Sermon
A sermon preached at New Hope Lutheran Church,
West Melbourne, FL on July 22, 2007 by Pastor Dale
Raether
What Is Love?
Luke 10:25-37
Here’s a picture of a mom and a baby. Do you think this
baby would be easy to love? I suspect so. But what if it’s 3:00 a.m. and the
baby is screaming and has a poopy diaper, would he still be easy to love?
Probably, especially if he were your baby. Next we have a picture taken from
Brevard County’s Most wanted. This man is wanted for false imprisonment,
battery, and grand theft. Do you think this man would be easy to love? Maybe
if you’re his mother, because moms don’t stop loving their children, even when
they do something bad. But what if you saw this man or someone like him begging
for a dollar along side an intersection? Would you roll down your window and
give him one, or would you make sure all the doors are locked and switch over to
the far lane? Some people are hard to love. Some people we wonder if we should
love at all, and if are supposed to love them, in what way are we to do that?
Let’s talk about that this morning. What Is
Love? 1. Love comes from a heart that
sees God’s love. 2. Love learns how to
love guided by God.
We read, “On one occasion
an expert in the law stood up to test Jesus. "Teacher," he asked, "what must I
do to inherit eternal life?" That’s a good question everyone needs to
ask and have it answered correctly. However, the man in our text wasn’t really
asking. He was testing Jesus. In a verse just before our text, Jesus had said,
“All things have been committed to me by my
Father. No one knows who the Son is except the Father, and no one knows who the
Father is except the Son and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal him."
This man’s reaction to what Jesus said was, “Yeah, right.”
And so, just to see if Jesus could tell him anything he didn’t already know, he
asked, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?” Let me tell you a
little more about these experts in the law. They believed that they would get
to heaven by obeying God’s commands and loving Him with all their heart. They
were correct, if in fact any can do that. But the problem they soon ran into
was trying to figure out what exactly God’s will was in all the gray areas of
life. For example if this guy were your son (show
picture of most wanted), what is truly the most loving thing to do? Do
you turn him into the police, or do you help him relocate in another part of the
country, hoping that he’ll turn his life around? This is the kind of thing the
experts in the law would sit around and debate all day. And then they would
write out their conclusions, and make keeping them equal with God’s Law, if you
want to go to heaven.
We don’t go along with adding or subtracting to God’s
Word. But we still struggle with: what is love? In our text Jesus shows the
expert of the law what love is by telling a parable. If I may now summarize it:
The road from Jerusalem to Jericho was quite
dangerous. It was through rough, desolate
country with lots of places for robbers to
hide. Anyway, they attacked a man, beat
him, stole even the shirt off his
back, and left him to die. A priest and then a Levite, who
was an assistant to the priests,
came along, saw the man lying on the side of the road, and
decided that the best thing to do
was to keep going, because he was probably going to
die anyway. The robbers might
still be around, and it wouldn’t be very loving for their
families if they got themselves
killed helping this guy they didn’t even know.
Can you put yourself into the sandals of this priest and
Levite? If you took a wrong turn and ended up in a bad part of Miami, and if
you saw a beaten up guy on the side of the road, would you stop and help him?
Or, would you keep going and look for the nearest freeway entrance, while
dialing 911 on your cell phone? I think that’s what I’d want to do. But what
if there were no cell phones or even police? Then what would you do?
Getting back to Jesus’ parable – after the priest and the
Levite, a Samaritan came along. Now the Samaritans were the ancestors of
today’s Palestinians, and they hated the Jews as much as the Jews hated them.
So, this Samaritan sees a dying Jews by the side of the road. But he doesn’t
keep going, neither does he stop to kick him one more time. Rather he binds up
the man’s wounds and puts him on his donkey, while he walks. He takes him to an
inn and cares for him. And when he has to leave, he gives the inn keeper a
blank check to keep on caring for the man, for as long as needed. Now, in all
this keep in mind the risk this Samaritan was exposing himself to, the time it
cost him, and the money. Yet he freely helps his enemy for no other reason than
his enemy needed help.
After telling this parable, Jesus asks the expert in the
Law, “Which of these was a neighbor to the man
who fell into the hands of robbers?" The expert in the law replied, "The one
who had mercy on him." Jesus told him, "Go and do likewise.” Now we know
what love is. Now we know the standard of love that God expects of us, and this
is the standard we must keep, if we want to enter heaven.
But perhaps you’re thinking to yourself, “I can love my
family. I can love some of my co-workers and neighbors. But there are others,
who are horrible human beings, and I cannot love them. So, does that make me a
bad person? It makes us someone, who is in rebellion against God, because after
telling the parable of the Good Samaritan, He says to all of us, “Go and do
likewise.” However, while this command is easy enough to understand, obeying it
is another matter. And that’s why love can only come from a heart that sees
God’s love.
We read again in our text, “What
is written in the Law?" Jesus replied. "How do you read it?"
He answered: "'Love the
Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your
strength and with all your mind'" Here the expert in the Law is quoting
from the Old Testament. However, as we read these verses we need to slow down
and take a careful look at the “Love the Lord your God.” The name Lord
in Hebrew emphasizes that He never changes and keeps His promises. The name
God in Hebrew emphasizes that He is the almighty. By identifying Himself as
the Lord YOUR God, He is reminding us that He loves us with an everlasting
love. And even when He foresaw our sins and that we would make ourselves His
enemies, He still loved us. And so, He more than risked His life for us. He
GAVE His life for us to rescue us. He cleansed the wounds of our sins with His
own blood. He carried us to the inn of His church and there nurtured our faith,
so that flickering flame of our faith like we sometimes have on our candles,
could become a bright flame of faith. All this He does with great patience; and
because He is God, He uses His almighty power to keep us in His power and
grace.
As we continually focus on God’s love for us, suddenly what
it means to love others becomes less complicated. And then, in stead of trying
to do the least possible so that we still call ourselves loving people, faith in
Jesus makes us WANT to love – period. However, once we have the willingness to
love even those who hurt us, we still need some guidance in putting love into
practice. But this too need not be complicated.
Again we read in our text, “and,
'Love your neighbor as yourself.'” We love our neighbor when we’re as
patient with him in his sins and weaknesses, as we would want others to be with
us in our sins and weaknesses. Or, we love when we help our neighbor as freely
and as non-judgmentally as we would want to be helped, if we were in trouble.
In short, before we say or do anything, we are to ask ourselves, “Is this how I
would like to be treated? Is this how I would like to be spoken to?” So, you
see, this isn’t complicated. But it is hard to do, and that when we need to get
back in the Word and let it be in our hearts by thinking about it throughout our
day and by letting it be on our lips whenever someone needs to hear it, because
speaking the Word blesses our faith also.
However, what if we find ourselves in a situation where
more than one of God’s commandments seems to apply, so that obeying one puts us
in conflict with the other. As an example, suppose someone has a drinking or
drug problem and is about to loose his house. Do help him this one more time,
so that he doesn’t loose everything? Or, do you allow his life to go into free
fall? Let God’s love guide us. In His love for us, He doesn’t always give us
what we want. Sometimes He gives us what we need, even though it’s painful.
The point I’m making, is love doesn’t always comfort. Love also takes a baby (show
picture) to the doctor to get a shot, if you get what I mean.
But again, how do we know when to apply comforting love and
when to apply tough love? Love God first! Love God’s kingdom first! And as
His love for us takes the long view, the eternal view, so let our love for
others take the long view, the eternal view. Getting back to that example of
helping a loved one with his mortgage – if we were in his shoes, we would
certainly want someone to help us, and so loving our neighbor as ourselves may
mean going ahead and helping him. But what if helping him means that his
problems are just going to continue and get worse? Or, what if helping him
means we won’t be able then to take care of our obligations? The Scriptures
guide us, It says, “Let no debt remain
outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another – Romans 13:8.”
Is it right to stiff someone else in order to help another? Certainly not. And
so, in this case, loving God with all our heart would mean NOT helping someone
monetarily, but recognizing that maybe God hasn’t enabled you to do that,
because He wants your loved one to hit bottom.
However, let me try to put this all a little more simply.
What is love? It’s caring about our neighbor the way we would care about
ourselves. Especially, it’s putting God and His Word first in every situation.
And then whenever it seems there’s a conflict between treating our neighbor as
we would want to be treated and loving God, love is obeying God first. In the
long run, this will always be the most loving thing we could do for our neighbor
as well. Finally, love isn’t going through life walking on egg shells and
constantly splitting hairs on right and wrong, like the man in our text did.
Love is constantly looking to God’s love for us and letting that be the starting
point in, not what we have to do, but in what we want to do, all to the glory of
God. Lord Jesus, fill our hearts with your love! Amen.
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