“Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent His Son to be the propitiation
for our sins. Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought also to love one another.”
1 John 4:10, 11.
THE law commands love, indeed, all its precepts are summed up in that one word, “love.” More
widely read it runs thus, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul,
and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbor as yourself.” Yet all this amounts
only to, “You shall love.”
But the law, by reason of our depravity never produced love. We were commanded to love, but we
did no such thing. The spirit that is in us is selfish, and it lusts to envy and to enmity. Why do wars and
fights come among us? Come they not from our lusts? Since the Fall, man has become man’s bitterest
foe upon the earth, and the world is full of hate, slandering, struggles, fighting, wounding, and slaying.
All that the law can do is to show the wrong of enmity and threaten punishment, but it cannot supply an
unregenerate heart with a fountain of love. Man remains unloving and unlovable till the gospel takes
him in hand, and by grace accomplishes that which the law could not do, in that it was weak through the
flesh. Love is winning many hearts to the kingdom of God, and its reign shall extend till love shall rule
over the whole earth. And so the kingdom of God shall be set up among men, and God shall dwell
among them. At the present moment love is the distinguishing mark of the people of God. Jesus said,
“By this shall all men know that you are My disciples, if you have love, one to another.” And John said,
“We know that we have passed from death unto life, because we love the brethren.” The man whose
spirit is selfish has not the spirit of Christ, and “if any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of
His.” The man whose spirit is that of envy and contention is evidently no follower of the lowly and loving
Jesus, and those who do not follow Jesus are none of His. They that are Christ’s are filled with His
love. “Everyone that loves is born of God, and knows God. He that loves not knows not God; for God is
Love.” God is the center of the believer’s love. The saints are an inner circle especially beloved, and all
mankind are embraced within the circumference of the ring of love. “He that dwells in love dwells in
God, and God in Him” and he alone is a child of God whose spirit is kindly and affectionate, and who
seeks, wherever he is, to promote peace, goodwill towards men.
The saints begin with love to God. That must always hold the highest place, for God is the best and
noblest being, and we owe Him all our hearts. Then comes, for Jesus’ sake, love to all who are in Christ.
There is a peculiarly near and dear relationship existing between one child of God and all the rest. Loving
Him that begat, we love all them that are begotten of Him. Should not a child love his brothers with
a tender, peculiar affection? This principle of l
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depths? Yes, by the leadings of God’s Spirit, we will search out the springs of the sea of love. Only in
one place shall we find love enough for our supreme purpose, which is also the purpose of the Lord
Himself. There is one shoreless ocean into which we may be baptized, and out of which we may be
filled until we overflow. Where is the unfailing motive of Love? For Love is tried, and hardly put to it to
hold her own. Can we find a motive that will never fail, even towards the most provoking of mankind?
Can we find an argument for affection which shall help us in times of ingratitude, when base returns
threaten to freeze the very heart of charity? Yes, there is such a motive. There is a force by which even
impossibilities of love can be accomplished, and we shall be supplied with a perpetual constraint moving
the heart to ceaseless charity.
Come with me, then, in the first place, to notice the infinite spring of love—“Herein is love, not that
we loved God, but that God loved us.” Secondly, let us observe the marvelous outflow of that love—
“God sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins.” And then, thirdly, let us notice the overflow of
that love in us, when it fills our hearts and runs over to others—“Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought
also to love one another.”
I. First, THE INFINITE SPRING OF LOVE. Our text has two words upon which I would place an
emphasis—“not” and “but.”
The first is, “not.” “Herein is love, not”—“not that we loved God.” Very naturally many conclude
that this means “not that we loved God first.” That is not exactly the truth taught here, but still it is a
weighty truth, and is mentioned in this same chapter in express words—“We love Him because He first
loved us” (verse 19). The cause of love in the universe is not that man loved God first. No being in existence
could love God before God loved him, for the existence of such a being is due to God’s previous
love. His plans of love were all laid and many of them carried out before we were born. And when we
were born, we none of us loved God first so as to seek after God before He sought after us, so as to desire
reconciliation with God before He desired reconciliation with us. No, whatever may be said about
free will as a theory, it is never found as a matter of fact that any man, left to himself, ever woos his
God, or pines after friendship with his Maker. If he repents of sin, it is because the Spirit of God has first
visited him and shown him his sin. If he desires restoration, it is because he has first of all, been taught
to dread the wrath of God and to long for holiness—
“No sinner can be beforehand with Thee!
Your grace is most sovereign,
Most rich, and most free.”
We inscribe a negative in black capital letters upon the idea that man’s love can ever be prior to the love
of God. That is quite out of the question.
“Not that we loved God.” Take a second sense—that is, not that any man did love God at all by nature,
whether first or second, not that we, any one of us, ever did or ever could have an affection towards
God while we remained in our state by nature. Instead of loving God, man is indifferent to God. “No
God,” says the fool in his heart, and by nature we are all such fools. It is the sinner’s wish that there
were no God. We are atheistic by nature and if our brain does not yield to atheism, yet, our heart does.
We wish that we could sin according to our own will, and that we were in no danger of being called to
account for it. God is not in all our thoughts, or if He does enter there, it is as a terror and a dread. No,
worse than that, man is at enmity with God by wicked works. The holiness which God admires, man has
no liking for. The sin which God abominates has about it sweetness and fascination for the unrenewed
heart, so that man’s ways are contrary to the ways of God. Man is perverse. He cannot walk with God,
for they are not agreed. He is all evil and God is all goodness, and therefore, no love to God exists in the
natural heart of man. He may say that he loves God, but then it is a god of his own inventing, and not
Jehovah, the God of the Bible, the only living and true God. A just God and a Savior, the natural mind
cannot endure. The carnal mind is enmity against God, and is not reconciled to God, neither indeed can
be. The unregenerate heart is, as to love, a broken cistern which can hold no water. In our natural state,
there is none that does good, no, not one. So is there also none that loves God, no, not one.
We come nearer to John’s meaning when we look at this negative as applying to those who do love
God. “Not that we loved God”—that is, that our love to God, even when it does exist and even when it
influences our lives, is not worthy to be mentioned as a fountain of supply for love. The apostle points
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us away from it to something far vaster, and then he cries, “Herein is love.” I am looking for “the
springs of the sea,” and you point me to a little pool amid the rocks which has been filled by the flowing
tide. I am glad to see that pool. How bright! How blue! How like the sea from where it came! But do not
point to this as the source of the great water floods, for if you do, I shall smile at your childish ignorance
and point you to yonder great rolling main which tosses its waves on high. What is your little pool to the
vast Atlantic? Do you point me to the love in the believer’s heart and say, “Herein is love!” You make
me smile. I know that there is love in that true heart, but who can mention it in the presence of the great
rolling ocean of the love of God, without bottom and without shore? The word, “not” is not only upon
my lips, but in my heart as I think of the two things, “NOT that we loved God, but that God loved us.”
What poor love ours is at its very best when compared with the love with which God loves us!
Let me use another figure. If we had to enlighten the world, a child might point us to a bright mirror
reflecting the sun. And he might cry, “Herein is light!” You and I would say, “Poor child, that is but borrowed
brightness. The light is not there, but yonder, in the sun.” The love of saints is nothing more than
the reflection of the love of God. We have love, but God is love. When I think of the love of certain
saints to Christ, I am charmed with it, for it is a fruit of the Spirit not to be despised. When I think of
Paul the apostle counting all things but loss for Christ, when I think of our missionaries going one after
another into malarious parts of the African coast, and dying for Christ, and when I read the Book of
Martyrs, and see confessors standing on the firewood, burning quick to the death, still bearing witness to
their Lord and Master—I do rejoice in the love of saints to their Lord. Yet this is but a stream. The unfathomable
deep, the eternal source from which all love proceeds, infinitely exceeds all human affection
and it is found in God and in God alone. “Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that God loved us.”
Let us contrast our love to God with His love to us. Dear brethren, we do love God, and we may well
do so, since He is infinitely lovable. When the mind is once enlightened, it sees everything that is lovable
about God. He is so good, so gracious, so perfect, that He commands our admiring affection. The
spouse in the Song, when she thought of her beloved, mentioned all manner of beauties, and then cried,
“Yes, He is altogether lovely.” It is natural therefore, that one who sees God should love Him. But, now,
think of God’s love to us. Is it not incomparably greater, since there was nothing lovely in us whatever,
and yet He loved us? In us there is by nature, nothing to attract the affection of a holy God, but quite the
reverse, and yet He loved us. Herein, indeed, is love!
When we love God, it is an honor to us. It exalts a man to be allowed to love a Being so glorious. A
philosopher once wrote that for a man to speak of being the friend of God was too daring, and in the
reverence of this thoughtful heathen, there was much to admire, for indeed there is an infinite difference
between the glorious God and the sinful creature man. Though God in condescension allows us to call
Him friend, and Jesus says, “You are My friends!” yet this is beyond reason, and is a sweet revelation of
the Holy Spirit. What an uplifting there is in it for us! On the other hand, God’s love to us can add nothing
to Him. It gives, but receives not. Divine love can have no recompense. That He, the Infinite, should
stoop to love the finite, that He the infinitely pure should love the guilty, this is a vast condescension.
See, moreover, what it involved, for this love rendered it necessary that in the person of His dear Son,
God should be “despised and rejected of men,” should make Himself of no reputation, and should even
be numbered with the transgressors. “Herein is love!”
When we love God, we are gainers by the deed. He that loves God does in the most effectual manner
love himself. We are filled with riches when we abound in love to God. It is our wealth, our health, our
might and our delight. But God gains nothing by loving us. I hardly like to set the two in contrast, for
our love is so poor and pitiable a thing as compared with the immeasurable love of God.
It is our duty to love God. We are bound to do it. As His creatures we ought to love our Creator. As
preserved by His care, we are under obligation to love Him for His goodness. We owe Him so much that
our utmost love is a mere acknowledgment of our debt. But God loved us to whom He owed nothing at
all. For whatever might have been the claims of a creature upon his Creator, we forfeited them all by our
rebellion. Sinful men had no rights towards God except the right of being punished. Yet the Lord manifested
boundless love to our race, which was only worthy to be destroyed. Oh words! How you fail me!
I cannot utter my heart by these poor lips of clay. Oh God, how infinite was Your love which was given
without any obligation on Your part, freely and unsought, and all because You will to love. Yes, You
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love because You are love. There was no cause, no constraint, no claim why You should love mankind,
except that Your own heart led You to do so What is man that You are mindful of him? “Herein is love,
not that we loved God, but that God loved us.”
I have thus pointed out the wellhead of love. Let us draw from it and from none other. If you go into
the world and say, “I am to love my fellow men because I love God,” the motive is good, but it is questionable,
limited, and variable. How much better to argue,—“I am to love my fellow men because God
loves me.” When my love grows cold towards God, and when by reason of my infirmity and imperfection,
I am led even to question whether I love God at all, then my argument and my impulse would fail
me if it came from my own love to God. But if I love the fallen because God loved me, then I have an
unchanging motive, an unquestionable argument, and a forcible impulse not to be resisted. Therefore the
apostle cried, “The love of Christ constrains us.” It is always well for a Christian to have the strongest
motive, and to rely upon the most potent and perpetual force, and therefore the apostle bids us look to
divine love, and not to our own. “Herein is love,” he says, “not that we loved God, but that God loved
us.” So far the “not.”
Let us turn to the, “but.” “But that He loved us.” I have nothing new to say, nor do I wish to say anything
new. But I would like you to meditate on each one of these words—“He loved us.” Three words,
but what weight of meaning! “He,” who is infinitely holy and cannot endure iniquity—“He loved us.”
“He,” whose glory is the astonishment of the greatest of intelligent beings—“He loved us.” “He,” whom
the heaven of heavens cannot contain, “loved us.” “He” who is God all-sufficient, and needs nothing of
us, neither can indeed receive anything at our hands—“He loved us.” What joy lies sleeping here! Oh,
that we could wake it up! What hope, too, for hopeless sinners, because “God loved us.” If a man could
know that he was loved of all his fellow men, if he could have it for certain that he was loved by all the
angels, doted on by cherubim and seraphim, yet these were but so many drops, and all put together could
not compare with the main ocean contained in the fact that, “God loved us.”
Now ring that second silver bell, “He loved us.” I do not think the apostle is here so much speaking
of God’s special love to His own elect as of His love to men in general. He saw our race ruined in the
fall, and He could not bear that man should be destroyed. Lord, what is man that You visit him in love?
Yet He did so visit him. The Lord’s love made Him lament man’s revolt and cry, “I have nourished and
brought up children, and they have rebelled against Me.” After which He bade heaven and earth witness
to His grief. He saw that sin had brought men into wretchedness and misery, and would destroy them
forever, and He would not have it so. He loved them with the love of pity, with the love of sweet and
strong benevolence, and He declared it with an oath, “As I live, says the Lord, I have no pleasure in the
death of him that dies, but that he turn unto Me and live.” “Herein is love.” But if you and I are reconciled
to God we can lay the emphasis, each one for himself, upon this word, “love,” and view it as special,
effectual, electing love. Let each believer say, “He loved me, and gave Himself for me.” Then what
force is in my text, “He loved us.” It is not enough that He pitied us, or spared us, or helped us, but “He
loved us.” It has often made me rise from my seat to think that God loves me! I could not sit still and
hear the thrilling truth. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me. It is high, I cannot attain unto it. It is
sweet to be loved even by a dog. It is sweet to be loved by a babe. It is sweet to be loved by a friend. It is
sweet to be loved by God’s people, but, oh, to be loved of God and to know it!—this is paradise. Would
a man need any other heaven than to know for certain that he enjoyed the love of God?
Note the third word. “He loved us”—“us”—the most insignificant of beings. There is an anthill
somewhere. It is no matter to you where it is. It teems with ants. Stir the nest and they swarm in armies.
Think of one of them. No, you do not need to know anything about him! His business is no concern of
yours, so let him go. But that ant, after all, is more considerable to you than you are to God. “All the inhabitants
of the earth are reputed as nothing.” What are you even in this great city!—One man, one
woman in London, in England, in the population of the world—what a nothing you are! Yet what is the
population of this world compared with the universe? I suppose that all these stars which we see at
night, all the countless worlds within our range of vision, are but as a little dust in a lone corner of God’s
great house. The whole solar system, and all the systems of worlds we have ever thought of, are but as a
drop in a bucket compared with the boundless sea of creation. And even that is as nothing compared to
the infinite God. And yet, “He loved us”—the insignificant creatures of an hour. What is more, He loved
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us though in our insignificance we dared to rebel against Him. We boasted against Him. We cried, “Who
is Jehovah?” We lifted up our hand to fight with Him. Ridiculous rebellion! Absurd warfare! Had He but
glanced at us and annihilated us, it would have been as much as we could merit at His hands. But to
think that He should love us—love us; mark you, when we were in rebellion against Him. This is marvelous.
Observe that the previous verse speaks of us as being dead in sin. “In this was manifested the love of
God toward us, because that God sent His only begotten Son into the world, that we might live through
Him.” Then we were dead, dead to all goodness, or thought or power of goodness, criminals shut up in
the condemned cell, and yet God loved us with a great love even when we were dead in trespasses and
sins. Child of God, God’s love to you today is wonderful. But think of His love to you when you were
far gone in rebellion against Him. When not a throb of holy, spiritual life could be found in your entire
being, yet He loved you and sent His Son that you might live through Him. Moreover, He loved us when
we were steeped in sin. Does not our text tell us so? For He sent His Son to be the propitiation for our
sins, and this implies that we needed to be reconciled. Our righteous Judge was angry with us. His righteous
wrath smoked against our evil, and yet even then “He loved us.” He was angry with us as a Judge,
but yet He loved us. He was determined to punish and yet resolved to save.
This is a world of wonders! I am utterly beaten by my text. I confess myself mastered by my theme.
But who among us can measure the unfathomable? “Herein is love,” that God freely, out of the spontaneous
motion of His own heart, should love us. This is the argument for love. This is the inexhaustible
fountain out of which all love must come. If we desire love, may we come and fill our vessels here and
bear it out to others. Love springing from our own bosoms is flat, feeble and scant, but the love of God
is a great deep, forever fresh, and full and flowing. Here are those springs of the sea of which we spoke,
“Herein is love!”
II. I want your attention a little longer while I speak as best I can upon THE MARVELOUS OUTFLOW
OF THAT LOVE. “Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent His Son
to be the propitiation for our sins.” Beloved, the love of God is seen in creation. He that studies the
mechanism of the human frame and of its surroundings will see much of divine kindness there. The love
of God is to be seen in providence. He that watches the loving hand of God in daily life will not need to
look far before he sees tokens of a Father’s care. But if you want to know when the great deep of God’s
love was broken up, and arose in the fullness of its strength to prevail over all, if you would see it revealed
in a deluge, like Noah’s flood, you must wait till you see Jesus born at Bethlehem and crucified
on Calvary, for His mission to men is the most divine manifestation of love.
Consider every word, “He sent His Son.” God “sent.” Love caused that mission. If there was to be
reconciliation between God and man, man ought to have sent to God. The offender ought to be the first
to apply for forgiveness. The weaker should apply to the greater for help. The poor man should ask of
him who distributes alms. But, “Herein is love,” that God “sent.” He was first to send an embassy of
peace. Today “we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did beseech you by us: we pray you in
Christ’s stead, be you reconciled to God.” Oh, the wonder of this, that God should not wait till rebellious
men had sent to His throne for terms of reconciliation, but should commence negotiations Himself!
Moreover, God sent such a One, He “sent His Son.” If men send an embassy to a great power, they
select some great one of their nation to wait upon the potent prince. But if they are dealing with a petty
principality, they think a subordinate person quite sufficient for such a business. Admire, then, the true
love of the infinitely gracious God, that when He sent an embassy to men, He did not commission an
angel or even the brightest spirit before His throne, but He sent His Son—oh, the love of God to men!
He sent His equal Son to rebels who would not receive Him, would not hear Him, but spat upon Him,
scourged Him, stripped Him, slew Him! Yes, “He spared not His own Son, but freely delivered Him up
for us all.” He knew what would come of that sending of Him, and yet He sent Him—
“Jesus, commissioned from above,
Descends to men below,
And shows from where the springs of love
In endless currents flow.
He whom the boundless heaven adores,
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Whom angels long to see,
Quit with joy those blissful shores,
Ambassador to me!
To me, a worm, a sinful clod,
A rebel all forlorn:
A foe, a traitor, to my God,
And of a traitor born.”
Note further, not only the grandeur of the ambassador, but the tenderness of the relationship existing
between him and the offended God. “He sent His Son.” The previous verse says, “His only-begotten
Son.” We cannot speak of God except after the manner of men, for God in all His glory is incomprehensible.
But speaking after the manner of men, what must it have cost Jehovah to take His only Son from
His bosom to die? Christ is the Father’s self, in essence they are one, there is but one God. We do not
understand the mystery of the Trinity in unity, but we believe it. It was God Himself who came here in
the person of His dear Son. He underwent all, for we are “the flock of God which He has purchased with
His own blood.” Remember Abraham with the knife unsheathed, and wonder as you see him obey the
voice which says, “Take now your son, your only son, Isaac, whom you love, and offer him for a sacrifice.”
Remember yet again that the Lord actually did what Abraham in obedience, willed to do. He gave
up His Son! “It pleased the Father to bruise Him; He has put Him to grief.” Christ’s death was in fact
God in human form suffering for human sin. God incarnate bleeding because of our transgressions. Are
we not now carried away with the streams of love? I speak my best, my brethren, but if my words were
what they ought to be, they would set your souls on fire. Is not all heaven still astounded at the death of
the Only-begotten? It has not recovered from its amazement that the heir of all things should bow His
head to death. How can I fitly tell you how much God loved the world when He gave His Only-begotten
to die that sinners might live?
Go a step further. “God sent His Son to be a propitiation,” that is, to be not only a reconciler, but the
Reconciliation. His sacrifice of Himself was the atonement through which mercy is rendered possible in
consistency with justice. I have heard men say with scorn that God required a sacrifice before He would
be reconciled, as if that were wrong on the part of the Judge of all. But let me whisper in their ears, God
required it; it is true, for He is just and holy, but God found it Himself. Remember that—Jehovah found
the ransom which He demanded. It was Himself, His own Son, one with Himself, that became the propitiation
and the reconciliation. It was not that God the Father was unkind, and could not be placated unless
He smote His Son, but that God the Father was so kind that He could not be unjust, so supremely
loving that He must devise a way by which men could be justly saved. An unjust salvation would have
been none at all. The Lord found the reconciliation—I will not say in the sufferings of Christ, though
that is true. I will not say in the death of Christ, though that is true. But I will put it in Scriptural words,
and here we have it in 1 John 2:2, “He”—that is, Jesus Himself—“is the propitiation for our sins.” The
sent One in Himself, as well as in all that He did, and all that He suffered, is the reconciliation between
God and man. “Herein is love!” For in order that there might be peace and love between man and God,
God finds the sin-offering, becomes Himself the atonement, that love might reign supreme.
What seems to me the most wonderful thing of all is that the Lord Jesus should deal, not only with
our sorrow, but with our sin, for “He is the propitiation for our sins.” That God should deal with us as to
our virtues, if, we had any, that He should deal with us as to our love, if we had any, might not seem so
difficult. But that He should send His Son to dwell with us as sinners—yes, and to come into contact
with our sins, and thus to take the sword, not only by its hilt, but by its blade, and plunge it into His own
heart, and die because of it, this is a miracle of miracles. O friends, Christ never gave Himself for our
righteousness, but He laid down His life for our sins. He viewed us as sinners when He came to save us.
“Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners.” If I had not found Christ till this very minute, I hope
I should find Him now as my mind drinks in this doctrine. By God’s Spirit there seems to me to be such
a window opened that even despair may see the light, for if the thing which God sent His Son to deal
with was the sin of man, then I, even though I am nothing but a mass of loathsomeness and sin, may yet
enjoy the infinite love of God. Oh, guilty ones hear these words, which are sweeter than music and fuller
of delight than all poetry. For even the harps of angels never rise to higher measures than these which I
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do so poorly and simply rehearse in your ears—even these glad tidings, that God who made the heavens
and the earth, whom you have offended, wills not that you die, but loves you so greatly that He opens up
a road of reconciliation through the body of His own dear Son. There was no other way by which you
could be reconciled to God, for had He reconciled you to a part of Himself and not to His justice, you
had not been in very truth at all reconciled to God. It is now to God completely just, holy, whose anger
burns against sin. It is to Him that you are reconciled by faith in Christ Jesus, through the laying down of
His life for men. Oh that God would bless this to all who hear the glad tidings!
III. We come at last to think of the CONSEQUENT OUTFLOW OF LOVE FROM US—“Beloved,
if God so loved us, we ought also to love one another.” Our love then to one another is simply God’s
love to us, flowing into us, and flowing out again. That is all it is. “Herein is love, not that we loved
God, but that God loved us,” and then we love others. You have seen a noble fountain in a continental
city adorning a public square. Look how the water leaps into the air, and then it falls into a circular basin
which fills and pours out its fullness into another lower down, and this again floods a third. Hear the
merry splash as the waters fall in showers and cataracts from basin to basin! If you stand at the lower
basin and look upon it and say, “Herein is water,” that is true, and will be true of the next higher one and
so forth. But if you would express the truth as to where the water really is, you may have to look far
away, perhaps upon a mountain’s side, for there is a vast reservoir from which pipes are laid to bring
these waters and force them to their height that they may descend so beautifully. Thus the love we have
to our fellow creatures, drops from us like the descending silvery waterfall from the full basin, but the
first source of it is the immeasurable love of God which is hidden away in His very essence, which never
changes and never can be diminished. “Herein is love.” If you and I desire to love our fellow Christians
and to love the fallen race of man, we must be joined on to the aqueduct which conducts love from this
eternal source, or else we shall soon fail in love.
Observe, brethren, then, that as the love of God is the source of all true love in us, so a sense of that
love stimulates us. Whenever you feel that you love God, you overflow with love to all God’s people. I
am sure you do. It is when you get to doubt the love of God that you grow hard and cold. But when you
are fired with the love of a dying Savior who gave Himself for you, you feel as if you loved every beggar
in the street, and you long to bring every harlot to Christ’s dear feet, you cannot help it. Man, if
Christ baptizes your heart into His love, you will be covered with it and filled with it.
Your love will respect the same persons as God’s love does, and for the same reasons. God loves
men. So will you. God loves them when there is no good in them, and you will love them in the same
way. Sometimes the wickedness of men kindles in the heart of a true Christian a stronger affection for
them. The deeper down they are, the more they need a Savior. Did not our Moravian brethren feel, when
they went out as missionaries, that, they would prefer to go first to the most barbarous tribes? For they
said, “The more degraded they are the more they need a Savior.” And should not the missionary spirit
make believers feel, if men are sunk until they are as low as brutes, and as savage as devils, that this is
the stronger reason for our being eager to bring them to Christ? I hope that abominable spirit which used
to come in among Christian people has been kicked away to its father the devil, where it ought to be. I
mean the spirit which despises the poor and the fallen. When I have heard people say, “What is the good
of looking after such riff-raff?” I have been saddened. The church of God feels that the souls of the
meanest are precious—that to save the most foul, the most ignorant, the most degraded, the most brutalized
man or woman that ever lives, is an objective worthy of the effort of the whole church, since God
thought it worthy of the death of Jesus Christ that He might bring sinners dead in sin to Himself.
Brothers and sisters, we will not have grasped the truth unless we feel that our love to men must be
practical, because God’s love to us was so. His love did not lie pent up like the waters in the secret caverns
of the earth, but it welled up like the waters in the days of Noah, when we read that the fountains of
the deep were broken up. In the gift of the Lord Jesus we behold the reality of divine love. When we see
the poor, we must not say “Be you warmed, be you filled, I am sorry for you.” But we must let our love
relieve them from our funds. If we see the ignorant, we must not say, “Dear me, the church is neglecting
the masses. The church must wake up.” But we must bestir ourselves and struggle ourselves, to warn
sinners. If there are any near you who are degraded, do not say, “I wish somebody would go after them.”
No, go after them yourself. We have each one a mission, let that mission be fulfilled.
8 “Herein Is Love” Sermon #1707
8 Tell someone today how much you love Jesus Christ. Volume 29
Our love ought to follow the love of God in one point, namely, in always seeking to produce reconciliation.
It was to this end that God sent His Son. Has anybody offended you? Seek reconciliation. “Oh,
but I am the offended party.” So was God, and He went straight away and sought reconciliation. Brothers
and sisters, do the same. “Oh, but I have been insulted.” Just so, so was God, all the wrong was towards
Him, yet He sent His Son. “Oh, but the party is so unworthy.” So are you, but “God loved you
and sent His Son.” Go and write according to that copy. I do not mean that this love is to come out of
your own heart originally, but I do mean that it is to flow out of your heart because God has made it to
flow into it. You are one of those basins of the fountain; love has poured into you from above, let it run
over to those who are below. Go forth at once and try and make reconciliation, not only between yourself
and your friend, but between every man and God. Let that be your objective. Christ has become
man’s reconciliation, and we are to try and bring this reconciliation near to every poor sinner that comes
in our path. We are to tell him that God in Christ is reconciled. We are to say to him, “He is the propitiation
for our sins and not for ours only, but for the sins of the whole world.” Mark that word! It tallies
with that other, “Behold the Lamb of God, which takes away the sin of the world.” God is now able to
deal on gospel terms with the whole race. We need never think that we shall meet with men to whom
God will not consent to be reconciled. The propitiation is such that whoever comes to God shall be received
through it. God is always within to receive every soul that comes to Him by Jesus Christ. “God
so loved the world, that He gave His only-begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish,
but have everlasting life.” Your work and mine is reconciliation, and everything that tends that way.
When we have done all, what then? We shall have nothing to boast of. Suppose a man should become
so loving that he gave himself wholly up for his fellow creatures, and actually died for them,
would he have anything to boast of? Read my text over again. “Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought
also to love one another,” so that if you get to the highest point of self-sacrifice, you will never be able
to boast, for you have only then done what it was your duty to have done. Thus you see the highest
grade of Christianity excludes all idea of salvation by works, for when we come up to its utmost pitch, if
we give our body to be burned for love, yet still we have done no more than it was our duty to have
done, considering the tremendous obligations under which the love of God has laid us.
If you had to manage the waterworks for the distribution of water all over this city, and there was a
certain pipe into which you poured water, but none ever came out at the other end, do you know what
you would do? You would remove it and say, “This does not suit my purpose. I need a pipe that will
give out as well as receive.” That is exactly what the Lord desires of us. Do not selfishly say, “I want to
sit down and enjoy the love of God. I shall never say a word to anybody about Christ. I will never give a
poor creature so much as a brass farthing, but I want to sit down and be solaced with the love of God.” If
you think thus, you are a plugged up pipe. You are of no use; you will have to be taken out of the system
of the church. For the system of love supply for the world requires open pipes, through which divine
love may freely flow. May the Lord clear you, and fill you, so that out of you there may continually flow
rivers of living water. Amen.
Muckle Kate Not a very ordinary name! But then, Muckle Kate, or Big Kate, or Kate-Mhor, or Kate of Lochcarron was not a very ordinary woman! The actual day of her salvation is difficult to trace to its sunrising, but being such a glorious day as it was, we simply wish to relate something of what shone forth in the redeemed life of that "ill-looking woman without any beauty in the sight of God or man." Muckle Kate was born and lived in Lochcarron in the county of Ross-shire. By the time she had lived her life to its eighty-fifth year she had well-earned the reputation of having committed every known sin against the Law of God with the exception murder. Speaking after the manner of men, if it took "Grace Abounding" to save a hardened sinner like John Bunyan, it was going to take "Grace Much More Abounding" to save Muckle Kate. However, Grace is Sovereign and cannot be thwarted when God sends it on the errand of salvation, and even the method used in bri
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