Jesus’ Love is Wide and Long and High and Deep!
When everything around us crumbles, we will always have the
love of God. His love endures forever. Scripture says: “And I pray that you, being
rooted and grounded in love, may have power, together with all the saints, to
grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ.” (Ephesians 3:17-19) Are our lives rooted and grounded in love
like that Scripture says? And have we
even begun to grasp how wide and long and high and deep Jesus’ love is for us?
In fact Scripture also says that God’s love for His children
is beyond reason. God spoke to Israel through
the prophets in the Old Testament. Hosea
was one of God’s prophets and God spoke to Israel through Hosea about His
unbelievable love for them. Instead of
Hosea standing in front of the people and preaching to them with words and
sermons, God instructed Hosea to instead live out in his own life what God
wanted to say to the people. Hosea put
on a “show and tell” drama in front of his surprised neighbors to demonstrate what
God’s love was like.
To begin his “show and tell” God told Hosea to go and marry
a prostitute. So Hosea obeyed and found
Gomer, a local prostitute, and married her.
Gomer and Hosea had three children together but then Gomer left Hosea
and ran off with other men. She went into the highways and byways and
shamelessly threw herself at any male that she could find. Finally her life of debauchery and loose
living caused her to be sold into slavery.
Hosea could have been glad that his unfaithful wife was
finally getting what she deserved. But
no, God told Hosea to act like God would act and go and buy Gomer back from the
slave traders while his fellow Israelites watched in amazement! I’m sure the gossip about Hosea and Gomer
spread all over town!
Hosea was to redeem
Gomer and bring her home to be his wife again.
When the Israelites asked Hosea why he was doing this he would answer
that God wanted them to see that they were like Gomer, the unfaithful wife and that
God was like Hosea in that he never gave up and never stopped wanting His
people to come back to Him. At that time
many of the Israelites had rejected God and were worshipping foreign gods. They were also cheating one another and
forgetting to help the poor among them. So
God was comparing His people to Hosea’s unfaithful wife, Gomer.
Hosea showed God’s people that God would always love them no
matter what they did. He might be angry,
but He always wanted them back! God
loves us, His children the same way! And
even when we are unfaithful to Him, God keeps running after us and offering to
redeem us from our slavery to sin and bring us back to Himself.
God calls us to love the same way that He loves – to love
the unlovable and help the person we may think doesn’t deserve to be
helped. If love doesn’t love the
unlovable it is no virtue at all.
Scripture says: “Therefore as God’s chosen people, holy and dearly
loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and
patience. Bear with each other and
forgive whatever grievances you may have against one another. Forgive as the Lord forgave you.” (Colossians 3:12-13)
One of the ways we can love others is by praying for
them. Richard Foster once said that if
we truly love people, we will desire for them far more than it is within our
power to give them, and this will lead us to prayer: Intercession is a way of
loving others. Scripture says: “As for
me, far be it from me that I should sin against the Lord by failing to pray for
you…” (1 Samuel 12:23a)
God calls us to pass on His great love to others. Scripture says: ‘Carry each other’s burdens
and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ.” (Galatians 6:2) We are to mourn with those who mourn and
rejoice with those who rejoice. (Romans 12:15)
We not only receive God’s love
but we are to pass it along and give it away.
If we only receive
and do not give we soon lose our vitality.
A river that has no outlet – like the Dead Sea
– soon cannot sustain life. Love without
action is empty. We are meant to pass on God’s love – to be a loving presence
in the lives of others, even in the lives of our enemies. We are to seek goodness in others and forgive
their mistakes, because we are children of our loving and forgiving
Father.
First Corinthians 13
is often referred to as the “Love Chapter” in the Bible! The “Love Chapter” starts out by telling us
that we can do great things and give great sums of money and time and learn
great mysteries, but if we do not have love we are nothing! I get the feeling that God cares much more
about how we love each other than any other accomplishment we may achieve. Love is described in the “Love Chapter” this
way: “Love is patient, love is
kind. It does not envy, it does not
boast, it is not proud. It is not rude,
it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of
wrongs. Love does not delight in evil
but rejoices in the truth. It always
protects, always trusts, always hopes, always keeps on going. Love never fails.” And the chapter ends with: “Now these three
remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.”
We don’t love God because of our intellectual beliefs or
theological arguments. But we love God
because we know that He loves us. His
Spirit bears witness with our spirit that He loves us and He promises to be
with us. He says: “And surely I am with you always, to the very
end of the age.” (Matthew 28:20) Jesus told us: “Love the Lord your God with
all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the first and greatest
commandment. And the second is like it:
Love your neighbor as yourself.”
(Matthew 22:37-39)
Jesus is saying that we are to love God with everything
we’ve got – our heart and our mind and our soul and our strength. That makes our Christian faith less of a
belief system and more of a love affair!
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