Christian Faith
Bishop Mar
Bawai Soro
Part Two:
THE GREATEST COMMANDMENT OF LOVE
“You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all
your soul, and with all your mind. This is the greatest and the
first commandment. The second is like it: You shall love your
neighbor as yourself. The whole law and the prophets depend on these
two commandments.” (Matthew 22:37-39)
Jesus’ answer to the scribe who asked him which of the hundreds of
commandments first century Jews obeyed was the greatest gave more
than he bargained for: not one commandment, but two that encompass
one principle. The greatest commandment of Jesus is love, a love of
God that comprises the whole being of each human person, and a love
of neighbor that is no less than love of self.
“The whole law and the prophets depend on these two commandments,”
Jesus said. The Ten Commandments, the Levitical and Rabbinical laws
and commentaries, rituals of purification and worship - Jesus boiled
it all down to love.
Our Christian faith, beginning and ending in God, is a faith rooted
deeply in love. Someone cannot say “I love God” when his actions
toward others show that he does not love them also. Someone cannot
say “I love my neighbor” while simultaneously neglecting to love and
honor the God who created them both. Love is never an “either-or”
proposition for Christian’s. It has to be “both-and.”
Many examples from the life of Jesus illustrate how he understood
this twin commandment of love in real life, especially when he shows
a love for neighbor (all of us sinners), and a love of his Father,
that no one else around him can touch.
One episode concerns a woman who was caught “in the very act of
adultery,” as the story goes, and the righteous (or self-righteous)
members of the community brought her to a public place - naked and
certainly humiliated - to execute her according to the dictates of
the law, by stoning. (John 8:3-11) They brought her to Jesus and
explained about her sin and punishment, and then (“to test him”)
asked, “What do you say?”
The scene we know so well from the Gospel of John is famous. Jesus
bends over and writes on the ground, saying nothing. They persist,
“to have some charge to bring against him.” He stands up and
delivers one of the greatest lessons he ever taught in the gospels:
“Let the one among you who is without sin be the first to throw a
stone at her.”
Bending down again to write on the ground, surely Jesus knew how
they would respond. One by one they went away - the elders first -
until Jesus was alone with the woman. “Has no one condemned you,” he
asks. “No one, sir,” she replies. “Neither do I condemn you. Go
(and) from now on do not sin any more.”
In their zeal to serve the law of God down to the very letter - to
show how intensely they love God with every fiber of their being -
the scribes and Pharisees in this story neglect to love their
neighbor (in this case the woman) as they love themselves. They are
ready to stone her without thinking twice, and without recognizing
what Jesus has tried to teach again and again: love entails not
merely obedience, but also compassion, mercy, and forgiveness.
Notice that Jesus does not condone sin; he admonishes the woman to
go and not to sin again. He does this, not out of misplaced leniency
or personal weakness, but again out of love. Jesus knows that his
great commandment of love means reaching out, often courageously and
standing up to others. Love means speaking and doing what is best
for the person. In this case, Jesus knew that it was best for the
woman to experience God’s love and mercy, and also to be reminded
that (as Saint Paul later taught) sin leads to death. She very
nearly experienced that reality, and now Jesus gives her a second
chance at life.
Another example is illustrated by one of Jesus’ parables, often
called “The Prodigal Son” (cf. Luke 15:11-32). The story is so
familiar that it needs the briefest retelling. The younger son,
impetuous and eager to go out on his own, leaves his father, family
and country behind, squandering his inheritance in sinful living. At
last when he finds himself in the dregs of life, he comes to his
senses and returns home. His father receives him with great love and
joy, which the wretched boy did not expect. The elder son, in anger,
demands an explanation, to which the father replies, “your brother
was dead and has come to life again; he was lost and has been found”
(Luke 15:32).
The younger son in this story shows disdain for God’s law by his
actions. He leaves all that has real meaning in his life behind,
including, we may suppose, the practice of his faith. By turning his
back on God and neighbor, home and family, he shows himself to be
unworthy of any love that would have to be earned. But the actions
of the father show what Jesus is trying to teach us: the love that
conforms to the great commandment does not have to be earned - it is
freely given, almost recklessly. In spite of the fact that the son
apparently loved not God, nor neighbor, nor even himself, God’s
mercy reached out to him in his father’s love.
These two examples and others show
that, in the life and teaching of Jesus and in our lives, we who
profess to be his followers and disciples, love for God and love for
neighbor go hand in hand. They appear to be two commandments in the
way Jesus responded to the question of the scribe in Matthew’s
gospel, but Jesus shows them to be that one great commandment. Love
for God and for neighbor are inseparable. This simple aspect of the
teaching of Jesus is a great foundation of our Christian faith.