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This sermon lands on 1 John’s first explicit imperative: “Do not love the world.” John isn’t condemning God’s creation or people, but warning against worldliness—the seductive system of values that makes sin feel normal and holiness feel strange. This text presses a personal question: if the world feels more worldly, is it possible we’ve become more worldly too? John confronts the fantasy that we can “have both”—love God and love the world—showing that divided loyalties create spiritual compromise, foolish investment in what’s passing away, and even a quiet loneliness inside the church. The call is to “break up with the world” so we can recover fellowship with God and the sweet fellowship that grows among believers who share the narrow road together.
Main Point: To profess Christ and love the world is unacceptable and foolish.
Message Highlights:
The first clear command in 1 John: “Do not love the world or the things in the world.”
Clarifying “world”: not creation/people (God loves the world), but worldliness—an anti-God value system shaped by the “ruler of this world.”
A working definition of worldliness: anything that makes sin seem normal and holiness seem weird.
Why not love the world? Three incentives in the text (1 John 2:15–17):
John confronts “you can have both”: you can’t serve two masters; a profession without a matching practice exposes a disconnect.
Three categories diagnosing worldliness (v.16):
Three signs you may love the world:
A key tension-point: holiness talk triggers “legalism” defenses, but John insists you can have good things with God—just not over God.
A striking connection: spiritual “affairs” (trying to love God and the world) produce double loneliness—and weak church fellowship often correlates with weak shared resistance to worldliness.
The narrow road implication: the path is narrow, so true travelers are close together—shared pursuit deepens bond.
Practical application:
Audit your loves: Where are your strongest cravings—approval, comfort, image, money, ease, experiences? Identify what you “need” to feel secure or significant.
Name your “over-God” risks: Not “can I have this?” but “has this become over God?” (calendar, sports, money, entertainment, reputation).
Break up patterns, not just behaviors: worldliness begins in the heart—repent at the level of desire, not only the level of actions.
Choose visible “different”: take one concrete area where you’ve drifted into normalizing sin or treating holiness as weird, and re-align your practice with your profession.
Pursue fellowship through shared holiness: don’t wait for community to happen accidentally—bond forms as you walk the narrow road together, resisting the same pressures with the same hope.
Resources Currently Available at the Veritas Church Bookstore:
1 John - The Gospel-Centered Life in the Bible
1-3 John - Knowing The Bible 12 Week Study
1,2, & 3 John For You - God’s Word For You
Don’t Follow You Heart
1-3 John ESV Scripture Journal
Do you have a question you want us to address? Submit it now!
By Veritas Church, Cedar Rapids, IA4.7
1010 ratings
This sermon lands on 1 John’s first explicit imperative: “Do not love the world.” John isn’t condemning God’s creation or people, but warning against worldliness—the seductive system of values that makes sin feel normal and holiness feel strange. This text presses a personal question: if the world feels more worldly, is it possible we’ve become more worldly too? John confronts the fantasy that we can “have both”—love God and love the world—showing that divided loyalties create spiritual compromise, foolish investment in what’s passing away, and even a quiet loneliness inside the church. The call is to “break up with the world” so we can recover fellowship with God and the sweet fellowship that grows among believers who share the narrow road together.
Main Point: To profess Christ and love the world is unacceptable and foolish.
Message Highlights:
The first clear command in 1 John: “Do not love the world or the things in the world.”
Clarifying “world”: not creation/people (God loves the world), but worldliness—an anti-God value system shaped by the “ruler of this world.”
A working definition of worldliness: anything that makes sin seem normal and holiness seem weird.
Why not love the world? Three incentives in the text (1 John 2:15–17):
John confronts “you can have both”: you can’t serve two masters; a profession without a matching practice exposes a disconnect.
Three categories diagnosing worldliness (v.16):
Three signs you may love the world:
A key tension-point: holiness talk triggers “legalism” defenses, but John insists you can have good things with God—just not over God.
A striking connection: spiritual “affairs” (trying to love God and the world) produce double loneliness—and weak church fellowship often correlates with weak shared resistance to worldliness.
The narrow road implication: the path is narrow, so true travelers are close together—shared pursuit deepens bond.
Practical application:
Audit your loves: Where are your strongest cravings—approval, comfort, image, money, ease, experiences? Identify what you “need” to feel secure or significant.
Name your “over-God” risks: Not “can I have this?” but “has this become over God?” (calendar, sports, money, entertainment, reputation).
Break up patterns, not just behaviors: worldliness begins in the heart—repent at the level of desire, not only the level of actions.
Choose visible “different”: take one concrete area where you’ve drifted into normalizing sin or treating holiness as weird, and re-align your practice with your profession.
Pursue fellowship through shared holiness: don’t wait for community to happen accidentally—bond forms as you walk the narrow road together, resisting the same pressures with the same hope.
Resources Currently Available at the Veritas Church Bookstore:
1 John - The Gospel-Centered Life in the Bible
1-3 John - Knowing The Bible 12 Week Study
1,2, & 3 John For You - God’s Word For You
Don’t Follow You Heart
1-3 John ESV Scripture Journal
Do you have a question you want us to address? Submit it now!

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