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The Love of Jesus (#131804)
The Love of Jesus
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From:
The Prospect
By:
William Kelly
Narrator:
Ivona Gentwo
Show More Sources
Love of Jesus, The: Four Actings of Love
From:
Christian Truth: Volume 3
Love of Jesus, The
From:
Christian Truth: Volume 25
• 4 min. read • grade level: 8
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In looking at
Rev. 1:5, 6,
5
And from Jesus Christ, who is the faithful witness, and the first begotten of the dead, and the prince of the kings of the earth. Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood,
6
And hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father; to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen. (Revelation 1:5‑6)
we can trace the following actings of love: first, love
thinks
of its objects. This marks the motive in operation to be unaffectedly pure, for when the heart regulates itself by meditating on its object, it seeks not to be noticed, to be praised or exalted for thinking of its object; its reward is found in the very thought itself—a reward, a pleasure with which nothing can compare. Secondly, love
visits
its object. It could not be content with merely thinking: the same principle that leads love to
think
with pleasure, induces it to
visit its
object; and, moreover, we can trace the same purity, elevation and disinterestedness, in the visit as in
the thought.
It does not
think
upon its object in order to please or attract the attention of any one, neither does it
visit
in order to effect such ends; it has
its own real substantial
enjoyment, both in thinking of and visiting
its object.
Thirdly, love
suffers
for its object. It rests not satisfied with merely
thinking
of or
visiting
its object—it
must suffer.
In order to exhibit itself in all its reality and intensity, love must put itself to cost for its object; it must spend and be spent, not because it expects a return, but simply because
it will
express itself in a way not to be mistaken. Love never thinks of what it may reap for itself in thus suffering. No: it simply contemplates
its object,
in thinking of, visiting, and suffering for it. Fourthly, love
exalts
its object. This is the highest point. In the exaltation of its object, love sees the point of previous thought, visitation and suffering. Hence, love feels exquisite happiness in exalting its object, for in so doing it reaps the wished-for harvest. Let us now apply the above blessed characteristics of love to the Lord Jesus, and see how His love exhibited all of them. Did not He ponder in His own eternal mind His much-loved Church before the foundation of the world? Yes, truly; "His gracious eye surveyed us ere stars were seen above." Did He rest satisfied with merely thinking about us? No: He laid aside all His glory; He came down into this cold, heartless world, as into a vast quarry, from whence He hoped to hew out stones for the temple. He made His way down into this
"rough valley"
of ours, which had "neither been eared nor sown." "The day spring from
on high
hath
visited us;"
but He did not rest satisfied with coming down to look at us in our misery and degradation; He determined to
suffer
for us, to groan, to bleed, to die for us; He hath washed us in
"His own blood,"
which marks the intensity of His suffering for us. What, then, was all this for? Why those ineffable sufferings of Jesus? Why the groans and bloody sweat in the garden? Why the mysterious hours of profound darkness, together with the cry, "Why hast thou forsaken me?" Simply that the love of Jesus might
exalt its
object. And He has exalted His object, yea, to the highest point of elevation: “He hath made us kings and priests unto God." Thus we have seen how the love of Jesus has
thought
of,
visited, suffered
for, and
exalted its
object: this is for our comfort. But then we should remember that if we love Jesus,
we too
will often like to
think
of Him, to contemplate His grace, ponder over His perfections; moreover, we will pay frequent
visits
to the secret of His sanctuary, not to gain a name as persons of much prayer, but simply to indulge the desires of our hearts after Him " who is the fairest amongst ten thousand, and altogether lovely." Again, we shall be ready to
suffer
for Him, not in order to commend ourselves to our brethren as persons of great energy and zeal, but to express the high estimation in which we hold His blessed person. Finally, it will be our constant effort to
exalt
Him in every place; our constant cry will be: “O magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt His name together." Let us earnestly pray for such a deep tide of divine love in our poor cold, narrow, selfish hearts, as will make our service not the more spirit of imperfect zeal, kindled by the unhallowed spark of human opinion, but the calm, steady, constant flow of unalterable affection for Jesus-that affection which has its primary joy in
pondering
over its object, ere it comes forth as an
actor
or a
sufferer in His cause.
"Come, saints, praise the Lamb, His mercies proclaim,
And lift up your heads and sing of His name;
His love to the Church, which He purchased with blood,
To make her His bride and the temple of God."
C. H. M.
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