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God’s Love (Part 2)
God’s shows His love for us by…
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- choosing us before the foundation of the world to make us holy and without blame before Him (Eph 1:4; Col 3:12; 1Th 1:4; 2Th 2:13).
- giving His Son to die for us (Joh 3:16).
- sending His Son to be a propitiation for our sins (1Jo 4:9-10).
- laying down His (Jesus’) life for us (1Jo 3:16).
- Christ giving Himself a sacrifice for us (Gal 2:20; Eph 5:2; Eph 5:25).
- Christ washing us from our sins in His own blood (Rev 1:5).
- Christ dying for us when we were sinners and His enemies (Rom 5:6-10).
- quickening us when we were dead in sins (Eph 2:4-5; Tit 3:4-7).
- making and calling us His sons who will be like Christ at the resurrection (1Jo 3:1-2).
- giving us the Holy Ghost in our hearts (Rom 5:5).
- requiring us to give up much to follow Him (Mar 10:21).
- chastening us when we sin (Heb 12:6; Rev 3:19).
- giving us everlasting consolation and good hope through grace (2Th 2:16).
God loves us both unconditionally and conditionally.
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- God loves us apart from our works (unconditionally) (Jer 31:3).
- God also loves us conditionally, in a certain way.
- God loves us because we love Jesus Christ (Joh 16:27).
- But we only love God because He first loved us unconditionally (1Jo 4:10, 19, 1Co 8:3).
- Therefore, our love is not the ultimate cause of God’s love for us.
- God does not love those who love the world (1Jo 2:15).
- God loves a cheerful giver (2Co 9:7).
- God’s love is perfected in us when we love one another (1Jo 4:12).
God loves members of His local churches (Rom 1:7).
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- Since God loves all of His elect, His love for the saints must be a special manifestation of His love.
- This is similar to how parents love all their children, but they love those of them who are in the faith in a special way that they cannot love those who are not.
Jesus loved His friends, disciples, and children.
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- Jesus loved Mary, Martha, and Lazarus (Joh 11:3, 5, 36).
- Yet, He let Lazarus die and his sisters suffer while they waited for Him to arrive (Joh 11:6, 21, 32).
- This shows us that Jesus’s love toward us cannot be known solely by whether or not He fulfills our every desire or need when we ask for it.
- Jesus loved His disciples (Joh 13:1).
- Yet, He corrected and reprimanded them (Mat 16:23; Mat 17:17; Joh 18:11).
- He became frustrated and weary with them (Mat 16:8-11).
- This shows that Jesus’ love toward us can sometimes be displayed by His correction of us and His displeasure with us.
- Jesus loved one of His disciples in a special way above the others (Joh 13:23; Joh 20:2; Joh 21:7).
- He loved this disciple so much that He committed the care of His mother to him as He hung dying on the cross (Joh 19:26-27).
- This shows us that we can love some people in a special way that we do not love others.
- The disciple which Jesus loved was John (Joh 21:20-24).
- Jesus loves those who love Him and demonstrate such by keeping His commandments, and He manifests Himself to them (Joh 14:21, 23).
- Jesus loves us in the same way that God loves Him (Joh 15:9).
- Jesus commands us to love each other in the same way that He loves us (Joh 15:12).
- Jesus loved us by laying down His life for us (Joh 10:11, 15).
- God loves Jesus because He laid down His life for us (Joh 10:17).
- We ought to love our brethren (Joh 15:17) and be willing to lay down our lives for them (Joh 15:13).
- The love of Christ for us passes knowledge; it is incomprehensible (Eph 3:19).
Nothing can separate us from the love of God (Rom 8:35-39).
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- God even loves His elect who are enemies of the gospel (Rom 11:28-29).
- Paul was one such enemy of the gospel whom God nevertheless loved (1Ti 1:13-14).