“I HAVE ALWAYS LOVED YOU,” SAYS THE LORD.
“OH REALLY? HOW?”
TEXT
Malachi 1:2–3:
“I have loved you,” says the LORD.
“Yet you say, ‘In what way have You loved us?’
Was not Esau Jacob’s brother?” says the LORD.
“Yet Jacob I have loved; but Esau I have hated,
And laid waste his mountains and his heritage…”
PROLOGUE
One of the most startling conversations between God and His people occurs in Book of Malachi 1:2–3:
At first glance, that sounds shocking.
Israel questions God’s love—and His answer seems harsh.
But hidden in that response is a powerful modern message that speaks directly to our generation.
I. WHEN PEOPLE QUESTION GOD’S LOVE
The Oldest Complaint in the World
One of the most common accusations people make against God today is this:
“If God really loved us, why would the world be like this?”
You hear it everywhere:
• After tragedies
• During wars
• When someone loses a job
• When prayers seem unanswered
And many people say exactly what Israel said:
“God says He loves us… but where is the proof?”
That is not a new question.
Israel asked it 2,400 years ago.
And God answered them in a way nobody expected
II. THE BOLDNESS OF ISRAEL’S QUESTION
Malachi records a shocking dialogue.
God begins:
“I have loved you.”
But the people answer back:
“How have you loved us?”
Think about the arrogance of that moment.
This is the nation God:
• Delivered from Egypt
• Fed with manna
• Led by fire and cloud
• Gave a land flowing with milk and honey
• Restored from Babylonian captivity
Yet they say:
“We’re not convinced.”
It is the same spirit we see today.
People enjoy:
• freedom
• abundance
• opportunity
• health
• family
Yet still say:
“God hasn’t done much for me.”
Human memory is short when gratitude disappears.
III. GOD’S SURPRISING ANSWER: ESAU
Instead of listing blessings, God gives a history lesson.
“Was not Esau Jacob’s brother?”
God reminds them of two twins:
• Jacob
• Esau
They had:
• the same father
• the same mother
• the same upbringing
Yet history went two very different directions.
God says:
“Jacob I loved… Esau I hated.”
This statement is not about personal dislike.
It is about choice, direction, and destiny.
Jacob’s line became Israel.
Esau’s line became Edom—a nation that opposed God’s people repeatedly.
IV. THE POINT GOD WAS MAKING
God’s argument was simple:
“Look at what happened to the two nations.”
Israel:
• disciplined
• corrected
• exiled
• but restored
Edom:
• destroyed
• abandoned
• left desolate
God’s love was seen not in comfort but in continued investment.
Israel had something Edom did not:
God NEVER GAVE UP on them.
That was the proof.
V. THE MODERN PARALLEL
Many people misunderstand love.
They think love means:
• constant comfort
• no hardship
• immediate answers
But Scripture shows something deeper.
The Bible says:
“Whom the Lord loves He disciplines.”
— Hebrews 12:6
Real love does not abandon.
Real love corrects.
Real love refuses to give up.
VI. THE DANGER OF SPIRITUAL AMNESIA
Israel forgot their story.
They forgot:
• the Exodus
• the covenant
• the prophets
• the restoration
And when people forget what God has done, they begin to doubt whether God cares.
America is drifting into the same mindset.
A nation blessed with:
• prosperity
• freedom
• opportunity
Yet many say:
“Where is God’s love?”
The problem is not the absence of love.
The problem is forgetfulness.
VII. THE ULTIMATE ANSWER GOD WOULD GIVE LATER
Malachi’s generation did not yet know the greatest proof of God’s love.
But four hundred years later it would arrive.
The cross.
Jesus would say:
“Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.”— John 15:13
When humanity asked again:
“How do you love us?”
God answered with
Calvary
EPILOGUE:
The Real Question
Israel asked the wrong question.
They asked:
“How have you loved us?”
But the better question would have been:
“How have we responded to that love?”
Because the real tragedy is not that God fails to love.
The tragedy is when people become so accustomed to grace that they stop recognizing it.
And when that happens…
even the greatest blessings begin to look ordinary.
“So, When you ask,
‘Where is God’s love?’
God points to history…
God points to the cross…
and God quietly asks back,
‘How much more proof do you need?’”
Invitation