In this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.
(1 John 4:10 – ESV)
(1 John 4:10 – ESV)
People say all sorts of things about love today, and there are all sorts of notions about what love really is. But how does God define it? What does God say it is, and where does it come from, how can we see and know it, in truth? Believers, unbelievers, and make-believers alike quote the last part of 1 John 4:8, God is love, and then try and make it say whatever they want it to, and use it as an excuse to do or believe just about anything, but that isn’t what the Bible is teaching here. Only what God means is what counts. So what does the Bible teach? God is love, yes, but God further defines that in the following verses, as we see propitiation declared here once again (1 John 4:10). We have gone into detail about that already elsewhere.
You cannot change it around here; John does not say that love is God, but that God is love. In the Greek, the two terms are not interchangeable. This same book declares God is light (1 John 1:5), and John writes in his gospel that Jesus said God is Spirit (John 4:24). Yes we want to declare His love, but it is even better understood in its proper perspective, it is an unfailing love because it is grounded in His unfailing character, not in everyone else’s ideas.
Now we can see that God defines His love here through Christ on the cross, and we can relate that back to many passages, including Romans 3:25-26. God’s righteousness flows from His holiness, His love flows from His holiness; it isn’t that God’s holiness is greater than His love, His mercy and His justice, but that holiness is the character that encompasses all the other attributes of God. His love is defined by His holiness. His justice, His mercy, His grace, they are all defined by His holiness. Perhaps we can make it clearer by saying that holiness is godliness, or God-likeness.
His justice is equal to His love and so He had to do it the “cross” way to satisfy both. God’s mercy did not nullify His justice; He had to be propitiated as our text plainly declares. If you redefine the atonement to remove the idea that Christ suffered the judgment for sin in our place, you destroy the heart of the gospel (1 John 4:10 / Romans 1:17 / 1 John 1:9). If that payment had not been made, there would never have been any forgiveness whatsoever (Hebrews 9:22). But forgiveness springs from the unfailing fountain of God’s character.
“Living For Today With An Eye For Tomorrow”©
6 comments:
I find it ever so irritating when people say ..but God is love, he wouldn't do that. and it's like...yes, God is Love, but he is more than that. He is love shown in a fuller way. (not saying it right) But God's love is seen by many as just a pancea... do whatever, God will be okay with it because he is loving. Frustrating at times.
Yep...check out a post from last week that dealt with that..."Oh No You Don't!"...I think you will like it...
God's love astounds me. The more I come to realize how far short I fall from Him, the greater and sweeter His love seems. When I see the true disparity between me and Christ, when I see what He does in contrast with what I do, I am constantly humbled and try to wrap my mind around what great a love it must take to love me and humble Himself for my redemption.
No greater love than a Friend giving His life for a friend.
Amazing how God, who called Abraham His friend, and the Lord who called the Apostles His friends, now calls us, (those who have repented and trusted Christ), His friends.
Something I never take lightly. In fact, it seems almost blasphemous to even suggest.
Thanks for another fine teaching JD.
More posts of this sort tomorrow and Thursday...
I kinda resonate with Sandman on the "friend" thing, in that it seems blasphemous to even suggest. Yes, God loves me; yes, he calls me friend. But instead of bouncing around, singing about it, announcing it to everyone in a light and bubbly manner, I am still in a bit of shock when I try to wrap my mind around that concept. He is Sovereign Lord, and he calls me friend? How awe-inspiring!!
Post a Comment