Can
we be honest for a moment?
Sometimes
we have a people problem.
Oh,
we like people--- sometimes, but we like them on our terms. At our most cynical
we tolerate people for what they can do for us. Even at its most benign, our
concern for others can be a tainted mixture of motivations. Our hesitation is
not without cause though.
We
live in a world in which war, terrorism, injustice, politics, and crime are
inescapable. Even those we choose to love grieve us with offenses both trivial
and heinous. If we love, it is a guarded love and in spite of ourselves.
The
problem, for Christ-followers (and it is a big problem) is that Jesus, on
multiple occasions explicitly ties together loving God and loving our neighbor.
When asked about the greatest commandment He naturally answers, Love the Lord,
but then problematically adds on “love your neighbor as yourself.”
Often,
quite often, in fact, we operate as if our faith in Christ is independent of
other people. Sometimes it is easier to love the Lord than it is other people.
We know the trustworthy character of the Lord but people--- well, we know the
track record they have going, and it’s not good.
For
those who choose to follow after Christ though, the command to love others is
inescapable. We aim to love not only those who deserve it but all we encounter. In loving our
neighbors regardless of what they have or haven’t done, we model the way Christ
loved us. He did not choose us when we were holy people with our lives
perfectly arranged (we’re not even those people yet) but loved us while we were
hopeless, wretched, and lost.
So
we make it our aim to love through action our neighbors--- strangers and
brothers alike, always acknowledging that it may be difficult, painful, and
messy but also keeping our eyes fixed on Jesus who, quite inexplicably, loved
us first.
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