| |
"He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is love.
In this was manifested the love of God toward us, because that God
sent His only begotten Son into the world, that we might live through
Him. Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved
us, and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins."
I John 4:8-10
Without doubt the love of God is the subject preached on, in the
churches on the mission fields,
more than any other subject. Strange to say, there are many who
talk about the love of God who are
actually strangers to the meaning of divine love. God is love! But
love is one aspect of the divine Being, so
that once I have stated that God is love, I am compelled to go on
and say that God also hates. God loves and
He hates, He blesses and He curses, He chastens and He punishes,
He saves and He damns. And it is when
we see and confess that full picture that the love of God becomes
very precious to us; for God does not love
everyone, but He loves a people chosen in Jesus Christ.
The love of God is amazing! Amazing when you consider Who
loves, how He loves, how He
reveals that love, and whom He loves! I want to know more about
the love of God, don't you? Let's get the
Biblical terms for love before our minds that we may arrive at a
Scriptural definition of the love of God.
There are two Hebrew terms for love: one has the root meaning
of fastening, binding, sticking
together; the other has the idea of breathing after, longing for,
desiring strongly. The Greek term, used by
John in the passage quoted above and by Paul as well, agrees closely
with the Hebrew. As Paul writes to the
Colossians (3:14), love or charity is "the bond of perfectness."
Love can exist and flourish only in the
sphere of moral perfection, where there is holiness, justice, and
truth. For love is to be mutual, for love to
flourish and grow, the one who loves and the one who is loved must
be ethically perfect. This is the great
reason why God hates even as He loves. God takes delight in Himself
and in certain men because He is the
highest perfection, and because He has provided perfection in certain
men. But God takes no delight in
darkness; He hates it. And God takes no delight in the workers of
iniquity; He hates them. Because God is
love, love is of God; that is, all true love finds its source in
God. Hence, we can define love this way: in
God, love is the bond of fellowship that eternally exists between
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, according to
which these perfect Persons seek, find, delight in One Another.
In respect to love outside the Godhead, love
is the spiritual; bond of fellowship between ethically perfect persons,
who because of that perfection, delight
in one another and seek one another.
If one examines the occurrences of the word love in the Bible,
he finds that God's love is
characterized by ten outstanding virtues. 1.) The love of
God is sovereign or free, for He did not have to
love anyone nor was He influenced by anything when He set His love
on certain ones. 2.) The love of God
is eternal in that there never was a time when He did not love Himself
or His people. 3.) The love of God is
unconditional for in its beginning and in its continuance the good
or evil in man does not influence it. 4.)
The love of God is unchangeable for whom He loves always remain
the objects of that love. 5.) His love is
particular for it burns not for every man, but for a definite few.
6.) His love is strong, enduring the sternest
tests, capable of following the wayward and returning them to the
way of life. 7.)The love of God is
primary or first, it is a casual, working, producing love; all other
love is result of it. 8.) His love is always
fruitful, for God never yet loved a man and than man failed to love
God, his brother, and his neighbor. 9.)
The love of God is always a Father's love, so that those whom He
loves experience that they are His sons
and His daughters. And 10.) The love of God always gives;
it belongs to the nature of the loving God
always to give. We'll return to this idea of giving in a moment.
Someone may ask whether it is really necessary for the Church
to proclaim that God loves and
hates, that He reaches out in love for the men of His good pleasure
but is angry with the wicked every day,
that He saves and that He damns. Our answer is, Yes, that's
necessary for three reasons. First, this belongs
to the revelation of God in Holy Scripture so that it would be unfaithfulness
on our part not to include this.
Second, it is only when a person understands that God does not love
every individual that he sees the love
of God to be exceeding precious, a pearl of great price, the most
astonishing thing in the world! Believers
must view the love of God for them as rare, exquisite, and precious!
In the third place, God would have
both His love and hatred carefully proclaimed that the Church is
gathered not only, but that the unrepentant
are left without excuses as well. No one may arrive at the
great judgement scene saying, I didn't know, I
never heard, that God also hates, punishes, and destroys.
God has revealed His great love for us in Jesus Christ.
"Herein is love, not that we loved God, but
that He loved us, and sent His Son." God loves and sent, God
loves and gave (John 3:16). You see, the
question is, How can the great love of God reach us, how can we
be taken into the family of God in order to
experience His love, and how can we return that love to God and
live in that love with the brethren?
Remember who and what we are! We are sinners from two points
of view; we share in the sin and guilt of
Adam (Romans 5:12), and we add to our sin and guilt every day of
our lives. In ourselves we are depraved
and corrupt, incapable of loving God or anyone. And the love
of God is not some wishy-washy sentiment,
it is the bond of perfectness! God can only love that which
is ethically pure, and love between men can only
be established when there is that same perfectness present.
How can the love of God reach me, become a
bond that unites us, and be returned to Him?
The answer is that when God sent His Son, God made Him a
propitiation for our sins. Now the
word propitiation, a word related to the mercy seat of the ark in
the temple, means that Christ is the
covering for our sins. The blood of Christ propitiates, appeases,
or satisfies God. When Christ died on the
cross, His death paid the debt of our sin, satisfied the outraged
justice of God, and reconciled us to God.
That means that we are innocent (justified) and holy (sanctified)
before God. Or, that means that we have
become ethically perfect for Christ's sake, and thus can enter into
the life of love with God! In Christ God's
love reaches us, transforms us, renews us, and works in us that
we live as sons!
God loved and God gave! Oh, how God gave! Humanly
speaking, it cost God a great deal when
He manifested His love to us in Christ! The gift of God's
Son to the Church collectively and to believers
individually can only be termed an unspeakable Gift. No one
can adequately describe the value, beauty,
power, and the benefits of such a Gift! God sent His only
begotten Son from His own bosom into this world
of sin, to become poor, to endure the contradiction of sinners,
to be despised, betrayed, denied, and
forsaken. And even though God loved Him eternally, God withheld
His love and His friendship at the
crucial moment of the cross; God would have nothing to do with His
Son in our flesh, in order that He
might be the righteousness of God in us! What a love that
it would not spare such a Gift!
Having given Christ to His people, it follows with irresistible
logic that God also gives us all
things! Thus Paul argues in Romans 8: "He that spared not
His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all,
how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things?"
There is nothing that God does not give to us;
nothing that God does not do for us! All things are ours,
we are Christ's and Christ is God's! All things
must work together for out temporal and eternal good!
There are tremendous fruits in the life of the saints as
they experience the love of God in Jesus
Christ. Because the apostle John writes "He that loveth not
knoweth not God, for God is love", we can say
that who so loveth God knoweth God! Because God loved us,
we love Him; because we love Him, we
know Him and have life everlasting! Loving and knowing God,
we keep His commandments, for love is the
keeping of the law. That which God loves and delights in is
to be found in the Ten Commandments. Those
that love God love His law, meditate upon it day and night, and
use it daily as a guide for thankful, holy
living.
Secondly, the fruit of the love of God for us is that we
love one another also. "Beloved, if God so
loved us, we ought also to love one another." (v. 11) Because God
loved us and placed us in family
relationship to Himself, we owe the debt of love to all members
of the same family. We must love the
whole Church of God everywhere in general and the saints that we
know in particular. (Please note that the
believer's calling to love also the unbelieving neighbor is outside
the scope of this chapter.) It would be
monstrous and unnatural if believers did not love one another, give
themselves and their substance to one
another, and share in the joys and sorrows of one another.
"If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother,
he is a liar: for he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen,
how can he love God whom he hath not
seen?" (v. 20) The point is not, Is the brother a nice person
and does he show himself worthy of my love?
The only point is, Has God by His love made that individual a member
of His covenant family? That's all I
need to know! Then I love him!
Finally, the fruit of God's love for us is that His perfect
love casts out fear. (v.18) Love reaches its
perfect goal when the child of God does not have fear but has boldness
in the day of judgment! Fear hath
torment; the one who has fear in his heart regarding the judgment
is a tormented person. He worries about
that day. He is afraid to die. When he lies down at
night he wonders whether he shall awake; and if not,
where shall he be? But when the love of God is shed abroad
in our hearts, that love carries us powerfully
along life's pathway unto the end. And it casts out fear!
What a blessing that we may have boldness,
confidence, even longing for the day of Jesus Christ!
All this, because God loved us and sent Christ to be our
propitiation. In love He chose us, in love
He gave us to Christ, in love He redeemed us unto Himself at the
cross, in love He preserves us all our days,
and in love He judges us worthy of everlasting live at the end of
the ages! Believing all this, I say, "I love
Him!" But I also say, "He must have loved me first!"
|