When Jesus was asked, "Teacher, which is the great commandment in the law?" he replied, "'You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your
There are probably more lessons in this than one preacher could preach, and the lesson below is just a small part of the subject, albeit an important part. In this lesson I offer for your consideration four clear principles evident in
We sometimes hear comparisons made between love and law, which seem to place love and law at odds, and make love transcend law. The truth is that love and law are inseparably bound up together. The law of God comes from the love of God, and our love of God is expressed in
Jesus was asked to name a commandment in the law which he considered to be the great commandment. He was not asked to name something which was greater than the law, stood outside of the law, or transcended the law. He was asked to name a commandment that was "in" the law. It was to be the first and foremost commandment, certainly, but a commandment nevertheless, a law in the law, not something
It is interesting that the person asking Jesus the question agreed with Jesus, and he added that the two commandments Jesus cited were "much more than all burnt offerings and sacrifices"
So we see, in our first point that love is the greatest law in God’s law, and it is not correct to say that love
If we were asked to identify the greatest principle in the gospel of our salvation, we might answer "faith". After all, have we not been taught, and rightly so, that we are justified by faith? However faith is not
When Paul spoke of the chief elements of the gospel, those things which should fill the heart of the Christian, he named, "Faith, hope and love, these three, but the greatest of these is love"
Why is "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ"
The foundation of the Protestant movement appears to be "faith alone". The term "faith alone" is found only once in the scriptures, and there justification by faith alone is categorically denied
So we see, in our second point, that love is greater than faith, and it is not correct to speak of being
We all know that when God redeems us from slavery to sin, he owns us and we become his slaves. We are freed from sin only to become slaves of God’s righteousness
Becoming enslaved to Christ, and out of wholehearted love placing ourselves under his law, we find true life and liberty. Jesus himself said, "You shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free"
Now a slave, if given no better status than that of a slave, may serve his master faithfully, and may even love his master. But a slave who is given the status of a son and heir in his master’s household, will, out of overflowing gratitude, surely serve his master more faithfully and have a greater love for his master. This is what John had in mind when he said, "in this is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the atonement for our sins"
So we see in our third point, that when the Christian practices the greatest commandment, he does so with a special kind of love, a love better than that of a slave, a love of one who has
We have been saying that the greatest commandment in the gospel or law of Christ, is one and the same as the greatest commandment in the old law. There is one important difference however, that we should notice before we
Jesus pointed out this difference when he said, "A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another, even as I have loved you, that you also love one another."
The old commandment was, "Love your neighbour as yourself"
It stands to reason that if the second commandment has been modified by a new and higher standard, so has the first commandment. We love God not only with own own whole heart, but even better still, we love God with the heart of Christ. We love God even as Christ
So we see in our fourth and last point, that when the Christian practices the greatest commandment, he does so with a new standard of love, the love which Jesus Christ himself demonstrated while he was