SECOND LORD'S DAY.
Question 4. What doth the law of God
require of us?
Answer.
Christ teacheth us that briefly, (Matt.
22:37, 40.) "Thou shalt love the Lord thy
God with all thy heart, with all thy soul, with all thy mind, and with all thy
strength. This is the first and the great command; and the second is like to
this: Thou
shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. On these two commands hang the whole law and
the prophets." EXPOSITION
Christ rehearses the substance of the law in Matt. 22:37, and in
Luke 10:27, from
Deut. 6:5,
and Lev. 19:8.
He explains what is meant by that declaration: "Cursed be he that confirmeth not
all the words of this law to do them;" that is, he who does not love God with
all his heart, with all his soul, with all his mind, and with all his strength,
and his neighbor as himself. These several parts must be explained more fully. Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God. To love God with the whole heart, is, upon a due
acknowledgment of his infinite goodness, reverently to regard and esteem him as
our highest good, to love him supremely, to rejoice and trust in him alone, and
to prefer his glory to all other things, so that there may not be in us the
least thought, inclination, or desire for anything that might be displeasing to
him; yea, rather to be willing to suffer the loss of all things that may be dear
to us, or to endure the heaviest calamity, than that we should be separated from
communion with him, or offend him in the smallest matter, and lastly, to direct
all this to the end that he alone may be glorified by us. The
Lord thy God. As if he would say, thou shalt love that God who is thy Lord and
thy God, who has revealed himself unto thee, who confers his benefits upon thee,
and to whose service thou art bound. There is here an opposition of the true God
to false gods. With
all thy heart. By the heart we are to understand the affections, desires, and
inclinations. When God, therefore, requires our whole heart, he desires that he
alone should be loved above everything else; that our whole heart should be
stayed on him, and not that a part should be given to him and a part to another.
In short, he wills that we make nothing equal to him, much less that we should
prefer any thing to him; or that we should be willing to share only a part of
his love. To love God thus, is what the Scripture calls "walking before God with
a perfect heart;" the opposite of which is not to walk before God with a perfect
heart, which is to halt, and not to surrender the whole person to him. Obj.
God alone is to be loved. Therefore, our neighbors, parents and kindred are not
to be loved. Ans. This argument is false, because it proceeds from a denial of
the manner, to that of the thing itself. God alone is to be loved supremely, and
above every thing else; that is, in such a manner that there may be nothing at
all which we either prefer or put upon an equality with him, and which we are
not heartily willing to part with for his sake. But we ought to love our
neighbors, parents, and others, not supremely, nor above every thing else, nor
in such a manner that we would rather offend God than our parents; but in
subordination to and on account of God, and not above him. With
all thy soul. The soul signifies that part of our being which wills, together
with the exercise of the will, as if he would say, thou shalt love with thy
whole will and purpose. With
all thy mind. The mind signifies the understanding, or that which perceives; as
if he would say, as much as thou knowest of God, so much shalt thou love
him--thou shalt bend all thy thoughts that thou mayest know God truly and
perfectly, and so shalt thou also love him. We can love God only as far as we
know him. We now love him imperfectly, because we know him only in part. But in
the life to come we shall know him perfectly, and shall, therefore, love him
perfectly; for "that which is in part shall be done away." (1 Cor. 13:10.) With
all thy strength. This embraces all actions, and exercises, at the same time,
both external and internal; that they may be in accordance with the law of God. This is the first and greatest commandment. The love of God is called the first commandment, because all the others proceed from this, as their source. It is the impelling, the efficient, and final cause of obedience to all the other commandments of God. For we love our neighbor because we love God, and that we may manifest our love to God in the love which we cherish towards our neighbor. It is called the greatest commandment
Obj.
The love of God is the greatest commandment. Therefore it is greater than faith,
and hence justifies rather than faith. Ans. Love is here to be understood as
including the entire obedience which we owe to God, in which faith is included,
which justifies, not of itself as a virtue, but correlatively, as it apprehends
and appropriates the merits of Christ. But the love which is opposed to faith,
and which in particular is so called, does not justify, because the application
of the righteousness of Christ is not made by love, but by faith alone; yea,
love springs from faith; for faith is the cause of all the other virtues. The
second is like to this: thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. To love thy
neighbor as thyself, is in view of thy love to God; or because thou lovest God,
do well unto thy neighbor according to all the commandments of the Lord; or will
and do to thy neighbor those things which thou wilt that he should do to thee.
Now every man is our neighbor. It is called the second commandment:
It is said to be like unto the first in three respects:
It is also unlike the first:
On
these two commandments hang the whole Law, and the Prophets; that is, the entire
doctrine of the Law and the Prophets, is reduced to these two heads; and all
obedience to the law, inculcated by Moses and the Prophets, arises from love to
God and love to our neighbor. Obj. But there are also many promises of the
Gospel in the Prophets. Therefore it would seem that the doctrine of the
Prophets is not properly restricted to these two commandments. Ans. Christ
speaks of the doctrine of the law, and not of the promises of the gospel, which
is evident from the question of the Pharisee, who asked him which was the
greatest commandment, and not, which was the principal promise in the law.
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