Love is the most searched word in the English language, and it might be the most misunderstood. We use the same word for pizza, our best friend, a summer evening, and the person we would die for. But the Bible refuses to let love stay blurry. Scripture gives love weight, definition, and a face, and that face belongs to God.
Whether you are searching for verses to read at a wedding, trying to understand what love is supposed to look like in a hard relationship, or simply hungry to know how God feels about you, you are in the right place. These bible verses about love will meet you where you are.

What the Bible Says About Love
One of the first things you notice when you study love in Scripture is that the original Greek language actually has different words for different kinds of love. That is not an accident. The biblical writers were precise because love is too important to keep vague.
Agape is the word used most often in the New Testament for God’s love toward people and for the love Christians are called to show one another. It is unconditional, self-giving, and completely unearned. It is not a feeling that rises and falls with circumstances. Agape is a choice, and it is the kind of love God showed the world when he sent his Son.
Phileo describes warm affection and friendship, the love you have for people you genuinely enjoy and care for. It appears when Jesus speaks about the Father’s love for him, and when he asks Peter three times, “Do you love me?” The tenderness in that conversation is unmistakably phileo.
Eros is the word for romantic, passionate love between a husband and wife. While the New Testament does not use the word eros directly, the Song of Solomon celebrates this kind of love openly. God is not embarrassed by human longing and desire within the covenant of marriage.
Understanding these distinctions matters because it helps you read the commands of Jesus and Paul accurately. When Jesus says “love your enemies,” he is not telling you to feel warm feelings toward someone who hurt you. He is calling you to agape: to choose their good, to refuse to return evil for evil, even when everything in you resists. That is harder than romantic love, and it is more transformative.
The other thread running through every Bible verse about love is this: love is not primarily an emotion. It is an action. First Corinthians 13 does not say love feels patient. It says love is patient. Love is something you do, even on days when you do not feel like it.
Key Scriptures on Love
1. 1 Corinthians 13:4-7
“Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.”
This is the passage most read at weddings, which is appropriate. But Paul did not write it for newlyweds. He wrote it to a church that was tearing itself apart with rivalry and spiritual pride. He was describing the love they were failing to show each other.
Notice what this passage does not mention: feelings, chemistry, attraction, or circumstances. Every quality listed is a verb in disguise. Patience is a practice. Kindness is a choice. Keeping no record of wrongs is an act of daily surrender. This is the standard, and Paul gives it to us not to crush us but to point us toward the source: the God who is himself patient, kind, and who has kept no record of our wrongs because Jesus absorbed every one of them.
If you want to test whether something in your life is love, run it through this list. It is the clearest mirror in Scripture.
2. John 3:16
“For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.”
If 1 Corinthians 13 is the definition of love, John 3:16 is the demonstration of it. God did not explain love in a lecture. He enacted it at a cross.
The word “so” here does not mean “very much,” though that is how we often read it. In the original Greek, it points to the manner of the love: this is how God loved, this is the shape his love took. It took the shape of sacrifice. It took the shape of a Father giving up what was most precious to him for people who had turned their backs on him.
“The world” includes you, specifically, on your worst day, when you were least loveable. That is the reach of agape. You did not earn it, and you cannot lose it by failing. It was given freely, and it holds.
3. Romans 8:38-39
“For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
Paul wrote this after listing suffering, hardship, persecution, famine, and the sword. He was not speaking theoretically. He was saying: I have tested this in real pain, and the love of God did not break.
The list is exhaustive by design. Paul names opposites: death and life, present and future, height and depth. He is covering every direction, every dimension, every possible threat you could name. And then he adds “anything else in all creation,” just to be sure nothing slips through. Nothing can get between you and God’s love. Not your worst sin. Not your deepest doubt. Not the silence you feel at 3 a.m. when you are not sure God is there.
This verse is a place to stand when everything else is shaking.
4. 1 John 4:7-8
“Dear friends, let us love one another, for love comes from God. Everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God. Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.”
John makes an extraordinary claim here: God is not merely loving, he is love itself. Love is not an attribute God occasionally expresses. It is the very nature of who he is. When you encounter genuine love anywhere in the world, whether in a parent sitting up all night with a sick child, or a friend who tells you a hard truth because they care more about your good than your approval, you are catching a glimpse of God’s character.
The implication is stunning in both directions. To know God is to be changed toward love. And to refuse to love is to be cut off from the source of life itself. John is not being harsh here. He is being honest. We were made for love because we were made by Love.
Love as Action, Not Just Feeling
The cultural version of love is mostly about how things feel. The biblical version is mostly about what you choose to do. That shift changes everything.
It means you can love someone you are frustrated with. You can love a difficult parent, a betraying friend, a prodigal child, because love is not waiting for feelings to arrive. You choose kindness before you feel kind. You choose patience before patience feels natural. You act in love and, often, the feelings follow.
It also means the love God has for you is not subject to his moods or your performance. His love is rooted in his character, and his character does not change. On the day you feel closest to him and on the day you feel farthest away, the love described in these verses is exactly the same.
How to Sit with These Verses This Week
You do not have to read all four passages at once. Pick one and stay with it for a few days.
- If you are struggling to love someone difficult, spend time in 1 Corinthians 13:4-7. Ask God to show you which quality he wants to build in you right now.
- If you are wondering whether God could love someone like you, read John 3:16 slowly and replace “the world” with your own name.
- If anxiety or grief has made you feel abandoned, read Romans 8:38-39 out loud. Let the list land on you.
- If you want to understand the connection between loving God and loving people, sit in 1 John 4:7-8 and ask God what it means for your relationships today.
A Closing Prayer
Lord, thank you that your love is not a feeling that fluctuates. It is a fact, written into history at the cross and declared over me in your Word. Teach me to receive it fully, so that what I have freely received I can freely give. Where I have been unloving, forgive me. Where love feels impossible, be my source. I cannot manufacture agape on my own. But you are agape, and you live in me. Amen.
Related Articles
- What the Bible Says About Romantic Love and Dating
- What Does the Bible Say About Loneliness in Marriage?
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