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Discover how God’s love is not just received but demonstrated — a life-changing message on triumphing over fear, uncertainty, and division through Christ’s love.
In this powerful Wednesday evening message from NTC Ministries, Pastor Paul Holman continues his teaching series on the triumph of God’s love, drawing primarily from 1 John chapter 3. Delivered on April 2, 2020, at the height of global uncertainty surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic, this sermon challenges believers to move beyond merely receiving God’s love and to actively demonstrate it toward others. Pastor Holman walks through 1 John 3:10-24, unpacking how God’s children are distinguished by their love in action, and how a loveless life remains spiritually stagnant. He draws on Philippians 2:3-5, John 13:34-35, Matthew 6:34, Deuteronomy 30:15, and Romans 8:37 to build a compelling case that love is not an abstract theory but a daily lifestyle. Using vivid illustrations such as imagining Jesus shopping at Walmart, Pastor Holman urges the church to be creative and sacrificial in sharing God’s love even amid social distancing. The message closes with an invitation to accept Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, and with an exhortation for all believers to grow stronger in God’s Word during seasons of trial.
1 John 3:10-24, Philippians 2:3-5, Psalm 133:1, John 13:34-35, Matthew 6:34, Deuteronomy 30:15, Romans 8:37, John 3:16
Pastor Holman anchors the entire message in 1 John 3:10, which draws a clear line between the children of God and the children of the evil one based on visible love and righteousness. This is not a passive distinction. The text insists that anyone who does not demonstrate love toward fellow believers is not living with God as their source. The pastor emphasizes that salvation is more than a prayer — it is the beginning of a relationship that grows, deepens, and inevitably overflows into the lives of others. God’s love is always moving outward.
Drawing from Philippians 2:3-5 and Psalm 133, Pastor Holman makes a compelling case that pride-filled opinions and self-promotion are the enemies of the unity God commands. Psalm 133 declares that it is in unity that the Lord commands His blessing, even life forevermore. The pastor urges believers to abandon every display of selfishness and instead consider the example Jesus set — authentic humility that places others first. This mindset of Christ is not optional for the believer; it is the very motivation that should drive every interaction and decision.
One of the most memorable illustrations of the sermon pictures Jesus walking through a modern grocery store. Rather than dreading interruptions, Jesus was the kind of person who looked forward to encounters with people in need. He healed all who were oppressed, turned water into wine to bless a wedding, and fed thousands with almost nothing. Pastor Holman uses this image to challenge believers to shift their mindset from inconvenience to opportunity — the same love that drove Jesus now lives in every believer, and it is always searching for a way to flow outward.
Responding directly to the pandemic context of April 2020, Pastor Holman refuses to allow social distancing to become spiritual distance. He calls the church to be creative: write letters, send encouraging texts, start family Bible studies, reach out to estranged relatives, and use every available platform to share the love of God. He notes that Satan intended isolation to breed fear and withdrawal, but God intends this season to stretch believers into new and inventive expressions of love. The means may change but the mandate never does — show and share the love of Jesus Christ.
First John 3:21-22 promises that when our hearts do not condemn us, we can speak face-to-face with God in bold freedom and receive whatever we ask because we keep His commands. Pastor Holman connects this directly to the command of John 13:34-35 — to love one another as Christ has loved us. A life of active, sacrificial love is not only an outward witness; it is the very condition that releases bold, confident, answered prayer. Obedience to the love command opens the pipeline of God’s provision and blessing in every area of life.
Romans 8:37 brings the message to its triumphant conclusion: believers are not merely surviving hardship but are more than conquerors through God’s demonstrated love. Pastor Holman insists this is not arrogance but identity — the same love God demonstrated by sending His Son is the love that lives in every believer and constitutes their glorious victory over everything the world can bring. The call to action is clear: receive this love, let it permeate you, and let it flow into a world that is desperately searching for hope it can only find in Jesus Christ.
To triumph in God’s love means to live as more than a conqueror through the love God has demonstrated toward us, as stated in Romans 8:37. It is not simply enduring hardship but overcoming it through the active power of God’s love working in and through the believer. This love, received through faith in Jesus Christ, becomes a force that cannot be stopped by circumstance, fear, or adversity.
The primary passage for this message is 1 John 3:10-24, which explains how God’s children are clearly distinguished from the children of the evil one by their active demonstration of love and righteousness. The pastor also draws significantly from Philippians 2:3-5, Romans 8:37, and John 13:34-35 throughout the message.
Pastor Paul Holman encourages believers to be creative and sacrificial in demonstrating love even during periods of isolation. Practical suggestions include writing encouraging letters, sending thoughtful text messages, starting family Bible studies, reaching out to estranged loved ones, and using technology to share the gospel. First John 3:18 reminds us that love must be demonstrated through action, not merely spoken as an abstract theory.
Psalm 133:1 declares that it is good and pleasant for brothers to dwell together in unity, and that it is there that the Lord commands His blessing and life forevermore. Philippians 2:3-5 adds that pride-filled opinions and self-promotion destroy the cherished unity of the body of Christ. Pastor Holman teaches that authentic humility and concern for others over self are essential ingredients for the kind of unity where God’s love and blessing can truly flourish.
First John 3:21-22 teaches that when a believer’s heart does not condemn them — because they are walking in obedience and love — they have bold freedom to speak with God and receive what they ask. The condition for answered prayer is keeping God’s commands, which Jesus summarized in John 13:34-35 as loving one another the same way He has loved us. A life of active love directly opens the door to confident, effective prayer.
Pastor Holman draws a direct parallel between faith and love, noting that just as faith without works is dead according to Scripture, God’s love that is never demonstrated is essentially inactive. Both faith and love require expression and action to fulfill their purpose. Receiving God’s love is the beginning, but that love must be put to work — given away sacrificially — for it to accomplish what God intends in the world.
Pastor Paul Holman is a preacher associated with NTC Ministries, also known as the New Testament Church. This sermon is part of a series titled Triumph of God’s Love, which began the previous month and examines the depth, character, and active nature of God’s love as revealed throughout Scripture, particularly in the book of Romans and the letters of John.
At the close of the sermon, Pastor Holman leads listeners in a simple prayer acknowledging sinfulness, asking Jesus for forgiveness, and accepting Him as Lord and Savior. He encourages those who pray this prayer to declare it publicly, share it with someone close to them, and immediately begin disciplining their life to read the Bible and build a personal relationship with God. Salvation is presented as the gateway to receiving God’s love and becoming a conduit of that love to others.
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