Thrower: God empowers us to love one another
Published 12:00 am Saturday, February 11, 2017
Love One Another, 1 John 3:11-24
When I was around 8 years old, I was always getting sick. My pediatrician said that I needed my tonsils taken out. He told my parents that I would be put to sleep for the surgery. I was more than a little bit nervous and uneasy about the procedure. And, to make bad matters worse, on the morning of the surgery, my pastor Rev. Bloodsworth, arrived wearing a dark suit. I started screaming frantically when he walked through the door. Finally my mom got me to quiet down and asked me, “what in the world was the matter” – I said, “the preacher is here for my funeral. I’ve only seen him at church before. What’s he doing here?” He tried to explain that he was only there to share God’s love and concern with me, but he had his work cut out for him sharing love in action over my hysterical screaming. I guess I’ve always been overly dramatic. That experience reminds me that it can be difficult to love one another. Our attempts to share the love of God may not always be well received. In the name of the resurrected loving Christ, we are called as Christians to selflessly love one another.
“How plain, how full, and how deep a compendium of genuine Christianity!” Thus did John Wesley estimate the first Epistle of John. As three of the canon’s catholic or general epistles, the Johannine letters have justly enjoyed esteem disproportionate to their size. As well as rewards, these texts offer their interpreters great theological insight and truth about how to live the Christ life.
The style of the writing of the epistle of 1 John is similar in phrasing to the Gospel of John. But there is not an open salutation or closing farewell to a particular audience. 1 John is deep as the ocean, yet simple enough for anyone to read with benefit. 1 John wasn’t written in a linear way, so this book is hard to outline. But it’s circular style corresponds to the way we live and learn. 1 John emphasizes a number of subjects – love, light, knowledge, life – and it keeps circling back to them throughout this letter. This epistle presents Jesus as the Son of God who came in the flesh. Those who reject Him are heretics, antichrists, and liars. Those who receive Him are children of light and love with assurance of everlasting life. Christian living isn’t easy, but it is simple and certain – a matter of staying in the light, walking with Jesus, confessing sins, loving other, and knowing we have eternal life. That’s the wonderful message of 1 John.
1 John 3:11-18 pushes us to take a hard look at the violence in our world, and to look through that violence to its root in lovelessness. The writers’s assertion that hatred is tantamount to murder (1John 3:15) may seem exaggerated to some. In fact, it could not be more clear-sighted or on target. Warp love, and hate thrives. Hand hate a gun, and someone gets murdered. Blood from a hundred murders stains every hour of every day in the United States and throughout the world. The spirit of Cain lives on in the will and the thirst for violence, which is the opposite of love. The author of 1 John could have predicted most of the murders are not strangers to their victims but members of the same family. Husband knife their wives; wives shoot their husbands; children and parents slay each other. The horrifying pattern is magnified among the world’s religions, whose adherents slaughter their kin; Buddhists and Hindus in Sri Lanka, Jews and Muslims in Palestine, Catholic and Protestants in Northern Ireland. Violence has become so commonplace that many Christians have grown callous to malice, accustomed to murder, and mute on this rampant obscenity. And so we are judged by our text, which exposes our indifference to evil and the circumscription of our own love.
We hear the word of love so much if we are not careful it can lose its significance upon our lives. The author rescues this well worn word love and helps us to gain a new perspective for the majesty and wonder of God’s amazing and redeeming love. The word love is used all through this passage. It is not enough to agree about the centrality and importance of receiving God’s love. In turn we must generously share the love of God with one another. Because we are loved by God we are compelled to share his life-giving transformational love. Loving one another means to visit the sick, care for the grieving, encourage the depressed, and help those in need. Each of us as followers of Christ are to seek to love as he did. As followers of Christ we are called to be Jesus with skin, to love one another in practical and tangible ways that will improve someone’s life in the here and now, as well as for eternity.
The basic command of 1 John is to love one another. Some people can be difficult and hard to love. But we are not to love in our own strength or merit. It is only through the power of the risen Savior are we enable to do what would be beyond our own natural ability. 1 John clearly reveals that love is a verb and followers of Jesus are to experience a radical change of heart and love. “Little children, let’s not love with words or speech but with action and truth. This is how we know that we belong to the truth and reassure our heart in God’s presence.“ (1 John 3:18-19. God alone has made love a reality to us. Without the assurance of the gospel, we would remain trapped in hate and paralyzed in fear. This passage from 1 John compels us to go beyond the pew; on the streets or at home, in a prison or playground, a workplace or soup kitchen, a hospital or funeral home – wherever God’s children find themselves among those in need. We don’t have two histories, one where we become children of God and the other by which we become each other’s brother or sister. We have one history, aptly captured in the Cotton Patch Version of 1 John 3:18: “My little one’s, let’s not talk about love. Let’s not sing about love. Let’s put love into action and make it real.” Without such responsible love, the distance between hate and murder is, as 1 John cautions us, considerably shorter that we think. Thanks be to God, who, through Jesus Christ and the discipline of his Spirit, give the vision, the energy, and the resources to nurture life and against all odds empowers us to love one another.
– Dr. Jason Thrower is the pastor at First United Methodist Church, Andalusia, and is a member of the Greater Andalusia Area Ministerial Association.