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Brotherly Love

Looking to Jesus Part 48 - Hebrews 13:1

January 14, 2018 • Pastor Luke Dailey

Sermon Meditation
Looking to Jesus, Part 48
Love for the Church
Please read Hebrews 13:1
I was born in a small town of Pennsylvania. My parents had a home on a cornfield down an old road. They decided to move to Florida when I was four years old. But every year we would go back to the cluster of small towns where my extended family lived.
While living in Florida, I began playing basketball and became a major NBA fan. My favorite player was Allen Iverson. Iverson played for the Philadelphia 76ers. I tried to talk my dad into going to a game every time we went to visit our family in Pennsylvania.

The city of Philadelphia is an interesting city. It is not the safest or cleanest city, and generally people can be rude on the streets. This is interesting because the meaning of the name of the city Philadelphia is “brotherly love.” In the establishment of the city, the founders wanted the city to be a place to remember the unity we have as a country. The founding meaning of the city is now lost.

In our passage, the author exhorts the listeners to “let brotherly love (philadelphia) continue.” This is an important message to the church at all times! If our brotherly love is lacking or missing it is because we have lost sight of the gospel. Like most issues in the believer’s life, this is a gospel issue. So the question for us to answer is “how can we let brotherly love continue unhindered?”

This question will be answered on Sunday. I pray I’ll see you there!

Pastor Luke

HOME FELLOWSHIP DISCUSSION GUIDE

Q: In one or two words, how would you describe the relationships you had with your brothers and sisters when you were growing up?

Q: Who has been as close to you as a brother?

READ FIRST: Hebrews 13:1 & I Corinthians 13

Q: In what areas should brotherly love define Christians (Heb. 13:1-7)? What consequences are spelled out here for those who do? And for those who don’t? What help is offered to those who struggle (Heb. 13:6-8)?

Q: (First read I Corinthians 13) - When in life have you felt most loved? How did that love affect your life?

Q: In I Corinthians 13:1-3, what activities are useless without love?

Q: In I Cor. 13, what does Paul say “love is?” And what does he say love “is not?”

Q: Looking at love in verses 4-7, in which of these are you the strongest? In which are you weakest?