A single passage will distinctly set before us the nature of Love as required in the Bible—that love which comprehends all other virtues, and the exercise of which is the “fulfilling of the law.” “Hereby,” says the sacred writer, “we perceive the love of God.” The phrase “of God” is not found in the original. The passage, as it there stands, reads thus: “By this we know love;” that is, we know the nature of the love which the Scriptures require, when they affirm, that “love is the fulfilling of the law.” What is that in which, according to the express teaching of inspiration, we learn the nature of this love? “Because he laid down his life for us: and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren.” In the act of “laying down his life for us,” we are here told, that the love required of us is embodied and revealed. What is the nature of this love? I answer, 1. It is not a conviction of the Intelligence, nor any excited state of the Sensibility. No such thing is here referred to. 2. It does and must consist exclusively in a voluntary act, or intention. “He laid down his life for us.” What is this but a voluntary act? Yet this is love, the “love which is the fulfilling of the law.” 3. As an act of Will, love must consist exclusively in a voluntary devotion of our entire powers to one end, the highest good of universal being, from a regard to the idea of duty. “He laid down his life for us.” “We ought to lay down our lives for the brethren.” In each particular here presented, a universal principle is expressed and revealed. Christ “laid down his life for us,” because he was in a state of voluntary consecration to the good of universal being. The particular act was put forth, as a means to this end. In a voluntary consecration to the same end, and as a means to this end, it is declared, that “we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren.” When, therefore, the Scriptures require love of us, they do not demand the existence of particular convictions of the Intelligence, nor certain states of the Sensibility. They require the voluntary consecration of our entire being and interests to the great end of universal good. In this act of consecration, and in the employment of all our powers and interests, under the control of this one intention, we fulfil the Law. We fully discharge all obligations, actual and conceivable, that are devolved upon us. The exercise of love, like that of repentance, is attended with particular convictions and feelings. These feelings are indirectly required in the precepts demanding love, and required, because when the latter does exist, the former will of course exist. |