I just read a ‘devotion’ that was all about love.
Now, I would be the very last person in the world to discount the Love
of God. It is the reason I am the person I am today. It is the reason for my eternal hope. It is
the reason His Son was willing to die a horrible death to become the sacrifice
for MY sin. Those things alone are
evidence of the love of God.
It
represents the most all encompassing love the world has ever known.
John
3:16 is repeated over and over as evidence of that. For God so loved the
world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him
should not perish, but have everlasting life.
And I John 4:9-10 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.10 Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved us,
and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.
In both of these specific references the
Love of God goes far beyond the smarmy, sweetsie, gooey kind of love that is
taught in much of the religious world today.
God was concerned with our eternal destiny. It doesn’t seem related at all to being lovey-dovey
and hugging homeless people or talking constantly about how we “luv” everyone. God’s Love doesn’t
involve overlooking sin in our lives. It
doesn’t involve patting sinners on the back and telling them it will be okay,
just go ahead and ‘do the best you can.”
God’s Love is focused on eternal
issues.
God loved Mankind so much that He sent
Christ to provide a path to Salvation, a path to righteousness, that Man might
have access to eternal life. That is a
tremendous Love. He created Man; He
gave him free will and he watched as Man used that free will to fall away for
Him. In spite of that, God still cared
enough to put His Plan of Salvation in place.
Man has taken that all encompassing love
and turned it into a mundane thing that is hardly related to the Love of God. Modern Human Religion wants to emphasize Love
and neglect the “the weightier matters of the
law, judgment, mercy, and faith.”
God’s Love comes with judgment, first,
and is followed by his mercy and then our
faith in his love.
The ‘devotion’ that I read said, “God loves you with an extravagant and irresistible love”
That
is in no way descriptive of the Love of God.
First off, God’s Love is not ‘irresistable.’ Man has been turning a cold shoulder to God’s
Love for centuries. Possibly because
they don’t like the way the ‘free gift’ is presented. To ‘unwrap’ it we must change our ways. We must turn from sin and live for God.
God’s
love is not an extravagant love in the sense that He tosses it out with no
consideration or plans for distribution.
But it does go beyond what is deserved or justifiable. None of us are deserving of His Salvation. It
goes far beyond what is our due and there is a very definite plan for its
distribution.
The
“devotion’ began with the text from Luke 6:33-36 And if ye do good to them which do
good to you, what thank have ye? for sinners also do even the same. But the quote stopped there and went to promote the gooey
kind of love taught in modern religion.
The reality of the text has nothing to do with that we hear on every
hand. First it continues to compare
God’s children to sinners: 34 And if ye lend to
them of whom ye hope to receive, what thank have ye? for sinners also lend to
sinners, to receive as much again. But the Love of God takes us
beyond that: 35 But love ye your
enemies, and do good, and lend, hoping for nothing again; and your reward shall
be great, and ye shall be the children of the Highest: for he is kind unto the
unthankful and to the evil. 36 Be ye therefore merciful, as your Father also is merciful.
Loving
our enemies requires a much deeper kind of love that the glad-hand-Harry kind
of love that slaps everyone on the back and overlooks all sorts of sin. Doing good seems to be rather easy, until we
get to the ‘lend,
hoping for nothing again.’
Most of the glad-hand-Harry types have no trouble sharing their
resources but they definitely don’t share it with no expectation of
return. Or if they do they have no
hesitation to ‘blow a trumpet’ announcing it.
Notice this text doesn’t require that we be overly affectionate (verging
on the obvious pretense and hypocritical).
It requires that we be ‘kind’ to those who are unappreciative and evil.
Those
who promote the ‘extravagant and irresistible’ kind of Love are most often
content to talk about love, to pat backs
and distribute hugs, to brag to others about their good deeds to the homeless
and those less fortunate. They make sure
to blow their own horns and let people know how loving they are. Christ adjoins us to not be as the Pharisees
who sound a trumpet before them, as the hypocrites do in the
synagogues and in the streets, that they may have glory of men.”
Our
modern love is a very flamboyant kind of love that is made very evident to all
around. It forgives all evil and overlooks all things that are ungodly. That isn’t the Love of God.
The
‘devotion’ closed with the statement: “Love must become your life-style, the habit of your
life. But it starts with a decision.
That
is very true. Love is the habit of life for the Child of God because God’s Love
permeates our lives. But it is presented
backwards here. It doesn’t “start” with
a decision. We don’t “decide’ to love
people. Love follows humbling ourselves
before God in sorrow for our sins and repentance of them. It follows turning from our sin and following
Christ. It involves deciding to accept
God’s Love under the conditions with which it is offered. Once we see ourselves as the sinful creatures
we are before God we recognize the tremendous love He bestowed on us it causes
us to love others as He loves us.
Repeatedly
in the Old Testament God demanded that the Israelites turn from sin and
evil. They never accomplished that
because they were living after the flesh. Now God in his Great Love is offering
a way for us all to achieve that. John
3:16 is a popular text, but the verses following it are overlooked
completely. Because they outline the
plan God had for men to take advantage of that Love announced in verse 16. this is the
condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were
evil.20 For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the
light, lest his deeds should be
reproved.21 But he that doeth
truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are
wrought in God.
To experience the Love of God we must understand that our
deeds have been evil. We must be willing to come to the love-light of God that
our deeds might be reproved. And when we come to the love-light our evil deeds
are manifest and we are changed. From that time on it becomes clear to all that
our deeds are
wrought in God. And that includes demonstrating God’s
love for the world—not by the glad-handing, overly sweet, love-all-and-sundry
kind of the religious world, but by being a light to sinners and by doing the complete will of God every day of our
life, not just ‘being a Christian’ but by being ‘Christ-like.’ That is the
love of God.