THE WORD IN SCRIPTURE
Romans
13:8-14
Don’t
be in debt to anyone, except for the obligation to love each other. Whoever
loves another person has fulfilled the Law. The commandments, Don’t commit
adultery, don’t murder, don’t steal, don’t desire what others have, and any
other commandments, are all summed up in one word: You must love your neighbor
as yourself. Love doesn’t do anything wrong to a neighbor; therefore, love is
what fulfills the Law.
As
you do all this, you know what time it is. The hour has already come for you to
wake up from your sleep. Now our salvation is nearer than when we first had
faith. The night is almost over, and the day is near. So let’s get rid of the
actions that belong to the darkness and put on the weapons of light. Let’s
behave appropriately as people who live in the day, not in partying and getting
drunk, not in sleeping around and obscene behavior, not in fighting and
obsession. Instead, dress yourself with the Lord Jesus Christ, and don’t plan
to indulge your selfish desires.
MESSAGE
If you were to ask some random person out on the street, “What
do you think of those people at Cobleskill United Methodist Church?” what
answer do you think you’d get?
What are we known for? What are the marks or characteristics
of our life together as a community of faith? What marks us as a faithful church?
Is it our Sunday worship? Is it our Sunday School or our
Bible Studies? Is it the concern we show for our neighbors through our varied mission
projects? Is it the many ways we seek to fulfill Jesus’ commandment to care for
those who are hungry or poor or sick?
Different churches use different ways of assessing their
faithfulness. For some churches, agreement with or profession of a certain
creed or set of beliefs is the mark of faithfulness. For other churches, the
celebration and proper understanding of sacraments such as holy communion and
baptism is the marks of faithfulness. And for other churches, the size of the
congregation or budget or building might be seen as a mark of faithfulness.
Certainly, our ministries, our worship, and our outreach
projects are all marks of our faithfulness to Jesus.
But perhaps the most important “marks” of a faithful Christian
community have less to do with what we DO and more to do with what we ARE as
the Church.
A couple of years ago, I finished my doctoral dissertation,
which focuses on the relationship between “church” and disability. As part of
my research, I looked into different definitions or “marks” of “church.” One of
the theologians I studied is John Howard Yoder. And his definition of “church”
is my favorite. It’s a definition that resonates deeply with my faith and my
experience, and that just makes a whole lot of sense to me.
Here’s Yoder’s definition of “church”:
The church is not simply the bearer of the message of
reconciliation, in the way a newspaper or a telephone company can bear any
message with which it is entrusted. The work of God through the church is the
calling and gathering of people together into a new form of communal life and
social wholeness that reveals reconciliation in that life.
In other words, according to Yoder, the church doesn’t HAVE
a mission to carry out; it doesn’t HAVE a ministry to fulfill; it doesn’t HAVE a
message to proclaim. Rather, the church IS the mission, it IS the ministry, and
it IS the message. The way the people of the church live and work together is
the message. Our life together IS the message and the mission.
Of course, we are the church when we gather on Sunday
mornings, when we enjoy our times of fellowship, when we celebrate communion
together, and when we spend many hours preparing for garage sales and quilt
shows and other community events.
But we are the church most fully and most faithfully when our
life together most closely resembles the way Jesus lived; when we, as a church,
are marked and shaped by aspects of Jesus’ life and ministry and message.
For the next three weeks, I will be describing some of these
“marks” of being the church.
Today’s mark of being the church is found in our reading
from Romans. Listen again to the Apostle Paul’s words to the church in Rome:
“Don’t be in debt to anyone, except for the obligation to
love each other. Whoever loves another person has fulfilled the Law. The
commandments, Don’t commit adultery, don’t murder, don’t steal, don’t desire
what others have, and any other commandments, are all summed up in one
word: You must love your neighbor as
yourself. Love doesn’t do anything wrong to a neighbor; therefore, love is
what fulfills the Law.”
Love fulfills the law. One mark of the church, according to
Paul, is choosing to live according to the rule of love, not the rule of law.
When Paul says law, of course he means the religious laws,
which, like any laws, can be defined as “a system of rules which are enforced
through social institutions to govern behavior.”
I believe that too many Christians and too many churches
let law be the guiding principle in their life together, and in their relationships
with God and with others.
But in this letter to the Romans, Paul is saying that all
of the law is fulfilled whenever we act out of love.
We need to remember that Jesus often took the religious
leaders of his day to task because those leaders focused so much on the law
that they lost sight of the loving choice. Relying on the rule of law to shape
our life together can keep us from seeing the way of love. When we make law the
basis of who we accept, who we welcome into our midst, who we deem “worthy” of
our love or God’s love, then we have buried love under the burdens of the law.
We have a choice. The rule of law, or the way of love.
Unfortunately, it’s a lot easier to choose the rule of law.
Law is easy. Love is hard.
Law means you can control people . . . love means you
can’t.
Law means you can reject and ignore people who aren’t like
you or who don’t think the way you think or believe the things you believe . .
. love means you can’t.
Law means you can judge others and decide who’s in and
who’s out . . . love means you can’t.
Law means you can determine who is worthy of receiving help
or support or love or forgiveness . . . love means you can’t.
Law means you look for the bad in people . . . love means
you have to trust the good in people.
Law means you can measure other people and decide if they
are as good as you are . . . love means you don’t think you’re better than
anyone else.
Choosing the way of love is hard. It demands practice. It
means taking risks.
Choosing love instead of law doesn’t mean that we believe the
laws aren’t important. Indeed, laws are an important means of ensuring that any
community can thrive and that people can be protected from being harmed by
others.
But . . . laws can only define and, to a certain extent, control,
BEHAVIOR. No laws can control ATTITUDES. For example, a person can follow laws that
prohibit discrimination, but still harbor racist or oppressive attitudes in
their hearts.
And that’s the core of Paul’s statement about love and law.
We know that there are limits to the law. Too often, laws get broken and people
get hurt.
John Wesley is the founding father of Methodism, our faith
tradition. In 19th century England, Wesley oversaw the growth of
Methodism through small groups of people who met together to grow in faith and
love. He laid out three simple, basic rules for the members of these groups to
follow:
Do no harm. Do good. Stay in love with God.
It’s interesting to note the order in which Wesley listed
those rules. We might think that he’d put something about loving God first. But
he didn’t. His first rule was, “do no harm.”
That sounds very similar to what Paul wrote: “Love does no
harm to a neighbor; therefore, love is the fulfillment of the Law.”
You see, where the law fails, love succeeds. Where our
attempts to obey the law fall short, love fills the gap. What the law can’t
accomplish, love can.
Because love does no harm, to anyone. And in this way, Love
always fulfills the law.
So to Paul, to John Wesley, and to Jesus, one of the most
important marks or signs of a faithful church is when we choose the way of love
instead of the rule of law. When our life together is a celebration of expansive
and generous love, rather than a rigid observance of law. When, by doing no
harm to anyone, we show the world that we are marked by and filled with the merciful
and gracious love of God.
Eugene Peterson is the author of the version of the Bible
called The Message. And I like the way he interprets Paul’s words in this
passage. He writes,
“You can’t go wrong when you love others. [Because] when
you add up everything in the law, the sum total is love.” May it be so, here at
CUMC. Amen.
What a great message and reminder of what Jesus was, and still is, witnessed in the body of Christ. Love your neighbor as your self. Do no Harm, do good and love God always ❤️
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