Dixon General Baptist Church

Love One Another

24 min · 21. maj 2026
episode Love One Another cover

Description

Two unlikely friends stayed at the same table for forty years through friction, grief, and differences that should have ended it. What held them wasn't compatibility but something Jesus commanded the night before his death: love each other in the exact same manner I loved you. That's the standard Jesus set, measured against the man who washed Judas's feet knowing the betrayal was already arranged. John tells us decades later that God doesn't just have love as an attribute: God IS love. When this community loves one another, the invisible God becomes visible to the world. The Spirit has already poured that love into your heart. Your work isn't manufacturing it. Your work is releasing it.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Dixon General Baptist Church community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

63 episodes

episode Bear One Another's Burdens artwork

Bear One Another's Burdens

When someone in your community falls, the options are to close ranks, perform grace from a safe distance, or quietly scatter. Paul describes something different. There's a precise and necessary distinction in Galatians 6 between two kinds of weight: the baros, a crushing load too heavy for one person, and the phortion, the ordinary pack that belongs to each of us alone. The community is called to get under the baros together while never relieving someone of their own phortion. One man said "I am coming over" to a friend eleven years sober who had just relapsed, and kept coming back for months. He bore the weight. He didn't do the recovery. That distinction is everything. Burden-bearing isn't a general sentiment about being supportive. It's specific, costly, and sometimes it means driving someone to the place they're too ashamed to walk into alone.

26. maj 202633 min
episode Going Local and Global artwork

Going Local and Global

Jesus gave the Great Commission to people still hiding in a locked room, afraid. The geography he named wasn't sequential but simultaneous: Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and the ends of the earth. Samaria matters because it's the village James and John wanted to incinerate. Jesus named it in their commission anyway. Paul's chain in Romans 10 is airtight: everyone who calls will be saved, but how can they call without hearing, and how can they hear without someone being sent? You are the sent one (apostellō) in someone's story. You have a Jerusalem (the people near you) and a Samaria (the one you've written off). The fire James and John wanted became Pentecost. The Spirit gave them feet instead. Beautiful feet go to the place the old self would have burned.

12. maj 202639 min