I John 5:3
“For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments. And His commandments are not burdensome.”
The commandments tell us how to express the love of God. They tell us what form our efforts are to take to express this love and how it is to be directed towards both God and man. The first four commandments are primarily directed at God, while the last six are directed at man. Therefore, what we see is a channel that our loving conduct is supposed to take.
A person may have a thought to do good or to refrain from evil. A person may have a feeling of compassion or pity or mercy. A person may have a feeling of revulsion to something that is evil. However, it does not become love until the thought or the feeling motivates the person to act. Love is an act.
Not all acts of love may be the same. A person could perform an act of love coldly, reluctantly, or out of dutiful obligation. On the other hand, it can be done in joyous, wholehearted submission, with a great deal of enthusiasm, warm-heartedly, and with thankful devotion, or anywhere in between. Because of this, we have to ask, “Which is more attractive?” Love that is done in warm-hearted enthusiasm or coldly, reluctantly, or dutifully?
In Romans 3, the apostle Paul informs us that law tells us our duty, that is, what we are obliged to do. It defines right and wrong. Combined with this is the wonderful Personality behind it: We find that keeping His commandments—His law—teaches us God’s greatest attribute. The law does two things: It shows negative things and positive things. The negative is what sin—wrongdoing—is. The positive is love—the love of God.
His law is a reflection of His character in words. It points the way toward what we are to become. Answer this simple question: Does God call people to salvation and then throw away the road map? It is ridiculous to think such a thing.
The law is a window into the love of God. The law provides the basic outline, and then, when combined with the examples of God’s living and acting in both Testaments, it presents a full picture of love. God’s actions and Christ’s example amplify and make practical what the law says in words.
One has to begin somewhere, and this the law does in providing us with its letter. Then there is its spirit, which is the magnification of the letter, but it does not do away with the law. The law, then, is not only the guideline to what is right and wrong, but the law is also the guideline—in words—to what love is.