Scriptural Works
Professor Janette H. Ok brings First John out of the realm of familiar church phrases and back into the pressure of a community trying to hold together after rupture. Her reading treats the Johannine Epistles not as abstract doctrine or devotional language, but as pastoral formation for churches marked by division, doubt, loss, and contested belonging. First John’s repeated language of abiding, confession, children of God, antichrist, and love works like a musical fugue: the same themes return again and again, each time drawing the community more deeply into a shared way of life. Identity comes before performance. Readers do not love in order to become God’s children; they learn to love because that identity has already been given. The conversation moves from Greek exegesis to church life with unusual clarity. Ok shows why “God is love” cannot be reduced to sentiment, why confession of Jesus must take material form, and why 1 John 3 turns Christ’s self-giving death toward economic care for brothers and sisters in need. Love is not only feeling, belief, or private spirituality; it is the refusal to close one’s compassion when another member of the household lacks food, shelter, or support. The discussion also explores church trauma, quiet leaving, intergenerational faith, and the challenge of speaking to people caught in the middle of divided congregations. For pastors, teachers, students, and engaged readers, this Johannine Epistles podcast offers a sharp reading of First, Second, and Third John as community formation under pressure, where confession, love, and belonging are practiced until they become a way of life. Fuller Profile: https://fuller.edu/faculty/janette-ok/
28 episodes
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