x file 12
Knowing and Loving God
"Hear, O Israel:...thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might." (Deuteronomy 6:4,5)
"Jesus said...This is the first and great commandment." (Matthew 22:37,38)
"If a man love me, he will keep my words: and My Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make our abode with him." (John 14:23)
This first and greatest commandment is given for our own good. God
loves each of us so much that He wants to give us the greatest
possible blessing: Himself. He does not, however, force Himself upon
anyone, for that would not be love. We must genuinely and earnestly
desire Him. "And ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall
search for me with all your heart" (Jer 29:13)
is the promise of God, who otherwise hides Himself (Is 45:15). And
again, "He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him" (Heb 11:6).
This first and greatest commandment is given for our own good. God
loves each of us so much that He wants to give us the greatest
possible blessing: Himself. He does not, however, force Himself upon
anyone, for that would not be love. We must genuinely and earnestly
desire Him. "And ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall
search for me with all your heart" (Jer 29:13)
is the promise of God, who otherwise hides Himself (Is 45:15). And
again, "He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him" (Heb 11:6).
This fervent seeking after God with the whole heart, without which
no one can know Him, has always been the mark of His true followers.
One of the psalmists likened his passion for God to the thirst of a
deer panting for water (Ps 42:1,2). David expressed it the same way: "O God...I seek thee: my soul thirsteth for thee..." (Ps 63:1). What greater desire could one have than knowing God? Yet this most worthy pursuit is neglected even by Christians.
How astonishing that the infinite Creator of the universe offers
Himself to such degraded creatures as ourselves! Nor is His love an
impersonal cosmic force; it is intimately personal. Think of that!
Such love should awaken a fervent response within us. Yet how many
of us express our love to God even once a day, let alone love Him
with our entire being? Sadly, even Christians are caught up instead
in the forbidden love of the world (1 Jn 2:15) and the pursuit of its deceitful rewards.
Loving God is the first commandment because our obedience to all His
other commandments must be motivated by love for Him. Moreover,
since God commands us to love Him with our whole being, then our
entire life--yes, everything we think and say and do--must flow from
that love. Paul reminds us that even giving everything one
possesses to the poor and being martyred in the flames is in vain
unless motivated by love for Him.
If loving God with one's whole being is the greatest commandment,
then not to do so must be the greatest sin--indeed, the root of all
sin. How is it, then, that loving God, without which all else is but
"sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal" (1 Cor 13:1),
is not even found in the course lists of our theological
seminaries? How can it be that this "first and great[est]
commandment" is so neglected in the church? The sad truth is that
among today's evangelicals it is not loving and esteeming God but
self-love and self-esteem that are presented as the pressing need!
I speak to my own heart. At times I weep that, like Martha (Lk 10:38-42),
in the busyness of serving Christ, I give so little thought or time
to loving Him. Oh, to be more like Mary! How does one learn to love
God without ever having seen Him (Jn 1:18; 1 Tm 6:16; 1 Jn 4:12,20)?
Obviously, there must be a reason for loving God--or anyone. Yes,
reason and love do go together. Love must result from more than a
physical attraction, which, in itself, can only arouse a fleshly
response. In addition to the outward appeal there are the inner beauties
of personality, character, integrity, and, of course, the other's
love response. God loves without such reasons. Our love, even for
Him, requires them. "We love Him, because He first loved us" (1 Jn 4:19).
Our heavenly Father loves even those who make themselves His
enemies, those who defy Him, reject His laws, deny His existence,
and would tear Him from His throne. Christ proved that love in going
to the Cross to pay the penalty for all, even asking the Father to
forgive those who nailed Him there (Lk 23:34).
Such is the love that the Christian, having experienced it for
himself, is to manifest through Christ living in him: "Love your
enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and
pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you" (Mt
5:44).
To love God with our whole heart and our neighbors as ourselves is
not something we can produce by self-effort. Love for our fellows
must be the expression of God's love in our hearts; nor can we love
God except by coming to know Him as He is. A false god won't do. Yet
at the 1993 National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, D.C., Vice
President Al Gore said, "Faith in God, reliance upon a Higher Power,
by whatever name, is in my view essential." No one can love the
"12-Step God as you conceive Him to be." That would be like loving
some imaginary person. To know the true God is to love Him; and to
know Him better is to love Him all the more.
Most of us have an all-too-shallow knowledge of God. Nor can our
love for God grow except from a deepening appreciation of His love
for us--an appreciation that must include two extremes: 1) God's
infinite greatness; and 2) our sinful, wretched unworthiness. That
He, who is so high and holy, would stoop so low to redeem unworthy
sinners supremely reveals and demonstrates His love. Such an
understanding is the basis of our love and gratitude in return and
will be the unchanging theme of our praise throughout all eternity
in His glorious presence (Rv 5:8-14).
There can be no doubt that the clearer one's vision of God becomes,
the more unworthy one feels, and thus the more grateful for His
grace and love. Such has always been the testimony of men and women
of God. Job cried out to God, "I have heard of thee by the hearing
of the ear: but now mine eye seeth thee. Wherefore I abhor [hate]
myself, and repent in dust and ashes" (Job 42:5-6).
Isaiah likewise lamented, "Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am
a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of
unclean lips: for mine eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts"
(Is 6:5).
Such recognition of their sin and unworthiness did not decrease but
enhanced the saints' love for God and appreciation of His grace. The
more clearly we see the infinite chasm between God's glory and our
sinful falling short thereof (Rom 3:23),
the greater will be our appreciation of His grace and love in
bridging that gulf to redeem us. And the greater our appreciation of
His love for us, the greater will be our love for Him.
There is no joy that can compare to that of love exchanged. Nor is
there any sorrow so deep as that of love spurned or ignored. How it
must grieve our Lord that His redeemed ones love Him so little in
return! That grief comes through in scripture passages such as
these: "I have nourished and brought up children, and they have
rebelled against me" (Is 1:2). "Can a maid forget her ornaments, or a
bride her attire? Yet my people have forgotten me days without number"
(Jer 2:32).
Even more reprehensible than forgetfulness and neglect is the
teaching of Christian psychology that God loves us because we are
lovable and worth it. Richard Dobbins, best known Assemblies of God
psychologist, suggests that one repeat, "I am a lovable, forgivable
person." Bruce Narramore boasts, "The Son of God considers us of
such value that He gave His life for us." If that were true, it
would not increase but decrease our love for Him and our
appreciation of His grace. The Bible teaches that our love for God
and our appreciation of His love and forgiveness will be in
proportion to the recognition of our sin and unworthiness.
Such was the lesson Christ taught Simon the Pharisee when He was a
guest in his house. Jesus told of a creditor who forgave two
debtors, one who owed a vast sum and another who owed almost
nothing. Then He asked Simon, "Which of them will love him [the
creditor] most?" Said Simon, "I suppose...he, to whom he forgave
most." "Thou hast rightly judged," replied Jesus. Then, rebuking
Simon for failing even to give him water and a towel, and commending
the woman who had been washing His feet with her tears and wiping
them with her hair, Christ declared pointedly, "Her sins, which are
many, are forgiven; for she loved much: but to whom little is
forgiven, the same loveth little" (Lk 7:36-47).
It is both logical and biblical that the more sinful and worthless
we realize we are in God's eyes, the greater our gratitude and love
that Christ would die for us. By whatever extent we imagine that we
are lovable or worth His sacrifice we lessen our appreciation of His
love. The Bible teaches that God loves us not because of who we are
but because of who He is. "God is love" (1 Jn 4:16).
If God loved us because something attractive or worthwhile within
us elicited that love, then, changeable creatures that we are, we
could lose that appeal and with it God's love. But if He loves us
because God is love, then that love can never be lost, for God never
changes. Therein lies our security for eternity (Jer 33:3)--and all the glory is His!
We often find it difficult, especially in trying circumstances, to
rest in God's great love for us--no doubt because deep within our
hearts we know how unworthy we are. Christian psychology tries
mistakenly to cure this sense of unworthiness by persuading us that
we are worth it after all. Robert Schuller declares, "The death of
Christ on the cross is God's price tag on a human soul....[It means]
we really are Somebodies!" Not so. Christ didn't die for Somebodies
but for sinners. Dobbins says, "If we hadn't been worth it He
wouldn't have paid the price." On the contrary, the greater the
price the costlier our sin, not our worth. That the sinless Son of
God must die upon the Cross to redeem us shouldn't make us feel good
about ourselves but ashamed, for it was our sins that nailed Him
there. Yet Bruce Narramore calls the Cross "a foundation for
self-esteem!"
This humanistic, self-inflating false gospel is being increasingly
embraced by evangelicals. Establishing the counselee's self-worth is
a key concept utilized at Rapha counseling centers founded by
Robert S. McGee. Anthony A. Hoekema writes, "Surely God would not
give His Son for creatures He considered to be of little worth!"
Thus the love and gratitude toward God that the Cross ought to
arouse in us is stifled by the perverted new belief that He did it
because we are worth it. Jay Adams points out the horrible error of
teaching that what God does for us is "a response on His part to our
significance rather than an act of His love, free mercy, goodness
and grace!"
Our song for eternity will be, "Worthy is the Lamb" (Rv 5:12).
Heaven has no place for the erroneous belief that Christ died because
we are worth it. Christ's death in our place had nothing to do with
our worth but with the depths of our sin, the demands made by God's
justice, and His eternal glory.
Of course those who brought humanistic psychology's selfism into the
church attempt to support it from Scripture. Bruce Narramore quotes
Psalm 139
and suggests that the "wonderful pattern for growth, fulfillment and
development" that "God built into our genes...is the ultimate basis
for self-esteem." Surely the genius of the genetic code should cause
me to bow in wonder and worship at the wisdom and power of God--but
self-esteem? Seeing the marvels of God's creative power in my genes
is no more cause for self-exaltation than seeing God's creative
power in another's genes or in any other part of the cosmos--I didn't create it!
Paul declared, "By the grace of God I am what I am" (1 Cor 15:10).
No basis for self-esteem there! Dare we think that we will ever be
able to erase from our memories the fact that we are unworthy
sinners saved by grace? Yes, God in His grace will give us crowns
and rewards and we will even hear from our Lord's lips, "Well done,
thou good and faithful servant:...enter thou into the joy of thy
[L]ord" (Mt 25:21; 1 Cor 4:5)
But will that give us a positive self-image, a sense of self-worth
and self-esteem? C. S. Lewis answers: "The child who is patted on
the back for doing a lesson well,...the saved soul to whom Christ
says, 'Well done,' are pleased and ought to be. For here the
pleasure lies not in what you are but in the fact that you have
pleased someone you rightly wanted to please. The trouble begins
when you pass from thinking, 'I have pleased him,' to thinking,
'What a fine person I must be to have done it.'"
Our love for God even influences whether we yield to temptation. Lust is called both "deceitful" (Eph 4:22)
and "hurtful" (1 Tm 6:9) because it entices us with pleasure that
is brief and involves disobedience to God and thus leads to pain and
ruin in the end. Those whose focus is upon themselves think of
God's commandments in terms of pleasures denied. But those who are
enraptured by God's love have been delivered from self and find true
and lasting pleasure and joy in obeying and thus pleasing Him. There
is a joy that comes from pleasing God that is so far beyond any
pleasure of this world that temptation loses its power in comparison.
The new theology denies us this path of victory. Its joy is selfish.
To obey the first and great commandment is necessarily to deny self
as Christ commanded (Mt 16:24). Nor can one deny self and at the
same time love, esteem, and value self. Seeing God's love as a
response to my significance and worth salvages just enough value for
self to deny God's truth. Let us forget ourselves, our needs and
hurts, and seek to know and love God (Father, Son and Holy Spirit)
because of who He is and His love and grace to us. His love will then
flow through us to others, whom we will then esteem better than
ourselves (Phil 2:3). Such is the path to true joy (Heb 12:2).
The Berean Call