — showing up, caring, honoring, serving — not because it feels natural, but because it is what the church deserves and what the gospel demands of us.

Draft · pending review
Pray together this week

A Prayer for the Church We're Called to Love

Father, we come before you with gratitude for the church — that precious bride purchased by the blood of your Son, loved by Jesus as his own, and designed by your wisdom to be the vehicle of the gospel to our city and our world. We marvel that you have made us members of one another, that you have called us to maturity not in isolation but through the body of Christ gathered in community and covenant.

We confess that we have grown weary in this season. The disconnection we feel is real. The volunteer shortages are real. The cycle of decreased participation that deepens our distance from one another — we feel it. And so we come before you acknowledging our fatigue, our hesitation, our tendency to withdraw when serving grows harder. Forgive us for treating the church as optional, as an enhancement to our individual spirituality rather than as essential to what it means to follow Jesus at all.

Yet here is our good news: you have demonstrated the church's worth by giving your Son for it. Jesus loved the church and gave himself for her. And that same Jesus who washed the disciples' feet and commanded us to love one another as he has loved us — he is alive and present with us still. His love is not diminished by our weariness. His commitment to us does not depend on our circumstances. We receive afresh the gospel that saves us, matures us, and sends us.

We ask you, Father, to knit our hearts together in fresh commitment to one another. Give us the courage to show up, to serve, to care with the deep and attentive love Jesus has shown us. Restore our kids' ministries. Revive our community groups. Help us stretch ourselves — in our giving, our time, our presence — so that the gospel moves from the biblical text through the church and into the lives of those who desperately need it. Make us a people willing to sacrifice for the church because we know how precious it is to you.

And as we move into the months ahead, strengthen our resolve. We commit ourselves afresh to love this church as Christ loved us — with all-weather devotion, with care, with service. To your name be the glory, and to your church be our whole hearts. Amen.

Draft · pending review
Memory verse this week

John 13:34-35

A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also must love one another. By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.

Why this verse: This verse is the sermon's load-bearing text and theological anchor. It establishes both the *why* (the church is precious because Christ loved it and commands us to love it sacrificially) and the *how* (love one another as Christ loved us) that drives Ricky's call for the congregation to push through COVID-era challenges and recommit to the church as essential to Christian maturity and gospel mission.

Draft · pending review
Where this was preached

About the church

Cross of Grace Church
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# Cross of Grace Church

A church preaching expository sermons through the books of the Bible.

## Sermons
- [The Waiting, the Wolves and the Good Shepherd (Isaiah 40:9-11, 2020-11-22)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2020/11/the-waiting-the-wolves-and-the-good-shepherd)
- [Born to Those Far Off (Revelation 7:9-10, 2020-12-06)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2020/12/born-to-those-far-off)
- [Born for the Forgotten (Luke 2:1-7, 2020-12-20)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2020/12/born-for-the-forgotten)
- [Where We're At 2021 (John 13:34-35, 2021-01-01)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2021/01/where-we-re-at-2021)

## About
- [About the church](/about)
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