Pseudo-Ussher:

Of the
Love of God

What is the Love of God?

It is an essential property in God, whereby he loves himself above all, and others for himself, 1 John 4:16; Rom. 5:8; John 3:16; Titus 3:4; Mal. 1:2, 3.

What learn you from hence?

That we should love him dearly, and other things for him.

That we may the better know what the love of God is, declare first, what love is in our selves?

It is a passion of the mind, whereby we are so affected towards the party whom we love, that we are rather his than our own, forgetting ourselves to do him good whom we so love.

And is love such a thing in God?

No: the true love of God is not such as our love is.

What difference is there?

There is great difference two ways. First, in time: for love was in God before it was in us, or in anything created; for he loved himself and us also before the world was, John 17:23. Secondly, they differ in nature and quality: for that love which is in God is most perfect and pure, without passion; but in us it is imperfect, and matched with passions, with impure affections, and grief of the mind.

After what manner doth the Scripture express the love of God?

In the Scriptures God does compare himself to a father and to a mother loving their children; to a hen gathering her chickens together under her wings; to a good shepherd seeking up his sheep, and to divers other things.

And wherefore serve these comparisons?

They are for our profit two ways. First, to show us that God’s love towards us, is most vehement and sincere. Secondly, to make us bold in coming to him, and calling upon him. So for this love Christ Jesus calls us by all the names of love, as his servants, his kinsmen, his friends, his spouse, his brethren, and by many names more: to shew, that he loves us with all loves, the father’s love, the mother’s love, the masters love, the husbands love, the brothers love, &c., and if all Loves were put together, yet his love exceeds them all, for all could not do so much for us as he alone has done.

If Love does not signify any affection or passion in God, as it does in us: What then does it signify?

In God it signifies three things most perfect. First, the eternal good will of God towards some body, for the love of God (suppose towards the elect) is his everlasting good will, or his purpose and determination to shew them mercy, to do them Good, and to save them, as in Rom. 9:11, 13. Secondly, the effects themselves of this love or good will, whether they be temporal concerning this life, or eternal concerning the life to come, as in 1 John 3:1. Thirdly, the pleasure and delight which he takes in that which he loves: and so it is taken in Psalm 45:7.

That things does God love besides himself?

Besides himself, God loves all things else, whatsoever he made, but he loves not sin and iniquity, for he never made it, as St. John saith, 1 John 2:16. Again, he loves his Son, being manifested in the flesh; and he loves his chosen children for his Son’s sake, with whom he is well pleased, Matt. 3:17.

Object. 1. The Scripture saith, That God doth hate all that work Iniquity: How then can God both hate and love one and the same Man?

In every wicked man we must consider two things: first, his nature, secondly, his sin. His nature is the work of God, and that he loves: but his iniquity is not of God, and that he hates.

Object. 2. God doth afflict his Children; therefore he doth not love them.

Whom he loves he corrects, and, therefore, he corrects them because he loves them, even as a gold-smith tries his gold in the fire, because he loves it.

Whether does God love all alike, or no?

No: he prefers mankind before all his other creatures; for which cause God is called philanthropos, that is, a lover of men, and this appears by three effects of his love.

First, he made him according to his own image; that is, in righteousness and true holiness, Gen. 1:26; Eph. 4:24.

Secondly, he made him lord over all his creatures, Psalm 8:5, 6.

Thirdly, he gave his own Son to death for his ransom.

Doth God love all men alike?

No: for he loves his Elect better than the Reprobate, for the elect he calls effectually by his Spirit in their hearts, when he calls others but by the outward voice of the gospel, &c.

Again, amongst the elect themselves, some are actually wicked, and not yet reconciled nor called; as was Paul before his conversion, but the rest are called and already made holy by faith in Christ, as Paul was after his conversion, and of these, he loves the latter sort with a greater measure of love than the former, as the Scripture testifies, Prov. 8:17.

What manner of love does God bear to his elect?

It has three adjuncts or properties: First, it is free without desert.

Secondly, it is great without comparison.

Thirdly, it is constant without any end.

How is the Love of God said to be free?

It is free two ways. First, because nothing caused God to love us, but his own goodness and grace: and therefore St. John says, that his love was before ours, 1 John 4:7.

Secondly, it is free, because God in loving us, did not regard any thing that belonged to his own commodity: for, as David saith, he hath no need of our goods; but only to our own salvation he loved us, Psalm 16:2.

Wherein doth the greatness of God’s love appear to his elect?

It appears two ways: First, by the means which God used to save us by, that is, the death of his Son: and so St. John sets forth his Love, 1 John 3:16, when he says ἕτϖ, that is, so, as if he should say, so vehemently, so ardently, so earnestly, so wonderfully did he love us, that for our salvation he spared not his own only begotten Son, but gave him to the death of the cross for our salvation.

What else does set forth the greatness of God’s Love unto us?

The consideration of our own selves, for he did not only give his only Son to death for us, but it was for us being his enemies. And this circumstance is used by the apostle to express the same, Rom. 5:7, 8.

Where find you it written, that God’s Love is constant and perpetual?

That is manifestly shown in these Scriptures following, Hos. 11:9; John 13:1; Rom. 11:29, for as God is unchangeable in His essence and nature; so is he unchangeable in his love, which is his essence and nature: and therefore is God called love in the Scriptures, 1 John 4:8.

Uses of
God’s love.

What use must we make of God’s love?

First, it fills our hearts with gladness, when we understand that our God is so loving, and love itself: and what is this but the beginning of eternal life? if eternal life consists in the true knowledge of God, as our savior Christ says, John 17:3.

Secondly, out of knowledge of this love, as out of a fountain, springs the love of god and our neighbor, for St. John says, He that loves not, knows not God, for God is love, 1 John 4:8.

Thirdly, when we consider that God loves all his creatures which he made, it should teach us not to abuse any of the creatures, to serve our lusts and beastly affections, for God will punish them which abuse his beloved; as he punished the rich glutton, which abused the creatures of God, Luke 16.

Fourthly, we are taught to love all the creatures, even the basest of all, seeing that God loves them, and for the love he bears to us he made them, and we must (if we love them for God’s sake) use them sparingly, moderately, and equally or justly, to this end we are commanded to let our Cattle rest upon the Sabbath day, as well as our selves, to this end we are forbidden to kill the dam upon her nest, and to this end we are forbidden to muzzle the mouth of the ox which treads out the Corn, Deut. 25:4; 1 Cor. 9:9.

Fifthly, we are taught from hence to love mankind better than all other creatures, because God does so, and therefore we must not spare any thing that we have, that may make for the safety of his body, and the salvation of his soul. And for this cause, we are commanded to love our enemies, and to do them good; because our good God does so.

Sixthly, from God’s love, we learn to prefer the godly brethren, and those that profess sincerely the same religion that we profess before other men, because God’s love is greater to the elect, than to the reprobate: and this doth the apostle teach us, Gal. 6:10.

Seventhly, whereas God’s love is freely bestowed upon us, this teaches us to be humble, and to attribute no part of our salvation to our selves, but only to the free love of God.

Eighthly, from hence arises the certainty of our salvation, for if God’s love was so free and great when we were his enemies, much more will it be so, and constant also to us, being reconciled to God by Jesus Christ, Rom. 5:10.

[Psuedo-]James Ussher, A Body of Divinity (London: Printed by M.F. for Tho. Downes and Geo: Badger, 1645), 64-67. [Some reformatting; some spelling modernized; italics original; marginal notes cited inline; and underlining mine.]

[Note: 1) This work was not written by Ussher but was published without his knowledge or permission. Indeed, he disassociated himself from it. Hence I have labelled this the author as Pseudo-Ussher in the spirit of all the great pseudo works of the classics. 2) However, having acknowledged its spurious authorship, the theology reflected in what is quoted images what was then deemed as acceptable and standard Reformed theology. For this reason I post it here. 3) Lastly, from what little I have read of Ussher, this work does not even “read” like Ussher, it is surprising, therefore, that it has been recently republished and recently accepted as written by Ussher (eg Truman, et al.]

This entry was posted on Tuesday, September 30th, 2014 at 1:45 pm and is filed under God is Love: Electing and Non-Electing Love. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

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