Readings for today: 1 Chronicles 6, Psalms 36, 39, 77, 78
I love how Eugene Peterson translates Psalm 36 in his paraphrased version of the Bible called The Message. “God’s love is meteoric, his loyalty astronomic, His purpose titanic, his verdicts oceanic. Yet in his largeness nothing gets lost; Not a man, not a mouse, slips through the cracks. How exquisite your love, O God! How eager we are to run under your wings, To eat our fill at the banquet you spread as you fill our tankards with Eden spring water. You’re a fountain of cascading light, and you open our eyes to light.” (Psalms 36:5-9 MSG) Isn’t that great? There’s just nothing like the love of God. We sing about it. We pray over it. We rest in it. We preach on it. We trust in it. It is literally the most powerful, life-transforming force in the universe.
Love is perhaps the most abused word in the English language. We throw it around all the time. Use it describe our desire for mundane things like different foods or activities or material possessions. We definitely use it to describe our connection to people as well but even there it gets a bit confused. When some people use the word “love”, they are speaking of something overtly sexual in nature. When others use the word “love”, they are talking more about friendship or companionship. Still others use the word “love” to describe an emotion so deep, it drives us to make huge sacrifices even to the point of laying down our lives. It is this last description of “love” that best fits the love God demonstrates for us on the cross. A love that would not let us go. A love that will not let us down. A love that never fails for it rests on a Savior who never fails.
Surely, there is nothing greater than the love of Christ for lost sinners like you and me? Nothing more amazing than His grace? Nothing as deep as His compassion? If you want to measure the width of the love of God, look to the outstretched hands of Jesus. If you want to measure the heights of the love of God, look to Jesus as He’s lifted up on the cross. If you want to measure the depth and the breadth of the love of Jesus, consider what He did in offering His perfect life to make atonement for the sins of the world. Reflect on the price He paid to secure our salvation. Consider the fact that God did not spare His own Son but sent Him to be a sacrifice for our sins. This is the love of God and it is indeed “meteoric”, “astronomic”, “titanic”, and “oceanic.”
Readings for tomorrow: None