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Octavius Winslow

Romans 8:28

Romans 8:28
Octavius Winslow May, 19 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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May, 19 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about loving God?

The Bible emphasizes that true Christians are identified as those who love God, as seen in Romans 8:28.

Romans 8:28 tells us that 'those who love God' are known and recognized by Him. This love is the fundamental characteristic that distinguishes true Christians from the unregenerate. While earthly affiliations and theological differences may vary among believers, this shared love for God unites them as members of His family. The change in status from children of wrath to those who love God is a result of the regeneration that the Holy Spirit accomplishes in their hearts.

Romans 8:28

How do we know that regeneration leads to love for God?

Regeneration transforms believers, replacing enmity with a fervent love for God.

The process of regeneration is essential in the life of a believer, as it changes the heart's disposition towards God. Previously at enmity with God, the regenerate person now treasures the glory of the Savior and acknowledges the Father's love. This transformation does not occur through human effort but is a result of the Holy Spirit's work within. The love for God is not merely an emotion but a response to His extravagant grace and mercy. It is this divine initiative that empowers us to love Him in return, fulfilling the truth found in 1 John 4:19, 'We love Him because He first loved us.'

1 John 4:19, Romans 8:28

Why is love for God important for Christians?

Love for God is central to Christian identity and reflects a true relationship with Him.

Love for God is paramount for Christian identity, acting as the distinguishing mark of those who have been saved. According to scripture, this love encompasses not only admiration but also trust, obedience, and reliance on Him as a Father. Christians learn to love God through His actions toward them; they respond to His wisdom, faithfulness, and holiness in all circumstances. Thus, love for God assures believers of their place in His family and is foundational to all other aspects of their faith. Furthermore, it compels them to worship, serve, and reflect His character in their lives.

Romans 8:28

“Those who love God.”

— Romans 8:28

Surely it is no small mercy belonging to the Church of Christ, that, composed as it is of all people and tongues, its members as "strangers scattered abroad," its essential unity deeply obscured, and its spiritual beauty sadly disfigured by the numerous divisions which mar and weaken the body of Christ, there yet is an identity of character in all, by which they are not only known to God, but are recognized by each other as members of the one family- "those who love God." Love to God, then, is the grand distinctive feature of the true Christian. The reverse marks all the unregenerate. Harmonious as their nature, their creed, their Church may be, no love to God is their binding assimilating feature, their broad distinctive character. But the saints are those who love God. Their creeds may differ in minor shades, their ecclesiastical relations may vary in outward forms- as rays of light, the remoter their distances from the center, the more widely they diverge from each other. Yet in this one particular there is an essential unity of character, and a perfect assimilation of spirit. They love one God and Father; and this truth- like those sundered rays of light returning to the sun, approximate to each other- forms the great assimilating principle by which all who hold the Head, and love the same Savior, are drawn to one center, and in which they all harmonize and unite. The regeneration through which they have passed has effected this great change. Once they were the children of wrath, even as others, at enmity with God. Ah! is not this a heart-affecting thought? But now they love Him. The Spirit has supplanted the old principle of enmity by the new principle of love. They love Him as revealed in Christ, and they love Him for the gift of the Revealer- the visible image of the invisible God. Who, as he has surveyed the glory and realized the preciousness of the Savior, has not felt in his bosom the kindling of a fervent love to Him who, when He had no greater gift, commended His love to us by the gift of His dear Son? They love Him, too, in His paternal character. Standing to them in so close and endearing a relation, they address Him as a Father- they confide in Him as a Father- they obey Him as a Father. The spirit of adoption takes captive their hearts, and they love God with a child's fervent, adoring, confiding affection. They love God, too, for all His conduct. It varies, but each variation awakens the deep and holy response of love. They love Him for the wisdom, the faithfulness, the holiness of His procedure; for what He withholds, as for what He grants; when He rebukes, as when He approves. For His frown- they know it to be a Father's frown; for His smile- they feel it to be a Father's smile. They love Him for the rod that disciplines, as for the scepter that governs- for the wound that bleeds, as for the balm that heals. There is nothing in God, and there is nothing from God, for which the saints do not love Him. Of one truth- the source of this feeling- let us not lose sight- "We love Him because He first loved us." Thus the motive of love to God as much springs from Him as the power to love Him.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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