Tim Isbell, March 1, 2026
Scripture clearly teaches that God’s love comes first, not as a response to our performance. God loved us while we were still sinners (Romans 5:8). Love begins with God, not with us (1 John 4:10), and His love flows from His character, not our merit (Ephesians 2:4–5).
This means: God’s love does not increase when we obey, nor decrease when we fail. God’s love is the environment in which our transformation happens, not the reward for transformation.
When we’re faithful in small ways, God entrusts us with more (Luke 16:10), and Christ considered Paul trustworthy and then appointed him (1 Timothy 1:12).
Those who keep Jesus’ commands are shown more of Him (John 14:21). And God gives more of His Spirit to those who obey (Acts 5:32).
Jesus’ parables repeatedly show that God entrusts more insight, responsibility, and spiritual authority to those who respond faithfully to what they already have. Here’s the pattern: the Spirit nudges; we respond or ignore; our responsiveness shapes what God entrusts to us next.
When we cease to respond, God does not withdraw His love from us, but his trust in us wanes. His withdrawal of trust is a necessity of wisely stewarding His Kingdom.
Protect us from performance-based Christianity (because love is secure).
Protect us from presumption (because trust is not automatic).
Explain why ignoring the Spirit leads to stagnation rather than punishment.
Clarify why some believers experience deeper intimacy or responsibility: it’s not God’s arbitrary favoritism for some, but His faithfulness to His Creation.
The idea for this post began with Danny Atkins' sermon on 2/22/2026, which included this short point: God’s love for us is unconditional, but we must earn His trust. When we pay attention to and follow the Spirit’s lead in the big and small moments of our daily lives, God’s trust in us grows. When the Spirit whispers something for us to do or not do, and we ignore it, God’s trust in us wanes. From there, I engaged with CoPilot AI to produce this webpage.