What does the Bible say about the love of God?
The Bible reveals God's love as unchanging and unconditional, manifested most fully in Christ Jesus.
Throughout Scripture, this love is unveiled in profound ways, such as in Jesus' words assuring His disciples of the Father's affection for them. From the very act of giving His only Son, God's love is the vital current flowing from the heart of God. It reassures believers of their secure standing in Christ, reminding them that, despite life's trials and tribulations, they remain enveloped in the unwavering love of their Creator. Understanding this divine love is crucial for believers to find comfort and hope in every circumstance, aligning their hearts with the truth that they are loved eternally and unconditionally.
How do we know God's love is true?
God's love is true and demonstrable through the sacrifice of Christ and the promise that nothing can separate us from it.
Moreover, God's love manifests in the believer's experience through the work of the Holy Spirit, who assures us of our adoption as God's children. This assurance fosters a deep-seated confidence in facing life's challenges, as believers hold onto the promise that they are loved by God regardless of circumstances. The tangible evidence of Christ's sacrifice becomes the ultimate testament of God's love, enabling believers to cling to the unshakeable truth of His affection towards them.
Why is God's love important for Christians?
God's love is essential for Christians as it provides security, identity, and assurance of eternal life.
Moreover, the importance of God's love extends to the Christian’s witness in the world. As believers embody and share this divine love, they reflect God's character to others, demonstrating the power of redemption and grace. Additionally, comprehending God's love empowers Christians to face persecution, suffering, and uncertainty, knowing that they are anchored in a relationship that transcends all earthly challenges. This understanding transforms their perspective, drives them to worship and inspires them to live lives that glorify the One who loves them eternally.
“For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
— Romans 8:38, 39
THE love of the Father is seen in giving us Christ, in choosing us in Christ, and in blessing us in Him with all spiritual blessings. Indeed, the love of the Father is the fountain of all covenant and redemption mercy to the Church. It is that river the streams whereof make glad the city of God. How anxious was Jesus to vindicate the love of the Father from all the suspicions and fears of His disciples! “I say not unto you that I will pray the Father for you; for the Father Himself loves you.” “God so loved the world that He gave his only begotten Son.” To this love we must trace all the blessings which flow to us through the channel of the cross. It is the love of God, exhibited, manifested, and seen in Christ Jesus; Christ being, not the originator, but the gift of His love; not the cause, but the exponent of it. Oh, to see a perfect equality in the Father’s love with the Son’s love! Then shall we be led to trace all His present mercies, and all His providential dealings, however trying, painful, and mysterious, to the heart of God; thus resolving all into that from where all alike flow—everlasting and unchangeable love.
Now it is from this love there is no separation. “Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?” The apostle had challenged accusation from every foe, and condemnation from every quarter; but no accuser rose, and no condemnation was pronounced. Standing on the broad basis of Christ’s finished work and of God’s full justification, his head was now lifted up in triumph above all his enemies round about. But it is possible that, though in the believer’s heart there is no fear of impeachment, there yet may exist the latent one of separation. The aggregate dealings of God with His Church, and His individual dealings with His saints, may at times present the appearance of an alienated affection of a lessened sympathy. The age in which this epistle was penned was fruitful of suffering to the Church of God. And if any period or any circumstances of her history boded a severance of the bond which bound her to Christ, that was the period, and those were the circumstances. But with a confidence based upon the glorious truth on which he had been descanting—the security of the Church of God in Christ—and with a persuasion inspired by the closer realization of the glory about to burst upon her view—with the most dauntless courage he exclaims, “I am persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
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