Title: Does God so love the world?
Author: John MacArthur
Link: http://www.oneplace.com/ministries/grace-to-you/read/articles/does-god-so-love-the-world-9312.html
Author: John MacArthur
Link: http://www.oneplace.com/ministries/grace-to-you/read/articles/does-god-so-love-the-world-9312.html
Love is the best known but least understood of all God's
attributes. Almost everyone who believes in God these days sees Him as a God of
love. I have even met agnostics who are quite certain that if God exists, He
must be benevolent, compassionate, and loving. All those things are infinitely
true about God, of course, but not in the way most people think. Because of the
influence of modern liberal theology, many suppose that God's love and goodness
ultimately nullify His righteousness, justice, and holy wrath. They envision
God as a benign heavenly grandfather-tolerant, affable, lenient, permissive,
devoid of any real displeasure over sin, who without consideration of His
holiness will benignly pass over sin and accept people as they are. Liberal
thinking about God's love also permeates much of evangelicalism today. We have
lost the reality of God's wrath. We have disregarded His hatred for sin. The
God most evangelicals now describe is all-loving and not at all angry. We have
forgotten that "It is a terrifying thing to fall into the hands of the
living God" (Hebrews 10:31). We do not believe in that kind of God
anymore.
We must recapture some of the holy terror that comes with a
right understanding of God's righteous anger. We need to remember that God's
wrath does burn against impenitent sinners (Psalm 38:1-3). That reality is the
very thing that makes His love so amazing. Only those who see themselves as
sinners in the hands of an angry God can fully appreciate the magnitude and
wonder of His love.
In that regard, our generation is surely at a greater
disadvantage than any previous age. We have been force-fed the doctrines of
self-esteem for so long that most people don't really view themselves as sinners
worthy of divine wrath. On top of that, religious liberalism, humanism,
evangelical compromise, and ignorance of the Scriptures have all worked against
a right understanding of who God is. Ironically, in an age that conceives of
God as wholly loving, altogether devoid of wrath, few people really understand
what God's love is all about.
How we address the misconception of the present age is
crucial. We must not respond to an overemphasis on divine love by denying that
God is love. Our generation's imbalanced view of God cannot be corrected by an
equal imbalance in the opposite direction, a very real danger in some circles.
I'm deeply concerned about a growing trend I've noticed — particularly among
people committed to the biblical truth of God's sovereignty and divine
election. Some of them flatly deny that God in any sense loves those whom He
has not chosen for salvation. I am troubled by the tendency of some — often
young people newly infatuated with Reformed doctrine — who insist that God
cannot possibly love those who never repent and believe. I encounter that view,
it seems, with increasing frequency. The argument inevitably goes like this:
Psalm 7:11 tells us "God is angry with the wicked every day." It
seems reasonable to assume that if God loved everyone, He would have chosen
everyone unto salvation. Therefore, God does not love the non-elect. Those who
hold this view often go to great lengths to argue that John 3:16 cannot really
mean God loves the whole world. Perhaps the best-known argument for this view
is found the unabridged edition of an otherwise excellent book, The Sovereignty
of God,by A. W. Pink. Pink wrote, "God loves whom He chooses. He does not
love everybody." He further argued that the word world in John 3:16
("For God so loved the world...") "refers to the world of
believers (God's elect), in contradistinction from 'the world of the ungodly.' Pink
was attempting to make the crucial point that God is sovereign in the exercise
of His love. The gist of his argument is certainly valid: It is folly to think
that God loves all alike, or that He is compelled by some rule of fairness to
love everyone equally.
Scripture teaches us that God loves because He chooses to
love (Deuteronomy 7:6-7), because He is loving (God is love, 1 John 4:8), not because
He is under some obligation to love everyone the same. Nothing but God's own
sovereign good pleasure compels Him to love sinners. Nothing but His own
sovereign will governs His love. That has to be true, since there is certainly
nothing in any sinner worthy of even the smallest degree of divine love. Unfortunately,
Pink took the corollary too far. The fact that some sinners are not elected to
salvation is no proof that God's attitude toward them is utterly devoid of
sincere love.
We know from Scripture that God is compassionate, kind,
generous, and good even to the most stubborn sinners. Who can deny that those
mercies flow out of God's boundless love? It is evident that they are showered
even on unrepentant sinners. We must understand that it is God's very nature to
love. The reason our Lord commanded us to love our enemies is "in order
that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven; for He causes His sun to
rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the
unrighteous" (Matthew 5:45). Jesus clearly characterized His Father as One
who loves even those who purposefully set themselves at enmity against Him.
At this point, however, an important distinction must be
made: God loves believers with a particular love. God's love for the elect is
an infinite, eternal, saving love. We know from Scripture that this great love
was the very cause of our election (Ephesians 2:4). Such love clearly is not
directed toward all of mankind indiscriminately, but is bestowed uniquely and
individually on those whom God chose in eternity past.
But from that, it does not follow that God's attitude toward
those He did not elect must be unmitigated hatred. Surely His pleading with the
lost, His offers of mercy to the reprobate, and the call of the gospel to all
who hear are all sincere expressions of the heart of a loving God. Remember, He
has no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but tenderly calls sinners to turn
from their evil ways and live.
Reformed theology has historically been the branch of
evangelicalism most strongly committed to the sovereignty of God. At the same time,
the mainstream of Reformed theologians have always affirmed the love of God for
all sinners. John Calvin himself wrote regarding John 3:16, "[Two] points
are distinctly stated to us: namely, that faith in Christ brings life to all,
and that Christ brought life, because the Father loves the human race, and
wishes that they should not perish."Calvin continues to explain the
biblical balance that both the gospel invitation and "the world" that
God loves are by no means limited to the elect alone. He also recognized that
God's electing, saving love is uniquely bestowed on His chosen ones.
Those same truths, reflecting a biblical balance, have been
vigorously defended by a host of Reformed stalwarts, including Thomas Boston,
John Brown, Andrew Fuller, W. G. T. Shedd, R. L. Dabney, B. B. Warfield, John
Murray, R. B. Kuiper, and many others. In no sense does belief in divine
sovereignty rule out the love of God for all humanity.
We are seeing today, in some circles, an almost
unprecedented interest in the doctrines of the Reformation and the Puritan
eras. I'm very encouraged by that in most respects. A return to those historic
truths is, I'm convinced, absolutely necessary if the church is to survive. Yet
there is a danger when overzealous souls misuse a doctrine like divine
sovereignty to deny God's sincere offer of mercy to all sinners.
We must maintain a carefully balanced perspective as we
pursue our study of God's love. God's love cannot be isolated from His wrath and
vice versa. Nor are His love and wrath in opposition to each other like some
mystical yin-yang principle. Both attributes are constant, perfect, without ebb
or flow. His wrath coexists with His love; therefore, the two never contradict.
Such are the perfections of God that we can never begin to comprehend these
things. Above all, we must not set them against one another, as if there were somehow
a discrepancy in God.
Both God's wrath and His love work to the same ultimate end
— His glory. God is glorified in the condemnation of the wicked; He is glorified
in every expression of love for all people without exception; and He is glorified
in the particular love He manifests in saving His people. Expressions of wrath
and expressions of love — all are necessary to display God's full glory. We
must never ignore any aspect of His character, nor magnify one to the exclusion
of another. When we commit those errors, we throw off the biblical balance,
distort the true nature of God, and diminish His real glory.
Does God so love the world? Emphatically — yes! Proclaim
that truth far and wide, and do so against the backdrop of God's perfectwrath
that awaits everyone who does not repent and turn to Christ.
Does the love of God differ in the breadth and depth and
manner of its expression? Yes it does. Praise Him for the many manifestations of
His love, especially toward the non-elect, and rejoice in the particular
manifestation of His saving love for you who believe. God has chosen to display
in you the glory of His redeeming grace.
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