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"Wherefore show ye to them. And
before the churches, the proof of your love" (2 Cor.
8:24). Love is capable of demonstration. Where it really
exists, it will manifest itself. It need not be made
known by mere assertion. We are told to love not in word
or in tongue, but in deed and in truth. In these days
there are many who, like some of old, show much love
with their mouths while their hearts are far from God.
The test of our love is not how much we talk about it,
but how much we manifest it in our lives. There are
three tests of love, which never fail to show exactly
just how much we love. Let us consider them in order.
1. How Much
We Serve
We are told
that Jacob loved Rachel so much that he served seven
years for her, and that those years seemed to him as
only a few days. The amount of our love to God is proved
by our willingness to serve him. If there is in us a
disposition to do only what we please to do, and if we
can, to disregard any of the known will of God, it is a
clear evidence that we do not love him. It matters not
what we profess, if we are not willing to put obedience
to God's will before everything else, it is from lack of
love.
Love makes
people willing-hearted. There are many things to do;
there are many ways to serve; and love prompts us to
serve wherever possible. If the work of God stands first
in our love, our hands will always be ready for service.
I have attended many camp-meetings, where I have noticed
those on whom the labor of the meeting fell. Everybody
was willing to sit in the meeting and enjoy the good
sermons and take all the blessings they could get; but
when it came to the labor and responsibility connected
with the meeting, willingness suddenly disappeared, and
a greater part of the burden fell upon the ministers and
a few consecrated brethren and sisters who loved God and
the people enough to go to work. I have often had the
occasion to call for volunteers for service, and have
often found that many people who can say "Amen" and
"Praise the Lord," and perhaps shout in meeting, become
suddenly silent when it comes to volunteering for work.
The test of their love proves that love is wanting.
In a certain
camp-meeting there was a young man who professed to be
saved, and was saved, so far as I know. I noticed,
however, that when others were busy at work in some
necessary service, he was always standing back a mere
onlooker. One day about the middle of the meeting this
young man came to the altar, and when asked what was the
trouble he said that he had backslidden. Being asked
what he had done, he said that he did not know. I said
to him: "I think I know your trouble. Whenever there has
been a meeting, you have been ready to go and enjoy all
you could of it; whenever a meal is ready, you are
always ready for it; but when there is any work to be
done, you are never ready. Now," I continued, "when
there is need of water at the boarding-house, you take a
bucket and go for it; when there is wood needed, get an
ax and use it, or when there is anything to do in which
you can help, be ready for it and do your part." He took
my advice, and from that time on he seemed to be a
different man. The reason many people get so few
blessings is because they do not love enough to serve.
There are
duties for all. There are opportunities everywhere.
Every one of them is a test of love. Brother, sister,
how does your love stand the test? Love will not
grumble; it will not complain; it will not shirk from
service. Do you love as fervently as you ought?
2. How Much
We Sacrifice
The mother
who loves her child thinks no sacrifice too great for
it. Even her life will she give for it, if need be. The
man who loves his country will, if the need should
arise, count no sacrifice too great. He who loves God as
truly as the mother loves her child or the patriot loves
his country is willing to sacrifice for God. Abraham
proved his love by not withholding his son. He offered
him freely in obedience to God's command. Paul loved,
and as a result he counted not his life dear to himself
so that he might do the work of God. Christ so loved the
world that he sacrificed everything for our salvation.
We say that
we love this glorious gospel; we say we desire to see it
spread to the ends of the earth; but how much do we love
it compared with our love of self? Do we love it more
than self, or equal with self, or far less than self?
Many persons spend willingly and even lavishly for self
who give sparingly and reluctantly to God. They spend
more for their pleasures than they give. Some spend more
for candy than they give to missions. Some spend more
for gasoline for pleasure-riding than they give to all
causes. In fact, some spend so much on their own selfish
desires that when a need of God's work is presented they
can truly say, "I can not give much." They might feel
disposed to give if they had anything to give, but are
they willing to deny themselves of some
self-gratification in order to have something to give?
There is the test of love that proves its real
direction-whether it runs our self-ward or God-ward. If
we love God and souls as much as we love self, we can
spend money for them just as willingly and with as
little reluctance or regret to see it go as if it were
being spent for ourselves. If we can not spend for God
and his work more willingly than for self, it is because
we do not love him more than self. If we do not get more
pleasure out of giving than we do out of consuming, we
may well question both the amount and quality of our
love and its direction. Often the work of God must go on
crutches because of lack of means while professors live
in luxury.
There is no
way to avoid the issue. There is plenty of money so that
all the work of the church could be properly financed
and no undue burden rest upon any. The fact is, there
are too many whose love is wanting in that quality which
draws out their hearts into the work of God until they
are willing to sacrifice for it. It is true that there
are many who do love and who prove it by their
sacrifices. But it is just as true that there are many
others who do not deny themselves and will not even from
a sense of duty, to say nothing of making willing
sacrifices through the prompting of love.
It is time
that we heard more of the practical side of love
preached from the pulpit and that people who profess
salvation and at the same time manifest an indifference
toward the salvation of souls and the work of the church
in general should not be left to drift along in coldness
and be lost at last. A sacrificing person or a
sacrificing church will be spiritual if the sacrifice is
prompted by love. People who are willing to serve and
sacrifice rarely backslide.
3. How Much
We Endure
Christ
proved his love by enduring the scoffs and ill-treatment
of the people and the shame and suffering of the cross.
By this he proved his love to be real. If our love is
genuine, as was that of the saints of old, we can
rejoice that we are counted worthy to suffer for His
name. Paul endured all things for the elect's sake, that
they might be saved. If we can not endure the little
persecutions, the unkind words, the sneering smiles, the
scoffs and jeers, of the unbelieving world, is it not
because our love lacks fervency? The early church took
joyfully the spoiling of their goods because they loved
their Lord far more than the loved their goods. God's
ministers in all ages have endured hardships and perils
and have suffered in a thousand ways without faltering,
because they loved souls as God loves them.
Sometimes
people quote the text, "We know that we have passed from
death unto life because we love the brethren;" but if
these same brethren do something that does not please
them, they are offended and grieved and are full of
complaint and murmuring, and it is hard for them to be
reconciled to their brethren. Is the love of such people
genuine? Does it really prove that they have passed from
death unto life? Many think that the preacher ought to
be willing to endure almost anything for the cause (and
so he should), but they do not consider that the same
love in them will give them the same spirit of endurance
and willingness to suffer as it gives to the minister.
Love that can not endure hardness, misrepresentation,
neglect, and such things, and still be sweet and strong,
needs to be increased.
Love makes
service sweet, sacrifice easy, and meek endurance
possible. Love enriches, ennobles, and blesses. It
sweetens the bitter cup; it lightens the heavy load. It
strengthens the faltering soul. Let us, therefore, see
that we have fervent love toward God, toward each other,
and toward the lost world.

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