In his sermon on John 3:16, Gary Shepard addresses the doctrine of God's love, specifically focusing on the nature and intention behind it. He argues against the notion of universal love, asserting that God's love is particular and directed toward His elect. By citing Scripture references such as Malachi 1:2-3, Romans 9:13, and John 17:9, he reinforces that God's hatred of some, and His choice to love others, aligns with a consistent biblical narrative. Shepard emphasizes that God’s love is eternal and unchanging, rooted in the reality of His choice to redeem His people through Christ, thereby providing them not merely with affection but with a profound, sacrificial love that acts toward their salvation. The significance of this doctrine lies in its comforting assurance that nothing can separate the elect from God's love in Christ Jesus, reinforcing the Reformed view of election and the assurance of salvation.
“If this meant that God loves every person in the world without exception, then it would put this book, its truthfulness, in a great, contradictory state.”
“The love of God is a particular and definite love for His people, and the world that is spoken of here is the world of His elect being identified as they are those who believe on the Lord Jesus Christ.”
“The love of God is in Christ Jesus. And since it is in Christ Jesus, and since God has chosen His people in Christ Jesus, and put them in Christ Jesus, and inseparably joined them in union with Christ Jesus, that love for them is as sure for them as it is for His Son.”
“Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought also to love one another.”
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