fbpx
GOD IS LOVE

GOD IS LOVE

We often hear the words, ‘God is love’, but what do they really mean? I ask this because too often our understanding of God’s love is shaped more by our culture rather than the Bible. In 1 John 4:10 we read, In this is love, not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the atoning sacrifice for our sins.

The New Testament was originally written in Greek. Our English word ‘love’ is used to translate four different Greek words – words for friendship (phileo), for parental and filial, family love (storge or philostorgos as in Romans 12:10), emotional love (eros), and a love that springs from decision within, from the will (agape). This is the word we find in 1 John 4:10.

What is interesting is that eros is a word that could have been used by the New Testament writers to speak about our relationship with God. Plato, for example, used eros to describe the irresistible attraction for the supernatural. Later, the mystery religions in Greece used eros to speak about the ecstatic religious experience they felt. Pagan religions have long had an interest in eros as part of the mystical experience of the supernatural. Indeed one form of yoga exploits sexual intercourse as a technique for achieving spiritual enlightenment.

John’s and, indeed, the New Testament’s choice of the word agape is significantAgape is a practical and unemotional love. When John says ‘God is love’, he is not referring to an ecstatic experience, but to Jesus on the cross. He speaks of a love that is willing to make sacrifices for the good of others. Eros is a word that seeks self-gratification; it is a demanding, craving love. Agape is about self-forgetfulness. It is a generous, sacrificial love that is more interested in the welfare of the one who is loved. Eros wants to take. Agape wants to give.

John’s language about God sending his Son, indicates that God’s Son has always existed. Here we see that God’s love is seen not so much in the Son’s coming, but in the death his Son died. This was the action of a holy and just God whose love found a way to forgive, rescue and restore men and women who had shown no love for God. God, in his love, was willing to make extraordinary sacrifices for us. Tragically, we too easily miss the significance of this.

In our age of ‘tolerance’ we overlook the reality of our broken relationship with God. We treat God more as a glorified Santa Claus who is always there when trouble strikes. We ignore the fact that, in our natural state, none of us can look God in the eye and expect to see his love. Our lives simply don’t measure up for we are more interested in serving Self rather than God.

It is only when we stop and consider what Jesus’ death meant that we begin to understand. For in Jesus’ suffering we see the outpouring of God’s fierce and just anger, being met in equal measure by the power of God’s love. To use Paul’s words in Romans 3:25, instead of showing his horror of sin by judging us according to his law, God has displayed the same horror, the same pure justice, by putting Jesus to death in our place.

No, Jesus’ death was not child abuse, as some will opine. In John’s Gospel we read that Jesus laid down his life of his own accord (John 10:17-18). He volunteered. Jesus death is, ‘the one perfect sacrifice, oblation and satisfaction for the sins of the whole world’ (BCP, 1662).

Before you go to bed tonight will you consider your response to God’s love: Honesty and humility – that Jesus Christ died the death you deserve? Gratitude – that God was willing to sacrifice his only Son so that you might be forgiven? Love – remembering that God in his love has now made you at peace with him? Loyalty – inspired afresh by God’s unswerving love, will you offer your life afresh to him in love, loyalty and service?

JUSTIFICATION

JUSTIFICATION

A letter turned up in The Australian newspaper last weekend, reiterating in just a few lines that ‘religion is the problem’ with the world. The myriad cynical voices around us today may tempt us to doubt the truth of God’s gospel. How important it is, not just to be able to remind others of the millions put to death at the hands of ruthless, unbelieving rulers last century (Stalin, Hitler, Pol Pot, and Idi Amin come to mind), but to focus on what it is we do believe.

Central to our faith is that we are not here simply by chance but that we are all personally accountable to the creator God. Tragically, following our own desires and devices, we have turned away from God. Such is the consequence of our decision that we are incapable of doing any thing good enough to restore, or even contribute to restoring, this most precious of all relationships:

For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23).

The wonderful and unique news of Christianity is that God who is rich in mercy, has stepped in and done what we could not do. As Paul puts it in Romans 3:21,

But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from law,…

One of the biggest mistakes we make about Christianity is that it is easy for God to forgive. It isn’t. The reason is tied up with the words, the righteousness of God… God is not just awesome in his power, he is not just wise in the way he deals with his world, he is also just in all his ways. His character defines what is good and what is bad, what is right and what is wrong.

God’s righteousness. If God overlooked evil, calling what we say or do to one another, misdemeanors, he would be saying that there’s no such thing as good and evil. But he can’t allow that. It is essential for the preservation of morality in his universe that God’s righteousness is evident, that justice is done. Deep down we know how true this is, for when we see injustice we cry out for justice. If this matters to us, how much more will it matter to God. If he didn’t care, if he didn’t stand against it, goodness itself would lose its meaning.

How then does God uphold the good? One way is to be a judge. The problem here is that God would have to condemn us all. But, there is another way that God can uphold the good and offer forgiveness and reconciliation, and that’s what Paul writes about in Romans 3.

In Romans 3:21 he says, But now… Following the tragic events of Genesis 3 when men and women first turned their backs on God, another side to God’s character emerged— mercy. God did not cut off Adam and Eve; he did not even kill off the Babel tower builders. Rather, with his promises to Abraham he set in motion a plan that makes reconciliation possible.

JUSTIFICATION

Now in Romans 3:21 Paul tells us that something has happened that provides new hope for a world hopelessly in the grip of its own wickedness. ‘There is a righteousness of God apart from the law,’ Paul is saying, and Romans 3:22 tells us that this has come, through the faith of Jesus Christ. Our translations imply that Paul is referring to our faith in Jesus Christ. But it fits the syntax and suits the context better to translate this, through the faithfulness of Jesus Christ.

The righteousness of God has come, not by means of the law, but rather through the perfect obedience of Jesus to the mind and will of God. Jesus is the one person who has kept God’s law. His relationship with God remained pure, and because of this he introduced a new way whereby God could reconcile us to himself. God is both just and the justifier, Paul says in 3:26.

How can God justly do this? Romans 3:25-26 is the key:

God presented Jesus as a sacrifice of atonement, through faith in his blood. He did this to demonstrate his justice, because in his forbearance he had left sins committed beforehand unpunished – he did it to demonstrate his justice at the present time, so as to be just and the one who justifies those who have faith in Jesus.

We are justified by faith in Christ alone. Article XI of the 39 Articles says,

We are accounted righteous before God, only for the merit of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ by Faith, and not for our own works or deservings: Wherefore, that we are justified by Faith only is a most wholesome Doctrine, and very full of comfort, as more largely is expressed in the Homily of Justification.

MERCY

MERCY

One of the questions I am often asked at present is ‘Why doesn’t God stop the terrorists?’  While there are no simple answers to this question, we need to remember that it is not God who has carried out these acts or even encouraged them.  Indeed, Jesus taught “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God” (Matthew 5:9).

JUSTICE

Furthermore, the evils of every age will be brought to account. Of this we can be sure. In 2 Peter 3:5 we read: By the same word the present heavens and earth have been reserved for fire, being kept until the day of judgment and destruction of the godless. In the flow of his Letter, Peter says that just as Noah’s flood occurred – and there is good historical evidence for this – God will bring about a final day of accounting. If God has brought judgement on his creation once, why shouldn’t he be capable of doing it again? Everyone of us has been put on notice.

If we believe this, our question becomes ‘When?’. We cry out with Psalm 13:1: How long, O Lord? Again, Peter helps us by saying, The Lord is not slow about his promise, as some think of slowness, but is patient with you, not wanting any to perish, but all to come to repentance (3:9).

MERCY

We must not confuse God’s slowness with insensitivity, indifference, or slackness. He could, if he chose, burst in on the world right now. We mustn’t mistake his non-return for apathy. ‘No,’ says Peter, ‘He is just being patient, giving people time to repent’. Jesus himself indicated this when he implied that he would rather leave the ninety-nine on the hill in the wind and rain, to make sure that the one who is lost is safe. Our problem is that we feel the cold and the discomfort while we wait. In his goodness and mercy God is being patient.

Knowing God. To understand this about God is most important, for it impacts on our relationship with Him and our outlook on life.

It is one of the strengths of The Thirty-Nine Articles of the Anglican Church that they identify and set out the substance of biblical teaching about the nature and work of God. For example, Article I speaks of God’s ‘infinite power, wisdom and goodness’. Unlike the gods of ancient Greece or Rome, or other religions, the Bible teaches us that God is infinitely wise and good in the way he exercises his power.

Understanding this is essential for the way we live. We see it for example, in the life of Joseph. His complete trust in God’s power and goodness prevented him from being resentful and bitter in the face of the appalling treatment he received from his brothers. Unlike most of us, Joseph was ready to forgive because he understood that the final word lay, not with his brothers, but with God. He therefore knew that God was working out a bigger and better purpose through his brothers’ actions: “As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good, to bring it about that many people should be kept alive,…” (Genesis 50:20).

While most who read this are not living in fear of their lives, we all need to ask what our faith means to us. How dependent are we on our physical security for our spiritual well-being? We will only know true courage, perseverance, and even joy when we know deep in our hearts that an all-powerful, good, wise and merciful God is in control. He is patiently and persistently working out his ultimate good purposes for his people.

SUPERNATURAL FAITH

SUPERNATURAL FAITH

Amongst the Christmas gifts I received is a book by Michael Horton, Christless Christianity. In it Horton presents a hard-hitting analysis of churches in America, arguing that many present a faith that is ‘trivial, sentimental, affirming and irrelevant.’ A preponderance of churches, he says, are presenting a message of ‘moralism, personal comfort, self-help, self-improvement, and individualistic religion, trivializing God, making him a means to our selfish ends.’

SUPERFICIALITY ABOUNDS

Horton quotes the response of the late John Stott in 2006 when he was asked his view on the state of evangelicalism: “Growth without depth”.

How different this is from Jesus’ commission: ‘Go and make disciples…, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you’ (Matthew 28:19f). In Colossians 1:28, Paul says he was committed ‘to teaching and warning everyone so that they become mature in Christ’. Being well grounded in the faith not only draws us into a richer, more trusting relationship with God, but also impacts our attitudes and relationships – something others discern.

Writing in The New York Times back in April, 2011, David Brooks observed: Rigorous theology delves into mysteries in ways that are beyond most of us. For example, in her essay, “Creed or Chaos,” Dorothy Sayers argues that Christianity’s advantage is that it gives value to evil and suffering. Christianity asserts that “perfection is attained through the active and positive effort to wrench real good out of a real evil.” This is a complicated thought most of us could not come up with (let alone unpack) outside of a rigorous theological tradition…

So, where do we begin? As we start a New Year, I plan to identify some key teachings we find in the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Anglican Church. No, this will not be a doctrine series but rather reasons and illustrations of why we need God’s truth and love.

What then has God done? He has revealed himself, for Christianity is a supernatural faith. Its truths cannot simply be found by our observations of the world around us, or by merely applying our mind or conscience. We need not only God’s actions but also his explanation of what he has done. This revelation, the Thirty-Nine Articles tell us, is to be found in the Old and New Testaments of the Bible (Article VI). Indeed, Article XX says that the Bible as a whole is ‘God’s Word written’. 2 Peter 1:19-21 sets out the grounds for this truth.

SUPERNATURAL FAITH

What then should we do? Read. We come to understand the revelation the Bible brings us by reading it, looking for the plain meaning of ‘text in context’, and by making deductions from the statements it makes. There is nothing surprising in the fact that God expects us to use the minds he has given us. In fact, it would be most surprising if God, having given us minds, would expect us to ignore them when it comes to reading and understanding his revelation.

And pray. Our problem, more often than we care to admit, is accepting the truth we find revealed in the Scriptures. So, we need to pray. We need to ask God that his Spirit, who caused the Scriptures to be written (2 Peter 1:21), will help us understand the meaning of the Bible with our minds, and to feel the impact of its truth upon our hearts.

God’s promise. The Bible is where we learn of God’s salvation. When we think about it, we see why this is most appropriate, for salvation comes to us as a promise. It is a promise that is verbally expressed in the context of the explanation of God’s acts in history. As Article VII puts it, Both in the Old and New Testament everlasting life is offered to Mankind by Christ, who is the only Mediator between God and Man, being both God and Man.  God offers men and women, by way of promise, the gift of salvation in and through Jesus Christ.

Jean Paul Sartre, the French existentialist, once said, That God does not exist, I cannot deny. That my whole being cries out for God I cannot forget.’ The great news is that God not only exists but has, in fact, stepped into our world and revealed himself.

RESURRECTION

RESURRECTION

In recent years ‘new atheists’ such as Richard Dawkins and the late Christopher Hitchens have dismissed the miracles of the New Testament as fabrications. And when we think about it, to discredit the New Testament miracles is to discredit, for example, the signs of John’s Gospel and their witness to the uniqueness of Jesus as the Son of God, God in the flesh.

Our approach to the miracles depends on our presupposition. If we believe – and it is a belief – that everything about us is here by chance, then it is unlikely we will accept the occurrence of miracles. If, on the other hand we believe that there is a creator God behind our vast, complex universe, then it is consistent that God, if he chooses, can suspend the natural order of observable laws momentarily for a particular purpose.

Read – John 11:17-27

17 When Jesus arrived, he found that Lazarus had already been in the tomb four days. 18 Now Bethany was near Jerusalem, some two miles away, 19 and many of the Jews had come to Martha and Mary to console them about their brother. 20 When Martha heard that Jesus was coming, she went and met him, while Mary stayed at home. 21 Martha said to Jesus, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died. 22 But even now I know that God will give you whatever you ask of him.” 23 Jesus said to her, “Your brother will rise again.” 24 Martha said to him, “I know that he will rise again in the resurrection on the last day.” 25 Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, 26 and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?” 27 She said to him, “Yes, Lord, I believe that you are the Messiah, the Son of God, the one coming into the world.”

Reflect – Death is the ultimate irony, the absurd reality of life. Unless Jesus was deceiving Martha that day, he is only person who can do anything about it.

John has been telling us that the Jewish leaders in Jerusalem had attempted to stone Jesus for his apparent blasphemy (John 10:31). Leaving the city he travelled east of the Jordan. There he learned that his friend Lazarus, brother of Martha and Mary, was dying in the village of Bethany, near Jerusalem.

Hearing that Lazarus had died, and against the advice of his disciples who feared the Jewish leaders, Jesus returned to Bethany where he was met by Martha. Talking with her he made the amazing assertion: I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die.

He didn’t say, ‘I promise resurrection and life;’ or ‘I procure’ or ‘I bring’, but ‘I am.’ Unless he is one with God his words are nothing but blasphemy. C.S. Lewis commented that Jesus was a liar, a lunatic or telling the truth. Jesus’ own resurrection was the event that changed the lives of the disciples and gave them a joy and a confidence that he is all that he claimed to be. It was their courageous witness, empowered by the Spirit of Jesus that changed the world.

The witness of the New Testament, the evidence of history, the existence of the Christian church all point to the conclusion that Jesus’ words are the truth. As he asked Martha that day, so he would ask you and me today, “Do you believe this?” And, if you do believe this, how will it affect your conversations with work colleagues, friends and family this Easter?

Prayer – Almighty God, you have conquered death through your dearly beloved Son Jesus Christ and have opened to us the gate of everlasting life: grant us by your grace to set our mind on things above, so that by your continual help our whole life may be transformed; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who is alive and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit in everlasting glory. Amen. (BCP, Easter Day)

Suggested reading – John 11:1-27