Monday, September 1, 2025

ROMANS 5:5-11 THE LOVE OF GOD

 


 Romans  5  expounds the wonderful  results  of having been justified by grace through faith: 

  • 5:1 Peace with God;  
  • 5:2a Access into God’s presence by faith through Grace;   
  • 5:2b Rejoicing in  the hope of the glory of God –  knowing what the future holds, beyond this life; 
  • 5:3-4 he ability to bear  all sorts of trials  with joy, because those trials are not senseless, but God-sent,  for  the building up of our character, making our future hope even more sure.

Today’s text  from 5:5-11  draws us into the profoundest aspect of  our experience of God’s Being: God’s love. 

I John 4:8 says, “God is love”.   Love is not simply an attribute of God. It is His very nature. This is what He is.  And since God is an infinite Being, His love is an inexhaustible fountain.  

Here follows then another proof of assurance, by which we may know the reality of our standing with God. It is the outpouring of God’s nature into our hearts.  

Love is a communicable attribute of God. When you are converted, the love of God is communicated to your own heart. This is the  “cherry on the top” of our Christian experience of justification - the real experience of God’s love in our hearts.  Note how Paul mentions the three pillars of the Christian faith:  faith (5:1,2) … hope  (5:2,4,5) love… (2:5,8). In 1 Cor. 13:8 we read that love is the greatest of these.  Heaven will have no need of faith or hope.  But heaven will be a world of love (Jonathan Edwards). How we should look forward to that world!

Let us then  follow the logic of this text:

1.      God’s Love Is Poured Into Our Hearts Through The Holy Spirit Whom He Has Given Us (5:5) 

a.       Consider that the subject is the love of God for us – not our love for Him.  This text does not talk about our love for God.  God’s love is always prior. “In this is love, not that we have loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be  the propitiation for our sins (1 Jn. 4:10). We only love, “because He first loved us” (1 Jn. 4:19)  

b.      Consider that this love of God is poured out into our hearts. The same phrase, “poured out” is also used in Acts 2:17,18 (quoting Joel 2:28-32) and in Acts 2:33 in connection with the outpoured Spirit at Pentecost. This is not a measured, controlled pouring as one pours carefully to fill a cup. This is a lavish pouring and the cup overflows!  The picture here is that God pours His love overflowingly into the heart of the Christian believer. The heart refers to the centre of our being. It includes the mind, will and emotions – the whole person. 

c.       Consider that this love is poured out by the agency of the outpoured Holy Spirit. It is a knowledge that surpasses academic knowledge.

·       The Holy Spirit applies this love via His inspired Word. We must read  and meditate  on the Bible for all its worth – see Paul’s desire  “...that I may know Him...” (Phil. 3:10)  “... the surpassing worth of knowing  Christ Jesus my Lord...” (Phil. 3:8) ... this knowledge comes to those  who worship by the Spirit of God  (Phil. 3:3)

·       The understanding of the love of God grows with time and understanding, which involves learning.  Paul’s prayer  in  Eph.3:14-19  expresses a desire that  Christians  “may have strength to comprehend the breadth and length and height and depth and to know the  love of Christ that surpasses knowledge…”. Seeking to understand the love of God requires comprehension or knowledge.  It is a process which involves the mind. You will never grow in the knowledge of God if you do not read the Bible.

·       The understanding of the love of God grows with trials (hence Romans 5:3,4). This includes understanding that the love of God also comes to us via His discipline, for God disciplines the one he loves (Hebr. 12:6-11)

A QUESTION

If this is so, then why is it that many professing Christians see or feel so little evidence of the love of God in their own experience?  

Let’s engage in some pastoral wrestling:

(i)                Perhaps, there is no genuine new birth.  If this is so the love of God cannot be seen or felt.

(ii)               Perhaps a person is backsliddenYou may have “lost your first love“ (Rev. 2:4,5).  Although this is written to the church at Ephesus, the church is made up of individuals. In this regard please note  that it  is possible for entire churches to grow lukewarm (e.g. Rev. 3:16 – the church at Laodicea). 

It is possible to grieve the Holy Spirit (Eph.4:30). 

It is possible to let bitterness, wrath, anger, unforgiveness etc.  dampen the experience of God’s love. 

It is possible to let things slowly come between you and your first love for God.  

If this is so, then Jesus  counsels  you right now to repent and to return to the place of your first love. 

 2.      The Love Of God Is Given To People Who Are Weak, Ungodly, Unrighteous (5:6-8)

 “For while we were still weak (powerless), at the right time, Christ died for the ungodly. For  one will scarcely die for a righteous person  - though perhaps for a good person  one would dare even to die -   but God shows  His love for us  in that while we were  still sinners , Christ died for us (5:6-8). 

(i)                  5:6 God’s love comes in a completely unmerited way. God’s love is not motivated by people’s merits or accomplishments (for there are none).  Why God should love weak, ungodly, sinful creatures is entirely mysterious.  I cannot discover any reason why God should love me. Such a thought caused   Charles Wesley (1707- 1788)  to write his hymn, “And Can It Be?” - “Tis mystery all! The immortal dies:  Who can explore His strange design? In vain the first- born seraph tries, to sound the depths of love divine. ‘Tis mercy all! Let earth adore, let angel minds enquire no more.” [1]

(ii)                5:7-8 The amazing love of God  becomes  even more profound   when we consider  the  fact that while for a righteous person a man will scarcely die (though it is conceivable)- BUT  FOR AN UNRIGHTEOUS PERSON?  And yet a holy God sent His Son to die for unrighteous sinners.  “God  shows His love for us in that while we were  still sinners, Christ died for us.” God’s love, as it is revealed in Jesus  is both, unprecedented and unparalleled.  

You just don’t die for a  wicked enemy! 

It’s unheard of!  I, as a human being will not do that. 

But God, the holy God, who is of purer eyes than to behold evil  – He does it!  

What for?  

For His  love‘s sake. 

For the sake of His sheep. 

For the sake of those given  to His Son (Jn 17).  

This is the deep, deep love of God.  This deserves prayerful meditation, and  when that knowledge finally  sinks in,  our  hearts melt with love and thankfulness  to God.

Jesus’ death on the cross for sinners is the supreme manifestation of the love of God.  

There are wonderful moments when the Holy Spirit shows us something of the extent of the love of God, and your heart is flooded with unbearable love. When this happens  you can be very overwhelmed. Such testimonies have not been uncommon in the experiences of God’s people. 

I will mention the example of Sarah Edwards (d. 1758), wife of Jonathan Edwards. She had an experience of the love of God as a result  of a  meditation on Romans 8:34, which resulted  in a renewed sense of the assurance of her salvation.  

It began on  January 20, 1742. [2]

“When I was alone, the words came to my mind with far greater power and sweetness; upon which I took the Bible, and read the words to the end of the chapter, when they were impressed on my heart with vastly greater power and sweetness still.  They appeared to me with undoubted certainty as the words of God, and as words which God did pronounce concerning me. I had no more doubt of it than I had of my being...  I cannot find language to express how certain this appeared... Melted and overcome by the sweetness of this assurance, I fell into a great flow of tears and could not forbear weeping aloud.  It appeared certain to me that God was my Father, and Christ my Lord and Savior, that He was mine and I His.  Under a delightful sense of the immediate presence and love of God, these words seemed to come over and over in my mind, ‘My God, my all; my God, my all.’  The presence of God was so near and so real that I seemed scarcely conscious of anything else.  God the Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ, seemed as distinct persons, both manifesting their inconceivable loveliness and mildness and gentleness and their great and immutable love to me.  I seemed to be taken under the care and charge of my God and Saviour, in an inexpressibly endearing manner; and Christ appeared to me as a mighty Saviour....

The peace and happiness which I hereupon felt was altogether inexpressible.  It seemed to be that which came from heaven; to be eternal and unchangeable...  I seemed to be lifted above earth and hell, out of the reach of everything here below, so that I could look on all the rage and enmity of men or devils with a kind of holy indifference and an undisturbed tranquillity.  At the same time I felt compassion and love for all mankind, and a deep abasement of soul, under a sense of my own unworthiness.... My God was my all, my only portion.

I continued in a very sweet and lively sense of divine things, day and night, sleeping and waking, until Saturday, Jan. 23.  ....At night my soul seemed to be filled with an inexpressibly sweet and pure love to God and to the children of God, with a refreshing consolation and solace of soul which made me willing to lie on the earth, at the feet of the servants of God, to declare His gracious dealings with me and breathe forth before them my love and gratitude and praise.”

Please note. It was as Sarah was meditating upon the Word of God that this experience of the love of God came upon her. It had a great effect  upon her – particularly in the matter of assurance.

 3.      What The Love Of God Accomplishes  (5:9-11)

(i)                 5:9a“Since therefore we have been now justified by His blood…”.  Paul comes back to the unifying theme of justification - the string which holds the pearls together. We are justified by the blood of Jesus. In this we saw the deep love of God for the those who were justified. When an understanding of that love grabs you, it overwhelms you.

(ii)               5:9b “Much more shall we be saved by him from the wrath of God”.  Here is what makes your love for God so much more profound - when you see what you have been delivered from … the wrath of God!  This is truly something to sing about.   The hymn, “In Christ Alone“ in which this subject is expounded: “In Christ alone, who took on flesh; Fullness of God in helpless babe! This gift of love and righteousness; Scorned by the ones He came to save. Till on that cross as Jesus died, the wrath of God was satisfied, For every sin on Him was laid, here in the death of Christ I live.“[3] Saved from the wrath of God! You will never  be able to  grasp  the nature of justification,  you will never  appreciate the depth of your salvation until you understand  what you have been saved from, and what it took to make that possible! A.W. Pink, in his great book, “The Attributes of God“ says that  the wrath of God is  “a perfection of the Divine character upon which we need to frequently meditate[4]:

  •                That our hearts may be duly impressed by God’s detestation  of sin
  •            That we may cultivate a true fear of God in our souls 
  •            To praise God for having been delivered us from the wrath that is to come                              
(iii) Reconciliation (5:10,11) Please note that reconciliation begins with God. He reconciled you before you were willing to be reconciled …. Remember? … while we were still sinners (5:8). It is something done to you - look at the language of Scripture: ” … we were reconciled (5:10 x2)…have received reconciliation (5:11).   Grammatically, this whole text is in the “passive voice”. This is being done to you. God takes the initiative. Jesus pays the price.

CONCLUSION

Experiencing the love of God is the antidote to falling in love with this world.  

The Good news is that God has freely poured out His love on His people. The challenge lies in keeping ourselves in the love of God:  But you, beloved, building  yourselves up in your most holy faith  and praying in the Holy Spirit, keep yourselves  in the love of God ....”(Jude 21). 

Make it your business to be always found in the presence of God.



[1] Charles Wesley : And can it be that I should gain

[2] Iain Murray : Jonathan Edwards: Banner of Truth, pp194ff

[3] In Christ alone : written by Keith Getty & Stuart Townend in 2001

[4] Arthur W. Pink : The Attributes of God: Baker Book House, p.84ff

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ROMANS 5:5-11 THE LOVE OF GOD

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