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DAY 14: THURSDAY OF THE SECOND WEEK IN LENT

LOVE AND JOY

John 15:9-13

John 15:9-13 NIV
9 “As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love. 10 If you keep my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commands and remain in his love. 11 I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete. 12 My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. 13 Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.

The truth is that only someone who is loved can love.[1] Jesus is the only begotten son of love who was fully loved by the Father. Jesus, with the love that he received from the Father, loved us. The reason why his love never dried up was because it was originated from the Father.

          There are many kinds of love and many kinds of people who love in the world. What is this love of Jesus that never dries up?  How is the love of Christians different from any other kind of love?

Love is shown in many different colors. Romantic love, family love, love of friends – all these are parts of well-rounded life. But we must be clear that, wonderful as they are, they are not “love” in the sense that Jesus is using the term here. He is talking about the kind of love that persists even though it means death.[2] The love of Jesus is the greatest love. It is the love that he lay down his life for his friends. It is the love that gives out all things and still looking if there is anything left to give more, and finally gives even the life that remains last.

Jesus regarded the ones gathered in the upper room as his friends and was determined to give his life for them. But one of the little band was Judas, who even as Jesus spoke had gone out to betray him. Others had spent time in the upper room quarreling about who would be the greatest (Luke 22:24). In Gethsemane, when Jesus would ask the three who were closest to him to watch with him in the hour of his greatest agony, they would simply fall asleep (Mark 14:33f., 37). And when soldiers came “they call forsook him and fled” (Mark 14:50).[3]

Jesus gave his precious life for these sinners. Despite all their iniquities and weakness, the love of Jesus was unconditional, loving the sinners.

Love in the Christian sense is not sentimentality; it is not a gushing emotional indulgence of some loved one. Love is what we see in the cross. It is what Christ showed when he laid down his perfect life for sinners.[4]

Jews, Moslems, pagans, even the so-called godless, not only can but often do love with utmost generosity and utter selflessness, even to the laying down of their lives. What distinguishes Christians is merely this: when they love, they love as Christ loved them and because he loved them. What makes their love “Christian” is neither its quantity nor its quality. What makes “Christian” is their faith in the love of Jesus for them, their abiding in his love (v. 9), and nothing else.[5]

Augustine said: “Love, and do what you like.” But we must understand Augustine carefully. He was not saying that if we love we can go happily through life doing good or ill as we choose. He was saying that if we understand what love in the Christian sense is, if we really understand it, then we need no other guide to Christian living.[6]

If we can love just as Jesus loved us, the true of joy of the Lord, that sings out delight in the pitch-black darkness before the shadow of the cross, will overflow in our lives.


[1] Marrow, The Gospel of John, 275.

[2] Morris, Reflections on the Gospel of John, 524.

[3] Morris, Reflections on the Gospel of John, 524.

[4] Morris, Reflections on the Gospel of John, 523.

[5] Marrow, The Gospel of John, 279.

[6] Morris, Reflections on the Gospel of John, 523.

Question

1. Retell today’s message in your own words. 2. Explain the meaning of the following statement based on today’s message: “Joy is not like happiness, which depends very largely on what happens. The Lord's heart was full of joy even with Gethsemane a few hundred yards ahead. It was for the joy that was set before him that he endured the cross, despising the shame. Joy is one of the fruits of the Spirit, second only to love. This joy he offers to us, joy resulting from obedience, flanked on one side by love and on the other side by peace. Joy is like a rainbow shinning above our tears.” 3. How can I apply the lessons from today’s message into my life?

Prayer

Jesus, filled with the love of God, loved us. May we also live the life of love, full of love given by Jesus. As Jesus kept the Father’s commands and was in his love, may we also keep his commands, be in his love, and enjoy the true joy of the Lord. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

40 Day Lenten Bible Study

Christians often hear about God’s love for us, but have they truly felt and believed in His love? Prior to Christ’s death on the cross, no one saw God’s love in its full measure. But God revealed His love to the whole world through the cross and resurrection. This Lenten Bible Study provides an in-depth look into the transformative power of God’s love. Readers will examine the most central part in the whole arrangement of the Gospel of John from the Last Supper (John 13) to Christ’s crucifixion (John 19:30). – Taken from The Cross of Christ: 40 Day Lenten Bible Study through the Gospel of John with illustrations by Christy Tran. Buy the book on Amazon, Stevens Books

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