To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 15:7-21; Jn 15:9-11
The love which the Father has for Jesus is the same
love that Jesus has expressed and shown for his disciples. It is a love that is
unconditional, a love without end. It is not merely a verbal expression, or an
emotion, but a love that is shown tangibly and in every action that Jesus
performs. The disciples have to act in the same manner as Jesus in order to
make this love visible. There is only one commandment and that is the
commandment to love. If the disciples keep this commandment, it will result in
their being like Jesus, their master, who before them, revealed God’s love for
the world.
Keeping the commandment of Jesus is thus not a chore
or burden but done willingly because one has experienced this love first. The
outcome of this sharing and manifestation of love is unbounded joy.
The word “love” has been a word that is used so often
that it has been abused. We speak of our love for the good things of life, and
of our love for the members of our family, and of our love for God in the same
breath. “I love mixed vegetables” we might tell our spouse and, in the next
breath, say “I love you”. Love is not primarily an emotion; it is not even a
feeling, but reality. As a matter of fact, the only reality is love. Fear,
which is regarded as the opposite of love, is not real, it is only an illusion.
If there is fear, there cannot be love, and where there is love, there is no
fear (1 Jn 4:18). While Paul gives a beautiful definition of love in 1 Cor
13:1-9, my own definition of love is simple, but not simplistic. “In love,
there is no “I””.
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