“This
is My commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. Greater
love has no one than this, than to lay down one’s life for his friends.” John 15:12-13
Reading
this passage literally, it seems clear that Jesus is referring to the perfect love
and the perfect faith which will be expressed when He willfully allows Himself
to be delivered to the Cross for death, the death by which sinners can be
freed. Reading more broadly, however, and not quite so literally, we can
see “love” expressed not only in a literal shedding of one’s blood unto death
but a surrendering of one’s own will for the sake of another whose genuine need
exceeds our own. The tricky part of discerning need, however, is trying
not to measure another’s needs according to our own desires; that is, when our
needs are more than met and we become confused between the two.
Make
no mistake; it is not always about money. Sometimes the greatest gift we
can give to others is our time just as it is often the greatest gift we can
offer the Church and to our Lord in prayer, in fasting, in worship, in
attending to the Sacraments of the Church, and in singing songs of
praise. Yes, Jesus does teach us that the giving of the tithe must not be
neglected, but we must also consider tithes “and offerings” that cannot be
measured in dollars and cents.
We
all have needs, genuine needs according to the body as well as the soul; but if
we are unwilling to offer anything except only to those whom we deem worthy of
our love, we have entirely missed the point of what Scripture means of divine
love, perfect love, sacrificial love. This comes from the better part of
who we truly are; the Image in which we are created.
Blessings,
Michael
2 comments:
Amen!
Thank you, Ren, for reading and commenting!
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