All in Love

Loving one another is such a basic tenant of our faith that we wonder why Jesus had to go to the trouble to declare it a new commandment like He did. We see this love in His every action and learn its importance through the way He treats those around Him… it is easy to love those who love us back, or who treat us rightly, but the love Jesus teaches us extends to our enemies, and yes, to those who betray us. Is this who we are? Would we be this way naturally, and without being commanded?

In this modern world we live in today, our daily lives are in a constant state of hurrying about. We slice our time so thinly that even a small variation can throw our entire day into chaos. By doing this we think we are being productive, but are we really? What about our relationships with family, friends, and God? Relationships take time, and those who are in one with us need to see that they are more than just another small slice of our day. Let me ask one question before we begin… How much time each day do we allot to making our families really feel loved, and more importantly, how much do we dedicate to being quiet, and still, with God?

We talk about the word “Love” a great deal, and we even say it to one another with great frequency, but by saying it, teaching it, studying it, and reciting poems and scriptures containing it, have we trivialized the true emotion and power of this word? Have we taken an emotion that is amazingly precious, given by God, and then systematically drained the true meaning from it? Is the love we once professed verbally for a spouse by saying the word “love” still capable of expressing how we feel after years of marriage, or has that “love” become something much more, something that even an hourly profession of “I love you” can’t convey? Was saying the word ever anything more than an incomplete attempt at expressing the depth of emotion we felt? We can say the word “love” a million times in our lifetimes and mean nothing by it, but if we have ever felt it, even once, we know just how ill equipped this word was at describing it.

As Christians we have a weapon in our spiritual arsenal that can overcome every instrument of harm that the world can throw against us. We might think it is the power of God’s right arm, or perhaps the wisdom we have received that allows us to outthink the plans of anyone who comes against us, and any situation we find ourselves in, but the weapon we possess is mightier than these; our greatest weapon is the ability to love. When we love as God, and Jesus, love us, then we can disarm our enemies, and stand strong against every obstacle in life. We not only overcome our adversaries, but we transform them in the process. In this way we are using love to conquer the world as we should?

Do we say that we love the Lord our God, and His Son Jesus Christ? Do we speak of our faith, and of loving others, and feel righteous because of it? Do we know and profess the commandments of God, and Jesus? Well saying these things, and knowing these things, is not enough, because we will be judged by the deeds in love, and faith that we perform, and the truth that is made evident by these, our actions. Are we simply sayers of love, and faith, or doers?

We know that God loves us, and that the depth of His love is unfathomable. We know this because He sent His only begotten Son to die for us, even though we were lost in our sin. By this unbound love He redeemed us, and for this we love Him in return, and praise His name. But, can we possibly love Him as He loves us? We strive to do so, but can we truly grasp the fullness of being loved as He loves us? Our love falls far short of God’s, yet we offer Him all that we have, and give Him all we are capable of, pressing the very limits of our heart, soul, mind, and strength. This is His commandment; not that we love him as He is able to love us, but that we love Him to the limits of our ability, with all we are capable of. Is this how we find ourselves loving God today?

Today is Good Friday, a day that God chose to bring His love for man to a crescendo through the sacrifice of His beloved Son. For His part, Jesus begins this day as a captive of religious men who claim to worship God, and yet whose eyes are covered, and sins are brought to the forefront through the bitter and self-serving treatment of God’s Son; their Messiah. Do we begin our day as Christians contemplating the horrors and humiliation of our Lord Jesus Christ, or the amazing love of God that His suffering reveals to us? Today the time is right, and has reached its fullness; God, after centuries of preparation, reveals His plan for our redemption to us.