The Love of God to us
By "Us" We Mean His People. Although we read of the love "which is
in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Rom. 8:39), Holy Writ knows nothing of a love
of God outside of Christ. "The LORD is good to all: and His tender
mercies are over all his works" (Ps. 145:9), so that He provides the ravens
with food. "He is kind unto the unthankful and to the evil" (Luke 6:35),
and His providence ministers unto the just and the unjust (Matthew
5:45). But His love is reserved for His elect. That is unequivocally
established by its characteristics, for the attributes of His love are
identical with Himself. Necessarily so, for "God is love." In making that
postulate it is but another way to say God’s love is like Himself, from
everlasting to everlasting, immutable. Nothing is more absurd than to
imagine that anyone beloved of God can eternally perish or shall ever
experience His everlasting vengeance. Since the love of God is "in Christ
Jesus," it was attracted by nothing in its objects, nor can it be repelled by
anything in, of, or by them. "Having loved his own which were in the
world, he loved them unto the end" (John 13:1). The "world" in John 3:16
is a general term used in contrast with the Jews, and the verse must be
interpreted so as not to contradict Psalm 5:5; 6:7; John 3:36; Romans
9:13.
The chief design of God is to commend the love of God in Christ, for
He is the sole channel through which it flows. The Son has not induced
the Father to love His people, but rather was it His love for them which
moved Him to give His Son for them. Ralph Erskine said:
God hath taken a marvelous way to manifest His love. When He
would show His power, He makes a world. When He would display His
wisdom, He puts it in a frame and form that discovers its vastness. When
He would manifest the grandeur and glory of His name, He makes a
heaven, and puts angels and archangels, principalities and powers
therein. And when He would manifest His love, what will He not do? God
hath taken a great and marvelous way of manifesting it in Christ: His
person, His blood, His death, His righteousness.
"All the promises of God in him [Christ] are yea, and in him Amen,
unto the glory of God" (2 Cor. 1:20). As we were chosen in Christ (Eph.
1:4), as we were accepted in Him (Eph. 1:6), as our life is hid in Him (Col.
3:3), so are we beloved in Him—"the love of God which is in Christ
Jesus": in Him as our Head and Husband, which is why nothing can
separate us therefrom, for that union is indissoluble.
Nothing so warms the heart of the saint as a spiritual contemplation
of God’s love. As he is occupied with it, he is lifted outside of and above
his wretched self. A believing apprehension fills the renewed soul with
holy satisfaction, and makes him as happy as it is possible for one to be
this side of heaven. To know and believe the love which God has toward
me is both an earnest and a foretaste of heaven itself. Since God loves His
people in Christ, it is not for any amiableness in or attraction about them:
"Jacob have I loved." Yes, the naturally unattractive, yes, despicable,
Jacob—"thou worm Jacob." Since God loves His people in Christ, it is not
regulated by their fruitfulness, but is the same at all times. Because He
loves them in Christ, the Father loves them as Christ. The time will come
when His prayer will be answered, "that the world may know that thou
hast sent me, and hast loved them, as thou hast loved me" (John 17:23).
Only faith can grasp those marvelous things, for neither reasoning nor
feelings can do so. God loves us in Christ: What infinite delight the Father
has as He beholds His people in His dear Son! All our blessings flow from
that precious fountain.
God’s love to His people is not of yesterday. It did not begin with
their love to Him. No, "we love him, because he first loved us" (1 John
4:19). We do not first give to Him, that He may return to us again. Our
regeneration is not the motive of His love, rather His love is the reason
why He renews us after His image. This is often made to appear in the
first manifestation of it, when so far from its objects being engaged in
seeking Him, they are at their worst. "Now when I passed by thee, and
looked upon thee, behold, thy time was the time of love; and I spread my
skirt over thee, and covered thy nakedness: yea, I sware unto thee, and
entered into a covenant with thee, saith the Lord God, and thou becamest
[manifestatively] mine" (Ezek. 16:8).
Not only are its objects often at their worst when God’s love is first
revealed to them, but actually doing their worst, as in the case of Saul of
Tarsus. Not only is God’s love antecedent to ours, but also it was borne in
His heart toward us long before we were delivered from the power of
darkness and translated into the Kingdom of His dear Son. It began not
in time, but bears the date of eternity. "I have loved thee with an
everlasting love" (Jer. 31:3).
"Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved us, and sent
his Son to be the propitiation for our sins" (1 John 4:10). It is clear from
those words that God loved His people while they were in a state of
nature, destitute of all grace, without a particle of love towards Him or
faith in Him; yes, while they were His enemies (Rom. 5:8, 10). Clearly
that lays me under a thousand times greater obligation to love, serve, and
glorify Him than had He loved me for the first time when my heart was
won. All the acts of God to His people in time are the expressions of the
love He bore them from eternity. It is because God loves us in Christ, and
has done so from everlasting, that the gifts of His love are irrevocable.
They are the bestowal of "the Father of lights, with whom is no
variableness, neither shadow of turning." The love of God indeed makes a
change in us when it is "shed abroad in our hearts," but it makes none in
Him. He sometimes varies the dispensations of His providence toward
us, but that is not because His affection has altered. Even when He
chastens us, it is in love (Heb. 12:6), since He has our good in view.
Let us look more closely at some of the operations of God’s love.
First, in election. "We are bound to give thanks alway to God for you,
brethren beloved of the Lord, because God hath from the beginning
chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit [His
quickening] and belief of the truth" (2 Thess. 2:13). There is an infallible
connection between God’s love and His selection of those who were to be
saved. That election is the consequence of His love is clear again from
Deuteronomy: "The Lord did not [1] set His love upon you, nor [2] choose
you, because ye were more in number than any people" (Deut. 7:7). So
again in Ephesians: "In love: having predestinated us unto the adoption
of children by Jesus Christ to Himself, according to the good pleasure of
His will" (Eph. 1:4-5).
Second, in redeeming. As we have seen from 1 John 4:10, out of His
sovereign love God made provision for Christ to render satisfaction for
their sins, though prior to their conversion He was angry with them in
respect to His violated Law. And "how shall He not with him also freely
give us all things?" (Rom. 8:32)—another clear proof that His Son was
not "delivered up" to the cross for all mankind. For He gives them neither
the Holy Spirit, a new nature, nor repentance and faith.
Third, ef ectual calling. From the enthroned Savior the Father sends
forth the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:33). Having loved His elect with an
everlasting love, with lovingkindness He draws them (Jer. 41:3), quickens
into newness of life, calls them out of darkness into His marvelous light,
makes them His children. "Behold, what manner of love the Father hath
bestowed upon us, that we should be called the sons of God" (1 John 3:1).
If filiation does not issue from God’s love as a sure effect, to what purpose
are those words?
Fourth, healing of backslidings: "I will heal their backsliding, I will
love them freely" (Hos. 14:4), without reluctance or hesitation. "Many
waters cannot quench love, neither can the floods drown it" (Song 8:7).
Such is God’s love to His people—invincible, unquenchable. Not only is
there no possibility of its expiring, but also the black waters of
backslidings cannot extinguish it, nor the floods of unbelief put it out.
Nothing is more irresistible than death in the natural world, nothing
so invincible as the love of God in the realm of grace. Goodwin remarked:
What difficulties does the love of God overcome! For
God to overcome His own heart! Do you think it was
nothing for Him to put His Son to death? . . . When He
came to call us, had He no difficulties which love
overcame? We were dead in trespasses and sins, yet
from the great love wherewith He loved us, He
quickened us in the grave of our corruption: "lo, he
stinketh"—even then did God come and conquer us.
After our calling, how sadly do we provoke God! Such
temptations that if it were possible the elect should be
deceived. It is so with all Christians. No righteous man
but he is "scarcely saved" (1 Pet. 4:18), and yet saved he
is, because the love of God is invincible: it overcomes
all difficulties.
An application is hardly necessary for such a theme. Let God’s love
daily engage your mind by devout meditations on it so that the affections
of your heart may be drawn out to Him. When cast down in spirit, or in
sore straits, plead His love in prayer, assured that it cannot deny anything
good for you. Make God’s wondrous love to you the incentive of your
obedience to Him—gratitude requires nothing less.
25. The Gospel of the Grac
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