Episode 25

2 John - Read the NT in 90 Days

What happens when truth and love collide in the early church? In this episode of Seek Go Create, Tim Winders unpacks the urgent and compact message of 2 John, exploring why John’s warning to a powerful woman host still matters for us today. Discover how hospitality, authority, and the protection of foundational beliefs shaped the very first Christian communities—and why guarding both truth and love is as essential now as it was then. If you’re curious about the real stories and tensions of the New Testament, this episode’s for you.

"John isn’t guarding an abstract doctrine—he’s protecting the foundation of everything." - Tim Winders

Access all show and episode resources HERE

Episode Resources:

  1. NT90 Hub – This is the central website for the 90-day New Testament reading plan, with downloadable, printable plans, background information, and links to all episodes and resources.

Episode Highlights:

00:00 Truth & Love: 2 John’s Urgent Warning (Cold Open)

00:15 Welcome to NT in 90 Days + Get the Reading Plan

01:05 Why 2 John Matters: Author, Date, Audience & Setting

01:42 The “Elect Lady”: House-Church Authority & Gatekeeping Teachers

03:13 False Teachers on the Move: Hospitality vs. Heresy

05:38 Why John Writes: Protecting One House Church

05:54 Key Themes: Deceivers, Boundaries, and Truth with Love

06:51 Why the Incarnation Is Non‑Negotiable (Resurrection at Stake)

07:34 Reading Assignment + Next Up: 3 John Preview

08:12 Final Setup: Imagine AD 66—Then Read 2 John

Transcript
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Short, sharp counsel about truth and love.

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Hospitality has boundaries.

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When teachers deny Christ came in the flesh,

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This is Seek Go Create.

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You are listening to read the New Testament in 90 days, 27

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books in order in context.

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We're walking through the New Testament, the way it was written, so you can hear

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it the way the first churches, the early churches, the first believers actually did

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make sure I remind you of this every time.

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Make sure you're going to K two M Foundation slash.

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NT 90.

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Make sure you can get the reading plan.

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You could, uh, get all the links to previous episodes and after we

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finish this up, it'll be a good resource to get access to the entire

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plan and share it with others and all good resources and all there.

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K two M Foundation slash NT 90.

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We are getting.

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Close to the letters and books of the New Testament.

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Finishing up today, stop.

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Second John.

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Just 13 verses one urgent.

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Very urgent message it seems when we really take it in context.

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Here's some key facts.

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John is the writer.

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The date is 80 66, like these other letters That we're reading from

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John and it's written the same year as one John and third John.

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We believe during the early months of the Jewish revolt

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that was going on in Jerusalem.

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The audience, this is fascinating.

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It is quote, the elect lady and her children.

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Most likely a specific woman who led or hosted a house Church.

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Not as, some have said a metaphor for a congregation.

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It just really seems that this is addressed to an individual, some early.

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Church fathers, like Clement of Alexandria believed that

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she was actually a real person.

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The personal tone and also the parallel with Third John that we will look at

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next, which was addressed to gas support.

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This, it just reads like a letter that's written to an individual,

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and this is fascinating.

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Shouldn't be controversial, but it could be.

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She had authority over all of those who entered her home.

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And in a world where churches met in homes, that meant authority

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over who got a platform and who.

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We would say, got the microphone in today's world, but who got

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to speak in front of the group.

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And this letter is addressing, being cautious about who you

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allow to get up and speak in front of the, the group of people.

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The setting.

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It's 36 years post resurrection.

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The resurrection is an important topic of this letter.

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False teachers are traveling city to city, seeking hospitality and looking for

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places that they can teach and preach.

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This was in 66 a D. 2000 years later, that's still.

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Applies.

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So not funny, but, anyway, we're looking at it in context, but boy, we could

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see how some of this applies today.

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Historical context.

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Rome Nero is still on the throne.

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He doesn't have much time left persecution.

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Massive persecution is continuing in Jerusalem.

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The temple is intact.

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There's four years before the destruction, and what we now know

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is that the beginnings of the Jewish and Roman War have started.

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So it has.

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Begun the church.

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False teachers are strategic.

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They travel, seek hospitality, act real nice, probably drop some names, arrive

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as brothers and once welcomed, they begin teaching that Jesus wasn't truly flesh.

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They start sowing.

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Doubt within the body.

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The tension hospitality was sacred, but these teachers deny the

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incarnation while speaking of Christ.

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In elevated terms, they probably use scripture, they probably use terms, but at

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its root, what they're teaching is false.

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Now let's talk a little bit more about this.

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Why being addressed to a woman house churches.

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We mentioned this earlier, but let's mention it again.

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House churches often met in the homes of wealthy or socially prominent women.

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We see that throughout the Bible.

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Lydia in Philippi, MFA in Kloe, Kloe, and Priscilla in Rome and Ephesus hosting.

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Meant leading, or at least gatekeeping.

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When John tells this woman not to welcome certain teachers, he's

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addressing someone with real authority.

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She's not just serving cake and cookies.

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She has authority in this setting, and he's addressing.

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This letter to her, her hospitality decisions shaped what her

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congregation or that group heard.

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Why now?

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Why is John writing this now?

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He writes a personal note to protect one specific house, church,

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truth and love belong together.

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Don't receive those who deny that Christ came in the flesh.

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Here's what you're gonna encounter.

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Second John is brief and protective.

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Truth and love are inseparable.

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You'll hear about truth and love.

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Together, grace, mercy, and peace will be with us in truth and love the deceivers.

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Many deceivers have gone out.

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Into the world, those who do not confess the coming of Jesus Christ in the flesh.

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In the previous letter one John, he called them anti Christ's, so he doesn't

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use that wording here, but that's the same thing that he used in one John.

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The instruction that he gives do not receive him or them into

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your house or give them any.

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Greeting you can turn them away.

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The reason whoever greets him.

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It takes part in his wicked works truth without love becomes harsh.

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Love without truth becomes compromised.

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The church needs both, and here's why the incarnation matters so much.

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This is so important and foundational to the gospel.

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If Christ didn't truly take flesh, he couldn't truly die.

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And if he couldn't truly die, he couldn't truly rise from the dead.

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The resurrection stands or falls with the incarnation.

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John isn't guarding an abstract doctrine.

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He's protecting the foundation of everything.

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This is the foundation of the gospel, the resurrection, and

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he is protecting it strongly.

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Okay, the reading assignment, very short letter here.

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You're gonna read Second John in one sitting.

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Have fun with it.

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After this, the next episode we look at Third John, leadership,

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hospitality, and Everyday Faithfulness.

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The contrast between D Atrophies and Demetrius will see that and uh, see

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how it's playing out in this first.

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Century again.

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make sure that you continue following along at K2 Foundation slash NT 90.

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That's the hub for all that we are doing here.

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Okay, now.

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Picture this before you read Second John.

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It's AD 66.

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John has just finished his general letter, but he has two more notes to

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write personal letters to people he knows.

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The first goes to a woman who leads a house church.

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He calls her the elect.

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Lady, she has authority.

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Her home is where believers gather and her hospitality decisions will

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determine whose voice gets heard.

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The false teachers know this.

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They travel city to city seeking welcome among believers.

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Once inside, they begin to teach.

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Slowly subtly that Jesus wasn't truly flesh.

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John's instruction is simple.

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Truth and love belong together.

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do not receive those who deny the incarnate Christ.

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Now, let's read.

About the Podcast

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Seek Go Create - The Leadership Journey for Christian Entrepreneurs and Faith-Driven Leaders

About your host

Profile picture for Tim Winders

Tim Winders

Tim Winders knows what it looks like when everything falls apart—and what it takes to rebuild.

After losing two businesses, his home, and starting over in a Honda van in 2013, Tim rebuilt his life from the ground up. That season reshaped how he thinks about success, leadership, and what actually matters.

Today, he serves as Chief Operating Officer at Earth Retention, leading operations and team development with an engineer's discipline and a builder's instinct. He's also the host of Seek Go Create – The Leadership Journey, a podcast with 300+ episodes exploring intentional leadership and purpose-driven success since 2019.

His latest project, NT90, invites listeners into a 90-day journey through the New Testament—reading the books in the order they were written and understanding them the way the original audience did.

Tim is the author of Coach: A Story of Success Redefined, a novel that mirrors his own journey from striving to stillness. He and his wife Glori live, travel, and work as "essential nomads" from their motorhome—proof that home isn't always a place.

📍 Engineer by training (Georgia Tech) | Author | Strategist | Podcast Host

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