Life Unpacked

Obedience & love: The Path of True Discipleship

Life International Season 1 Episode 10

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0:00 | 12:57

Today, we’re charting a course through 'The Path of True Discipleship,' exploring how we move from a simple connection to meaningful action. We often hear about the importance of faith, but how do we move beyond just an intellectual knowledge of God, what scholars call Gnosis, to a deep, experiential relationship known as Epignosis? 

If you've ever felt like your spiritual life was 'connected' but not necessarily 'close', this episode is for you. Let’s dive in.



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SPEAKER_00

Welcome to Life Unpack, the weekly podcast designed to help you navigate the everyday with more clarity, purpose, and intention. In each episode, we take the challenges, questions, and experiences that shape our lives and unpack them layer by layer. Through honest conversations and elevated perspectives, we explore practical insights that can help you grow, think differently, and create a better, more fulfilling life. Whether you're looking for direction, inspiration, or simply a moment to pause and reflect, life unpacked. It's your space to restep and rise. Together, we'll dig deep, open up new ways of seeing the world, and empower you to live each day with more confidence, balance, and meaning. Today, we're charting a course through the path of true discipleship, exploring how we move from a simple connection to meaningful action. We often hear about the importance of faith, but how do we move beyond just an intellectual knowledge of God, what scholars call gnosis, to a deep, experiential relationship known as epignosis? We're going to look at the four critical stages of this journey: building a foundation by abiding in the mind, meeting the requirement of obedience, producing the fruit of honorable conduct, and ultimately fulfilling our purpose to glorify God. If you've ever felt like your spiritual life was connected, but not necessarily close, this episode is for you. Let's dive in.

SPEAKER_02

Today we have something really special. We're looking at a really profound sermon.

SPEAKER_01

A powerful one. It was delivered at Life International Church in Durban, South Africa. And it focuses on these, well, these huge concepts of abiding obedience and love.

SPEAKER_02

Right. And our mission today is to really unpack the logic of it because it argues that real assurance, you know, it doesn't just come from what you believe.

SPEAKER_01

No, not at all. It comes from the, well, the very visible and often challenging act of obedience. So we're going to explore that difference between knowing about God and, you know, truly experiencing him.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell And how that experience absolutely demands action. I love that focus.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

The sermon sets it up right away, making it clear that this idea of abiding isn't passive at all. It's active. And it's built on that metaphor from John 15.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. That imagery is just foundational. I am the true vine, my father is the vine dresser, and you are the branches. It establishes this unbreakable structure of dependence.

SPEAKER_02

You have to stay connected.

SPEAKER_01

You have to. And the sermon is really quick to point out the two areas where that connection gets tested the most. Obedience, and then this uh this difficult process of pruning.

SPEAKER_02

And before it even gets into the really thorny parts of obedience, there's this um this moment of grace right at the top. It's almost like an assurance for the listener. It is.

SPEAKER_01

It's like a bit of preemptive pastoral care, isn't it? Yeah. We're told right from the start not to confuse our brokenness for uselessness.

SPEAKER_02

Which is so easy to do.

SPEAKER_01

So easy. Yeah. You feel like because you're struggling, you're disqualified. But the sermon emphasizes that, you know, through help and grace, we're still beautiful, we're still usable and capable. You don't start this journey perfect. You start it knowing you're valued.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell That's a necessary starting point because the very next thing it tackles is, well, maybe the hardest spiritual idea of all total dependence. It all hinges on that one line from John 15.5. Without me, you can do nothing.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell That statement is the linchpin. Absolutely. The sermon argues that while everybody, you know, intellectually they want to obey, nobody decides they want to fail, it's still one of the most difficult positions for us.

SPEAKER_02

So what makes it so hard? Is it just that the commands are big, or is there something uh deeper going?

SPEAKER_01

Oh, it's deeper. It's a fundamental conflict with our own nature. The speaker is really blunt about it. Our default setting is rebellion. Your flesh will always rise up. So obedience means surrendering your personal sovereignty, your right to choose your own path, your own comfort. It's this constant friction.

SPEAKER_02

That reframes it completely. It's not rule following, it's an ongoing act of surrender. And this is where the sermon pulls in the epistle of first John to connect that internal struggle to, well, our external assurance.

SPEAKER_01

And this part is just vital. It moves assurance away from being just a feeling and into the realm of actual evidence. It lives in 1 John 2, and the bar is set incredibly high.

SPEAKER_02

So how do we know?

SPEAKER_01

The way we know that we truly know him is if we keep his commandments.

SPEAKER_02

And the implication for those who who claim to know but don't act on it, that's what's so jarring.

SPEAKER_01

It is. The text is explicit. The person who says, I know God, but doesn't keep the commandments is called a liar.

SPEAKER_02

Wow. No middle ground there. No well, I meant well.

SPEAKER_01

None. If the knowledge is real, it has to produce action. So obedience, it perfects the love of God. It becomes the visible proof.

SPEAKER_02

The fruit on the branch?

SPEAKER_01

Precisely. It's the result of being connected. Those who abide in him, the text says, ought himself also to walk just as he walked. The fruit has to look like the source.

SPEAKER_02

That's a perfect setup to then explore the nature of knowledge itself, which the sermon does by drawing this really clean line between knowing of him and actually experientially knowing him.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, using the Greek terms gnosis and epignosis, a crucial distinction. We can go right back to the vine analogy here. Okay. A broken branch, it could be lying right on the ground next to the vine. It has perfect gnosis. It knows the vine's shape, its color, its texture, it's running parallel to it.

SPEAKER_02

But it's not connected.

SPEAKER_01

It's not connected. So it's not getting any life. No water, no nutrients, proximity, observation, all useless without connection.

SPEAKER_02

And the sermon uses a modern analogy for this, right? To make it more relatable.

SPEAKER_01

A brilliant one. It uses a celebrity. I think the example was Angelina Jolie. We all know of her. We know her face, her history, we see her social media, her films. You can read every biography. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_02

So you have extensive gnosis. You have a ton of knowledge about her.

SPEAKER_01

A ton of it. Yeah. But you don't know her.

SPEAKER_02

No.

SPEAKER_01

You don't have that experiential knowledge, the epignosis. You've never sat next to her or shared a struggle. You haven't built a relationship.

SPEAKER_02

And that gap between having all this intellectual knowledge but zero relational depth, that's where a lot of people are in their faith.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely. And here's the central, really groundbreaking insight from the sermon.

SPEAKER_02

What is it?

SPEAKER_01

Obedience is the bridge. Obedience is what connects the branch to the vine. It's the proof that we've moved from that intellectual gnosis to the experiential epignosis. Our obedience gives us the very assurance that we're truly connected.

SPEAKER_02

So assurance isn't a feeling, it's the fruit. It's measured by action.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, so if obedience is the measure of love, let's look at how the sermon unpacks that famous scene after the resurrection in John 21. It ties love directly to command.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, this scene is so layered. Jesus is making breakfast on the beach for the disciples, and Peter, who is just denied Jesus three times, is there. Right. But before the big questions, the sermon points out this fascinating little detail. Jesus addresses him as Simon, son of Jonah. Uses his old name.

SPEAKER_02

His old identity. Pre-Peter, pre-Rock. Why would he do that? Remind him of his failure right at the moment of restoration.

SPEAKER_01

The sermon sees it as grace, but grace wrapped in truth. It shows Peter was still able to mess up, the denial was real, and yet Jesus still came back for him. It's his powerful message that God doesn't give up on us, even when we feel like we're back to our old Simon nature.

SPEAKER_02

That context makes the three questions even more intense. Jesus isn't just asking a simple thing here.

SPEAKER_01

Not at all. He's navigating Peter's own limitations in love. And you haven't looked at the original Greek words here. The first two times Jesus asks, Do you agape me?

SPEAKER_02

Which is that that unconditional God kind of love.

SPEAKER_01

The perfect self-sacrificial kind. And Peter, knowing he just failed that standard spectacularly, he can't say yes to that. So he answers, I filio you.

SPEAKER_02

Brotherly love. Affection. He's answering in a lesser, safer language.

SPEAKER_01

Precisely. He's being honest about where he is. But then the third time, Jesus changes the question. He meets Peter where he is and asks, Do you even filio me?

SPEAKER_02

And that's what grieves Peter. He thinks Jesus is doubting even his basic affection.

SPEAKER_01

Right. But the sermon's point is that Jesus was pushing Peter toward realizing that agape love is the destination. Because if you can get to that unconditional agape love, then you're walking after his commandments.

SPEAKER_02

Because agape isn't just a feeling, it's the engine for the kind of obedience Jesus is demanding.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. And we see that immediately. Love produces these tangible instructions. It's a job description.

SPEAKER_02

Right. He's given three specific commands.

SPEAKER_01

And they're beautifully layered. The first is feed my lambs. This is the young ones, the immature, the, as the sermon says, the loose ones. They need basic care.

SPEAKER_02

Spiritual milk.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. Pasture them, tend to them. Then the second command shifts, tend my sheep. These are the mature ones, people with understanding.

SPEAKER_02

So it's a different kind of care. Less basic feeding, more oversight.

SPEAKER_01

Right, watching over them, guarding them. And then the third command seems to wrap it all up: feed my sheep. It's holistic. And what's interesting is a little side comment the sermon makes about this.

SPEAKER_02

About how churches separate their groups.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. If the command is to care for everyone, lambs and sheep together, the sermon warns that our modern practice of heavily separating groups, you know, youth, men's, ladies, it can actually become dysfunctional, even if it's done for good reasons. The ideal is integrated care for the whole body.

SPEAKER_02

That takes us back to instruction. I mean, if Peter, who walked with Jesus, still needed specific commands, what does that say about us?

SPEAKER_01

It says the pure revelation isn't enough. It has to be grounded in actionable instruction. We see this so powerfully with Saul later, Paul, on the road to Damascus.

SPEAKER_02

He has the ultimate direct encounter.

SPEAKER_01

The ultimate, blinding light, voice from heaven. And he asks the perfect question Lord, what would you have me do?

SPEAKER_02

And Jesus doesn't just download the plan to him right there.

SPEAKER_01

Nope. He delegates, he says, Go, and it will be told to you what you should do. Then he sends a man, Ananias, to deliver the instructions. The principle is clear. Abiding requires obedience under instruction and accountability. Otherwise, even the biggest revelation can go astray.

SPEAKER_02

Unguided action can get you cut off the vine.

SPEAKER_01

That's the risk.

SPEAKER_02

So we've established that knowing him requires obedience, and obedience requires instruction. Now, let's talk about the final result. What does all this produce that the outside world can actually see?

SPEAKER_01

For that, we turn to 1 Peter 2.12. The sermon explains that true abiding, that instructed obedience, it produces honorable conduct among the Gentiles.

SPEAKER_02

And Gentiles here means the outsiders, the non-believers, the people who might even be hostile to your faith community.

SPEAKER_01

Precisely. The actions aren't for an internal audience, they're not for praise inside the church walls. They have to be visible and honorable to the very people who might see you as an evildoer.

SPEAKER_02

Why is that so critical? What does their observation of this conduct actually do?

SPEAKER_01

Because that observation of your good works is the very mechanism by which they will glorify God. When your honorable actions completely contradict the negative things they expect or say about you, it forces them to look beyond you to the source of your action. It shatters their narrative. The glory goes up.

SPEAKER_02

So the so what here, the ultimate point, is to be a conduit for that glory.

SPEAKER_01

It's the ultimate purpose. Our singular objective is to make sure people glorify God. And that happens through our visible, honorable actions. If the branch is truly connected, the fruit will be so good, so different, that people will recognize the source. Our obedience isn't a burden, it's actually a vital part of our assurance that we truly know God.

SPEAKER_02

Which brings it all full circle. Knowing Him requires obedience, and that obedience produces observable, loving action towards everyone, lambs and sheep alike. And that action is the final proof of the connection.

SPEAKER_01

It is. And if we take that final nugget that our actions must be honorable among the Gentiles, the people who aren't like us, it forces a really personal question for you, the listener.

SPEAKER_02

A provocative thought to end on.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. In what specific actions, visible to those completely outside your immediate circle, are you demonstrating the depth of your experiential knowing?

SPEAKER_02

Some real food for thought on that path of instructed obedience.

SPEAKER_01

Thank you once again for joining us, and we hope that this summary has encouraged you. Until next time, have a great week.

SPEAKER_00

As we close today's episode, I want to leave you with a reminder that your obedience isn't just a rule to follow, it is a confirmation of your genuine connection to him. When we truly abide, it naturally results in outward actions that reflect his character, what we call fruit. Remember that the world is watching. When others observe your honorable conduct and good works, it serves as a pointer that can lead them to glorify God themselves. Our ultimate goal is to make him known. So, as you head back into your week, ask yourself: are my actions pointing others toward Jesus? Thanks for listening to Life Unpack, and we'll see you next time as we continue to explore what truly matters and unpack life by the unfolding of God's word.