Show me the wonders of your great
love, you who save by your right hand those who take refuge in you from their
foes.
--
Psalm 17:7
When asked by one of the Pharisees --
a strict religious sect of centuries ago -- to name the greatest of God’s laws,
Jesus astounded his audience by the simplicity and clarity of his response:
“Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the first and greatest commandment,” he said. “And the second is like it: 'Love your neighbor as yourself.’ All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments."
In just a few brief sentences, Jesus
summarized the core message of the
entire Old Testament: God’s love, translated into beneficial
motivations and actions through our faith in Christ, is an unstoppable,
world-changing force.
This is a difficult concept for many
people because they equate “love” with weddings, chocolates and Valentine’s
Day. But Jesus wasn’t talking about that fleeting, awkward emotion. Instead, he’s
calling his followers to walk in step with him by putting their love into
sincere, tangible action. And this can come in a wide variety of forms — everything
from helping an elderly neighbor pick up their groceries to revealing God’s
light to strangers through a prison ministry. It could also translate into
changing a coworker’s life by showing him or her how Jesus has changed your
own. The possibilities and potential are endless.
How does God demonstrate his love to
us?
Let’s start with The Prodigal Son, the famous Bible story
about a loving father who welcomed back his wayward -- and totally undeserving --
child with open arms. Or what about Jesus’ parable of the shepherd, who
searched tirelessly for a single missing sheep? When he finally found it, he
returned it triumphantly to the rest of the flock. Christ also told his
disciples about a man who sold all his possessions to buy a field. But it
wasn’t just any plot of land. Instead, it was real estate that held buried
treasure. The cost to buy the field was staggering, but the man did whatever it
took to gain the precious prize.
Indeed, God shows his love by going
to extraordinary lengths to bring us into his family. John 3:16, perhaps the most well-known passage of Scripture, tells us that God loves
the world so much that he gave his only son (Jesus) so that those who believe
in him will have eternal life. God willingly let Jesus suffer and die to pay
for all our wrongdoings — past, present and future. We rightfully deserve death
because of how we’ve lived our lives and broken his laws. But God’s love offers
us joy and happiness if we’re only willing to accept it. By living on Earth
among everyday people and then dying for our sins, Jesus, who was literally
God-in-the-flesh, has already paid the high price we owe.
The limits of vocabulary prevent us
from fully describing the meaning and implications of how God loves and
cherishes his creation. We can only skim the surface of this vast and deep
ocean. But maybe it’s really not so difficult. After all, it takes only three
simple words from the book of 1 John to sum up: God
is Love. And it’s when we live out our faith by putting his love into
action that we can make a world of difference.