The doctrine of the love of God is sometimes portrayed within Christian circles as much easier and more obvious than it really is, and this is achieved by overlooking some of the distinctions the Bible itself introduces when it depicts the love of God.1
I have been captured by Paul’s prayer that we would come to experience the magnitude and complexity of the love of God not merely as a doctrine but as a life-changing reality (Eph. 3:17-18). Although this unexplainable love can be known, it is not automatic or simple.
There are several ways to explore the greatness of God’s love. One is to consider the magnitude as it reaches through history, spans geography, and penetrates every culture to every person. Another is to look at the qualities of God’s love: eternal, loyal, holy, gracious, etc. I am exploring a third way by considering the complexity of God’s love as evidenced by the many ways it is expressed or demonstrated.
I am coming to understand that His love is not monochromatic but iridescent (like a rainbow). That is, as His love touches broken humanity, the “white light” of His love is refracted and reflected into a rainbow of colors.
Before we look at the various expressions of God’s love, I want to preface the discussion by clarifying several concepts that set the stage for understanding its complexity.
- Definitions
- Intra-Trinitarian source
- Expression and experience
1. Word definition/meaning
It is obvious that love has many forms. Two Greek words are used to express love forms in the New Testament: pheleo and agape. The word pheleo is used to express a love of affection and approval. The word agape, however, has a broader meaning ranging from affectionate love to benevolent love.2 Agape was the word for love that New Testament writers chose to express the gracious, benevolent love of God given to undeserving humanity. This grace kind of love was added to the historic use of agape, and eventually came to dominate its meaning. However, the grace aspect of agape is not its only meaning in Scripture and it would be incorrect to remove the element of affection from our understanding of the word.
While the Hebrew and Greek words for “love” have various shades and intensities of meaning, they may be summed up in some such definition as this: Love, whether used of God or man, is an earnest and anxious desire for and an active and beneficent interest in the well-being of the one loved.3
The love relationship within the Trinity affirms that the grace aspect of agape is not its only meaning in Scripture.
2. Intra-Trinitarian love
This refers to the love that exists within the Trinity.4 John refers to this love when he said, “God is love” (1 John 4:8). God not only loves, but He is love. Love resides within the essence of who God is. John is not saying that God equals love, but rather that love is a trait of divinity (along with His other traits such as holiness and justice). John is not making love the “trump card” in the deck of God’s attributes. He is saying that love is part of the essence of God, permeates all His other characteristics, and is the source of love as we know it.
Therefore, it should not surprise us to see love expressed within the Trinity. Jesus described the Father’s love for Him as both agapeo (John 3:35) and pheleo (John 5:20) even as the Son loves (John 14:31) the Father. It is this amazing intra-Trinitarian love into which we are now invited. Jesus prayed this invitation for His disciples (John 17:26):
I have made your name known to them, and will make it known, so that the love with which You love Me may be in them, and I in them.
The intra-Trinitarian love is the source of all love. It is the “white light” that contains various expressions. It is the love that is incomprehensible yet expressed in such ways that we can begin to understand its complexity when we observe how God loves broken humanity.
3. Expression and response
Unless love is expressed in some way, it may exist but be unknown. Within the intra-Trinitarian love, Jesus explains how it is expressed and responded to:
For the Father loves the Son, and shows Him all things that He Himself is doing; (John 5:20).
But so that the world may know that I love the Father, I do exactly as the Father commanded Me (John 14:31).
For us to know God’s love it must be expressed and to be experienced it requires a response. In John 3:16 Jesus explained that God’s love was expressed in the giving of his only begotten Son. But to experience that love, one must respond by believing “in Him”.
A word of caution: the condition of responding to His love, should not be equated with meriting His love. God’s love in all of its expressions is always initiated by God and unmerited. But unmerited does not mean unconditional. [See TAD Blog 12 Reducing Tension in Discipleship (2)]
With these three critical concepts in mind, in the next blog we will explore four of the colors of God’s iridescent love. The following blog we will look at the love language of God and then tie them into our pursuit of knowing Christ on the resurrection side of the cross.
- DA Carson, “The Uncomfortable Doctrine of the Love of God.” pg.15
- Thayer word studies defines agapeo: to be well pleased to be fond of, love dearly. But also “embracing especially the judgment and the deliberate assent of the will as a matter of principle, duty, and propriety”.
- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Love in its broadest meaning can also been described as a deep personal longing for the object of the love. This implies ascribing value, feeling of affection, and seeking the welfare of that which is loved.
- DA Carson, “The Uncomfortable Doctrine of the Love of God.” pg. 16
Loved the message and especially the visual light picture in the beginnings