The Basis for Love in Marriage; James
1:12
You cannot love someone you
don’t know. Love is based on knowledge. Love that is nothing more than pure
emotion is ridiculous; it is not love, it is just feeling, warm fuzzies and it won’t go anywhere. One of the difficulties,
and one of the reasons people have difficulty in understanding the whole
concept of loving God, beyond the fact that they don’t know God and don’t take
time to ever get into the Scriptures to find out who God is and what he has
said, is because God is a spirit. We can’t feel Him, we can’t touch Him, we
can’t put our hands around Him; there is an abstraction there that is very
difficult for us to get past, because the only way that we can know God is
through understanding the Scriptures. Another and more fundamental reason is
that people just don’t understand love, they identify
it too often with just a superficial, sentimental emotion. We need to get past
that.
When we come to the
Scriptures there are two commands that we have referred to already that we must
deal with. One is the command in Matthew 22:37 NASB “And He said to
him, ‘YOU SHALL LOVE THE LORD YOUR GOD
WITH ALL YOUR HEART, AND WITH ALL YOUR SOUL, AND WITH
ALL YOUR MIND.’” That is a mandate, a command,
an order to every single believer. The best way to paraphrase this is, You must love the Lord your God with all… etc., it is not an
option. We have to get beyond the infant stages of the spiritual which focus on
the infant or basic skills of spirituality—confession, the filling of the Holy
Spirit, faith-rest drill, grace orientation, doctrinal orientation, all of
which are in the realm of spiritual infancy and don’t get us into the realm of
spiritual adolescence and spiritual adulthood.
If we look at this verse
there is one idea that stands out ion that mandate, and that is the idea of
devotion, or what we will call enduring devotion on the one hand. Enduring
devotion is a vital aspect of love. If you love something or someone then you
are devoted to them. If they are the object of your love then you are devoted
to them. This is exemplified in God’s love in two critical verses: John 3:16
and Romans 5:8. There is an incredible amount of devotion there to mankind in
order to accomplish the goal of salvation that the Father planned. So this is
the idea of devotion: overcoming all obstacles and enduring incredible amount
of pain. It is focused exclusively on the task at hand. That is the first
aspect that we want to emphasize in what is involved in love.
The second, which is more
difficult for us to understand because it is so abstract, is the idea of fear.
We are to fear the Lord. What exactly does that mean? Psalm 33:8 NASB
“Let all the earth fear the LORD; Let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of
Him.” We are to fear Yahweh. This is
the scared Tetragrammaton [Tetra = four; grammaton =
letters: the four letters]. The Jews would never pronounce the divine name out
of reverence. This is a reminder that when we see the word Yahweh it is the covenant name for God. It was to remind the Jews
that God has entered into a special covenant relationship with
This whole idea of fearing
the Lord is very abstract and is a hard concept for a lot of people to really
grasp. When the Bible says that we are to fear the Lord what we have on the one
hand is God’s enduring devotion to us. But is is
abstract; it is expressed in the historical terms of something Christ did 2000
years ago on the cross. It is expressed in the Bible. The only way we can put
our fingerprint on what God has provided for us is to come and sit in Bible
class night after night after night. We exemplify our love for God through our
enduring devotion to Bible class, to be here. When we come to grips with what
God has done in terms of His devotion to us at the cross in providing us our
salvation, then our response: the more we learn doctrine we respond in fear,
defined as admiration and reverence for God. This in turn provides us with
increased motivation to go forward. It is incremental,
it doesn’t happen all at once. You learn a little here, you learn a little
there, you have a little more respect. This in turn spurs you on to more
motivation, so you go back to Bible class, you learn, you apply, you are
overwhelmed with God does and that drives you to greater reverence. You see how
the cycle continues and the cycle builds, and this is what it means to love the
Lord. It is the twin ideas of enduring devotion and respect and awe for God.
Look at how the Bible emphasizes this whole aspect of fear and awe for the
Lord:
Psalm
Psalm 31:19 NASB
“How great is Your goodness, Which You have stored up
for those who fear You, Which You have wrought for those who take refuge in
You, Before the sons of men!” From this verse we learn that God has a treasure
house, referred to here as His goodness. This alludes to divine blessing,
contingent blessings in time and in eternity. God has established these from
eternity past—contingent blessings for each one of us—and this is totally
dependent not on our works but on our spiritual growth. We have to develop the
capacity for these blessings or God will not distribute them to us. The only
thing that limits them is our own spiritual growth. This is tied to our
developing personal love for God in terms of respect.
Psalm 33:18 NASB
“Behold, the eye of the LORD [His careful care] is on those who fear Him, On those who hope for His lovingkindness.”
This is emblematic parallelism. Hope here has to do with our confidence. Hope
in the Bible never refers to some kind of uncertain, wishy-washy future, but it
refers to a confident expectation in the faithful enduring love of God. Fearing
the Lord is related to confidence, and confidence is related to our future and
this brings in problem-solving device # 6 which is a personal sense of our
eternal destiny, and then faithfulness and love.
Psalm 34:7 NASB
“The angel of the LORD encamps around those who fear Him, And rescues them.”
This verse describes the special protection that God gives to those who fear
Him. Not every believer fears Him. Romans
Psalm 34:9 NASB “O
fear the LORD, you His saints; For to those who fear Him there is
no want.” There is no lack, no need. What does Psalm 23:1 say?
“The LORD is my shepherd, I shall not want.” God provides everything for life
and godliness. We don’t need counselling, we don’t need psychology, we don’t
need human viewpoint systems to get along, we don’t need stress management
techniques; God has given us every single thing we need. That is the promise in
2 Peter 1:3 NASB “seeing that His divine power has granted to us
everything pertaining to life and godliness, through the true knowledge of Him
who called us by His own glory and excellence.” That is reinforced here in
Psalm 34:9 NASB “O fear the LORD, you His
saints; For to those who fear Him there is no want.”
Psalm 86:11 NASB
“Teach me Your way, O LORD; I will walk in Your
truth; Unite my heart to fear Your name.” “Your truth” refers to the principles
of Bible doctrine referred to in the Word. Jesus Christ in His high priestly
prayer the night before He was crucified, said, “Sanctify them [believers in
the church age] in the truth; Your word is truth.” How
are we set apart in the spiritual life? By means of doctrine.
Psalm 103:11 NASB
“For as high as the heavens are above the earth, So
great is His lovingkindness [His faithful covenant
love] toward those who fear Him” – those who have reverent awe and respect for
Him.
Psalm 103:13 NASB
“Just as a father has compassion on {his} children, So
the LORD has compassion on those who fear Him.”
Psalm 103:17 NASB
“But the lovingkindness [faithful devotion of the
love] of the LORD is from everlasting to everlasting on those who fear Him, And His righteousness to children’s children.”
So just from the few of these
verses from the Psalms we see the importance that the Bible stresses and puts
on this second aspect of love, on reverence and awe. This is to be seen in
every single believer, these two aspects: enduring devotion on the one hand, and on the other hand, respect, awe and admiration.
This is what drives us, what provides the motivation to stimulate you, to push
you forward in the spiritual life to spiritual maturity, because the last thing
in the world that you want to do is to let God down, to disappoint Him. So we
are told that awe, respect, and admiration is
necessary for any advance in understanding God and in application of doctrine.
We see this principle in two key passages: Psalm 11:10; Proverbs 1:7.
Psalm
Characteristics: On the one
hand we have devotion; on the other hand we have respect. In many ways devotion
is the initiating side and respect is the response side. But both are present
in every believer under the category of love. We take as out model what takes
place on the cross (Romans 5:8), that God demonstrates His love for us in that
while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. What are the characteristics
that we see in the divine impersonal love? Why is it impersonal? It is
impersonal because personal love emphasizes the compatibility and rapport between
the object and the subject of love. So the emphasis is on the compatibility,
the attractiveness of the object of love with the subject of love and therefore
it is personal. It involves personal knowledge and a personal relationship
between the person loving and the person who is loved, and it emphasizes the
aspect of compatibility. Often it is conditional because as soon as that aspect
of compatibility is gone there is not longer and kin of relationship or love. Many
times this is expressed selfishly because as long as you make me feel good then
I will care about you and take care of you, but as soon as things get rough I’m
gone. Impersonal love puts all the emphasis on the virtue and integrity of the
one loving. The object may be unattractive, it may be obnoxious or repugnant to
the person doing the loving but all of the emphasis and stability comes from
the integrity and character of the one loving. This is the kind of love that
God has for us.
What are the characteristics that are
found in that kind of love?
1)
It is initiating.
We find initiating grace in eternity past. God knew that if he created a
creature called man that man would sin and rebel against Him, and God would
have to solve the problem. God took the initiative. In grace He would provide a
plan that would solve the problem. God is perfect, so He has a perfect plan to
solve the problem of human sin. That was motivated by His impersonal love for
man perceived as a sinner and it focussed on sending His Son as a sacrifice to
die on the cross as a substitute for our sins. Si in initiating God’s love took
charge in eternity past to motivate Him to provide the solution necessary to
restore the relationship with mankind that would be broken by Adam’s original
sin.
2)
It is aggressive
as opposed to passive. It asserts itself with confidence and boldness. It goes
forward; it seeks solutions; it focuses on the divine solution and not the
human problem. Because of omniscience God knows the entire problem the human
race faces and with complete omniscient understanding He takes every step
necessary to resolve the problem.
3)
Humility. Humility
is the attitude of a servant. This is expressed in various passages in the New
Testament. Mark 10:45; Matthew 20:28 NASB “just as the Son of Man
did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for
many.” This is basic to all impersonal love. Humility has the idea of being a
servant. Cf. Ephesians
Psalm 34:11 NASB
“Come, you children, listen to me; I will teach you the fear of the LORD.”