Of all the emotions God gifted us with, the most complex is
love. For us it runs the gamut from “I love pizza” love to “I love my husband”
love. It can be as shallow as loving a color or as deep and intense as a mother’s
love for her children. We can feel patriotic fervor as a result of love of
country and sentimental warmth for love of the holiday season. Love is complex
and is expressed in a variety of ways by humans.
But how does God see love? Scripture says, “In this is love,
not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the atoning
sacrifice for our sins” (1 John 4:10). His definition of love is given to us in
the very life and death of Jesus. More than words from a Webster’s dictionary,
he clearly demonstrates the meaning what love is all about. There is no
ambiguity or confusion when you look at Jesus’ life among us and his death on
the cross. God’s love revealed to humankind in the most radical way possible.
The passage from 1 John goes on to say, “Beloved, since God
loved us so much, we also ought to love one another.” God’s kind of love is
exemplified in Jesus and that is the kind of love we are to show one another. The
well-known verses from 1 Corinthians 13:4-8a pictures love as Jesus lived it: “Love
is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude. It
does not insist on its own way; it does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices
in the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures
all things. Love never ends.”
And God’s love is strong. It does not waver in the face of
adversity or pain. It is a constant. It doesn’t depend on our good days or bad,
whether we’ve stumbled and failed or if we are doing just fantastic. In fact, it
doesn’t depend on us at all. God’s love is wholly based on his heart’s desire
to love us no matter what may come. He calls us to love the same, to set our
hearts to love sacrificially just as he does.
There is a song from years ago that had a chorus line, “Love
is not a feeling it is an act of your will.” There is truth to that, but I
would add that God’s love is a fierce love. There is nothing passionless about
it. There will always be times when to do the right thing in love may not be
accompanied with great emotion or at least not joyfulness, but keep following
the example of Jesus and don’t be surprised if passion eventually follows actions.
The Bible says Jesus endured the cross for the joy that was set before him (Hebrews
12:2).
I try to love God’s way, but I know I fall short too often.
The good news is that the Holy Spirit resides in me and his presence produces
the fruit of love. If I press onward and closer to God, if I continue to
practice love in all I do, the fruit will grow. So it is for all God’s people: God’s
love, for us and through us, reaching into the lives of the deserving and undeserving
alike, touching lost, broken hearted, beaten down weary travelers in this life.
If we can love with God’s love, we can change lives, and not
just the lives of others. We’ll find we ourselves are being transformed with
every act of love. Dare to love with God’s kind of love and see what happens
when you do. I promise you won’t be disappointed.
2 comments:
Thank you.
I have started reading your blog more and more. It seems to have what I need to hear.
Have you considered being an author?
Think of the folks you could help.
In Christian Love,
Pat
Thank you,
I read your blog more and more.
You should be an author.
Thanks,
Pat
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