Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love. (1 John 4:8, NIV)
The cost of loving can be great. Massive. To us in Cor Unum, however, the cost of withholding love is too great to measure. It is too great to consider.
Here in this monastery, we love our family and our friends; we love those in our church and the church down the street, too. We love those with whom we agree and those with whom we categorically disagree. We love our enemies. We love them. We must. We simply cannot afford any other strategy. Our God is LOVE, and our personal proof is that He loves us in all our unloveliness. How can we think to relate to Him without it?
This last word, for the time being, on this surpassing great subject is from Jesus’ words to His disciples as He prepared to leave them to love in His absence.
Let’s employ a bit of Lectio Divina for practice. Here is what we can see in John, chapter 15.
- The Father loved Jesus, and He loved us. (verse 9)
- He wants us to remain in His love and commanded us to do that (verse 9)
- To keep His commandment to love, we must keep His commandments. (verse 10) What were they?
- He has had joy in keeping His Father’s commands and He wants us to have that joy, too. In fact, He says we can have complete joy. (verse 12)
- He seems to be speaking in a circle … His command is to LOVE! (verse 12)
- He gives a measure for love … to the laying down of one’s life. Is that once and for all or, more likely, on a continuing basis? (verse 13)
- The measure of that love is to be called Jesus’ friends. That is, we are His friends if we do what He commands. It makes sense. He is glad to be our Friend, but He is still King and Lord of ALL. (verse 15)
- He doesn’t call us servants, even though this friendship is built upon obedience. This makes sense, too. After all, He is SON to the Father, even closer than a friend, but He is obedient. (verse 15)
- Servants don’t know what their master is doing; this means that we do. That indicates that we know the plan of God is to love, and we will have all that we need to obey … to LOVE … as we go along.
- Jesus has left nothing unsaid or undone or unknown. He has imparted to us everything that He learned from His Father. That must mean that from here on out, we will be reminded of what we know. What we know is that LOVE is God’s nature and His plan, and it is our vocation, by commandment.
“As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love. If you keep my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commands and remain in his love. I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be complete. My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. You are my friends if you do what I command. I no longer call you servants, because a servant does not know his master’s business. Instead, I have called you friends, for everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you. (John 15:9-15)
Should anyone suggest we are here in Cor Unum for another purpose, to accomplish something outside of the love of God, we are safeguarded to dismiss that idea. All our hours of stillness, thanksgiving, “Lectio”, all worship and all “Conversatio”, it’s all because we love and that we might love more faithfully. We pray because we love, we sing because we love, we bring our hearts into the fullness of hope, because we love our Father and our God, and He loves us and those very like us and those very much opposed to us.
Most of us were, after all, once very much opposed to what we are now. Blessed be the God Who loved us then and loves us now!
Carl Heinrich Bloch
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