Sermon Notes
Sermon Series: How to Live, How to Love
Sermon Title: Barriers to Intimacy
Passage: 1 John 1:5-2:2
Preacher: Ashley Herr
Who God Is (1:5)
God as light is good (Genesis 1), safe (Psalm 27), present (Exodus 3, 13), and holy (Psalm 104)
Responding to Who God Is (1:6-2:2)
1st Claim (1:6-7)
Living in the darkness involves: embracing sin and hiding sin
Dangers of the Darkness
Sin separates you from God and others
Sin leads you out of the light and into the darkness
Shame keeps you hiding sin in the darkness
We hide, terrified of the vulnerability that the intimacy we desire requires
We hide what we’ve done
We hide what’s been done to us
We hide our suffering
We hide our thoughts and desires
We hide who we are
2nd Claim (1:8-9)
We deceive ourselves by
Hiding our sin
Ignoring our sin
Excusing our sin
Justifying our sin
Redefining our sin
Tolerating our sin
Embracing our sin
3rd Claim (1:10-2:2)
Reflection
Father, help us to see the ways we’ve hidden our sin from you
Father, help us to bring our sin out of the darkness and into the light
Father, help us create a culture of vulnerability where others feel safe stepping out of the darkness
Father, help us take a step of courage this week in sharing with someone else
Sermon Footnotes
“Sin demands to have a man by himself. It withdraws him from the community. The more isolated a person is, the more destructive will be the power of sin over him, and the more deeply he becomes involved in it, the more disastrous is his isolation. Sin wants to remain unknown. It shuns the light. In the darkness of the unexpressed it poisons the whole being of a person.” - Dietrich Bonhoeffer (Life Together, p112)
“We recognize early and often that shame tends to be self-reinforcing. When we experience shame, we tend to turn away from others because the prospect of being seen or known by another carries the anticipation of shame being intensified or reactivated. However, the very act of turning away, while temporarily protecting and relieving us from our feeling (and the gaze of the "other"), ironically simultaneously reinforces the very shame we are attempting to avoid. Notably, we do not necessarily realize this to be happening - we’re just trying to survive the moment. But indeed this dance between hiding and feeling shame itself becomes a tightening of the noose. We feel shame, and then feel shame for feeling shame. It begets itself.” - Curt Thompson (The Soul of Shame: Retelling the Stories We Believe About Ourselves, p31)