Today I found myself reflecting on a word we use often, yet may not fully understand: love.
In modern speech, love is often linked to romance, attraction, or strong emotion. But in scripture, it often means something deeper.
Consider three relationships:
- Jonathan and David.
- Jesus and John.
- Jesus and Mary Magdalene.
In each case, scripture describes deep affection, loyalty, and devotion. Yet the writers seem less concerned with labeling the relationship than with showing the kind of love it expresses.
Jonathan loved David so deeply that he gave up his own claim to the throne and repeatedly risked his life to protect him. His love was shaped not by what he could receive, but by what he was willing to give.
John, often called “the disciple whom Jesus loved,” stayed near the Savior when many others fled. At the cross, he stood as a witness to faithfulness in Christ’s darkest hour.
Mary Magdalene’s devotion was just as striking. She remained near the cross, went to the tomb while it was still dark, and became the first witness of the risen Lord. Her love endured even when hope seemed gone.
What do these relationships have in common?
They reveal a love that reaches beyond emotion.
- A love that stays.
- A love that sacrifices.
- A love that remains faithful.
Perhaps this is why the Apostle Paul declared:
"And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity." (1 Corinthians 13:13)
The highest form of love is not possession, control, or mere affection.
It is a covenant of the heart that seeks another's good, even when no reward is expected in return.
It is a commitment to another person’s good, even when that commitment requires sacrifice.
In recovery, I have seen this kind of love in sponsors who answer late-night calls, in friends who stay when life grows hard, and in family members who keep believing when belief feels impossible.
And I have seen it most perfectly in Jesus Christ.
The Savior’s love was not only spoken; it was shown. He taught, healed, forgave, comforted, suffered, and ultimately gave His life for others.
Perhaps the deeper meaning of love is found not simply in what we feel, but in what we faithfully choose to do.
- Love is choosing to remain.
- Love is the willingness to serve.
- Love is the courage to sacrifice.
- Love is faithfulness in action.
Seen this way, the relationships of Jonathan and David, Jesus and John, and Jesus and Mary Magdalene bear witness to a timeless truth:
Love is not measured by what it receives.
It is measured by what it faithfully gives.
May we all find this LOVE in each of our days
Amen




