Sunday, 3 May 2015

“Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, 1 john 4.7


There is a lot said about love. In deed as Christians we have a lot to say about Love: think how many time the word appears in our sermons, our prayers, our hymns, in our Bible readings. In these Sundays of Easter we have been reading from the epistles of John which have one theme running throughout and it is Love.
    
Let us look in a little more detail at the words John writes in the 4th chapter of his first letter, epistle.

In the two verses preceding our second reading this morning we see John touch on two important aspects of love. In verse 6, he writes, “And this is love, that we walk according to his commandments.” Christian love is most full understood as Love for God and in this verse he points to an important aspect of Christian love, that is first and foremost obedience to God. Love is not passive, not primarily an emotion we feel, love is something we do – obey God. Of course, when John says this, he is reminding us of the teachings of Jesus about love for the Lord our God being the greatest commandment. If we love God, we will obey him and the depth of our obedience is the mark by which we know our love.
    
In verse 5, John simply writes, “Love one another”, which echoes Paul’s teaching in Romans 8:8, “He who loves his neighbour has fulfilled the law”. “Love one another” – it is such a simple command… Christian love means to love others.
    
There is a lovely story told about John the apostle who was the only disciple to live into old age. As the Bishop of Ephesus, he lived a long time and had an active ministry to the day he died. But shortly before he died, he grew so frail that he had to be carried everywhere and he had little breath to preach for long. And time and time again, he would preach the same sermon; a sermon that was only 5 words long: “Little children, love one another”. Five small words that, for John, encapsulated the Christian message.
    
Loving God and loving others – two practical out workings of the Christian faith.

Turning to our reading verses 7-8: John tells us that God’s nature is love. “Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God. Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love.” Notice it says two things. Verse 7 says that “love is from God.” And verse 8 at the end says, “God is love.” These are not at odds.

Because when John says that “love is from God,” he doesn’t mean it’s from him the way letters are from a mailman, or even letters are from a friend. He means that love is from God the way heat is from fire, or the way light is from the sun. Love belongs to God’s nature. It’s woven into what he is. It’s part of what it means to be God. The sun gives light because it is light. And fire gives heat because it is heat.

So John’s point is that for we who live in Christ, we who renewed our baptism at Easter a month ago are acknowledging that we are part the divine life of God and that an essential part of that life is love. God’s nature is love, and in the new birth that comes with our baptism God’s nature becomes part of who we  are.
When we look at verse 12 of our second reading we read “No one has ever seen God; if we love one another, God lives in us and his love is perfected in us.”
In these words John is assuring us that the love we have when we are born again through our baptism is no mere imitation of the divine love, no it is an experience of the divine love and it is the divine love that we pass on when we fulfill the commandment of our lord – that is to love God and love our neighbour.
So the first way John links God’s love for us and our love for people is by focusing on God’s nature as love and how when we are made one with Christ, when we are born again, when we are baptized we are connected to that divine nature.

John then goes on to speak of how the love of God is manifested in history

Verse 10 we read “In this is love, not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the atoning sacrifice for our sins. 11Beloved, since God loved us so much, we also ought to love one another. 12No one has ever seen God; if we love one another, God lives in us, and his love is perfected in us.”

It is in Love, from love, because of love, that God could no longer stand by but chose to become part of the created order he has brought in to being through the word by the power of he Spirit.

When we see that All powerful, All knowing, Creator, Glorious but distant God moved by Love to become part of our lives we see how and why we also get involved.

Once again the people of this island have shown their deep desire to get involved in the life of others who are in need in the amazing giving of £15 million to the suffering in Nepal. But as impressive as this is it is does not really capture the meaning John is conveying when he speaks about the love of God revealed in Jesus Christ and our response.

Salvation history is filled with examples of those who have been sent, as a donation is sent, to guide, direct and even plead with humanity to love one another. In deed it is the revelation of Christianity that shows that such an approach is inadequate, Mohammad might well be the last of the prophets and peace be upon him, but prophets beginning with Adam are only like a donation sent across the world. The revelation of Christianity is that God himself travels across the vastness of time, across the void that separated our world from his and shows us love.

John tells us in verse 11 “Beloved since God loves us so much we also ought to love one anotherwhen he says, “We ought to love each other,” he means ought in the way fish ought to swim in water and birds ought to fly in the air and living creatures ought to breathe and peaches ought to be sweet and lemons ought to be sour. As baptized people, we are born again and ought to love. It’s who we are. This is not mere imitation. For the children of God, imitation becomes realization. We are realizing who we are when we love. God’s Spirit is in us. God’s nature is in us. God’s love is being perfected in us. so that when people see us they see God, when people experience love they are experiencing the reality of God

Why can’t we give love that one more chance?
Why can’t we give love……
Cause Love’s such an old fashioned word
and Love dare you to care
for the people on the edge of the night
and love dares you to change our way
of caring about ourselves
                                    Under Pressure by David Bowie

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