To read the texts click on the texts: Acts 10:25-26, 34-35,44-48;; 1 Jn 4:7-10; Jn 15:9-17
A man went to his pastor to say
that he felt there was a lack of friendliness among the parishioners and that
people were reluctant to greet one another in church. The pastor agreed with
him and said that he had devised a plan to change things. During services the
next Sunday, the pastor described the situation to the parishioners and said
that the following Sunday they would have a brief pause to allow parishioners
to turn to those seated near them and greet them with a friendly hello. After
the announcement, the man turned around to the woman behind him and said, “Good
morning.” She looked at him in shocked indignation and snapped, “That doesn’t
start until next Sunday!”
The American author and poet,
Stephen Vincent Benet, who won the Pulitzer Prize twice, wrote, “Life is not
lost by dying; life is lost minute by minute, day by dragging day, in all the
thousand small, uncaring ways”. The penultimate verse of the Gospel text of
today, in which Jesus tells his disciples, “I appointed you to go and bear
fruit, fruit that will last:, serves as an antidote to this way of living and
ensures that one will continue to live even after death.
The disciples can be fruitful
primarily because the love which the Father has for Jesus is the same love that
Jesus has shown for his disciples. It is a love that is unconditional, a love
that is totally caring, a love that places the other before self and, a love
without end. It is a love that is shown tangibly and in every action that Jesus
performs. There is only one commandment that Jesus gives his disciples. That is
the commandment of love. If the disciples keep this commandment, they will
resemble Jesus, their master, who revealed God’s love for the world tangibly,
in the most perfect of ways, by willingly dying.
The disciples are indeed friends
of Jesus, as has been manifested in their keeping his command to love. Jesus is
not placing a condition for friendship here (you can be my friends only if…);
rather, he is stating who the disciples are (because you are my friends, you do
what I command). Keeping the commandment of Jesus is not a chore or burden but
something done willingly because one has experienced his love first. The
outcome of this sharing of love is unbounded joy.
As Jesus treats his disciples as
his friends, he reveals to them all that they need to know. His primary
revelation to them has been of God as a loving and compassionate Father. It is
Jesus who has taken the initiative in calling and choosing the disciples and
this fact reinforces the idea of grace. It is not one’s effort that can earn
discipleship but the grace of God which enables one to live out daily the call
to discipleship. Jesus’ self-emptying love points back to the self-emptying
love expected of us. We are to love one another in the way he loved us.
However, this kind of
self-emptying love does not always come easily, as today’s first reading from
Acts demonstrates. Initially, Peter was reluctant to have anything to do with Cornelius
because he was a Roman centurion. However, he soon learned that, because God
does not hold back from anyone his self-emptying and unconditional love. When
genuine love was present, all distinctions of caste, creed, colour, and race
disappeared, John reiterates this point in the second reading of today and goes
even further. He states very clearly that it was not we who first loved, but
God. God took the initiative and sent a part of himself, his son. It is in
Jesus, the Son that love has its origin and finds its fulfillment.
Love is not just an emotion – 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, I believe, simple, but not simplistic. “In love, there
is no ‘I’”.
As love keeps giving, Jesus
continues to give, even today. However, the giving is only one side of the
story. Without a receiver, the gift has no value. This is why, while the grace
of God given as a gift in Jesus is first, our reception of that gift is
important. We show that we have received this gift when we, like Jesus, also
dare to reach out in love. When we speak a comforting word, perform a loving
action, behave less selfishly and more selflessly, then the gift is given and
received, again and again.
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