Maturing Love; 1 John. 4:11
See from His head, His hands, His feet,
Sorrow and love flow mingled down!
Did e’er such love and sorrow meet,
Or thorns compose so rich a crown.
As
Isaac Watts penned these words he was saying what John is saying, and that is
that there is no love anywhere in human history that even comes close to the
love that is modelled for us at the cross. That is the example. As John says in
1 John 3:16 it is by this that we know what love is. If we want to know what
real love is we have to start at the cross. That is
one of the reasons, among many, that the Lord instituted the Lord’s table. It focuses us on historical reality, takes out
attention off the day-to-day events and cares of life, to remember on a regular
basis that everything we are and have is the result of what Jesus Christ did
for us at the cross. It is all grace, it has nothing to do with any merit on
our part or with who we are or have done but it has everything to do with who
Jesus Christ is and what He did on the cross.
As
John looks at love and as we have studied love in the past, love is used almost
as a code word for spiritual maturity itself. He makes a point that if we know
God we are going to keep His commandments; if we love God we are going to keep
His commandments. To know God we have to study the Word, we have to understand
what is revealed in the Scriptures, and when we tie all of this together it
becomes obvious that we can be saved, justified, redeemed, a child of God
growing and maturing in the spiritual life, and still not know God. As John
uses that phrase “know God” he has in mind someone who has reached a certain
level of maturity in his understanding of who and what God is, His plan, and in
the application of His Word. Therefore when we equate the concept of knowing
God, as John uses it, with loving God and loving one another it becomes clear
that love is a code word for spiritual maturity, for somebody who has reached
spiritual adulthood.
The
way that we have dealt with this is graphically to help us understand how these
things get together, is to relate it to the ten stress-busters or spiritual
skills that we have been studying. The three stages of the spiritual life that
John addresses in 1 John chapter two are spiritual childhood, spiritual adolescence
and spiritual adulthood. In spiritual childhood we begin to learn to understand
and apply the basic skills that are necessary to go anywhere in the spiritual
life. These are just fundamental skills that every believer has to have.
When
we come to spiritual adolescence we slowly grasp the reality that the decisions
we make today determine who and what we will be in eternity—not in terms
of our eternal destiny in relationship to heaven or hell, but in relationship
to our inheritance. Romans 8:16, 17. Once we get that personal sense of eternal
destiny we start making decisions not on the basis of how it is going to affect
things today or tomorrow or next year but in terms of eternity. Once we get
these things in place to where they are a solid part of our thinking it is only
then that we are going to really see developments in the arena of love. Now
that we understand God’s grace and understand more and more of what God has
done for us, we can love Him more and more.
As
we develop an understanding of God’s plan and purposes, then we know God in all
of His breadth and depth and we begin to lobe Him in more mature ways. Then,
because we understand what love for God is, that motivates us in impersonal
love for all mankind. The reason we call it impersonal love is because this
emphasises the fact that we don’t have to have a personal knowledge or a
personal relationship with the other person, the other believer. We are to love
one another. Then the third element in love is occupation with Christ: our
focus is on Jesus Christ. These three elements together make up the concept of
love in the Christian life. The result of all this is that we share the
happiness of God and we have a measure of happiness. It is not emotional but it
based on a stability, tranquillity and contentment in life because of our
mental attitude and the divine viewpoint that dominates our soul. Love is that
key element that is being developed in us as spiritual adults.
John
emphasises the radical importance of love in this epistle. But the love he
emphasises is a far cry from the kind of love that I usually taught and
extolled from the pulpits of most churches and the kind of love we hear people
talk about. It is not the kind of love we find in a church where people are
told to stand up, turn around and tell somebody they love them. It is not
having warm feelings of affection toward other believers. It is not emotion.
Emotions change, they are fluid, up one day and down the next. They respond to
numerous situations in life, so it is not something that is based on emotions;
they vacillate too much. Love that is explained in 1 John is not a love that is
expressed in superficial or sentimental ways, it is a love that is not based on
human experience but on what Jesus Christ did on the cross. So we have to go to
the cross to understand it. 1 John 3:16 NASB “We know love by this,
that He laid down His life for us; and we ought to lay down our lives for the
brethren.” That implies an obligation that we should lay down our lives for the
brethren. 1 John 4:9 NASB “By this the love of God was manifested in
us, that God has sent His only begotten Son into the world so that we might
live through Him.” How do we know God’s love? By the
incarnation; by the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Then verse 10, “In this is love, not
that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son {to be} the
propitiation for our sins.”
Eight characteristics of love
These
are characteristics of love as seen in salvation. So we have to factor those in
to our concept of what it means to love. A definition: Love always seeks the
best for its objects. Notice: A word like “best” is a superlative, it implies
comparison, and that involves an evaluation judgment. That means that we have
to be able to determine what actually is the best. A person is an immature
believer operating on human viewpoint doesn’t have a clue what is best for
somebody else. Love, then, comes only as a result of spiritual growth and only
as a result of having doctrine in the soul, and only as a result of having an
objective and absolute standard which was demonstrated
at the cross.
1
John 4:11 NASB “Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love
one another.” John calls them beloved, emphasising the fact that they are the
objects of God’s love. The verb he uses there is the present active indicative
of opheilo, which means
obligation. If God loved us we have an obligation to love one another in that
same way; it is not an option as far as God is concerned. The words “God so
loved” is almost identical to the words in John 3:16. The word translated “so”
is the Greek demonstrative adverb houtos,
which is used to emphasise degree, extent, to such a degree or in such a
manner. Therefore we need to focus on the cross, understanding what love is.
That is the model; that is the standard that we are expected to stand up to. We
can’t do it on our own, it can only come by the Holy
Spirit. It can only be produced as a result of growth. Growth comes by studying
the Word, knowing His commandments and applying His commandments.