“My song is love unknown, my Savior’s love to me, love to the
loveless shown that they might lovely be.
Oh, who am I that for my sake my Lord should take frail flesh and die?”
God is love, love unknown. His love isn’t unknown in the sense that we
cannot see it or hear of it. It isn’t
love that is hidden or secret. His love
is unknown because we cannot comprehend it, we cannot understand it. We cannot imagine why Christ would die for
someone like us. We know our sin, our
guilt, our shame better than anyone else.
We know that there is little in us that deserves salvation. But God is love. Saint Paul writes in Romans chapter five: “God
shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for
us.” This statement is the essence of
what the Gospel is: love shown to the loveless that they might lovely be. Our hymn immerses us in that mystery. “Oh, who am I that for my sake my Lord should
take frail flesh and die?” This hymn
isn’t about our love, which fails and falters, but about the Savior’s love for
us, shown to us on Calvary’s cross. This
love is shown despite our sin, and it is shown to destroy our sin, so that we
might be made lovely in the Father’s eyes forever.
No comments:
Post a Comment