Where We're At 2021

John 13:34-35 January 31, 2021 Pastor Ricky Alcantar
Thesis Despite pandemic-induced disconnection and difficulty, we must press into church life with renewed commitment because the church is precious to God, essential to Christian maturity, and the only God-designed vehicle for gospel mission.
Series
Mission
Type
Topical
Tone
pastoraldidactic
Method
applicatorycanonical
What's in this sermon

The shape of the argument

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

Pastoral correction · unit #30
"Forbids normalizing church-switching based on preference by contrasting it with Jesus' covenantal treatment of us, calling instead for long-haul commitment and care."
Doctrinal loci· 8 surfaced
Ecclesiology · 43 Sanctification · 16 Ethics / Moral Theology · 6 Christology · 4 Soteriology · 4 Providence / Sovereignty · 3 Pastoral Theology · 2 Doxology / Worship · 1
Bible citations· 24
John 13:34-35 | Matthew 16:18 | Ephesians 5 | Isaiah 54 | Revelation 21 | John 15 | Acts 2:47 | Ephesians 4 | Acts 1 | Matthew 28 | John 13 | Acts 2 | Romans 12:10 | 1 Corinthians 12 | Galatians 6 | 1 Peter 4 | James 5 | 1 Thessalonians 4 | Romans 14 | Galatians 5 | Colossians 3:13 | Ephesians 5:21 | 1 Peter 5
Illustrations· 4
  1. historical example · unit #1 — Introduces Churchill's leadership during WWII as a model combining brutal honesty about the present with relentless optimism about the future—a pattern the pastor intends to follow in addressing the church.
  2. personal story · unit #11 — Shares a personal story about the chaotic Sunday morning routine with his kids to illustrate how serving at church has become logistically more difficult during COVID, even for the pastor.
  3. hypothetical · unit #20 — Uses a hypothetical scenario comparing elite one-on-one discipleship from famous Christians (D.A. Carson, Chris Tomlin, resurrected Billy Graham) with local church membership, arguing that even the perfect curriculum cannot mature you like the body of Christ because bumper stickers and party non-invitations reveal your sin in ways private Bible study cannot.
  4. historical example · unit #24 — Cites Mark Dever's message to a campus fellowship distinguishing the local church from parachurch ministries: only the church has God's promise that the gates of hell will not prevail against it, making it uniquely backed for mission regardless of circumstances.
Theological claims· 7
  1. Before we can mobilize to restore full church life, we must first establish why the church is worth the sacrificial effort required. unit #13
  2. We should love the church because it is precious to God—Jesus claims it as 'my church' and relates to it as his bride. unit #16
  3. Jesus demonstrated that the church is precious by laying down his life for sinners, calling them friends and bride despite their sin. unit #17
  4. The church is not an optional enhancement but essential to what it means to be a Christian—the New Testament assumes believers are added to a definite body, not left to practice faith solo. unit #18
  5. The church is the vehicle God designed to carry the gospel from Scripture to people who need it. unit #22
  6. Jesus defines the shape of Christian love by his own example, preventing us from substituting our own comfortable definitions. unit #26
  7. Loving the church means caring for one another with the same deep, attentive knowledge of needs, joys, and sorrows that Jesus has for us. unit #31
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 #18)
"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 #18)
"The verse says, 'The gates of hell will not prevail against the church.'" — Mark Dever (unit #24)
Read it

Full transcript

44,767 characters 52 units ~50 min reading time Listen instead →

0 · Opens the sermon by welcoming the congregation and framing the message as an honest assessment of the church's current challenges in the COVID era and a path forward together

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 · Introduces Churchill's leadership during WWII as a model combining brutal honesty about the present with relentless optimism about the future—a pattern the pastor intends to follow in addressing the church

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.

2 · Transitions from the Churchill illustration to the sermon's opening diagnostic section, establishing the commitment to honest assessment

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 that we will not be defeated. 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.

3 · Identifies the first challenge: relational distance resulting from a year of isolation, acknowledging shared losses and hits the congregation has endured

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.

4 · Identifies the second challenge: the impossibility of creating a universally agreeable safety plan, acknowledging the church has attempted this and failed

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.

5 · Identifies the third challenge: community groups are experiencing difficulty with engagement, as members struggle to find meaningful connection through screens and restricted formats

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 the screen, or, you know, I can't go to somebody's backyard, or this isn't working for me for one reason or another.

Where this fits

Recent preaching context

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

Jan 10, 2021
The natural state of the Christian life is moving on mission with Jesus, because we encounter a God who is himself in motion toward sinners and who sets all who follow him in motion to declare and demonstrate his kingdom.
Mark 6:7-13
Jan 17, 2021
Being a Christian means giving our lives to declare and demonstrate the good news about Jesus Christ, making this the central melody to which all other pursuits serve as harmonies.
Mark 6:7-13
Jan 24, 2021
The difficulties of 2020 revealed that we belong not to ourselves but to God, and embracing this truth transforms our anxiety into trust, our anger into worship, and our consumerism into sacrificial love for the church.
Romans 14:7-9
January 31 · This sermon
Where We're At 2021
Despite pandemic-induced disconnection and difficulty, we must press into church life with renewed commitment because the church is precious to God, essential to Christian maturity, and the only God-designed vehicle for gospel mission.
John 13:34-35
Take it further

Discuss · apply · pray

Small-group discussion

6 questions for your group this week

  1. What reasons does the sermon give for why the church is precious to God? Where in Scripture does Jesus himself make this claim about his own church?
    Matthew 16:18; Ephesians 5
    → How does knowing that Jesus calls the church 'my church' and treats it as his bride change the way you think about your local congregation?
  2. The sermon argues that the church is not optional but essential to being a Christian. What does the New Testament assume about how believers are meant to live out their faith together?
    Acts 2:47; 1 Corinthians 12
    → What fears or resistances come up in you when you think about the church being essential rather than optional?
  3. Jesus defines Christian love by his own example in John 13:34-35. What does it look like to love one another 'as I have loved you' in the concrete life of your church community?
    John 13:34-35
    → Where is that standard of love stretching you beyond what feels comfortable right now?
  4. The sermon says that loving the church means caring for one another with the same deep, attentive knowledge that Jesus has for us. Who in your church community do you actually know at that depth right now?
    John 15
    → What would it take to know one or two people in your group that well?
  5. Ricky compares commitment to the church to a mailman showing up regardless of conditions. What is the difference between loving the church when it's convenient and loving it covenantally?
    Galatians 6; 1 Peter 4
    → What would it require from you to show up for your church community in that way this year?
  6. The sermon frames the local church as God's vehicle for carrying the gospel to people who need it. What specific role do you sense God is calling you to play in that mission—whether in kids ministry, community groups, or care for one another?
    Matthew 28; Acts 1
    → What's one small step you could take this month to move toward that role?
Draft · pending review
Daily readings · Monday–Friday

5-day reading plan

This week we meditate on why the church is precious—to God, to our formation, and to the world—and what it means to love it as Jesus loved us.

Monday Matthew 16:18

Jesus didn't say 'a church' or 'the institution'—he said *my church*. That possessive claim runs deeper than any organization we might build or abandon. When we hesitate to commit to church life, we're hesitating to commit to something Jesus himself has claimed as his own, his prize, his bride. This is the foundation: before we ask what the church should do for us, we must see that we are his beloved.

Tuesday Ephesians 5

Paul's image of Christ giving himself up for the church isn't metaphorical romance—it's the deepest measure of value. Jesus bled and died for people who would betray him, doubt him, and abandon gathering with him. He didn't wait for us to become worthy; he made us worthy by his sacrifice. Our commitment to the church is always a response to a commitment already completed for us.

Wednesday Acts 2:47

Luke doesn't say believers *chose to join* a church or *found a church that suited them*—he says the Lord *added them* to the church. Salvation and church membership are woven together in Scripture, not separated. You cannot follow Jesus alone in a way that matches what the New Testament assumes. We need the body, not as decoration but as the very vehicle of our growth.

Thursday Matthew 28

The Great Commission doesn't send individuals out with a message—it sends a *gathered, equipped, sent* body. The gospel reaches the world not through isolated Christians but through churches that teach, baptize, and disciple together. When we withdraw from church life for convenience or preference, we're not just stepping back from community—we're removing ourselves from the pipeline God designed to reach the lost.

Friday John 13

Jesus washed the disciples' feet—not as a ritual but as an act of intimate, knowing service. He wasn't checking a box; he was touching their lives with attention to their actual condition. This is what *loving the church* looks like: showing up to know people's sorrows, celebrate their joys, and serve them not out of duty but out of the same sacrificial attentiveness Jesus showed us. That kind of love requires presence, commitment, and the willingness to be stretched beyond our comfort.

Draft · pending review
Pray together this week

Father, Make Us the Church You Designed

Father, we come before you grateful for your Son, who loved the church so completely that he laid down his life for us—sinners, yet claimed as his bride and his friends. We confess that after a year of separation, our love for one another has grown cold in some places, our commitment has wavered, and we have begun to treat the church as optional, something we attend when it suits us rather than something essential to who we are as your children. We have forgotten that you designed the church not as an enhancement to Christian life but as the very means by which we grow in holiness, are known deeply, and become instruments of your gospel mission.

And here's the good news: Jesus has not abandoned us or this church. He stands among us still, commanding us to love one another as he has loved us—with persistence, with knowledge of our sorrows and joys, with a commitment that does not depend on our performance or our comfort. He has made us members of his body, and in that body, our growth and our mission are one.

We ask you, Father, to rekindle our love for this church body. Give us courage to show up, to serve, to know one another's names and struggles and victories. Restore our kids ministry and our community groups as infrastructure for the gospel work you have for us. Free us from the mindset that treats the church like a gym we can change at will, and bind us together with covenantal commitment that reflects the commitment Christ made to us. And when we are stretched beyond our comfort zones, when sacrifice is required, remind us that we are simply following the one who loved us first.

May the world see in our love for one another that we belong to Jesus. We commit ourselves to this church, this family, this mission, in his name.

Draft · pending review
Sunday-evening family table

Jesus Shows Us How to Love the Church

For the parent

This card anchors in the moment from the sermon when Ricky talked about Jesus laying down his life for the church despite our sin—the ultimate picture of committed love. The goal is to help kids see that loving the church isn't a burden imposed on us, but a response to how Jesus first loved us.

Ricky talked about how Jesus loved the church by laying down his life for people who weren't perfect—people who mess up, just like all of us do. If Jesus loved the church that much, what do you think it looks like when we love our church family the same way? Can you think of one person at Cross of Grace you could show that kind of love to this week?
works for ages 7+
Draft · pending review
Couples · three questions over coffee

Love Like Jesus Loved Us

  1. What did you hear in this sermon about why the church matters—and where do you feel resistance or hesitation in your own heart about committing to it?
  2. In what ways has isolation or distance weakened how we show up for one another in our church family, and what's one step we could take together to rebuild that commitment?
  3. How can we pray for each other this week to love the church—and the people in it—the way Jesus has loved us?
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 is the sermon's primary text and the definition of what loving the church actually means—not sentiment or preference, but Christ-modeled commitment that is visible to the watching world. Memorizing this verse anchors the hearer in Jesus' own standard for how we are to relate to one another in the local church body.

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
- [Jesus Movement (Mark 6:7-13, 2021-01-10)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2021/01/jesus-movement)
- [Moving on Mission (Mark 6:7-13, 2021-01-17)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2021/01/moving-on-mission)
- [What 2020 Revealed About Us (Romans 14:7-9, 2021-01-24)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2021/01/what-2020-revealed-about-us)
- [Where We're At 2021 (John 13:34-35, 2021-01-31)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2021/01/where-we-re-at-2021)

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