When you think about God, do you think of God’s love for you or God’s disappointment in you?
Stop and think about it for a moment.
If you’re like most people and me, you don’t have to think very long to decide the answer; it’s God’s disappointment, his anger.
I’m becoming more and more convinced that Christians would live differently, our culture and churches would be different if we understood God’s love for us.
We read passages like Romans 8 and how nothing can separate us from the love of God and shrug. Then when we sin, we feel far from God and wonder why we don’t feel close.
We read how God sings over us in delight in Zephaniah but aren’t sure what that means or even how that would feel.
I had a conversation with a friend recently who gave me some pushback on my preaching. He told me that I spent too much time talking about God’s love and not enough time talking about God’s wrath. In his words, the gospel is what we have been saved from and what we are saved to, and I spent the majority of my time in a sermon on what God has saved us to.
The reality for many (especially in the reformed tribe) is to focus solely on God’s wrath and make little mention of his love. The Bible doesn’t say God is wrath. It says “God is love.”
I want to return to the question at the top. Is there a verse in the Bible that says God is disappointed in you?
Most people live like there is, but there isn’t.
Now, the Bible has plenty to say about life apart from God, sinful desires, giving into temptations and not letting go of past hurts. The Bible has plenty to say about shame, regret and other sins and negative emotions.
But it doesn’t say that God is disappointed in you.
Make no mistake, if you think God is disappointed in you, that will drastically impact your life.
If God’s love or God’s wrath is prominent in your mind, that determines so much of your life.
Back to my friend.
The reality is that I do spend more time on God’s love for us and what we have been saved to.
For a couple of reasons:
1. Jesus spent a lot of time on that. Many times, Jesus would talk with someone and end by saying, “Go and sin no more.” That is future-oriented.
2. The Bible is full of hope, and that’s what people walk into a church looking for. Every Sunday people walk into a church looking for hope and help. They may not say that, but that is what brought them there. The beautiful thing about this is that is precisely what the Bible has for us.
Now, to be clear before I get emails. When the text calls for it, talking about God’s wrath is something we do at our church (we spent almost a whole year in Romans once). It is in the Bible.
I’ve learned though that regardless of whether or not you have a church background, believing in God’s wrath is not difficult. Believing in His love is.