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Octavius Winslow

Romans 8:35

Romans 8:35
Octavius Winslow December, 25 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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December, 25 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about Christ's love for believers?

The Bible assures us that nothing can separate us from the love of Christ (Romans 8:35).

The Bible vividly expresses the unwavering love of Christ for believers, highlighting that nothing in existence can sever this bond. Romans 8:35 poses a pivotal question regarding separation from Christ's love, emphasizing that it is not dependent on the believer's love for Christ, but rather on Christ's eternal affection for His people. Understanding this foundational truth reassures believers of their position in Christ, especially during trials and temptations that may threaten their faith.

Romans 8:35

How do we know that Christ's love is unbreakable?

Scripture confirms that Christ's love remains steadfast regardless of our circumstances (Romans 8:35).

The unbreakable nature of Christ's love is firmly anchored in Scripture. Romans 8:35 assures us that no adversities, be they persecution, distress, or even death, can separate us from His love. This promise was given to encourage early Christians facing various sufferings and apostasy, reminding them that their comfort lies not in their actions or feelings, but in the eternal, unchanging love of Christ. The profound knowledge of this love brings deeper confidence and peace to believers, regardless of their struggles.

Romans 8:35

Why is understanding Christ's love important for Christians?

Understanding Christ's love provides comfort and assurance in times of trouble (Romans 8:35).

For Christians, comprehending the depth of Christ's love is crucial for spiritual assurance and emotional strength. When believers focus on Christ's unshakeable love, they find solace amid trials and tribulations. Romans 8:35 beautifully illustrates this by affirming that despite external pressures and internal doubts, believers are eternally secure in Christ's affection. Realizing that their standing before God is grounded in Christ's love rather than their own fluctuating feelings provides a profound sense of peace and stability in their faith journey.

Romans 8:35

“Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?”

— Romans 8:35

OF whose love does the apostle speak? The believer’s love to Christ? On the contrary, it is Christ’s love to the believer. And this view of the subject makes all the difference in its influence upon our minds. What true satisfaction and real consolation, at least how small its measure, can the believer derive from a contemplation of his love to Christ? It is true, when sensible of its glow, and conscious of its power, he cannot but rejoice in any evidence, the smallest, of the work of the Holy Spirit in his soul. Yet this is not the legitimate ground of his confidence, not the proper source of his comfort. It is Christ’s love to him! And this is just the truth the Christian mind needs for its repose. To whom did Paul originally address this letter? To the saints of the early and suffering age of the Christian Church. And this truth—Christ’s love to His people—would be just the truth calculated to comfort, and strengthen, and animate them. To have declared that nothing should prevail to induce them to forsake Christ would have been but poor consolation to individuals who had witnessed many a fearful apostasy from Christ in others, and who had often detected the working of the same principle in themselves. Calling to mind the strong asseveration of Peter, “Although all shall be offended, yet will not I,” and remembering how their Master was denied by one, betrayed by another, and forsaken by all His disciples, their hearts would fail them. But let the apostle allure their minds from a contemplation of their love to Christ, to a contemplation of Christ’s love to them, assuring them, upon the strongest grounds, that whatever sufferings they should endure, or by whatever temptations they should be assailed, nothing should prevail to sever them from their interest in the reality, sympathy, and constancy of that love, and he has at once brought them to the most perfect repose. The affection, then, of which the apostle speaks, is the love of God which is in Christ Jesus.

The love of Christ! such is our precious theme. Of it can we ever weary? Its greatness can we fully know? Its plenitude can we fully contain? Never. Its depths cannot be fathomed, its dimensions cannot be measured. It “passes knowledge.” All that Jesus did for His Church was but the unfolding and expression of His love. Traveling to Bethlehem—I see love incarnate. Tracking His steps as He went about doing good—I see love laboring. Visiting the house of Bethany—I see love sympathizing. Standing by the grave of Lazarus—I see love weeping. Entering the gloomy precincts of Gethsemane—I see love sorrowing. Passing on to Calvary—I see love suffering, bleeding, and expiring. The whole scene of His life is but an unfolding of the deep, awful, and precious mystery of redeeming love.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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