Everyone talks about it, but do we really know what it means?
Love today seems so…cheap. Couples profess their love to one another, and in a matter of years (sometimes months!), they’ve broken up or divorced. Maybe a figure in your life claimed to love you and yet used you and manipulated you.
Or, even if they didn’t outright betray or abuse you, maybe things felt one-sided, as though they didn’t really care about putting effort into the relationship.
And this is the love that God supposedly has?
It can’t be.
Thankfully, the Bible gives us a different picture of love—not of empty words and shallow emotions but of true expressions of love and noble feelings propelled by choice. God Himself embodies this love, showing how love gives and sacrifices for the other.
As we uncover this picture, you can expect to learn:
- What love is, according to Scripture
- The types of love
- The type of love we find in God
- What Jesus says about love
You just might find that love is very different from what you imagined—and so much better.
What is love according to Scripture?
Love, as described in the Bible, is selfless and unconditional, focusing on what’s best for the other and offering the freedom to choose whether to love in return. God Himself demonstrated this love by giving Jesus Christ to die for the sins of the world (John 3:16; Romans 5:6-8). He gave selflessly and unconditionally, yet He doesn’t push this gift on anyone; He allows us to choose whether we’ll reciprocate.
The clearest description of this love is in 1 Corinthians 13. This passage gives us an idea of what true love is and isn’t. Let’s take a look:
| 1 Corinthians 13 (ESV) | |
| What Love Is | What Love Isn’t |
| Patient | Envious |
| Kind | Boastful |
| Rejoicing in the truth | Arrogant |
| Bearing all things | Rude |
| Believing | Insistent on its own way |
| Hopeful | Irritable |
| Enduring | Resentful |
| Unfailing | Rejoicing in wrongdoing |
The one word that summarizes all of these character traits is selflessness. And it goes beyond words:
“Little children, let us not love in word or talk but in deed and in truth” (1 John 3:18, ESV).
Here’s what that looks like according to God’s Word:
- Serving one another (Galatians 5:13)
- Doing what’s best for the other (Romans 13:10)
- And even giving one’s life for another (John 15:13)
All of this can be summarized in the Ten Commandments, which provide the principles for loving God and loving one another:
“You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets” (Matthew 22:37-40, ESV).
The Ten Commandments express what it means to love, and when we love God, it’ll be natural for us to want to follow them (1 John 5:3; 2 John 1:6).
In the same token, sin and selfishness are the opposite of that love because they break the law (1 John 3:4). They include behaviors like adultery, murder, theft, covetousness, and hatred of others (1 John 4:19-21).
The good news about this law is that it helps to set clear boundaries around love. Loving someone doesn’t mean that anything goes in the relationship. Sometimes, the most loving thing to do is not allow unhealthy behavior (Proverbs 3:12), whether emotional or physical abuse, manipulation, gaslighting, or more.
Theologian Jiri Moskala, ThD, highlights this aspect of love:
“Love is also tough: It cannot tolerate sin, hatred, selfishness, and pride; in that sense, it is exclusive. Strong and healthy love understands but does not compromise with injustice and other forms of evil.”1
And as we mentioned, a key component of biblical love is freedom. A person with this kind of love will recognize that people are free to accept or reject that love.
This love looks so different from what we often see. But it’s what makes relationships safe and healthy.
What are the types of love in the Bible?
The English language only has one word for love, but Greek uses numerous words—many of which appear in the New Testament. The main ones, in English, are self-sacrificing love, brotherly love, self-love, and romantic love. These categories can help us understand more about God’s love.
We’ll look briefly at each one and how they show up in the Bible.
Agape

Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash
Agape is the Greek word for unconditional, selfless, and self-sacrificing love. It’s a love based on principle, and it’s “primarily a function of the head, the mind, the intellect.”2
This is the kind of love that chooses to do what’s best for someone else, even when you might not feel like it. It goes beyond emotions or attraction.
Here are a couple of examples in the Bible:
“Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you” (Matthew 5:44, ESV).
“We love because He first loved us” (1 John 4:19, ESV).
Phileo
Phileo is brotherly love or friendship love. It’s “more a matter of the heart, the emotions.”3 After all, you are usually friends with someone because you enjoy them and feel a sense of closeness to them. You don’t have to be around them—but you want to be.
It’s the kind of love Jesus had for his friend Lazarus (John 11:3). The word is also used to describe the love that believers in Christ are called to have for one another (Titus 3:15).
A couple of other Greek words are closely connected to this one:
- Philoxenia: hospitality or love toward strangers (Romans 12:13; Hebrews 13:2)
- Philostorgos: affection, especially between relatives or family members (Romans 12:10)
Philautia

Photo by Andrea Piacquadio
Philautia can refer to either self-love or self-obsession.
The first kind—self-love—isn’t selfish.
In fact, it’s biblical. Jesus calls us to love our neighbors as ourselves (Matthew 22:39). This involves recognizing our value and caring for who God has created us to be so that we can most effectively serve others.
Self-obsession, though, is what we find in passages like 2 Timothy 3:2, which describes the characteristics of people in the last days: “lovers of self, lovers of money, proud, arrogant, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy” (ESV).
Though the word lover is used to describe people who are “lovers of self” or “lovers of money,” this is far from the definition of love we’re describing throughout this article. Obsession and fixation are not love, though they may masquerade as such.
Eros
Eros is the Greek word for romantic or sexual love (not to be confused with lust, which is selfish).
The word itself is not actually used in the Bible, though we do see examples of it. The most prominent ones are in Song of Solomon, where the deep intimacy of sexual love is glorified:
“Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth—For your love is better than wine…. Draw me away!” (Song of Solomon 1:2, 4, NKJV).
What type of love is God’s love?

Photo by Emmanuel Phaeton on Unsplash
Many Christians have identified God’s love as the selfless, principled, freedom-giving agape. And no doubt, it is. However, the Bible also speaks of God’s love as phileo. And if you think about it, doesn’t the purest and truest of each kind of love give us a peek into who God is?
Nonetheless, let’s start with agape.
The Bible tells us that “God is love [agape]” (1 John 4:8, NKJV).
Pastor Ty Gibson points out that this verse is the “only definitive total-identity statement” about God in the Bible.4 It doesn’t say, “God is loving.” Instead, God is love in His very essence. And to represent this perfect love, God is a living relationship—the Trinity. The Godhead is a “picture of God as a three-way unity of perfect love.”5
Think of it this way:
Without someone else to love, it’s easy for an individual to be selfish—to be concerned with their own needs, wants, and interests. As a single person, you don’t have to think about a significant other when you want to hop on a plane for a spur-of-the-moment vacation, stay out later this evening, or take a new job.
Add another person to that picture, and now, you have to think about someone else. You’re giving and receiving love. But in this situation, it can still be easy to stray from pure love and become selfish as you both focus on getting your needs met by one another.
But perfect love that is never selfish and is always uplifting of others is what comes from God.
We can see this in the Trinitarian Godhead.
The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are in a constant rhythm of serving one another and giving love to us. The Old Testament brings out this love of God, using the word hesed, which is equivalent to the Greek agape.
Hesed has incredible depth. Gibson discusses this in his book A God Named Desire:
“As the Hebrew prophets endeavored to describe God and reach out to Him, hesed is the word they employed more frequently than any other, often coupling it with other words in an effort to expand its rich meaning.”6
Hesed is translated as mercy, goodness, lovingkindness, and everlasting kindness—to name a few biblical examples.7
It carries the ideas of:
- Loyalty
- Integrity
- Faithfulness
- Consistency
- Commitment
That’s the kind of love God has for each one of us. It’s a love so deep that He wouldn’t break His promise to us but instead came and died for us—even if we choose not to accept that gift:
“God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8, NKJV).
As this passage emphasizes, that love is also unconditional. Theologian John Peckham, PhD, who has written whole books on the love of God, says:
“God’s love is always unmerited. It’s never deserved. It’s never earned. It’s never something that you have to measure up to in order to receive.”8
And God chose to love us in this way, regardless of whether we would love Him in return. He gives us complete freedom to enter into a relationship with Him or not because He knows that true love cannot be forced.
But does God love us only out of principle—because He sees it as the right thing and chooses to? Or does He actually enjoy us and want us?
The picture gets better.
Agape or phileo?

Photo by Jackson David on Unsplash
If we stop at agape, we’re missing an important aspect of God’s love. Passages in the New Testament also use phileo to express it.
Take a look at this example when Jesus was speaking to His disciples:
“The Father Himself loves [phileo] you” (John 16:27, NKJV).
And the apostle Paul uses phileo to express the love we should have for God (1 Corinthians 16:22).
In other words, God has not only a principled, self-sacrificing love. He also directs affection and emotions toward us. Both agape and phileo represent His love.
Peckham agrees:
“We’ve traditionally been taught that agape is the only unique word for God’s love, and it’s a better kind of love, and all the other kinds of love are deficient. But in John 16:27, the kind of love that God Himself has is described as phileo.”9
Agape and phileo work hand in hand, as another Adventist author writes:
“Both kinds of love are constantly operative and both are an authentic way of expressing love; both being a part of God’s creation. Both kinds of love are potentially operative in human-to-human, God-to-human, and human-to-God relationships.”10
As we learn more about God’s love, it still leaves some questions, though, about God’s anger and justice. How do those fit into the picture?
God’s love versus His justice?

Photo by Sora Shimazaki
If God is love, then everything that is true of Him must be true because He is love. He is merciful because He is love. He is kind because He is love. And He is also just because He is love.11
As Peckham puts it, “God’s love and justice go together. Because if you love someone, you’re going to be upset about any injustices perpetrated against them.”12
Just think about how you’d feel if someone kidnapped your child and harmed them in some way. You’d be furious and set on getting justice.
And how much more does God want justice for His children who have been wronged? Adventist theologian Angel Rodriguez, ThD, is clear:
“Love and permissiveness are incompatible…. God’s love is tough love.”
We can take comfort in that because it means God will bring justice on our behalf.
But this can feel like a tricky topic. You may wonder why you haven’t seen justice served for people who have hurt you or wronged you. Why does life seem to be going so well for so-and-so who caused so much pain in your life? How come they got away with what they did?
Here’s where we circle back to an important aspect of love: freedom.
God has created every single person on this planet—and they are His children. His greatest longing is for them to experience His love and, as a result, show that love to others. But He will never force them to receive His love and live by it, which means that His children sometimes make choices that harm His other children.
That puts God in a tricky dilemma, doesn’t it?
Because He values freedom so much, He has to allow evil to take its course. Otherwise, the devil, in this conflict between good and evil, would have an opportunity to accuse God of forcing His love upon us.
Thankfully, though, a time will come when justice will be served—when all have clearly had the opportunity to choose for or against God. During the judgment in the last days, He will acknowledge the decisions that people have made and bring ultimate justice for all His children who have been hurt.
For more on the topic of God’s justice and the question of evil,
What does Jesus say about love?
Jesus came to this earth to show us the Father and thus show us His character of love. His life was a living, breathing example of agape and phileo love as He healed the sick, touched lepers, embraced the outcasts of society, blessed children, and called out the hypocrisy of religious leaders.
His actions gave power to His teachings about love, which we’ll summarize in three points:
God the Father loves us
Perhaps some of the most powerful—and most-remembered—words Jesus spoke are these:
“For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life” (John 3:16, NKJV).
It’s easy to skip over these words, to miss what they’re really saying.
Notice the sequence: God loved. Therefore, He gave.
And when Jesus came, He loved us with that same self-giving love (John 15:9). He demonstrated the greatest love in laying down His life for us (John 15:13). Now, He calls us and empowers us to do the same.
Love is central to the Ten Commandments

Photo by Tim Wildsmith on Unsplash
Jesus taught that the Ten Commandments are principles for loving God and loving others:
“‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.’ This is the first and great commandment. And the second is like it: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets” (Matthew 22:37-40, NKJV).
He emphasized that obedience to these commandments don’t earn salvation. Rather, they’re evidence of love for Him and for others:
“He who has My commandments and keeps them, it is he who loves Me” (John 14:21, NKJV).
These Commandments reach beyond outward rituals to the very heart. Jesus wanted followers who revealed His love more than followers that just went through the motions (Luke 11:43).
Mark 12 records the same words of Jesus that we quoted from Matthew 22. After Jesus explained how love was central to the Law, someone in his audience responded with these words:
“And to love Him with all the heart, with all the understanding, with all the soul, and with all the strength, and to love one’s neighbor as oneself, is more than all the whole burnt offerings and sacrifices” (Mark 12:33, NKJV).
Jesus affirmed him:
“Now when Jesus saw that he answered wisely, He said to him, ‘You are not far from the kingdom of God’” (Mark 12:34, NKJV).
God values true obedience, spurred by love, far above following rituals or ceremonies.
Loving one another is part of discipleship to Jesus
Jesus called all of His followers to love the way He does:
“A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another; as I have loved you, that you also love one another. By this all will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another” (John 13:34-35, NKJV).
This is part of the discipleship process—of becoming like Him. And as we show love for one another, we reveal the love of Christ to the world (John 17:23).
It sounds good written out, but this kind of love is not easy. It requires loving those who don’t offer us love in return:
“But I say to you, love your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who spitefully use you and persecute you, that you may be sons of your Father in heaven; for He makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust. For if you love those who love you, what reward have you? Do not even the tax collectors do the same?” (Matthew 5:44-46, NKJV)
How do you treat that friend who betrayed you by gossiping about you, or that co-worker who seems intent on making your life miserable? It’s these situations where the principled agape love of Jesus is most difficult to carry out.
But it’s also in these situations that we can depend on Him to fill us with that kind of love.
Love: choice first, feelings second
Love in its purest form, as we’ve learned, is quite unlike the ever-changing feelings we often think of as love. It’s deeper than that. It’s the kind that endures through challenges, that chooses to stay when things get tough.
As Gibson pointed out, “Love is an action. It’s a principle of commitment and loyalty and faithfulness, come what may.”13
This doesn’t mean it’s without feelings, though. But it has an important foundation of self-sacrifice and what Gibson calls “relational integrity.”
With that foundation, the feelings become deep and meaningful.
That’s the kind of love God has for each one of us. And the love He’s inviting us to have for one another.
Related Articles
- Moskala, Jiri, “Love – A Decision and a Verb,” Perspective Digest, vol. 8, no. 1. [↵]
- Dinsley, John, “A Kiss of Charity: The Debate over Agape,” Ministry. [↵]
- Ibid. [↵]
- Gibson, Ty, “Life with God, Season 1 – God Is Love,” Adventist Theological Society. YouTube. [↵]
- Gibson, Ty, “The Heart of God,” Truth Link Bible Study #2, [↵]
- Gibson, Ty, A God Named Desire, p. 90-91. [↵]
- Exodus 20:6; 34:6; Psalm 36:10; Isaiah 54:8. [↵]
- Peckham, John, “Life with God, Season 1 – God Is Love,” Adventist Theological Society, YouTube. [↵]
- Ibid. [↵ ]
- Dinsley, “A Kiss of Charity: The Debate over Agape.” [↵]
- Gibson, “Life with God, Season 1 – God Is Love.” [↵]
- Peckham, “Life with God, Season 1 – God Is Love.” [↵]
- Gibson, “Life with God, Season 1 – God Is Love.” [↵]
More Answers
What Do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the New Earth?
Seventh-day Adventist, like other Christians, believe that after the second coming of Christ, God will cleanse our earth by fire and then restore it back to Eden-like perfection.
What Adventists Believe About the Millennium and the End of Sin
As most Christians, Seventh-day Adventists hope for the time when sin and evil will no longer exist. The Bible teaches that God will bring an end to sin after a thousand-year period of time called the millennium.
What Are Seventh-day Adventists Beliefs on Death and the Resurrection?
The thought of dying can seem scary. And the idea of being resurrected—or coming back to life—can seem a little uncomfortable.
What Do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about The Second Coming of Christ?
The second coming of Jesus Christ is an event the Bible prophesies will occur at the end of this world’s history. It’s called His second coming to distinguish it from His first, when Jesus was born to Mary and lived as a human before dying on the Cross.
What Adventists Believe About Jesus’ Ministry in the Heavenly Sanctuary
The ancient Israelite sanctuary had a daily service and a yearly service. Jesus’ death on the Cross and His ministry in the heavenly sanctuary reflect these services.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Marriage and Family?
The Seventh-day Adventist Church believes God established marriage and the family unit to be blessings to humanity. They make up a relational structure that can reflect the multifaceted nature of God’s love.
What Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Christian Behavior
The patterns of actions and words that make up behavior are central to any type of belief system because they flow from those beliefs. Seventh-day Adventists look to the Bible, with Jesus as the perfect example, for guidance on shaping our daily behavior.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Sabbath?
Seventh-day Adventists believe that the biblical Sabbath is a beautiful gift of rest that God gave to us at Creation and that remains valid to this day. Falling on the seventh day of the week—Saturday—it connects us to God in a special way and offers us a weekly opportunity to be physically, mentally, and spiritually refreshed.
What Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Stewardship (and What Does It Mean?)
Love for God and our fellow humans is the overriding principle of the Seventh-day Adventist faith. And we express that love in an overarching way through how we manage the things—material and immaterial—that God has entrusted to us.
What Do Adventists Believe About the Law of God?
Seventh-day Adventists believe that God’s law reflects His character of love (1 John 4:8; Romans 13:10). It is perfectly summarized in the Ten Commandments given to Moses on Mount Sinai, showing us the practical application of loving God and loving other people.
What Do Seventh-day Adventists Believe About the Gift of Prophecy?
Adventists believe the gift of prophecy is a spiritual gift that the Holy Spirit gives to specific individuals to help the church carry out Jesus’ Great Commission (Matthew 28:16–20). Prophecy helps strengthen, encourage, and comfort His people (1 Corinthians 14:3).
What Seventh-day Adventists Believe About Spiritual Gifts in the Bible
Seventh-day Adventists believe that spiritual gifts are talents that the Holy Spirit gives to believers and followers of Jesus Christ. These gifts are different but complementary, and they often equip followers of Christ with the ability to spread the good news about Jesus and encourage its members.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Lord’s Supper (Communion)?
Like many Protestant Christians, Seventh-day Adventists believe in the practice commonly called the Lord’s Supper or Holy Communion. They drink grape juice and eat unleavened bread in obedience to Jesus’ direct instructions to do it in remembrance of Him (1 Corinthians 11:24–25).
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Baptism?
Like many Protestant Christians worldwide and throughout history, the Seventh-day Adventist Church believes in baptism, a ceremony in which individuals go under water to publicly demonstrate dying to an old life and beginning a new life in Christ. We baptize people by immersion, as taught and exemplified in the Bible.
What Do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Unity in Christ?
Seventh-day Adventists believe in biblical unity—the idea of believers in Jesus being united by the truth of the Bible and the common goal of representing God and His love to the world.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Remnant and its Mission?
The “remnant” are a group of faithful believers that have existed throughout history and proclaimed God’s truth, love, and plan to save humanity. They “remain” with God even amid persecution and also when it seems everyone else has rebelled against God or compromised their beliefs.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Church?
Seventh-day Adventists believe that the idea of the church is an important biblical concept.
What Adventists Believe about The Experience of Salvation?
The Seventh-day Adventist Church believes that salvation is a gift that anyone can receive through faith in Jesus Christ, the Son of God. When we accept His sacrificial death in our place, He saves us from the penalty and power of sin (or evil), which prevents us from experiencing true freedom.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Life, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus?
Jesus Christ, a person who lived in first-century Palestine, is the foundation of the Adventist faith. This is because it’s only through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus that any of us have hope of life beyond the toil, suffering, and death of this world.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about The Great Controversy?
The “Great Controversy” is the phrase Seventh-day Adventists typically use to describe the cosmic spiritual conflict between the forces of good (God) and the forces of evil or sin (Satan/the devil).
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Creation?
Seventh-day Adventists believe that God is the creator of our world. They come to this conclusion from the first book of the Bible—Genesis. The account there tells us that God took six literal days to form the earth and all it contains, including us humans.
What Do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Father?
Like most Protestant Christians, Seventh-day Adventists believe in God the Father as part of the Godhead. We call Him Father because of His role towards Jesus. Jesus Himself encouraged us to also call Him Father.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Sin and the Nature of Humanity?
Seventh-day Adventists believe that humanity was created perfect and that, at our very core, we crave this kind of perfection and unity with God. But unfortunately, the Bible teaches that we chose to be wise in our own eyes and disobey God, which led to a natural tendency to be sinful, evil, and selfish.
What Do Seventh-Day Adventists Believe about God the Holy Spirit?
Besides believing in the full divinity of God the Father and God the Son, Adventists also believe in the full divinity of God the Holy Spirit. This post will go over what the Bible says about the Holy Spirit. You’ll learn:
What Do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about God the Son?
Seventh-day Adventists believe that Jesus is fully God, being one of the members of the Trinity. And that He plays a central role in it as the Son of God.
What Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Trinity
How can Father, Son, and Holy Spirit all be one God? Find out as you learn what the Bible has to say about the Trinity.
What Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Bible
The Bible forms the foundation for all that Seventh-day Adventists believe and teach. It reveals God to us and is our final authority on all issues relating to morals, doctrine, salvation, and the very nature and purpose of life itself (Isaiah 8:20).
Why is the Great Controversy in my mailbox?
Every year, households across North America receive free copies of a 150-year-old book, The Great Controversy. Millions more are shared around the world.
How Important is a Weekly Sabbath as a Day of Rest?
Around the world, different religious groups have had a Sabbath—a day set apart for rest each week. A day to worship together, spend time with loved ones, and to just rest.
Didn’t find your answer? Ask us!
We understand your concern of having questions but not knowing who to ask—we’ve felt it ourselves. When you’re ready to learn more about Adventists, send us a question! We know a thing or two about Adventists.

































