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Click to hear this sermon sermon070513
"Johnny," said a teacher to
one of her young pupils, "do you think you can explain to the class the
difference between 'like' and 'love'?" "Well," said Johnny,
"I like my parents... but I love Milk Duds."
"Follow
the Leader" Cicero United Methodist Church May 13, 2007.
John
13: 31-36 Mother's Day Jack Keating
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"Johnny," said a teacher to
one of her young pupils, "do you think you can explain to the class the
difference between 'like' and 'love'?" "Well," said Johnny,
"I like my parents... but I love Milk Duds."
Today is Mother's Day. It is a day to
show our mothers that they are at least as important to us as our Milk Duds.
I must relate to you though, that one
Mom had a most revealing experience on Mother's Day.
Her two children ordered her
to stay in bed. She lay there looking forward to being brought her breakfast,
as the inviting smell of bacon and eggs floated up from the kitchen. At last
everything grew quiet and then finally, the kids invited her downstairs. She
found them sitting at the kitchen table, each with a large plate full of eggs
and bacon. "As a Mother's Day surprise," one explained, "We decided to
cook our own breakfast."
That says an awful lot, doesn't it?
Who in this world does more for us than our Mom? And who is taken for granted
more than our Mom? So it is only right that we pause to devote a day each year
in honor of those women who have devoted their lives to their family, to their
church and most importantly to their children.
Would that it would be more than just
a day...
Our gospel text today could easily be about
being a good mother, but actually it is aimed at the whole Christian family.
Jesus is looking to the cross. There he will glorify God by his perfect
obedience to God's plan. Now he is calling his disciples to perfect obedience
as well. But what is this perfect obedience to which he is calling them?
"A new commandment I give to
you," says Jesus, "that you love one another. Just as I have loved
you, you also should love one another. By this all people will know that you
are my disciples, if you have love for one another."
So let me try today to make three
points about this important passage
FIRST
OF ALL I would hope that you would notice that love is not an option for
followers of Jesus. Jesus says, "A new commandment I give to you..."
Not a suggestion, not a recommendation. A commandment!
Why is it a commandment? It is a
commandment, I think, because there is a part of every one that rebels against
the idea of pure, unconditional love.
Despite the example that almost
everyone of us received in the form of our Mother's love for us - there is a
part of us that says such love is out of place in the world in which we live.
There is a part of us that says - sure, love is great - up to a certain point
...
A man recently described his father to
me this way - he told me that his father was a kind man - a generous man - a
man who would do anything for his friends - but who could be exactly the
opposite way if he didn't like you.
I thought how sad this description of
this man was - and after hearing it, I was upset. I was upset for the son's
sake - because I could tell that he knew that something wasn't quite right with
his father - and I was upset for the father's sake- because he was already into
his 70's and he hadn't yet learned what love is - I was upset for him - and
lastly I was upset for all the people whose lives he had failed to touch for
God - for all people who learned from him that they didn't matter - that they
were unimportant.
I tell you about this man today
because he is a perfect example of why Jesus commanded us to love one another -
because without that command - and the particular nature of the command - that
we love one another just as Jesus has loved us - many of us might end up
thinking that it is good enough to love your family and friends and to hate, or
despise, or simply ignore, everyone else.
But Jesus reminds us that it is not.
We are called to love others in the
way that Christ loves us-
We are called to love our brothers and
sisters in the way that mothers love their Children
We are called to love without
condition - to care for - and to pray for others - regardless of their attitude
towards us
- regardless of what they may
or may not deserve
- regardless of whether or
not they are related to us by blood, or by ties of affection or common
interest.
If I was asked today to explain the
difference between liking and loving - I would say it lies in attitude.
Attitude is what makes liking and
loving different from one another.
The attitude of obedience - and the
attitude of gratitude -
- obedience to Christ's
commandment to love like he loves, to love even sinners
- and gratitude that we have
the opportunity to love others in the same way that Christ loves us - that he
has given us the opportunity to love
others
without condition or qualification.
Jesus
commands us - he orders us - to love one another - just as he loves us.
THE
SECOND THING I want to lift up from today's gospel text is this: Our ability to
love is derived from our relationship with Christ. "We love because he
first loved us", says the Apostle John. We are able to love because he
loves us.
I think understanding this is critical
to our ability to live out the Christian life of love. It is critical to our
ability to keep the only commandment that Jesus in fact gave to us.
My friends, love does not happen in a
vacuum. Love is something that is passed from one person to another. This is
one reason Christian parents, and particularly Christian mothers, are so
important. A child who does not receive love, psychologists tell us, will not
be able to give love. There will always be a void there - a terrible void that
can never be filled. On the other hand, a child who has received the proper
amount of nurturing as an infant and as a toddler will have a sense of security
and trust that will last them all their lives.
This is also true with regard to
Christ's commandment about love.
If you try to keep Christ's
commandment without first nurturing your relationship with him, you will be
doomed to fail.
We draw our ability to love others in
the way that Christ loves us from our connection to God. We get it from the
love that Christ is able to pour out upon us when we are in relationship with
him. Without that connection - without that love - our faith is simply an
exercise in noble living. It has no real power to draw us out of ourselves and
to center us in others.
"A new commandment I give to
you," said Jesus, "that you love one another. As I have loved you, so you
also should love one another. By this will all people know that you are my
disciples, if you love one another."
We can keep the commandment to love
one another as Christ loves us - only is proportion to how we open ourselves to
Christ and allow his love to enter our lives - and to empower our lives.
We open our lives to Christ when we
pray to him - when we immerse ourselves in his word - and when we gather
together with others who believe to worship him and to fellowship and to work
together for him in the world.
THE
THIRD THING I would like to help you see in today's text is that love is the
Christian's primary witness to the world. Our husbands, our wives, our
children, and our neighbors will know we are Christ's followers if we have love
for them and for everyone we meet.
I speak now, for a minute to the men
who are here today, specifically to the married men...
We are told by Christ - like all other
disciples - to love others just as he has loved us - but we are also even more
specifically told by God that we are to love our wives in the way Christ loves
us, in the way that he loves the church and give himself for her...
Paul tells us in chapter five of his
letter to the Ephesians that you are to take the same standard of love that
Christ commanded his disciples to apply to everyone and you are to apply it to
your own families to your own wives.
I think back to my own childhood and
how my mother would say about my father - he is so charming and nice to
everyone else when we go out, but he is so different when we get home."
And sometimes I recognize in this -
and in myself - and in how so many men are one way in public and another way in
private - in how so many men treat their bosses and their fellow workers and
their clients or their customers better than they treat the mother of their
children - and I recognize in these things that many of us really need to hear
the special word God has given us about loving our wives as Christ loves us.
Think of it guys, as a Mother's Day
challenge - think of it as a gift you might make to your spouse - as a gift you
might make to the world.
We men really need to think about how
Christ gave himself for us - how he served us
- how he bent down and washed
the feet of his disciples
- how he gave his time - his
energy - his attention - to them
- and how for them - for
everyone - he endured without protest - without fighting back against false
accusations - slander - and even injury until
death.
What do you do for your wife that
other men don't do? What makes your love for her different from the love that
non-Christian men show to their wives? How do you love her as Christ loves the
church?
I read an article not too long ago
about an antenna that was on the market for cellular telephones. It costs
nineteen dollars. This antenna gives the appearance of the real thing, but it
is fake. It's for people who can't afford a cellular telephone, but don't want
their friends to know it. The amazing thing is that in its hey-day more than
200,000 people bought these fake antennas.
When I read that I thought about a
survey done by a psychology professor many years ago. The purpose of the survey
was to find out what people think of those people who wear eyeglasses.
It seems that shoppers in a mall were
asked to look at pictures of men and women with and without glasses and rate
them according to certain characteristics. The results to that survey were
quite interesting. Men wearing glasses were considered to be more intelligent
and more trustworthy than those without. In the rating of women for
intelligence, however, glasses made no difference. But glasses did add an air
of financial success to both sexes. Women
with glasses were generally considered to be more competent than those without
glasses. In fact, after the survey was completed, the professor bought himself
a pair of fake eyeglass frames to wear at counseling sessions! He wanted to
look competent too, I suppose.
There are a lot of fakes in this world
my friends, but there are some things in life you cannot fake.
Love is one of them - it has defining
characteristics - the characteristics of Christ - and it produces fruit that
cannot be mistaken - a fruit that keeps on growing and spreading - and changing
your family - changing your world - changing your life... as it produces love
And
joy
And
peace
And
patience
And
faithfulness
And
gentleness
And
self-control.
How
do people know that you are disciples of Christ?
"By
this they will know that you are my disciples," says Jesus, "if you have
love for one another."
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