This week I was listening to this audio message by John Piper on Romans 8:28-32. In part one of dealing with this passage he deals with understanding what it really means to be one who loves God. I found it quite thought provoking and challenging to what is often assumed to be love for God.
Here are some highlights from the manuscript-
Loving God is not meeting his needs. The way we love man is different from the way we love God. In Acts 17:25 Paul said, “He [is not] served by human hands, as though He needed anything, since He Himself gives to all people life and breath and all things.”
. . . the second thing that love for God is not. Loving God is not, in its essence, love for his gifts – gifts like forgiveness, justification, escape from hell, resurrection to a pain-free life, etc. Indeed if we love God, we will cherish these gifts and be thankful for them, because we would not have God without them. . . His gifts are precious to the degree that they bring us to God and show us more of God.
The essence of loving God is not the things that love for God prompts you to do. Love for God may prompt you to leave mother and father and forsake all that to declare his glory among the nations. But leaving mother and father and forsaking all are not the essence of love – they are the fruit of love.
Loving God is desiring God himself beyond his gifts. Loving God is treasuring God himself beyond his gifts. Love for God is delighting in God himself beyond his gifts. Love for God is being satisfied in God himself beyond his gifts. Love for God is cherishing God himself beyond his gifts. Love for God is savoring God himself beyond his gifts. Love for God is valuing God and prizing God and revering God and admiring God beyond his gifts. All these words are grasping for that essential response of the heart to the revelation of the glory of God, especially in Christ through the gospel. It is a glad reflex of the heart to all that God is for us in Christ.
Do you really love God?