In the sermon titled "God Is Love," Paul Pendleton addresses the profound doctrine of God's love as presented in 1 John 4, specifically highlighting the necessity of understanding this love in relation to God’s hatred for sin. Pendleton argues that true love is inseparable from God's holiness and righteousness, indicating that God hates all that is opposed to His nature, including unholy actions and the ungodly. Key scriptural references such as Romans 7:12 and Ephesians 1:4-7 reinforce this message by illustrating the righteousness of God's law and the redemptive work of Christ. Practically, the sermon emphasizes that believers must manifest God's love through their actions towards one another; loving the brethren is not merely an emotional response but a reflection of God’s love in their lives, as articulated in 1 John 4:20. In this light, Pendleton deftly connects the Reformed doctrine of total depravity with the necessity of divine grace for true love to flourish among believers.
“He cannot love anything but righteousness, and the righteousness I am talking about, and the righteousness the scripture is talking about, it would be his righteousness and not what kind of righteousness man or any other being would try to come up with.”
“If you do not see this, that is, that Christ Jesus came to save sinners, then your love is perverted because the love of God is manifested there.”
“Had God not loved us, we would never have loved him. If we love Him, the only reason we love God is because He first loved us.”
“If we love the brethren, then it is not by loving the brethren that we know the love of God. It is by knowing love, who is God, and the manifestation of that love that we can truly love one another.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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