Unconditional Love
Unconditional Love
Bill Bright
Love By Faith
5 Truths about Love: You Can Love with God's Love by Faith
Study Guides
But what is agape? How does this kind of love express itself?
Love is very patient and kind, never jealous or envious, never boastful or proud, never haughty or selfish
or rude. Love does not demand its own way. It is not irritable or touchy. It does not hold grudges and will
hardly even notice when others do it wrong.
It is never glad about injustice, but rejoices whenever truth wins out. If you love someone you will be
loyal to him no matter what the cost. You will always believe in him, always expect the best of him, and
always stand your ground in defending him.
All the special gifts and powers from God will someday come to an end, but love goes on forever...
There are three things that remain -- faith, hope, and love -- and the greatest of these is love.
In the next chapter the apostle Paul, inspired by the Holy Spirit, admonishes: "Let love be your greatest
aim."
Let me share with you five vital truths about love that will help you understand the basis for loving by
faith.
God loves with agape, the love described in 1 Corinthians 13. He loves you so much that He sent His Son
to die on the cross for you, that you might have everlasting life. His love is not based on performance.
Christ loves you so much that while you were yet a sinner, He died for you.
God's love for you is unconditional and undeserved. He loves you in spite of your disobedience, your
weakness, your sin and your selfishness. He loves you enough to provide a way to abundant, eternal life.
From the cross Christ cried out, "Father, forgive them for they know not what they are doing." If God
loved those who are sinners that much, can you imagine how much He loves you -- His child through
faith in Christ and who seeks to please Him?
The parable of the prodigal son, as recorded in Luke 15, illustrates God's unconditional love for His
children. A man's younger son asked his father for his share of the estate, packed his belongings, and
took a trip to a distant land where he wasted all of his money on parties and prostitutes. About the time
that his money was gone, a great famine swept over the land, and he began to starve. He finally came to
his senses and realized that his father's hired men at least had food to eat. He decided, "I will go to my
father and say, 'Father, I have sinned against both heaven and you, and am no longer worthy of being
called your son. Please take me on as a hired man."
While he was still a long distance away, his father saw him coming and was filled with loving pity. He ran
to his son, embraced him and kissed him. I think that the reason he saw his son coming while he was still
a long distance away was that he was praying for his son's return and spent much time each day
watching that lonely road on which his son would return.
Even as the son was making his confession, the father interrupted to instruct the servants to kill the
fatted calf and prepare for a celebration -- his lost son had repented; he had changed his mind and had
returned to become part of the family again.
God demonstrated His love for us before we were Christians, but this story makes it obvious that God
continues to love his child who has strayed far from Him. He eagerly awaits his return to the Christian
family and fellowship.
Even when you are disobedient, he continues to love you, waiting for you to respond to His love and
forgiveness. Paul writes:
Since by his blood he did all this for us as sinners, how much more will he do for us now that he has
declared us not guilty? Now he will save us from all of God's wrath to come. And since, when we were
his enemies, we were brought back to God by the death of His Son, what blessings he must have for us
now that we are his friends, and he is living within us!
The love that God has for you is far beyond our human comprehension. Jesus prayed, "My prayer for all
of them (the disciples and believers of all ages) is that they will be of one heart and mind, just as you and
I are, Father...I in them and you in me, all being perfected into one -- so that the world will know you sent
me and will understand that you love them as much as you love me."
Think of it! God loves you as much as He loves His only begotten Son, the Lord Jesus. What a staggering,
overwhelming truth to comprehend! You need have no fear of someone who loves you perfectly. You
need never be reluctant to trust God with your entire life for He truly loves you. And the almost
unbelievable part of it is that He loves you even when you are disobedient.
Even on the human level, loving parents display such love. I loved my sons as much when they were
disobedient as I did when they were good. For their sakes, because I do love them, I sometimes found it
necessary to correct them. So it is in your relationship with God. When you are disobedient, He
disciplines or corrects you because He loves you.
Have you quite forgotten the encouraging words God spoke to you, his child? He said, "My son, don't be
angry when the Lord punishes you. Don't be discouraged when he has to show you where you are
wrong. For when he punishes you, it proves that he loves you...Let God train you, for he is doing what
any loving father does for his children. Whoever heard of a son who was never corrected?
Since we respect our fathers here on earth, though they punish us, should we not all the more cheerfully
submit to God's training so that we can begin to really live?
Our earthly fathers trained us for a few brief years, doing the best for us that they knew how, but God's
correction is always right and for our best good, that we may share his holiness. Being punished isn't
enjoyable while it is happening -- it hurts! But afterwards we can see the result, a quiet growth in grace
and character.
Christ's death on the cross has once and for all satisfied the wrath and justice of God for the believer's
sin. God chastens and disciplines you to help you grow and mature spiritually.
The early Christians endured persecution, hardships and unbelievable suffering. Yet Paul wrote to them:
Who then can ever keep Christ's love from us? When we have trouble or calamity, when we are hunted
down or destroyed, is it because He doesn't love us anymore? And if we are hungry, or penniless, or in
danger, or threatened with death, has God deserted us? No, for the Scriptures tell us that for his sake we
must be ready to face death at every moment of the day -- we are like sheep awaiting slaughter; but
despite all this overwhelming victory is ours though Christ who loved us enough to die for us.
For I am convinced that nothing can ever separate us from his love. Death can't, and life can't. The angels
won't, and all the powers of hell itself cannot keep Gods' love away. Our fears for today, or worries about
tomorrow or where we are -- high above the sky, or in the deepest ocean -- nothing will ever be able to
separate us from the love of God demonstrated by our Lord Jesus Christ when He died for us.
Such love is beyond our ability to grasp with our minds, but it is not beyond our ability to experience
with our hearts.
A certain lawyer asked Jesus, "Sir, which is the most important command in the laws of Moses?"
Jesus replied, "'Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul and mind.' This is the first and greatest
commandment. The second most important is similar: 'Love your neighbor as much as you love yourself.'
All the other commandments and all the demands of the prophets stem from these two laws and are
fulfilled if you obey them. Keep only these and you will find that you are obeying all the others."
At one time in my Christian life I was troubled over the command to love God so completely. How could I
ever measure up to such a high standard? Two very important considerations have helped me to desire
to love and please Him completely.
First, the Holy Spirit has filled my heart with God's love, as promised in Romans:
We know how dearly God loves us, and we feel this warm love everywhere within us because God has
given us the Holy Spirit to fill our hearts with His love.
Second, by meditating on the attributes of God and the wonderful things He has done and is doing for
me, I find my love for Him growing. I love Him because He first loved me.
How could God love me so much that He was willing to die for me? Why should God choose me to be His
child? By what merit do I deserve to be his ambassador to tell this good news of His love and forgiveness
to the world? On what basis do I deserve the privilege of His constant presence and His in-dwelling
Spirit, of His promise to supply all of my needs according to His riches in glory? Why should I have the
privilege -- denied to most of the people of the world who do not know our Savior -- of awaking each
morning with a song in my heart and praise to Him on my lips for the love and joy and peace that He so
generously gives to all who place their trust in his dear Son, the Lord Jesus?
I was a new Christian when I proposed to Vonette, who is now my wife. She had been an active church
member, although -- I discovered later -- she was not a Christian at that time. Imagine her distress when,
in my zeal for Christ, I explained to her that I loved God more than I loved her and that He would always
be first in my life. I failed to explain, nor did I even realize at the time, that it was exactly because of my
love for God that I was able to love her so much. Later, before we were married, she too experienced
God's love and forgiveness and became His child.
Through the years He has become first in her life also, and because He is now first in each of our lives, we
enjoy a much deeper love relationship than we could otherwise have known. Though my responsibilities
in His service take me to many parts of the world and I am often away from her and our home, we both
find our joy and fulfillment in Him. The times when we are privileged to be together are all the richer
because of our mutual love for Him and His love for us.
The one who has not yet learned to love God and to seek Him above all else and all others is to be pitied,
for that person is missing the blessings that await all who love God with all their heart, soul and mind.
For example, billiard balls, rolling freely on a table, naturally bounce away from each other because of
the nature of their construction. But if we tie strings to several balls and lift them perpendicular to the
table, the balls will cluster together.
When individual Christians are vitally yoked to Christ and related to God and are walking in the Spirit,
loving Him with all their hearts, souls and minds, they will fulfill God's command to love others as
themselves.
If you love your neighbor as much as you love yourself you will not want to harm or cheat him, or kill him
or steal from him. And you won't sin with his wife or want what is his or do anything else the Ten
Commandments say is wrong. All ten are wrapped up in this one, to love your neighbor as you love
yourself. Love does no wrong to anyone. That's why it fully satisfies all of God's requirements. It is the
only law you need.
It is love for God and for others that results in righteousness, in fruit, and in glory to Christ.
Also, you were commanded to love others because such love testifies to your relationship with the
Father. You demonstrate that you belong to Christ by your love for others. The apostle John practically
equates your salvation with the way you love others when he says that if you don't love others, you do
not know God, for He is love.
John says:
If someone who is supposed to be a Christian has money enough to live well, and sees a brother in need,
and won't help him -- how can God's love be within him? Little children, let us stop just saying we love
people; let us really love them, and show it by our actions.
Jesus says:
As a Christian you should love your neighbor because your neighbor is a creature of God made in the
image of God; because God loves your neighbor; and because Christ died for your neighbor. Following
the example of our Lord, you should love everyone, even as Christ did. You should devote your life to
helping others experience His love and forgiveness.
There is a saying, "Love your friends and hate your enemies." But I say: Love your enemies! Pray for
those who persecute you! In that way you will be acting as true sons of your Father in heaven. For he
gives his sunlight to both the evil and the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust too.
If you are friendly only to your friends, how are you different from anyone else? Even the heathen do
that.
When Christians begin to act like Christians and love God, their neighbors, their enemies and especially
their Christian brothers -- regardless of color, race or class -- we will see in our time, as in the first
century, a great transformation in the whole of society. People will marvel when they observe our love in
the same way people marveled when they observed those first century believers saying, "How they love
one another."
I counsel many students and older adults who are not able to accept themselves. Some are weighted
down with guilt because of unconfessed sins; others are not reconciled to their physical handicaps. Still
others feel inferior mentally or socially. My counsel to one and all is, "God loves you and accepts you as
you are. You must do the same. Get your eyes off yourself! Focus your love and attention on Christ and
on others. Begin to lose yourself in service for him and for your fellow man."
God's kind of love is a unifying force among Christians! Paul admonishes us to "put on love, which is the
perfect bond of unity" that our "hearts may be encouraged, having been knit together in love." Only
God's universal love can break through the troublesome barriers that are created by human differences.
Only a common devotion to Christ -- the source of love -- can relieve tension, ease mistrust, encourage
openness, bring out the best in people, and enable them to serve Christ together in a more fruitful way.
One mother shared that the discovery of these principles enabled her to be more patient and kind to her
husband and children. "The children were driving me out of my mind with all of their childish demands,"
she confided. "I was irritable with them, and because I was so miserable, I was a critical and nagging
wife. No wonder my husband found excuses to work late at the office. It is all different now -- God's love
permeates our home since I learned how to love by faith."
A husband reported, "My wife and I have fallen in love all over again, and I am actually enjoying working
in my office with men whom I couldn't stand before I learned how to love by faith."
Just as surely as "those who are in the flesh (the worldly, carnal person) cannot please God," so in your
own strength you cannot love as you ought.
You cannot demonstrate agape, God's unconditional love for others, through your own efforts. How
many times have you resolved to love someone? How often have you tried to manufacture some kind of
positive, loving emotion toward another person for whom you felt nothing? It is impossible, isn't it? In
your own strength it is not possible to love with God's kind of love.
By nature people are not patient and kind. We are jealous, envious and boastful. We are proud, haughty,
selfish and rude, and we demand our own way. We could never love others the way God loves us!
4. You Can Love With God's Love
It was God's kind of love that brought you to Christ. It is this kind of love that is able to sustain and
encourage you each day. Through His love in you, you can bring others to Christ and minister to fellow
believers as God has commanded.
God's love was supremely expressed in the life of Jesus Christ. You have a perfect, complete picture of
God's kind of love in the birth, character, teachings, life, death and resurrection of His Son.
How does this love enter your life? It becomes yours the moment you receive Jesus Christ and the Holy
Spirit comes to indwell your life. The Scripture says, "We feel this warm love everywhere within us
because God has given us the Holy Spirit to fill our hearts with his love." God is Spirit and the "fruit of
the Spirit is love..." When you are controlled by the Spirit, you can love with God's love.
When Christ comes into your life and you become a Christian, God gives you the resources to be a
different kind of person. With the motivation, He also gives you the ability. He provides you with a new
kind of love.
But how do you make love a practical reality in your life? How do you love? By resolutions? By self-
imposed discipline? No. The only way to love is explained in my final point.
Everything about the Christian life is based on faith. You love by faith just as you received Christ by faith,
just as you are filled with the Holy Spirit by faith, and just as you walk by faith.
If the fruit of the Spirit is love, you may logically ask, "Is it not enough to be filled with the Spirit?" This
will be true from God's point of view, but it will not always be true in your actual experience.
Demonstrating God's Love Requires Faith
Many Christians have loved with God's love and have demonstrated the fruit of the Spirit in their lives
without consciously or specifically claiming His love by faith. Yet, without being aware of the fact, they
were indeed loving by faith; therefore, they did not find it necessary to claim God's love by faith as a
specific act.
Hebrews 11:6 says, "without faith it is impossible to please Him." Obviously there will be no
demonstration of God's love where there is no faith.
If you have difficulty in loving others, remember that Jesus has commanded, "Love each other as much
as I love you." It is God's will for you to love. He would not command you to do something that He will
not enable you to do. In 1 John 5:14, 15, God promises that if you ask anything according to His will, He
hears and answers you. Relating this promise to God's command, you can claim by faith the privilege of
loving with His love.
God has an unending supply of His divine, supernatural, agape love for you. It is for you to claim, to grow
on, to spread to others, and thus to reach hundreds and thousands with the love that counts, the love
that will bring them to Jesus Christ.
In order to experience and share this love, you must claim it by faith; that is, trust His promise that He
will give you all that you need to do His will on the basis of His command and promise.
This truth is not new. It has been recorded in God's Word for two thousand years. But it was a new
discovery to me that early morning some years ago and, since that time, to many thousands of other
Christians with whom I have shared it. When I began to practice loving by faith, I found that problems of
tension with other individuals seemed to disappear, often miraculously.
In one instance, I was having a problem loving a fellow staff member. It troubled me. I wanted to love
him. I knew that I was commanded to love him; yet, because of certain areas of inconsistency and
personality differences, it was difficult for me to love him. But the Lord reminded me of 1 Peter 5:7, "Let
him have all your worries and cares, for he is always thinking about you and watching everything that
concerns you." I decided to give this problem to Him and love this man by faith. When I claimed God's
love for the man by faith, my concern lifted. I knew the matter was in God's hands.
An hour later, I found under my door a letter from that very man, who had no possible way of knowing
what I had just experienced. In fact, his letter had been written the day before. The Lord has foreseen
the change in me. This friend and I met together that afternoon and had the most wonderful time of
prayer and fellowship we had ever experienced together. Loving with God's love by faith had changed
our relationship.
Two gifted attorneys had great professional animosity, even hatred one for the other. Even though they
were distinguished members of the same firm, they were constantly criticizing and making life miserable
for each other.
One of the men received Christ through our ministry and some months later came for counsel.
"I have hated and criticized my partner for years," he said, "and he has been equally antagonistic toward
me. But now that I am a Christian, I don't feel right about continuing our warfare. What shall I do?
"Why not ask your partner to forgive you and tell him that you love him?" I suggested.
"I could never do that!" he exclaimed. "That would be hypocritical. I don't love him. How could I tell him I
love him when I don't?"
I explained that God commands His children to love even their enemies and that His agape,
supernatural, unconditional love is an expression of our will which we exercise by faith.
"You will note," I explained, "that each of these descriptions of love is not an expression of the emotions,
but of the will."
Together we knelt to pray and my friend asked God's forgiveness for his critical attitude toward his law
partner and claimed God's love for him by faith.
Early the next morning, my friend walked into his partner's office and announced, "Something wonderful
has happened to me. I have become a Christian. And I have come to ask you to forgive me for all that I
have done to hurt you in the past and to tell you that I love you."
His partner was so surprised and convicted of his own sin that he responded to this amazing confession
by asking my friend to forgive him. Then to my friend's surprise, his partner said, "I would like to become
a Christian, too. Would you show me what I need to do?"
After my friend showed him how through the Four Spiritual Laws, they knelt together to pray. Then they
both came to tell me of this marvelous miracle of God's love.
A special assistant to a former governor of California once visited our headquarters at Arrowhead
Springs, and during his visit he received Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord. He began to discover how to love
by faith. Recently his son had left home after they had had an argument. Contemplating the problem,
this new Christian realized that he had never told his son that he loved him.
On his way home from Arrowhead Springs, he asked the Lord to bring his son home so that he could
make things right. He wanted to express his love for him. As he neared his home, his heart quickened.
The upstairs light was on indicating that the son had come home! Soon, father and son embraced,
became reconciled, and established a new relationship founded on God's forgiving love.
A young college football player, who had been raised in a community where blacks are resented, had
always found it impossible to love blacks. One evening he heard me talk to a group of racially mixed
students about loving by faith, especially in reference to loving those of other races.
"As you prayed," he told me later, "I claimed God's love for the black man. Then, as I left the
amphitheater, the first person I saw was a black man, and he was talking to a white girl. Now that is
about as explosive a situation as you can imagine for a man who hates blacks. But suddenly I felt a
compassion for that black man! At one time, I would have hated him and probably would have been
rude and angry with him. But God heard my prayer."
That same evening a young black couple approached me in the lobby of the Arrowhead Springs hotel.
They were radiant.
"Something wonderful happened to me tonight," the young woman said. I was liberated from my hatred
for the white man. I have hated whites since I was a little girl. I have known that as a Christian I should
love white people, but I couldn't help myself. I hated whites and wanted to get revenge. Tonight I have
begun to love whites by faith, and it really works."
The young man added, "It worked for me, too; now my hatred for whites is gone. Thank you for telling us
how to love by faith."
Whites who have hated blacks and blacks who have hated whites have discovered God's supernatural
love for each other. Christian husbands and wives who were living in conflict have claimed God's love by
faith, and miracles have resulted. Parent-child struggles have been resolved and generation gaps have
been bridged through loving by faith. Disputes in working situations have been resolved. Enemies cease
to be enemies when you love them by faith. God's love has a way of dissolving prejudice and breaking
down barriers.
The Greatest Power has Changed History
Love is the greatest power known to man. It changed the course of the first-century world, and God is
using it to bring a great revolution in the twentieth century. Nothing can overcome God's love.
In the first century there was a wedding of love and faith resulting in a great spiritual revolution
throughout the known world. Then both were lost during the Dark Ages. The realization of Martin Luther
and his colleagues that the "just shall live by faith" ushered in the Reformation and another mighty
movement of God's Spirit. But there was little love. In fact, there was often great conflict.
Today, God is bringing back to our remembrance the biblical wedding of the two -- faith and love.
Through faith, that supernatural, divine love of God will reach out where nothing else can go to capture
men and women for Christ. The love which results from that faith will captivate people everywhere so
that, as we live and love by faith, we will spread God's love throughout the world. This love is contagious,
attractive and aggressive. It creates hunger for God. It is active -- constantly looking for loving things to
do, people to uplift, and lives to change.
Leonard is an example. The night he received Christ as his personal Savior, his heart was filled with love,
and a great change came over him. Until then he had hated everyone and everything.
Often when he came home drunk at night, he would kick his dog to get him off the porch. In the process,
the dog would bark, growl and try to bite him. Reeling and rocking under the influence of alcohol,
Leonard would chase the dog around the table outside.
Soon his wife would get into the fray. They would curse each other and fight. Eventually, he would kick
the dog off the porch, scattering chairs and flower pots in all directions.
"But the night I received Christ," he relates, "I was so filled with love I think even the dog sensed I was
different. He raised himself on his belly and crawled toward me, then lay down on the same feet that
had kicked him all the other nights."
Agape love frequently expresses itself as a flow of compassion. Jesus said, "Rivers of living water shall
flow from the inmost being of anyone who believes in me." Compassion is one of these rivers. It is a
gentle stream of tenderness and concern for another person's need. Such love compelled Jesus to feed
the hungry, comfort the sorrowing, heal the sick, teach the multitude, and raise the dead.
Most of us at some time in our lives have experienced this flow of love toward someone.
Perhaps you felt it while washing the dishes, or while working on the job, or driving down the freeway, or
sitting in a classroom. You couldn't explain it, but your impulse was to do something special for that
person.
I encourage you to take the first step; start loving by faith and follow that flow. It is Gods compassion
streaming toward the one in need. The tug of love within you means that He is filling you with godly
compassion and that He has chosen you to minister to that individual.
Ask God to manifest His tender compassion through you in some way today. As you pray, ask Him to lay
someone on your heart. When you sense God's love flowing through you to that individual, find out his
need and begin ministering to that need. By following the leading of Gods Spirit, you can help those
whom the Lord has prepared for His transforming touch, and you will become part of His miraculous
provision. When God leads you to help someone, He will enable you to do what He leads you to do.
A Japanese magazine has a picture of a butterfly on one of its pages. Its color is a dull gray until warmed
by one's hand. The touch of a hand causes the special inks in the printing to react, and the dull gray is
transformed into a flashing rainbow of color.
What other things can be thus changed by the warmth of your interest and agape love? Your family?
Your church? Your city? This hurting world is hungry for the touch of someone who cares -- who really
cares! Through God's agape kind of love, you can be that someone.
But what about those who seem unlikable? People with whom you may have difficulty getting along?
Individuals whose attitudes rub you the wrong way? I encourage you to make a list of people you do not
like and begin to love them by faith.
Perhaps you will place yourself on the list. Have you thought of applying the truths of 1 Corinthians 13 to
yourself by faith? Ask God to help you see yourself as He sees you. You have no reason to dislike yourself
when your Creator has already forgiven you and demonstrated his unconditional love by dying for you!
If Christ is in you, you are complete because Christ Himself is perfect love, perfect peace, perfect
patience, perfect kindness. He is all goodness, and He is in you! Whenever Satan tries to attack you by
reminding you of sins which you have already confessed or by magnifying your weaknesses and
shortcomings, claim in faith the forgiveness and righteousness of God, and thank Him that, on the
authority of His Word, you do not have to be intimidated by Satan's accusation.
Thank God that you are His child and that your sins are forgiven. Thank God that Satan has no control
over you except that which is allowed by God. Then cast this care on the Lord as we are commanded to
do in 1 Peter 5:7.
Perhaps your boss, a fellow employee, your spouse, your children or your father or mother is on the list
of those whom you will love by faith. Pray for each person. Ask the Holy Spirit to fill you with Christ's love
for all of them. Then, seek to meet with them as you draw upon God's limitless inexhaustible,
overwhelming love for them by faith. Expect God to work through you! Watch Him use your smile, your
words, your patience to express His love for each individual.
Love by faith every one of your "enemies" -- everyone who angers you, ignores you, bores you or
frustrates you. People are waiting to be loved with God's love.
A homemaker who, through a long cold winter, had seen her family through mumps, measles, a broken
nose, 3 new teeth for the baby and countless other difficulties, reached the point where these pressures
and demands became too much for her. Finally, on her knees, she began to protest, "Oh Lord! I have so
much to do!" But imagine her surprise when she heard herself say, "Oh Lord! I have so much to love!"
You will never run out of opportunities to love by faith.
Remember, the agape kind of love is an act of the will, not just an emotion. You love by faith. By faith,
you can claim God's step by step, person by person.
"The fruit of the Spirit is love..." Like fruit, love grows. Producing fruit requires a seed, then a flower, then
pollination, then warm sun and refreshing rains, and even some contrary winds. Similarly in daily life,
your love will be warmed by joy, watered by tears and spread by the winds of circumstances.
God uses all that you experience to work His will in your life. He is the one who makes your love grow. It
is a continual, ever-increasing process. As Paul says, "May the Lord make your love to grow and overflow
to each other and to everyone else..."
Now, how does loving by faith motivate you to engage in aggressive personal evangelism and contribute
to the fulfillment of the Great Commission?
When you begin to truly love God by faith with all of your heart, soul, mind and strength and to love
your neighbors as yourself, you will begin to see men as God sees them -- as individuals of great worth,
as those for whom Christ died. As a result, we shall be motivated by the same love which constrained the
apostle Paul who said, "Everywhere we go we talk about Christ to all who will listen."
Love, God's kind of love, causes the Great Commission to become a personal responsibility and privilege.
When non-Christians observe believers not only saying that they love one another, but also proving it by
their actions, they, like their first-century counterparts, will marvel at "how they love one another" and
will be drawn to receive and worship our Savior with us.
How exciting it is to have such a dynamic, joyful force available to us! And it all comes from our loving
Savior, Jesus Christ, who explicitly promises in His Word all that you need. You need not guess, nor hope,
nor wish. You can claim this love by faith, right now, on the basis of God's command to love and His
promise to answer whenever you pray for anything according to His will.
Why not make this prayer your own: "Lord, You would never have commanded me to love had You not
intended to enable me to do so. Therefore, right now, on the authority of Your commands for me to love
and on the authority of Your promise to answer if I asked anything according to Your will, I personally
claim Your love -- the 1 Corinthians 13 kind of love -- for You, for all people, and for myself. Amen."
Remember, How You Can Love by Faith is a transferable concept. You can master it by reading it six
times; then pass it on to others as our Lord commands us in Matthew 28:20, "Teach these new disciples
to obey all the commands I have given you." The apostle Paul encouraged us to do the same: "The things
you have heard me say in the presence of many witnesses entrust to reliable men who will also be
qualified to teach others" (2 Timothy 2:2).