What truly has your heart today — the things of this world, or the One who gave Himself for you?
Key Verse:
“The world is passing away and also its lusts; but the one who does the will of God lives forever.” —1 John 2:17 NASB
Background Context:
After reassuring believers of their forgiveness and their identity in Christ, John turns to a crucial warning: do not love the world. The “world” here does not mean creation or people, whom God loves, but the world system — the patterns of thinking, desiring, and living that oppose God and entice the flesh.
John identifies three expressions of worldly desire:
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the lust of the flesh
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the lust of the eyes
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the pride of life
These desires fueled humanity’s fall from Eden onward and continue to war against our hearts. John contrasts this temporary world with the eternal reality of doing God’s will.
(Continued and expanded after scripture.)
Do Not Love the World
15Do not love the world nor the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. 16For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the boastful pride of life, is not from the Father, but is from the world. 17The world is passing away, and also its lusts; but the one who does the will of God lives forever.
Reflection on 1 John 2:15–17:
John’s words are simple, direct, and searching: “Do not love the world nor the things in the world.” Every believer is faced with a choice of affection — either the world will claim our hearts, or God will. The two cannot coexist peacefully.
The “world” that John warns against is a system of values built on rebellion, self-gratification, and pride. It is a world that measures success by what we have, how we appear, and how much we can elevate ourselves above others. It pulls our hearts away from obedience and distracts us from devotion.
John describes this world through three powerful categories:
1. The lust of the flesh:
Desires that draw us into sinful pleasure, self-indulgence, and cravings that dominate rather than serve God.
2. The lust of the eyes:
The pull of what looks appealing — materialism, coveting, comparison, and the endless pursuit of “more.”
3. The pride of life:
Arrogance, self-sufficiency, status, and boasting in what we accomplish apart from God.
These temptations are not new; they mirror the serpent’s appeal to Eve in Genesis 3 and Satan’s temptations of Yeshua in the wilderness.
John then gives a sobering truth: the world is passing away. Everything that seems desirable, successful, or impressive today will be gone tomorrow — empty, temporary, fragile.
In contrast, “the one who does the will of God lives forever.” Obedience to God aligns us with what is eternal, unshakable, and rooted in His kingdom rather than the shifting values of culture.
This passage calls us to examine our affections — what we pursue, what we admire, what we give our time and desires to. True love for God is revealed in a heart freed from the world’s grip and anchored in eternal things.
Application:
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Examine your desires. Ask where the world’s values have influenced your thinking, goals, or affections.
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Fight the pull of the flesh. Pursue holiness through the Spirit, not through willpower alone.
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Guard your eyes. Be watchful about what you admire, envy, or long for.
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Reject pride. Humble yourself before God, recognizing your dependence on Him.
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Choose what is eternal. Invest your heart in God’s will — His Word, His kingdom, His righteousness.
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Remember the world is temporary. Let this truth shape your decisions, priorities, and hopes.
Closing Prayer:
Father, thank You for calling me out of the world and into Your light. Help me to recognize the subtle ways the world appeals to my heart, and give me strength through Your Spirit to resist its pull. Fix my affection on You alone. Teach me to pursue Your will, to value what is eternal, and to walk in humility and obedience. In Yeshua’s name, Amen.
May the grace and peace of our Lord, Yeshua, be with you.
John Golda
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