Good Morning All,
John 15:12; “This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you.”
Many years ago, there
was a pop song that had the chorus line “If you can’t be with the one you love,
honey; love the one you’re with.” This
line pretty much sums up the world’s view of love. This view is based entirely on the selfish
concept of “me, me, only me”. It gives a
much- distorted view of love. A common
view of love is the one that states “I’ll love you as long as you love me and
are nice to me and as long as you make me feel good.” This way of looking at love also distorted
the view of God’s law and covenant.
During the time that
Jesus ministered here on earth, the Pharisees and the Scribes had completely
distorted the correct way to read God’s law that was given to Moses. The Pharisees made the law very condemning
and harsh. They used the law to punish
and attack the people. They used it as a
cruel rod of oppression. They used the
law to beat the people into submission and gave them no comfort, no peace and
no hope.
This was the way
religion worked at this time. It was
about rules, really picky rules, and it was about being judged or judging
someone else. This was one of the
reasons that Jesus’ message resonated with the common, everyday people at this
time and not with the religious elite.
The message of Jesus offered hope.
Instead of condemning; he offered forgiveness. He told his disciples that faith, true faith
is very different from what the Pharisees taught. True faith was shown with love. This is what Jesus meant when he called it a
“new commandment;” it was new to the way they were used to. It was new to them but not to Jesus or God.
This doesn’t mean that
we forget the law. The law serves as a
guide to our life. When we approach
someone who is in sin, it is not so much telling them that they are wrong. It is telling them that what they are doing
is hurtful to themselves and hurtful to their relationship with God. When Jesus told the woman, who was caught in
adultery, to “go and sin no more;” this was as much about the harm she was
doing to herself, her family, and all the others involved. The pain that she felt was pretty much
self-inflicted. This is common today.
We are often our own
worst enemy. We hold onto hate or
grudges; we think that fulfilling selfish desires makes us happy and it never
does. The person who loves money never
has enough and worries about it constantly.
The person who loves himself only thinks of himself and is usually
lonely most of the time. The person who
expects others to make him happy rarely is because our source of happiness is
not outside of us but comes from our inner peace which we have with and from
God. Our only source of true joy is
love; the kind of love that is the expression of our faith in Jesus.
Father of all love, too
often we fall short of your glory and on doing so we fail to love as you love
us. Strengthen us with your grace and
move us by your mercy to reach out and to show your love to those around us. In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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