Love

Peaceful Amid the Pieces

“[R]emember that you were at that time separated from Christ, alienated from the commonwealth of Israel and strangers to the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world. But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. For he himself is our peace, who has made us both one and has broken down in his flesh the dividing wall of hostility by abolishing the law of commandments expressed in ordinances, that he might create in himself one new man in place of the two, so making peace, and might reconcile us both to God in one body through the cross, thereby killing the hostility. And he came and preached peace to you who were far off and peace to those who were near. For through him we both have access in one Spirit to the Father. So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God, built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the cornerstone, in whom the whole structure, being joined together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord. In him you also are being built together into a dwelling place for God by the Spirit.

When you look around at our current cultural moment, it may well feel that life is in pieces. Life is fragmented through political divisions, racial divisions, family divisions, divisions over to wear a mask or not, to congregate with others or not…the divisions are all too pressing and real.

Our impulse amid these circumstances can range from checking out at one extreme or further drive a wedge at the other. We are overwhelmed by the inundation of opinions and commentary, each seeking to pull us into this tribe or that, to reduce us to a set of ideas or positions.

However, in Ephesians 2.10 Paul lays out for us as the church who we are as a people. We are God’s masterpiece, a workmanship crafted to spread the beauty of God’s good news through our good confession and works.

Further, Paul reminds us that this fragmented life, this place broken in pieces due to sin and the power struggles that resulted was once our place too.

But we are no longer defined by this reality.

We belong to a greater reality.

While we once were far off, Christ has brought us near through the blood He poured out on the cross for our victory. (Ephesians 2.13)

Further, He demolished the walls that divide us, built brick by brick from the material of legalism as we were shackled to the flesh. (Ephesians 2.14-17)

We are a new people…a new humanity…not one built on the splintered and fighting line inherited from Adam. Rather, we are a humanity built on the liberation and freedom embodied in the person and work of Jesus.

So we stand, watching the pieces shattered around us, lying on the floor of this reality. But we witness and point the way to a greater reality, one not enmeshed in the divisions of our day, but integrated into the wholeness that comes with abiding in Jesus.

This wholeness gives us the gift of seeing everyone we encounter as a sacred being reflecting the image of God. This wholeness helps us to put the divisions aside so we may love genuinely and well…so we can stand hand in hand with our sisters and brothers of every tribe, language, and nation as one new humanity. This wholeness helps us to recognize that Christ has already won the war.

He has tore down the walls that divide us. Therefore we can know the abiding presence of His peace.

We can lift others out of the pieces and welcome them into the peaceful life that is ours when we walk with Jesus.

Grace and Peace in Christ,

Matthew S. Miller

(Matthew is the preaching and discipleship minister at Highland Hills Church of Christ in Tullahoma, TN)

Love God/Love Neighbor

Love one another.jpg

You and I are here…in this place…this blue vaporous sphere coursing through space to learn the way of love.

Love is the ground of Being, the nature of the Eternal, the all-encompassing Reality of God.

As we continually near the way of love, we realize the Presence of God.

As I was contemplating these thoughts, I came across some reflections from Augustine that are helpful in understanding God’s call to love.

He writes:

The Lord, the teacher of love, full of love, came in person with summary judgment on the world, as had been foretold of him, and showed that the law and the prophets are summed up in two commandments of love. Call to mind, brothers, what these two commandments are. They ought to be very familiar to you; they should not only spring to mind when I mention them, but ought never to be absent from your hearts. Keep always in mind that we must love God and our neighbor: Love God with your whole heart, your whole soul, and your whole mind, and your neighbor as yourself. These two commandments must be always in your thoughts and in your hearts, treasured, acted on, fulfilled. Love of God is the first to be commanded, but love of neighbor is the first to be put into practice. In giving two commandments of love Christ would not commend to you first your neighbor and then God but first God and then your neighbor. Since you do not yet see God, you merit the vision of God by loving your neighbor. By loving your neighbor you prepare your eye to see God. John says clearly: If you do not love your brother whom you see, how will you love God whom you do not see! Consider what is said to you: Love God.

If you say to me: Show me whom I am to love, what shall I say if not what John says: No one has ever seen God! But in case you should think that you are completely cut off from the sight of God, he says: God is love, and he who remains in love remains in God.

Love your neighbor, then, and see within yourself the power by which you love your neighbor; there you will see God, as far as you are able.

Begin, then, to love your neighbor. Break your bread to feed the hungry, and bring into your home the homeless poor; if you see someone naked, clothe him, and do not look down on your own flesh and blood. What will you gain by doing this? Your light will then burst forth like the dawn.

Your light is your God; he is your dawn, for he will come to you when the night of time is over.

He does not rise or set but remains for ever. In loving your neighbor and caring for him you are on a journey. Where are you traveling if not to the Lord God, to him whom we should love with our whole heart, our whole soul, our whole mind? We have not yet reached his presence, but we have our neighbor at our side. Support, then, this companion of your pilgrimage if you want to come into the presence of the one with whom you desire to remain for ever.

May you seek to live the way of love, not as some abstraction or idealism, but as a living reality met in the tangible actions of today. Know that as you see love in action toward your neighbor, you see God moving.

Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love. 1 John 4:8 (NIV)

Grace and Peace in Christ,

Matthew Miller