weekend Broadcast

How to Connect Deeply with Others, Part 1

From the series Love One Another

Do you long to be loved - to have a group of people that cares deeply for you? Chip shares how to connect deeply with others and how they can connect deeply with you.

This broadcast is currently not available online. It is available to purchase on our store.

Chip Ingram App

Helping you grow closer to God

Download the Chip Ingram App

Get The App

Today’s Offer

Love One Another Resources on sale now.

PURCHASE

Message Transcript

Before I totally jump into where we want to go, I want to give you, if you haven’t been here, we’re in a new series, What Did Jesus Say? And He said a lot of things but in John 13:34 He said, “There’s a new commandment and the new commandment is this: Love one another,” how? in the same way that He loved His early disciples, He told them and now tells us, “Love each other.” Everything we’re talking about is about how to love each other.

We learned that we need to be in community, that we’re participants, that we’re a body, and that we need to understand our function and our membership, to really love one another.

And we’re going to learn that we’re a family as well as a body.

And as you read a book that I think will be a major paradigm shifter in the Christian world with regard to counseling, it’s called, Connecting, by Larry Crabb, he tells a story in here.

Twenty-five years of counseling, multiple books, well trained, PhD, counseling practice, training students, on and on and on and on. He sees more and more and more and more breakdown in relationships.

And you begin to see that what the Church originally was meant to do, was happening more and more and more - people sharing deeply, people working through deep issues, they were almost always doing it - in therapy, instead of in churches.

And although he feels there is a clear role for quality Christian counseling, obviously, he’s a Christian counselor.  What he began to see was, “We’re missing it. We’re missing it somewhere. People aren’t recovering. People aren’t growing into wholeness.”

He tells a story of a meeting with a fellow and he said, “You know, there are times where,” he said, and without false humility, he’s really good at what he does, has great insight, is well trained. And he said, “There was a particular problem, a very, very deep psychological problem in this fellow’s life,” he said, “we met a couple, three times a week, for, like, two, three years.”

And he said he remembers the great breakthrough day and he felt like God just gave him insight like never before to really help this person see what was going on in his life. And in his mind, the whole healing process really began there.

Later on during that time, however, he was just driving around and they happened to live in the same town and he noticed this friend with another friend eating a brown bag lunch at a park.

And so he thought, “You know, this isn’t very professional,” but he just had a prompting of God and he went over and just sat down on the grass, informally, took off his counselor hat, and just said, “How you doing?” And the guy started to give the psychological things he’s working on.

He said, “Oh, no, no. I mean, like, regular. You know, like regular people. How you doing? And you say, ‘Fine.’” He said, “Oh, fine.” He said, “Could I join you for lunch?” He said, “Well, sure.” And then he said, “We sat down and we just had lunch and we didn’t talk about his deep issues. We were just friends for forty-five minutes.”

He said, “I didn’t think anything of it, I got in my car, went back.” He moved out of the area, he met him, I forget how much longer but a significant period of time longer, and he thought to himself, “How are you doing?” And the guy, glorious story, I mean, glorious story, I mean, real change, inner transformation, rightly connected with God, restored relationships, making great progress.

And he said, “I just couldn’t resist.” He said, “Well, tell me, what was the turning point?” And he said, “In my mind I’m thinking, ‘I can tell you the session. I know the session he’s going to say and what I said and the great insight I brought,’ and, you know, go ahead, tell me.”

And he said, “You know, there was a day. There was a day when I think it all began to turn around.” And his chest is swelling, you know? And he said, “That day that you ate lunch with me in the park.” He said, “What?” He said, “Yeah, just the day you ate lunch with me.”

He said, “I don’t know, we were just friends and we weren’t working on my problem, and somehow we connected and I felt affirmed and loved just as a regular person,” and he said, “I think that was the turning point.”

What he’s actually saying is, here’s a renowned psychotherapist who concludes, “There must be a better way.” He is full-fledged into counseling and he says, “There must be a better way,” and then here’s the question: What is this better way and how does it work?

And I’d like to suggest that, since most of you have already turned the page, I will too, and that the better way is God’s answer in Romans 12:10. It’s one thing to say, “What did Jesus say? Love one another.” How do we do it? But now the question is: How does it work? How do we love one another?

It begins by understanding we are members of one another. It moves on by understanding, “Be devoted to one another.” It’s a command. “Be devoted to one another in brotherly love.”

That’s how it works. Now, he’s a real smart guy and he’s a psychologist, so he doesn’t use those Bible words. He calls it “connecting.” But that’s what this. I’m going to give you a little Bible study and I’m going to give you the context and the meaning of the words and what we’re going to learn is God wants you to get it and so He says, “You’re not only a body theologically but you’re a family.” And what makes for great families is deep, emotional, psychological connecting where we heal one another’s wounds as we love one another.

And if we’re going to do what Jesus said, if we’re going to love each other, it starts, obviously, by understanding who we are in His community, our membership and our function, but the very first thing, then we have to be devoted to one another. Be devoted to one another in brotherly love, in very specific, tangible, concrete ways.

Now, you might ask, “What does it mean?” I mean, specifically, what’s it mean to be devoted to one another? Let me tell you. The context here, you might open your Bibles to Romans chapter 12 and I’ll just highlight as I go.

The first couple verses talk about our relationship with God. Verses 3 through 5 we looked at last week, about our membership. Verses 6 through 8, glance through there, talk about your giftedness. The only point I want to make is the context is is we are in community, we are interdependent in community.

And in that context, in verse 10 we are told, “Love one another in brotherly love.” Be devoted to one another. The context of verse 10 is this little phrase here. It’s not just “be devoted to one another,” but how? Be devoted to one another in brotherly love.

You all already know a Greek word and you don’t know it. Some of you have visited there. The Liberty Bell is there. Philo, love; delphia, brothers. Right? Philadelphia, the city of brotherly love. That’s this word. Be devoted to one another in philo-delphia.

The word “delphos,” brothers, is used two hundred and fifty times in the New Testament. What’s the point? We’re a family! We’re brothers! We’re sisters! It’s more than just a theological reality. We’re to care for one another, we’re to be touching one another, we’re to be from the heart, connected to each other.

In fact, the meaning of the word “devotion” is really pretty interesting. Webster says the word “devotion” means, “To give up one’s self, one’s time, one’s energy to some purpose, activity, or person. It’s to pursue with loyalty and deep affection,” and I like that. Devotion means to pursue one another with loyalty and deep affection.

In fact, the meaning of this word here, it’s different, the word “devotion” is “philo,” same word, “love,” “storge.” And that means “the mutual love,” it’s used in classical Greek. It’s only found here, I believe, in the New Testament, “philostorge,” it means, it’s translated “devotion,” but the idea, the King James tries to get its arm around it, by talking about a warm, tender, affection.

The idea, it’s the kind of love that parents have for children and children have for parents. It’s the kind of love that brothers and sisters have. In fact, in summary, if you want to know what it means to be devoted to one another, here it is in a nutshell: Tender family connection, one to another, from the heart. Get that, okay? Tender, do you see what I’m trying to get at?

Tender, family connection, from the heart, authentic, to one another. Real, live, authentic, warm, caring, you-matter-relationships with one another. That’s what it means to be devoted to one another.

Now, let me ask you before I go on. How many of you have that? Don’t raise your hand. How many of you are experiencing that at some significant level? Not perfectly, but, I mean, significantly.

There are other believers, not just immediate family, there are other believers where you feel a tenderness and a warmth and you are connected with them from the heart. That you can sit down over a cup of coffee, that when things are really weighing you down, you can pick up the phone and you can talk to someone and you are greeted with concern and affirmation and love and follow through and maybe a note in the mail later or an invitation that gets them up – how many of you have that?

That’s God’s dream for you. It’s His will for you. It’s His will for every person, that’s what it means. If we’re going to obey the command, if we’re really going to take seriously “love one another,” God wants that for you.

And for those of you that have it, it’s precious, isn’t it? It’s awesome. Now, no matter how much you have, you want a little more, don’t you? I do. That’s okay. But that’s what it means.

Let me show you what it looks like real specifically. I’m just going to take some quick pictures. The first one is from the Old Testament. If you want to get a feel for it, you know, if you’re a word picture person. Read the book of Ruth and look at the relationship between Ruth and Naomi. It’s family love. It’s a daughter-in-law who has lost her husband; it’s a mom who has lost her boys, her husband. And there is family love.

And notice that as you read that story out of the book of Ruth, their family love transcends race, she’s a Moabite, Ruth is. Naomi is a Jew. It transcends culture and even geography. They are willing to relocate, if necessary.

Or another good Old Testament example is Jonathan and David, I Samuel 20, awesome. Awesome passage of connection, love, family, brotherhood. I mean, these are two men that love each other at a level that the Promise Keepers are dreaming about and trying to emulate and it is wonderful.

And notice the things it transcends – power – Jonathan is the king’s son. He should be threatened but he’s not. Privilege, he’s got all the money, he’s got the family, he’s got the name. But he lays all that aside, in fact, there’s a very special moment in their life where he gives away his sword, his robe, and very specific things that communicate, “We’re on level ground, David.”

And then finally, the last one, family relationship. This love is so deep when Jonathan has to choose between his father’s wrath for David and his own love and brotherhood for David, he chooses God’s way over his own family.

See, that’s the kind of love we’re talking about. I’m not talking about some warm, ooey-gooey, fuzzy, little, trite, superficial – we got enough of that junk. That’s TV stuff. That’s Hollywood stuff. That’s what people act about. We’re talking about the real thing.

In fact, the third example is just read through the book of Acts. Chapter 2, chapter 3, chapter 4, chapter 6, chapter 13. Just read through the book of Acts. Brothers and sisters loving each other.

It transcends money. They just pool their money, it’s such a crisis early on, they just pool their money and just meet each other’s needs. It transcends socioeconomic barriers. You read carefully, you’ve got people in the household of Herod and you’ve got slaves.

You’ve got Jews and you’ve got Gentiles, you got people who hated each other’s guts that wouldn’t go under the same roof, that wouldn’t eat a meal together, all this stuff, and then when there’s this family love, it transcends all that.

And, in fact, right here at Santa Cruz Bible Church I’ve got a picture that has been very, very encouraging to me. It happens over and over and over. But I want to ask someone in our church that has been through some pretty rough times and they have experienced family love. So, John? Why don’t you come on up?

I’ll give this one to you. Let me give you a little background on John’s story and it’s pretty fresh. It’s been really, what? Four months?

John: Three months.

Chip: Three months?

John: Yeah.

Chip: Fresher than I thought. John, interesting story, he and his wife came here through some connections of people that are in our church, they had been sharing the Lord with them and I would say that you guys weren’t exactly, early on, overly eager to come to church. That’s putting it in a nice way. And yet, people just kept loving them and caring for them.

They came and, like a lot of people, got involved and it was fairly superficial for quite some time. Then we had Impact groups and they are basically the equivalent of Growth groups now. And they weren’t real excited about getting involved in one of them.

And his wife came from a Jewish background and so there were some cultural issues that she had to work through as well. And finally, as God would have it, they ended up in this Growth group, basically an Impact group, and even as they were driving in the car they were thinking, “You know what? You know, this is scary. We’re going to sit in this living room with people we don’t know, we haven’t met any of these people, this is going to be a real… you know?”

And then he tells the story of how six couples for about two and a half years really loved each other and then very suddenly and tragically John lost his wife to a heart attack. And, John, tell me a little bit about how God expressed His love to you through that group. What happened?

John: It was, it was awesome, to say the least. Four of the people in that group were out of town. Two in Boston and two on business, a man and wife on business. They dropped what they were doing immediately and they flew home to be here and to support me and my son, Joe, and to be at Donna’s funeral.

There was another of the couples who had since moved and left Santa Cruz and moved to San Diego. They didn’t hesitate, they were on the plane and here. And, again, to support Joe and myself and to be there to send Donna off.

They became, in that two and a half years, more than friends. We became family. And as Chip said, the model is in the book of Acts, the early Church, due to necessity, had to pool their resources and be together all the time. And we don’t have that necessity nowadays, we can live independently and so often and we confine our church life to Saturday night or Sunday morning and we don’t feel connected.

Donna and I felt that way at first. And after we joined our Impact group, we grew as a family, we grew in the church, it wasn’t just in bad times, things like Donna’s death that kept us close. There was a lot of joy in that two and a half years. Praying, learning to pray with each other, I learned to pray with my wife in that group. My wife and I prayed independently until then.

And I can’t describe the joy of the two of us starting our day in prayer, which we had not done, and we learned that in this group. And praying with the people in this group, good, devoted friends, family now.

It, unbelievable, the growth that we found in that group. And like I said, the model is in Acts, the Church was together. Do yourself a favor, if you’re not feeling connected, if you’re just here on Sunday mornings or Saturday nights and you feel that there should be more, maybe there’s that little voice that only you hear inside, that little voice and the Holy Spirit that is prompting you to check out the Growth groups, please do. Please do.

Not only will it benefit you but it allows you the opportunity to be of a benefit to someone else.

Chip: As I hear that, John, you know, the things that come up are, “You know, I’m not an outgoing person, my personality doesn’t fit real well in groups,” and as I know you two, neither of you saw yourself at all as the kind of people that would necessarily easily fit.

The next thing usually we say is well, convenience, “I don’t really have the time.” And yet, you two worked in group homes with children and had a schedule where it was one week off, one week on. You guys had to really realign your whole schedule to make that happen.

John: Yeah.

Chip: And yet, what you shared with me on the phone, it was a great line, it was something along the lines of, “You can hear all about how much God loves you, but when He puts people close in your life who know you and affirm you, then you really see what you all have been talking about and you get to experience it.” And it has gone on since your wife’s death, I understand.

John: Yeah, it has. And our group no longer meets. We made a two and a half year commitment to that group and that group ended some time ago. But the connections, connections…

Chip: That’s a good title for that book, isn’t it?

John: The connections that we made will endure for a lifetime.

Chip: John, thank you.

John: Thank you for letting me speak to everyone.

Chip: Our privilege, man. Hang in there.

[Congregation applause]

I want you to get the picture, okay? The picture is not ought or should. The picture is not, “We’re trying to get people to do this or do that.” Here’s the picture: We want to take seriously, “What did Jesus say?” What did Jesus say? He said, “Love one another.” How? “As I have loved you.” Sacrificially, from the heart, tenderly, as a family.

That can’t happen if we don’t know each other. You know, we can learn about God but you just can’t love people looking at the back of their heads or looking up on the screen or singing some songs. You can get a greater appreciation of your love for God and you can worship and you can learn. But you can’t love each other that way.

And that’s what we’re about. And whatever it takes this fall, whatever we need to do, whatever we need to learn.  So week by week we are going to learn, the Bible tells us, one another, what to do.

The clarity is we are members of one another and now, the first command, “Be devoted to one another.” So, let me ask you that second question. The first one was, remember? “Do you feel connected like that?”

Let me ask you the next one and please don’t raise your hand but give it some thought. Do you have a sense, when you look at this room or when you think about other believers, do you have a sense, that sense of moral responsibility, that sense of from the heart, are you devoted to other believers in brotherly love?

I mean, does it matter how they are doing? Do you feel the moral weight toward other believers like you would someone who is a physical brother or sister, relationally? Or to a mom or to a dad or to a niece or to a nephew?

See, what I want you to understand, the Bible talks about this supernatural community. He is saying that we each move toward one another in connection and I need to own the moral weight of saying, “If you’re not loved, I may not be able to supply it, but I need to be a part of the process of you getting connected and loved.”

And so then the question is: What is it that keeps you, what is it that keeps me, from experiencing this authentic devotion? This supernatural community? And so with that, follow along, get your pen out, if you will, I’m going to make you work a little bit.

Because what I want to do is just do some things that are very, very simple but let you know, first, what keeps us from experiencing this authentic devotion to one another? One, it doesn’t happen automatically. It’s not magic. God didn’t design the body where you just come to church a couple times and all of a sudden, ooh, ooh, ooh, something happens inside, “I’m just devoted to everyone in brotherly love.” It doesn’t happen that way!

In fact, it so is non-automatic that multiple times in the Scripture, we’re commanded, we are reminded to make this the focal point, lest we end up with just some sort of intellectual relationship with God and with others.

Notice what it says in I Thessalonians 4:9 and 10. “Now about brotherly love we have no need to write to you,” Paul says, “for you yourselves have been taught by God to love each other, and in fact, you do love all the brothers throughout Macedonia. Yet, we urge you, brothers, to do so more and more.” See, it’s not automatic. We all need urging.

The second passage, I Peter 1:22 and 23, “Now that you have purified yourselves by obeying the truth so that you have sincere love for your brothers, love one another deeply from the heart, for you have been born again, not of perishable seed but of imperishable, through the living and enduring Word of God.”

Do you get the idea? You have the ability, I have the ability because I have a new birth, to love people. But there’s a command, “Therefore love one another,” how? Superficially? When it’s convenient? No. Authentically, from the heart.

The final passage, II Peter 1 verses 5 through 7, “For this very reason,” he talks about what we already have in Christ, “make every effort to add to your faith, goodness; and to your goodness, knowledge; and to your knowledge, self-control; and to your self-control, perseverance; and to your perseverance, godliness; and to your godliness, brotherly love.”  Notice the little word, “add to,” “add to,” “add to.”  There are certain things God has already done for us, but we cooperate. You see, it’s not automatic. Learning to love one another takes real effort, it takes real focus, it takes a plan.