Thursday, December 20, 2012

Rachel Weeping for Her Children: Lamentations during Yuletide


A time of weeping. Who would have thought that during the time of Jesus’ birth that Herod, the furious king who had been outwitted, would have all of the boys (2 years old and under) around the vicinity of Bethlehem killed?
                A time of weeping. Who would have thought in a Connecticut  elementary school a week before Christmas that a troubled and disturbed young man would kill 20 six and seven year olds in their classroom?
                Yes, a time of weeping. A time of weeping for the parents, for the relatives, for the friends, for the adults, for the teachers, for the community, for the state, for the nation.
                A time of weeping because evil is present. Sometimes evil is present in proportions that our human mind can hardly fathom. It is at those moments that it seems nothing can really console, nothing can really soothe the pain, there is no balm for the soul.
                A time of weeping, a time of lament. When Herod did the unthinkable, he also created the un-consolable. Listen to how Matthew in his gospel records this…

                “A voice is heard in Ramah,
                                Weeping and great mourning,
                Rachel weeping for her children
                                And refusing to be comforted,
                Because they are no more” (Matthew 2:18).

The human condition of unconscionable acts perpetrated upon innocent people could not have been painted any more poignantly. “Because they are no more.” A vacancy left. A hole in the heart. A vacuum of presence.
                Two huge things make a difference for the Christian in this painful moment: God suffers with the children and parents, and evil will not prevail. Only God can provide the kind of comfort that such a bruised heart needs. Since He is the God of all comfort, He alone can walk with us in the mourning of our lamentations and accept the meaning of our groans. Let us collectively pray for the “Rachels” who are weeping for their children and refuse to be comforted because they are no more.
In Christian love, Curtis

Monday, November 26, 2012

What is the Gospel? (1)


First of all, it is an English word  which comes from Middle English, from the Old English word godspel. This compound word is made up of god which means “good,” and spel which means “tale.” It is used to translate the Late Latin word evangelium which means “good news.” This comes from the Greek word εύαγγελιον which means “good news.”
So, what is the gospel, the good-tale, the good news all about? How is it portrayed in the New Testament?
First, we must look into the Old Testament and Greco-Roman usage to get the power of this word and why it was chosen to express a central concept of New Testament theology.
The verb “to speak the good news” is first used in 1 Samuel 31:9. After a battle in which the Philistines fought with Israel, Saul and his sons die in battle. After the battle is over the Philistine army strips the armor off of Saul and sends it back home, “sending round glad tidings (good news) to their idols and to the people. “ A public display is made of Saul’s dead body, and they exhibit his battle armor in the temple of Astarte.
This interesting use of the word “good news” comes out of the context of a victor in battle. The Philistines rejoice and sound out the good news that their arch enemy and leader has been vanquished in combat.
Theologically and metaphorically this idea stays inherent within the word itself. Satan and his army has been vanquished by the resurrection of Jesus. The good news of victory is inherent in the New Testament usage of this word.
In 2 Samuel 1:20 we find the next usage of this word. After the battle mentioned above, David laments over Saul and over Jonathan his son. David gives an order to share his lament with the sons of Judah, and even to have it written down for posterity in the book of Jasher. Part of this lament cautions, “Do not tell it in Geth, and do not tell it as glad tidings (“good news”) in the streets of Ascalon, lest the daughters of the Philistines rejoice…”
Another inherent concept within the gospel, “good news,” is that the good news is bad news for someone. In this case, it was Judah and David. In the case of the Christian, it is Satan and his world. The good news of Jesus is bad news for Satan and his kingdom. Satan has already lost the war. He is losing enlistments daily. He is losing battles daily.
Continuing the story, in 2 Samuel 4:10 someone reports to David that Saul was dead, and assumes that David is going to take it as good news. David is so upset that he kills the messenger! This gives us another insight into “good news.” Often it is not appreciated and the herald or messenger is persecuted, punished or killed. Reminds us of Jesus, doesn’t it!
The gospel, the good news…celebration of victory, the enemy has been overcome, but the message not always appreciated!
What is the good news of Jesus in your life?
In Christian love, Curtis

Monday, November 19, 2012

NO LEFTOVER CAKE AFTER THANKSGIVING!


The first reference in the Bible to thankfulness is with reference to a thanksgiving cake! Both the recipe and when to eat it is mentioned! In my wife’s recipes for Thanksgiving Dinner, and even the recipes I remember seeing in my mother’s kitchen, none of them contained an expiration date or when to eat what was baked!
                Israel’s first instructions regarding an offering or expression of thankfulness connected with their “fellowship offering.” Traditionally this was known as a “peace offering.” Perhaps it is not a coincidence that an offering of thankfulness came out of fellowship and peace!
                Though today we do not think of a  thanksgiving cake, I suppose our substitute would be the Thanksgiving turkey.   Just as recipe stipulations were made in the preparation of Israel’s offering of a thanksgiving cake, so too, we all have family special recipes that determine how we fix and prepare and cook the turkey. Also, it seems that a dinner is not complete without rolls! We have Thanksgiving rolls, and what an aroma out of the kitchen when they are ready to serve!
                Another odd stipulation was that all of the thanksgiving cake must be eaten of the day it was baked; a person “must leave none it until the morning”(Leviticus 7:15). This does away with the necessity of creative leftovers. I was thinking about this command, and I suppose it is rooted in the idea of thankfulness being experienced in the here and the now. After all, the more leftovers hang around the less thankful we become!
                No leftover cake. No leftover turkey. No leftover fixin’s.
                In Leviticus these regulations for the “fellowship offering of thanksgiving” are in a large section where more regulations are given for the burnt offering, the grain offering, the sin offering, and the ordination offering. These guidelines were given Moses on Mt. Sinai by God, and taken into their practice of offerings when they sojourned in the Desert of Sinai.
                Bottom line:   Every offering is connected with the covenant care and love of God to remind His people of how much He cared for them.
                This year in our participation of the Thanksgiving Holiday, let us focus on God’s love and care. Let us offer thanksgiving to God out of fellowship and peace with others.  This helps us keep this holiday centered, grounded in relationships, and thankful for life itself. The material blessings are just a serendipity!
In Christian love, Curtis

Monday, November 5, 2012

Struggling in Prayer Together


Every church I have ever been a part of has a prayer line or prayer request opportunity. So many misconceptions surround the practice of prayer. Additionally, many unknown dimensions of prayer remain unknown in actual practice. The one I want to focus on is what I call “Mutual Agonizing Prayer.”
            Sean was a young man who asked me to visit him. His world had caved in because of unsuccessful surgeries that left him virtually incapacitated and unable to eat normally. The pain, the misery and the depression were quite acute. On this particular day I entered his apartment and all he could do was listen and pet his dog. It was the first time in my life that I made the following statement: “Sean, I will help take on your painful struggle and pray in your presence right now, trying to say what you are feeling.” Taking on the pain of another introduces empathy into our own lives at a whole new level.
            The apostle Paul understood this mutually, deep experience of prayer. On one occasion he requests that his Christian brothers and sisters in Rome “agonize together with me in prayer” (Romans 15:30). He was asking to be delivered from mistreatment and other difficult obstacles in his life. He felt he could only face these trying circumstances by asking others on board his ship of life. No such thing as sailing solo for Paul during a storm!
            To the church at Colossae Paul reminds them of their friend, Epaphras, who also “agonized in prayer on their behalf”(Colossians 4:12). He specifically prayed for their spiritual maturity and an assurance that they were committing their lives properly to the will of God.
            Think with me, now, about this mutual, deep experience of prayer. Here is what we can struggle together about…
·         Health concerns that overwhelm
·         Proper way to respond to mistreatment
·         Spiritual maturity
·         Right decision-making
·         Support in the midst of emotional pain
·         Right direction in a person’s life
I know that we all can add to this list. When we go through the fires of pain, and life throws one obstacle after another in our path, we understand in the Christian world-view that we do not have to make that journey alone! “Struggling together in prayer” is a mutual blessing that is embraced by Christians who care for one another.
In Christian love, Curtis

Monday, October 29, 2012

BENT FIGURE OF A WOMAN: Meditation on Vincent Van Gogh’s Picture


There seems to be an unspoken weariness expressed by her posture. It mimics and mirrors the weariness of our own souls. Perhaps the day’s chores have been completed, leaving an inner “depleted-ness.” Her head is resting on her left hand as if it has no energy of its own. Even the most simple of tasks, holding the head up, is unthinkable at this moment.
          The right hand is lifelessly drooped over her knee as if it too needs support and help. Having worked and fulfilled the day’s pressing demands, it now rests in exhaustion.
          For some reason the word “resignation” seems appropriate to depict her entire demeanor. What is she resigned to? Has a loved one left her? Has her heart been broken? Are the pressing responsibilities more than she can bear? Does the future seem hopeless with no hint of change?
          The eyes looking downward and over to the side are telling indeed. They seem to ask the question, “Why are you bothering me with your empty promises? Things are not going to get better. Why should I care anymore?” These burning questions are responses to the false hopes uttered by one who has stepped out of her view. Those false hopes ring so hollow, echoes of emptiness reverberating in the chambers of her lonely heart.
          Purpose and motivation have been crushed by the weight of obligations never letting up. Something about her bent figure seated in a chair echoes the contours of our own inner life. Too often our own unspoken weariness comes from a loss of vision within. The boss had piled on another deadline. The children have been sick one too many times. My spouse has misunderstood me and hurt my feelings again. Another unexpected bill has arrived in the mail. Facebook has de-friended me from another friend.
          How can we go on in the face of such “depleted-ness?” Somehow the energy to go on can no longer be mustered. Her own fatigue has forced her heart to create space for God. This woman may very well be engaged in “weary prayer.” Such a prayer would be the inner groanings escaping from a wearied soul. These type of prayers know the fullness of empty words. They are prayed out of truthfulness in the heart when the mind is too numb to function any more.
          If I were to draw a graphic with my own bent figure in the chair, what would it look like? What clothes would I be wearing? How would my head be resting? Where would I be casting my gaze? What would my hands be doing, if anything?
          Often at the end of a long, exhausting day a couch or lounge chair provides the perfect respite for the depleted soul. How do I recoup and regroup from the day’s demands? Limitations of my personhood create caverns in the psyche where self-doubt, fear and rejection take up residence and spread quietly like a deadly cancer.
Do I allow God to embrace my soul and refresh me? My own “weary prayers” are the lifeline to a caring God. God sees the weariness and personal exhaustion. God accepts the failures, provides clarity of vision and defines purpose for my life.
My own “bent-ness” is noticed by a loving and compassionate God.

"Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light" (Matthew 11:28-30, NIV).

Monday, October 22, 2012

“Stay a Little While, O Wanderer”


                 This past week I had the opportunity to visit an exact replica of the ancient catacombs found outside Rome. It was to scale, along with the type of rock excavated and the art and graphics on the rock walls. The frescoes are copies of the originals.
                There were a couple of authentic items, one being the actual body of an 8 year old boy martyred in Rome. His body was wrapped in fine clothes and a stately outfit, but you could see his mummified hands and feet with the bones showing. It was humbling and eerie to be actually looking at the body of young man from a Christian family almost 2,000 years old. He is known as St. Innocent.
                There were nearly 900 miles of underground passageways dug out by early Christians in the pumice-like rock. The purpose was to have a place to bury their dead, and to have special services in honor of their dead. This was all necessary because Roman authorities would not permit Christians to be buried in regular cemeteries.
                As I walked through the dimly lit, narrow passages, I could see various fading artwork and graffiti. The words that captured my attention the most were, “Sta, viator.” This can be roughly translated as, “Stay a little while, O Wanderer.” Or, another possible translation that our guide suggested was, “Pause, and consider your own fate.”
                Something deeply stirred within me as I witnessed what it must have been like for Christians in the early centuries to remember their dead. It was important for me to pause and stay a little while, giving  homage in my own heart to those who have gone before. History has not recorded for us all of those brave Christians who died and were buried in the Roman catacombs. They are a long forgotten witness of the faithful who have gone on before.
                The first three centuries of the church were difficult years. Depending on where one lived in the Roman Empire, different levels of persecution were experienced. Some stories of amazing faith in the face of cruel martyrdom have emerged from this time period.
                Yes, I want to stay a little while precisely because I am a wanderer! I am in exile, a foreigner, and a stranger that has a heritage of faith blazing the trail for my own witness in the world. May I always be true to Jesus who died for me.  May I always take time to remember the faithful who have gone before.
They were put to death by stoning; they were sawed in two; they were killed by the sword. They went about in sheepskins and goatskins, destitute, persecuted and mistreated— the world was not worthy of them. They wandered in deserts and mountains, living in caves and in holes in the ground "(Hebrews 11:37-38).
In Christian love, Curtis

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

What does it mean to be “religious?”

James 1:26-27
The word that James uses for “religious” (threskos) comes from the idea of religion being ritualistic worship activities or even a religious system that one embraces.
There is a reference in Jewish practice centuries before James was on the scene of the idea of “religious” being tied to the skill of a craftsman.  This person  made images of children and kings that provided avenues of reverence but also added to a whole world of superstition and misguided reverence that should have been directed toward God (Wisdom of Solomon XIV.18).
                So, for centuries people have attached wrong ideas to the notion of being religious. Questions abound: is it performing certain rituals correctly? Is it living a perfect life? Is it proving that I am morally better than others? Is it a type of moral purity I achieve because I do more things for the poor and needy? Does it mean that I am living a cramped lifestyle, and I cannot do the other “fun” things that my friends at work get to do over the weekend? Just what does it mean to be “religious?”
                In an astounding move, James takes the idea of “religious/religion” and,  instead of emphasizing ritualistic perfection and moral perfection, he points out that it is a matter of the heart.
                Because religion is a matter of the heart, three things will be evident:
1.       I will be able to bridle my tongue and bless others instead of cursing them.
2.       To care for orphans and widows need, troubles and pressures.
3.       Embrace a different set of values that focuses on God’s will, and not run rampant after values of the world that destroy one’s character and reputation.
Of course, this short list was never intended by James to be the entire picture. But notice that it covers three important things: my words, my reaching out to others, and my value system. If this is religion, then it covers a lot in my life!
Throughout the Bible God demonstrates concern that his covenant people control their tongues. Who would have thought that religions is concerned with what I say to you!
Throughout the Bible God demonstrates His care for the widows and orphans through his covenant people. Who would have thought that religion is concerned with that!
Throughout the Bible God demonstrates concern that His covenant people embrace the right values. Who would have thought that religion is concerned about the values I embrace down deep in my heart, and guide what I do every day!
Even though “religious” and “religion” have received a bad rap for a long time, perhaps the only answer is to live the Christian life in such a way that my tongue, my care, and my values give these two words a whole new meaning from the context of my faithful life to my loving Heavenly Father!
In Christian love, Curtis

Monday, August 6, 2012

QUICK TO LISTEN & SLOW TO SPEAK

Have you ever spouted off something without thinking and it got you into trouble? We instantly realize in two seconds the trouble we are in, and we wish we could take the words back. It may be the hurt look on another’s face, it may be the heavy silence in the room, or it may be our conscience giving us a swift kick—these all speak in a voice that reminds us we should have kept quiet!
                In James 1:19-21 the writer makes a connection between our listening skills and our speaking skills. He starts off with the emphatic phrase…”Understand this…”
                James begins by saying, “Here is something crucial I want you to understand in your Christian life. You need to listen more often than you speak.”
                Notice that James connects quick speaking with anger. We are to be “slow to speak, and slow to anger.” Why is this so? The reason is much more important that keeping me out of trouble.  He connects it with God. Thoughtless speaking and angry words do not bring about or work out the “righteousness of God.”
                This righteousness can be understood in one of two ways (maybe both at the same time!):         1) My listening and speaking should represent the very nature and character of God in my life;       and/or 2) The very will of God can be carried out by how I listen and control my tongue.
                You see, we need to understand that James connects something as practical as my listening and speaking to the very will and nature of God in the world. He is not just concerned with helping us stay out of trouble. He is not just interested in helping us develop relationships skills. He is not just concerned with giving us tips for better living.
                James wants us to know that thoughtless speech and a quick temper do not come from God nor represent the will of God. In this paragraph, he closes with a conclusion about how we are to live in such a way as to save our souls. It is the implanted word that we receive in humility that transforms our speech and lives. This kind of attitude and power from the implanted word enables us to put away everything that is filthy in our lives, along with rampant or abundant wickedness.
                Practically, this means that every day and with every spoken word I must pass the “God-test.”
Am I listening with the compassion of the heart of God? Are the words I am about to speak represent God and His will in the world? Do I realize that unchecked words and anger do not bring about God’s righteousness in the world? What keeps me from being a compassionate and caring listener? Is there anything filthy in my speech or wicked in my thinking and behavior that needs to go?
Understand this…” May God give us the grace to really understand this!

In Christian love, Curtis

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Do Not Fret!


I cannot imagine a more poignant and applicable command in Scripture for most of us! Three times in Psalm 37 the Psalmist says, “Do not fret.”
What does it mean to fret? The dictionary says, “to cause to suffer emotional strain: vex. To grate, wear away, corrode. To affect something by gnawing or biting. To chafe.”
Basically when we fret about something we are allowing that thing (whatever it is) to gnaw away at our insides. It chafes our soul raw. It grates against our nerves and makes us unhappy and agitated.
The specific situation that David is addressing is fretting because others succeed in their ways. Such success comes because of evil and manipulative scheming, and such “evil men” are not concerned about faithfulness before God and caring compassion toward others.
Do not be envious of those who do wrong—nothing could be more pertinent for us to hear today! God does not want us to look at what others have gotten and envy their treasure trove of possessions and positions that have become their idols.
It is easy to fret, though. Here is what we hear ourselves telling ourselves:
·         Man, did he get a break! I wish I could have the same luck;
·         It is not fair. He got away with murder, and got rich doing it!
·         I wish I had her market savvy. She got rich quick. And no one knows how!
·         Some things got passed under the table without notice. How did they get so lucky?
·         That’s business. Too bad someone got hurt. I envy that unfeeling approach. I am not there yet.
·         How in the world did she get so far ahead? I’ve worked twice as hard. I deserve that position.
·         Keep God out of this. It is cut throat, and you just have to suck it up and be tough.
Each of us can keep on adding to this litany of “envious self-flagellation” that does not honor God.  What is the answer to this? The Psalmist has a two-fold response: realize that “evil men” are going to soon wither away and die; and, trust in the Lord and do good.
Sounds almost too easy. But there is a high price to be paid for fretting. When one’s emotions are rubbed raw, when something gnaws at our insides, when our souls are chafed, and when something grates against our nerves, it is hard to love God and neighbor.
Read this Psalm for yourself. Fretting leads to evil! Such strong language and prohibition against it may catch us off guard. But think of all the ways in which David learned the hard way that fretting does not serve any good purpose!  Do we need to remind ourselves today, “Do not fret?!”
In Christian love, Curtis

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Our View of God

In preparation for my fall sermons out of Colossians (Christ in Us, The Hope of Glory), I have been carefully reading through this letter of Paul. Paul’s view of God just from this letter is powerful and insightful for our Christian living today.
·         The Will of God
·         Father of our Lord Jesus Christ
·         Receives prayers and asking
·         He loves the Son
·         He cares enough to rescue us from the dominion of darkness
·         God is invisible
·         God is relational and wants us to be reconciled to him
·         God commissioned Paul to present the word of God in its fullness
·         God has chosen to make known
·         God has power to raise Jesus from the dead, and us from spiritual death.
·         God forgives
·         God makes us alive in Christ
·         God causes the body of believers to grow
·         God has a right hand of power where Jesus sits
·         Our Christian life is hidden with Christ in God
·         The wrath and anger of God is coming upon those who allow their “members that are upon the earth” not to be put to death; in other words, people who have allowed themselves to be guided by their unbridled passions, fulfilling any and every desire without any compunction of conscience.
·         God is the recipient of all expressions of human gratitude
·         God provides open doors for the gospel message
·         God has a will that unfolds and comprises his kingdom on earth
The above major ideas come from the Colossian letter revealing some of the major concepts relative to God’s nature and will and ways on the earth.  It is amazing to me that in such a short letter Paul can address and incorporate all these powerful ideas about God. It seems that for Paul, his practical theology for his readers was always built around the framework of a correct and adequate view of the nature of God.
Perhaps our greatest challenge today as Christians is starting with a view of God that comes from the basis of biblical revelation. If our knowledge, relationship and destiny related to God’s nature are pursued in the right direction, think of how many other things fall naturally into place!
In Christian love, Curtis

Monday, April 16, 2012

PRAYING TO GOD OR PRAISING GOD?

In Augustine’s confessional search for God, he asks God to grant him a special insight.
“Grant me, Lord, to know and understand whether a man is first to pray to you for help or praise you, and whether he must know you before he can call you to his aid.” (Confessions, I.1.2)
Perhaps in our own Christian life and daily walk with God we, too, have struggled with this same question. And, perhaps it comes out this way for us: When I get up in the morning, what is the first thing I should do—pray for God’s help for the day, or begin in praise?
Augustine answers in own question this way: “Those who look for the Lord will cry out in praise to him.”Perhaps, then, it is not an either or choice, rather, seeking God’s help and praising God can be intertwined together.
The notion of knowing God and seeking Him is a concern for writers of the New Testament for their first Christian readers. For example, listen to the writer of the book of Hebrews:  “And without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him” (Hebrews 11:6).
I think it is clear that faith in God and knowing God comes before praying and praising God. This makes sense because it means that earnest seeking after God and  a personal knowing of God precedes some kind of faithful response to God because of the relationship.
Seeking earnestly after God and believing that He  exists seems to be a hurdle for many. But our faithful life lived in covenant relationship with God is nurtured by prayer and praise only after we have earnestly sought after God and completed invested our destiny in believing that God exists.
Think how each day is transformed from something mundane into an exciting spiritual journey when we are earnestly seeking God because we vigorously and exuberantly believe in Him! May our daily walk then be lived in the context of prayer and praise as we respond to God’s care and compassion.
In Christian love, Curtis


Monday, March 26, 2012

Concentric Core of the Church(3)


“God gave a person, then a proclamation, and then a people. This is the historical and theological order” (page xvii).
Ferguson, Everett. 1996. The Church of Christ: A Biblical Ecclesiology for Today. Grand Rapids, MI:
                Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
                The quote above from Ferguson’s book provides what I call “The Concentric Core of the Church.” His comment about the historical and theological order of what God gave is vital. Additionally, his reference to God being the Giver of them is significant as well. Last week’s article focused on God’s ultimate gift to humanity in the person of Jesus as the incarnation of His love. This week we continue the concentric core of the church with the following affirmation:
·         God’s ultimate gift of  proclamation to humanity is Jesus as the incarnation of His love.
The proclamation of the gospel actually begins in Acts chapter 2 and continues to the end of the book of Revelation. The four Gospel writers provide the content of Jesus’ ministry and teaching which later form the content of the proclamation. The good news is that Jesus has arisen from the dead, and is now seated on the right hand of God. This proclamation goes in two directions at once:
The good news of Jesus is proclaimed to those who otherwise would perish.
The good news of Jesus is proclaimed to those who need ongoing transformation into the likeness of his image.
This all reminds me of the apostle Paul’s declaration about the place of proclamation in the spreading of the gospel:  “How, then, can they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone preaching to them?” (Romans 10:14). The proclamation of Jesus leads to belief and calling on the name of Jesus. Such expression by Paul can be taken to mean a totality of life where heart, mind and soul are given over to the Risen One. No wonder the good news needs proclaiming! This is a message that is hard to take, and it certainly bears repeating over and over to all who need and want to hear it. It is a joyous thing to think of the proclamation of the gospel as a gift from God!
In Christian love, Curtis

Monday, March 19, 2012

Concentric Core of the Church (2)


You may remember last week that I quoted the following:
“God gave a person, then a proclamation, and then a people. This is the historical and theological order” (page xvii). Ferguson, Everett. 1996. The Church of Christ: A Biblical Ecclesiology for Today. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
The quote above from Ferguson’s book provides what I call “The Concentric Core of the Church.” His comment about the historical and theological order of what God gave is vital. Additionally, his reference to God being the Giver of them is significant as well. God’s ultimate gift to humanity is the person of Jesus as the incarnation of his love.

According to the Gospel of John, this gift of Jesus is offered because God so loved the world. The little adverb “so” demonstrates the depth and breadth of that love. All four Gospel writers attempt to look at the gift from various angles, thus providing a rich and textured masterpiece of Jesus.
It is necessary to develop this thought further. There are actually 3 directions of love presented in John’s gospel: God’s love for Jesus, Jesus’ love for God, and God’s love for humanity. All of this is portrayed with the ultimate hope that there will be humanity’s love for God!


In order for God to demonstrate the depth and nature of his gifted love to humanity, he sends Jesus into the world as the incarnation of that love. This tells us at least two deeply embedded concepts in divine love: a desire to connect with creation, and a need to demonstrate the gift of love in concrete actions. Consequently, this has profound ramifications for every child of God today.


To begin with, if I truly love others, then I will have a deep desire to connect with the lives of others. Their struggles, obstacles, pain, anguish and joy become part of my life too. I feel what others feel. This takes a certain amount of maturity to want to step out of self and experience life with others on their terms. I have to empty myself, relinquish self, and surrender self to God’s divine plan in order to do this. It is not easy.


Also, if I truly love others, then I will engage in concrete actions to demonstrate such love. This may mean giving them my jacket. It may mean taking them to the restaurant for a meal. It may mean giving an hour of my time to sit and listen to their story. It may mean sacrificing an afternoon and helping someone repair their roof. Love enacted and demonstrated takes a million different forms!


As Jesus incarnated God’s love, may we also be love in the flesh!


In Christian love, Curtis