We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

Not to rebuke sin is a form of hatred, not love (Lev. 19:17). Refusing to warn a person about his sin is just as unloving as refusing to warn him about a serious disease he may have. A person who does not warn a friend about his sin cannot claim love as his motive.
John MacArthur

God is utterly other than us – other in a way we express with the word holiness. Yes, He dwells within each Christian, but He’s not you. He isn’t the same as you, He isn’t a part of you, and He isn’t a “higher” you. Yes, you’re made in His image, but you’re not Him. You’re not the same as Him, you’re not part of Him, and you aren’t a “splinter” of Him – nor will you ever be. He doesn’t depend on anything else because He is what everything else depends on. He can’t be explained by anything else because He is what everything else must be explained by. Although we can know what He has taught us about Himself, we can never comprehend Him completely because He is greater than our minds. Anything He wills, He can do. He not only holds supreme power but He also uses it. Nothing can defeat Him and nothing can happen contrary to His will. He is also supremely good – light with no darkness. Although evil is real, He detests it and bring it to judgment. He knows everything, He pays attention to everything, and nothing escapes His notice. He’s not just a What and a Who, like me or like you, but one What in three Whos – one God in three persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. There is no one like Him. He is set apart. He is what He is, and there was never a time when He was not.
J. Budziszewski

Bible Reading: NOV23: Romans 1-2

The Book of Romans is probably the greatest
and most influential of all Paul’s Epistles. It is a
very profound, yet very simple, Epistle, written to and
for sinful mankind. It points out how lost and helpless
humanity really is, and how we can find deliverance in
Christ. It presents Christ’s redemption as the only hope
for humanity. The book was apparently written from
Corinth around a.d. 57.

The Book of Romans presents doctrinal truth on
justification, sanctification, adoption, judgment, and
identification with Christ. It presents dispensational
truth, showing the relationship between Israel and the
Church in the eternal plan of God. It presents practical
truth, teaching the secret of Christian victory over the
flesh, and the duties Christians have toward each other
and in relationship to government. If we, as Christians,
should try to master one book, it should be the Book of
Romans. The understanding of this precious book is a key
to unlocking the entire Word of God.

Chapter 1 contains the salutation. The writer
identifies himself, and those to whom the book is
written. They are identified as the saints at Rome, and
not the unbelievers. The theme is Christ and the Gospel
of salvation (verses 1-7). Paul tells us why he is
writing the book in verses 8-15, and what he is writing
about in verses 16 and 17. In the latter part of the
chapter, Paul explains to the Gentiles that they are
lost and engulfed by darkness and why man is condemned.
Then, in chapter 2, he turns to his own people, the
Jews, and shows them that they are equally condemned as
sinners before God. Paul deals with Israel’s unbelief
and explains that Jews and Gentiles alike are all under
sin.