The striking feature of God’s love in this chapter is not only that it is infinite, but that it is non-transactional. Moon describes God as still anxious to give more even after giving everything. That means divine love does not move by equivalence, repayment, or fair exchange. It moves by self-giving that never feels complete.

That sharply contrasts with most fallen love, which gives while quietly waiting to be paid back in attention, loyalty, or gratitude. The chapter’s claim is that genuine love does not ask, “Now why don’t you give back?” It remains troubled only by the feeling that it has not yet loved enough.

This also reframes holiness. God is not holy because He is detached from need, but because His need for love does not become manipulation.