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God is Love: How do we Define Love?
"God is Love", but how do we define it? The American
Heritage Dictionary defines love as "an intense affection
for another person based on familial or personal ties".
Often this "intense affection" stems from a sexual
attraction for that other person. We love other people, or
we say we love other people, when we are attracted to them
and when they make us feel good. Notice that a key phrase in
the dictionary definition of love is the phrase "based on".
This phrase implies that we love conditionally; in other
words, we love someone because they fulfill a condition that
we require before we can love them. How many times have you
heard or said, "I love you because you are cute;" or "I love
you because you take good care of me;" or "I love you
because you are fun to be with"?
Our
love is not only conditional, it is also mercurial. We love
based on feelings and emotions that can change from one
moment to the next. The divorce rate is extremely high in
today's society because husbands and wives supposedly stop
loving one another-or they "fall out of love". They may go
through a rough patch in their marriage, and they no longer
"feel" love for their spouse, so they call it quits.
Evidently, their marriage vow of "till death do us part"
means they can part at the death of their love for their
spouse rather than at their physical death.
Can anyone really comprehend "unconditional" love? It seems
the love that parents have for their children is as close to
unconditional love as we can get without the help of God's
love in our lives. We continue to love our children through
good times and bad, and we don't stop loving them if they
don't meet the expectations we may have for them. We make a
choice to love our children even when we consider them
unlovable; our love doesn't stop when we don't "feel" love
for them. This is similar to God's love for us, but as we
shall see, God's love transcends the human definition of
love to a point that is hard for us to comprehend.
God is Love: How does God Define Love?
The Bible tells us that "God is Love" (1 John 4:8). But how
can we even begin to understand that truth? There are many
passages in the Bible that give us God's definition of love.
The most well known verse is John 3:16, "For God so loved
the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that
whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have
everlasting life." So one way God defines love is in the
act of giving. However, what God gave (or should we say,
"who" God gave) was not a mere gift-wrapped present; God
sacrificed His only Son so that we, who put our faith in His
Son, will not spend eternity separated from Him. This is an
amazing love, because we are the ones who choose to be
separated from God through our own sin, yet it's God who
mends the separation through His intense personal sacrifice,
and all we have to do is accept His gift.
Another great verse about God's love is found in Romans 5:8,
"But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we
were yet sinners, Christ died for us." In this verse and
in John 3:16, we find no conditions placed on God's love for
us. God doesn't say, "as soon as you clean up your act, I'll
love you; " nor does He say, "I'll sacrifice my Son if you
promise to love Me." In fact, in Romans 5:8, we find just
the opposite. God wants us to know that His love is
unconditional, so He sent His Son, Jesus Christ, to die for
us while we were still unlovable sinners. We didn't have to
get clean, and we didn't have to make any promises to God
before we could experience His love. His love for us has
always existed, and because of that, He did all the giving
and sacrificing long before we were even aware that we
needed His love.
God is Love: It's Unconditional
God is Love, and His love is very different from human love.
God's love is unconditional, and it's not based on feelings
or emotions. He doesn't love us because we're lovable or
because we make Him feel good; He loves us because He is
love. He created us to have a loving relationship with Him,
and He sacrificed His own Son (who also willingly died for
us) to restore that relationship.
Source:

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