One God, One Love
Mark 12:28 - 34
Mark 12:28 - 34
November 1, 2009
During the last few weeks we have been looking at Jesus’ final travels with his disciples. The disciples have debated amongst themselves not only about who is the greatest amongst them, but also concerning who will have the pleasure of sitting to the left and to the right of the Messiah in the Kingdom that is to come. Last Sunday, reminding us once again about the importance to serve others, regardless of our current state of awareness, we met up with Jesus as he was leaving the city of Jericho, on his way to the city of Jerusalem. The blind beggar, Bartimaeus, devoid of the need to be seen, seeks to see again, not so that he may return to the life he knew before his blindness, but so that he may look forward to a life serving others, to be a disciple of the one true Christ.
We are aware through our recent studies that many are making
their way from all over the region to the capital city of Israel to celebrate
the Passover and so it is not unusual for Jesus to encounter large crowds of
people during these last days of his public ministry. Intermixed within these crowds Jesus also
encounters the enemy, as characterized by the religious leaders of the time who
are attempting to discredit Jesus through public debate. We recall one such example of this in Mark 10
when the Pharisees asked “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife?” Jesus responds to their inquiry by adamantly
instructing them that man has no right to attempt to tear apart what God has
joined together. Jesus’ words were not
only compelling because of his response to Mosaic Law, but because his words
spoke to a deeper meaning of relationship and the authority to which we submit
ourselves in our relationship with our God through Christ. These increasing accounts of questioning and
debate seem almost to serve as a prediction of the events that are to come once
Jesus and his followers have spent a few days in the capital city of Jerusalem.
In our scripture reading this morning, we read of a scribe
who has begun to question Jesus on the details of Mosaic Law. There were 613 laws designated under the law;
365 were negative commandments and 248 were positive in nature. Describes in terms of “heavy” and “light” it
is important to note that while many of the laws were derived from scripture,
many were part of oral tradition; tradition that had led to the development of
these extra laws through a response to interpret the Mosaic Law. Jesus does not respond with one of the Ten
Commandments we have grown to be so passionate about in American Christianity
today, but rather gives a response that is a combination of the Shema, a well
known prayer that comes from the Deuteronomy 6:4-5 which reads, “Hear, O
Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one. Love the LORD your God with all your heart and
with all your soul and with all your strength” and a passage of scripture found
in Leviticus 19:18 which reads, “'Do not seek revenge or bear a grudge against
one of your people, but love your neighbor as yourself.” And so with these two recitations, Jesus
manages to sum up 613 commands.
It is not unlikely that the scribe find some comfort and
understanding in the Jesus’ response. In
fact, Jesus commends and encourages him as one who is, “not far from the
kingdom.” With a basic understanding of
such a simple construct, love, the scribe has found himself in favor with
Christ and so we too can learn something about obeying God’s law through our
understanding of these two commands.
Recall that Jesus said, “I have not come to abolish the law, but to
fulfill the law” and so we begin to see that Jesus is speaking of bringing
life, love and relationship back to a lost and dying world.
In answering the scribe’s question, Jesus quoted from the Shema,
probably the most important prayer recited by observant Jews. In summarizing all the commandments of
Scripture and tradition by way of the Shema, Jesus is simply following the
teaching of his Word and the intent of the Mosaic Law. Deuteronomy 6:4, "Hear, O Israel: the
Lord our God is one Lord," recited in the Shema, is regarded as a
confession of belief in One God, that is, we are reminded here first and
foremost that there is only the one true God.
Immediately following these words, verse 5 instructs us to “Love the
Lord [our] God with all [our] heart, with all [our] soul and with all [our]
strength.” I can’t help but hear the
words, “One God, One Love” ring out from these words from Deuteronomy. All of Mosaic Law is summarized here by the
command to love God and others.
So what do we mean by love?
I want you to know this morning that I love each and every one of you
here today. But the love I have for you
is more than just a love we have grown to know cheaply in our world today. In the musical, Moulin Rouge, the opening scene
presents us with our main character, who ironically is named Christian, typing
away frantically at his typewriter in an attempt to put into words a love that
he has come to know; to verbalize on paper the important lessons of life. “The greatest thing you’ll ever learn,” he
writes, “is to love and to be loved in return.”
Ladies and gentleman I must declare to you today that life
and relationship is much more than that.
It is not to love in the way we as a culture and community have come to
know through warm fuzzies defined by a feeling we have in the pit of our
stomach whenever that special someone in our life enters into the room and it
is certainly not about being loved in return, at least not in the since of
defining our self worth by our relationships with others. Our concept of self cannot and should not be
defined by how others view us, by our relationship status or by how a nation
defines legally recognized partnerships and marriages.
The word most often used in the New Testament for God’s love
is word agape, which means a love that expresses itself in practical and
sacrificial service for others, regardless of their deserving. Agape love is then a lot like grace, the
grace given to you and I by an all powerful, all caring God.
In John 4:8 we read that God is love. As Paul Scherer says, it is easy to confuse
this statement with a definition of God.
But we can say a lot more about God than that he is love. God is holy.
God is almighty. God is
wisdom. So, love does not adequately
define God, rather God in his infinite ability to provide us with all that we
are undeserving to receive, defines love for us. John 3:16, “For God so loved the world that
he gave his one and only Son . . .” is another verse that describes the costly
love of God. It is a love that begins
with and must come from God. (Scherer)
God so loved that he gave and His love is given to us
regardless of our interest in him our response to him. Now don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying that
all are saved regardless of interest or response, only that God gives His love
to us regardless of our interest and response.
Paul in his letter to the Romans says God demonstrated love for us when
we were powerless, ungodly and sinful.
In fact, he says God saved us while we were yet sinners and thus enemies
of God. Jesus response is often referred
to as the Great Commandment; a commandment that calls us to love God with the
same kind of love that God has shown us and to in turn express that love to
others with the same kind of costly love.
“One God, One Love” takes us a long way from the sentimental notions of
love as a mutual exchange of feelings and admiration. Loving God is about action and our love for
God gets expressed in ways that honor God and honor those who are made in God’s
image.
Loving is call from God; a call to serve – a call to
action. It is also a call to
awareness. First to become a aware of
those who we are called to serve and second and equally important, an awareness
to love those we are led to in a way that is meaningful to them. As Followers of God, it is important to love
others in ways that are clear to them.
They need to know that our response to serve is indeed a response to
love and not a response to charity, pity or a need to satisfy our own desires
to be seen. Simply stated, if the person
you are called to serve is not aware of the love that supports that service,
then your love cannot have the fully intended effect.
It is easy for us to understand this in terms of romantic
love. We send text messages to our
partners in the middle of the day, buy them small gifts when they least expect,
prepare their favorite meal at the end of a hard day and sacrifice our time to
attend to their needs. These same sorts
of responses extend to our community of faith, as well. In order to show love to not only the people
of this community of faith, but to those within our surrounding community, we
must be willing to do so in tangible ways.
James wrote about his as he criticized the Christians who told the
hungry and cold to “Go, be warmed and well-fed” without lifting a finger to
five them something to eat or something to wear. Love must express itself in ways that are
understandable.
So as we move into the busy season of the Holidays that are
fast approaching us today; seasons that for many of us will be filled with
food, family, fellowship and giving, but for some will be void of many of these
things we have grown to expect and in some cases even take for granted, let’s
be reminded of the Great Command that Jesus has given us – Love God with all
your heart, soul and strength and to love others as you would yourself (or your
own). Our call to action does not have
to be a grand gesture of sacrifice; it can be small and humble. It isn’t the size of the gesture, but rather
the effectiveness of the gesture to meet a need.
When it comes to loving others, Jean Varnier, founder of a
faith based ministry for people with intellectual disabilities, says that love
must – reveal value in the other person, offer understanding, aid in
communication, celebrate the life of the other person, provide people with a
since of empowerment, offer an opportunity to part of a community and to assist
in forgiving and forgiveness. Love is
not always about creating lifelong earthly relationships or about becoming
solely responsible for the everyday well being of those around us. It is about meeting a need, fostering self
worth and being Jesus to a lost and dying world. Love means I see value in you and tell you I
do; I listen to you enough to understand what you are saying; I communicate
with you and receive communication from you; I celebrate the wonder that is
your life, no matter the difficulty of its present circumstance; I empower you
to act on your own and to take responsibility for living up to your potential;
I move with a community that includes you and others who are all seeking to
love in the ways that God has shown us love; and, I forgive you and ask that
you forgive me. (Vanier)
Could we add one more component to Vanier’s list, an eighth
characteristic of love? Let’s add
sacrifice. This is, in fact, the kind
of love God has shown us, “God showed great love for us by sending Christ to
die for us while we were still sinners.” (Romans 5:8) Recall that earlier I placed emphasis on the
distinction between God loving us and our salvation. That is, God does not save us regardless of
our interest or response, but rather God gives His love to us regardless of our
interest and response. God loves each
and every one here today. It doesn’t matter
where you’ve come from, who you are or what you’ve done.
Michaiel and I attended the Judgment house at Tom’s Creek
Baptist Thursday night. In all their
effort to bring the love of God to those who attended, it was hard to see that
they genuinely believed in what they were saying. Our guide repeatedly reminded us that it
doesn’t matter how good of a life we lead or how much we do to serve of
families and others, but it is about accepting Jesus Christ as our Savior and
Lord. Our guide summarized this up about
half way through the event when she said something to the affect of, “it
doesn’t matter what you’ve done in this life, instead it is about accepting
Jesus as Savior.” At that moment I had
such an amazing realization; one that I sadly believe that many overlook. You see, our guide was correct on a much
deeper level that I think she even believed.
You see, it doesn’t matter what you’ve done in this life; not only concerning
the good deeds in life but also concerning the mistakes we may have made.
I’ve made a lot of mistakes in my life and I am sure there
are others here, who have made quite a few themselves, but God loves me and God
loves you. Our community of faith
decrees that all people shall have equality of access and opportunity which is
free from discrimination on grounds of gender, sexual orientation, race, age,
physical challenge, health status, gender identification, nationality or
economic status not based on personal belief and ethics, but because this is
how God has loved and does love us.
Reach out to God today and accept God’s gift of Love, the
gift of eternal salvation. If you are
here today and have never known God’s love for you, know that today can be that
day. If you are here today and desire to
renew your relationship with your Creator, know that today can be that day, as
well.
Amen.