NB. Another late post. . .oh, and you really need to read this one in an ironic tone!
St. Martin de Porres
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
NDS, NOLA
Fr. Philip N. Powell, OP
NDS, NOLA
We should ignore Jesus’ command to love one another. (Oh, “loving God,” by the way, is fine b/c that’s mostly an abstract sort of thing that doesn’t really require us to do much beyond saying that we love God. It’s not like the God-lovers glow or anything). OK. Back to the reasons to ignore Jesus:
First: Love is messy and it makes you
act stupid: as a passion love is fine, but when indulged it turns the
lover into a hopeless mess and promotes really dumb decision-making.
Take Jesus, for example. Because he indulged in loving us, he ended
up a bloody mess on a whipping post and nailed to a cross. He
could’ve stopped the blood bath at any point, but he didn’t. He
died for us instead.
Second: Love is expensive: show me one
act of love that is free, and I’ll show you some land on Grand Isle
that’s guaranteed not to flood. Love always has a price. What’s
the point of willing the Good for others when it will likely lighten
your wallet, cost you a gallon of gas, or force you to spend several
minutes of your life doing something charitable. Again, just look at
Jesus. Was his act of love for us free? Well, OK, free for us! That’s
fine. But it cost Jesus his dignity and his life. Expensive, indeed.
Third: Love requires us to focus too
much on others: it would seem that the basic point of love is to fawn
all over other people, wait on them hand and foot, and pretend to be
all about their needs and their hurts. It’s all about them, them,
them! What about me?! I have my needs and my hurts and my wants and
me, me, me. . .Perfect example of this problem: Jesus tells his
little band that if they want to be first they have to serve others!
What is that? What kind of logic is that? To be first I have to be
last, willing to sacrifice prestige, place, honor, and power in order
to SERVE!? Jesus does this for us – again – but look how he ended
up. Great for us. Not so great for him.
Fourth: You have to lie when you love:
not that lying is a problem when you have to do it, but loving is
doubly difficult b/c to keep people liking you you have to tell them
what they don’t want to hear. You can’t “love” if you make
people uncomfortable or if you say unpleasant things to them. It
would seem that charity requires us to lie in order to keep the
peace. Being peaceful is more important than speaking the truth.
Obviously! Didn’t Jesus say that he came to divide with a sword, to
both cut the bonds of sin and to split apart families and friends? Is
that what love does when it forces you to tell the truth? Who thinks
that’s good? He spoke the truth and ended up dead. Not a good
example of peacekeeping.
I’ve given you four good reasons why
loving one another is a problem: love is messy and makes you do dumb
things; it is expensive; it requires you to focus too much on others;
and it makes you lie. All good reasons to forget about love. And this
is why Jesus doesn’t just suggest that we love one another or hint
at the possibility of loving one another. He commands us to love.
Commands. Do it! Love is the greatest commandment b/c our
relationship with God depends on it. We cannot understand what God is
saying to us through the prophets if we fail to love. And we cannot
know what is true, honorable, just, pure, lovely, gracious, and
excellent if we will not love. What’s worse: we cannot know
anything of Goodness, we cannot imitate God, we cannot become Christ
if we will not love.
It’s a command. Not an argument or a
suggestion or a Facebook meme. It is a command, an order. And if you
will be more than you are, if you will be made perfect in the
Father’s love, you will love – Him, us, yourself and you will
rejoice in the Lord always b/c He loved you first. . .and loves you
still.
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