Sunday, May 13, 2012

Sixth for Easter


Love one another
We celebrated the first wedding of the season this afternoon.  The bride and groom were there, as were other members of their bridal party, their families, their friends, and some people from the parish community too.  As I prepared my reflection for the wedding, it seemed as though I needed to find some profound truth which should be spoken.  After all, isn’t that what the priest is supposed to do: to interpret the scriptures?


As it turns out, not only the readings chosen for the wedding this afternoon spoke of the gift of love; the scripture passages for this Sunday’s liturgy also speak of love, so either God is trying to tell me to share some of the homily from this afternoon with you, or he’s trying to tell me that I need to work harder at understanding what love is all about.  Speaking to the disciples, Jesus issues a command: As the Father has loved me, so I have loved you; abide in my love … and … love one another.  This seems simple enough, perhaps even too simple.  For the wedding couple sitting before the altar, these words represent an ideal which they hope and dream will come true, but if truth be known, loving another is much easier said than done.

If we try to learn love from modern society (watching television and movies), love seems to be easy.  The world encourages us to believe that love can somehow be translated as ‘take pleasure in someone’ at times as though that someone were a something.  According to this way of thinking, when the warm feelings fade, it’s ok to walk away.  By contrast, if we try to learn love from watching Jesus at work in the gospels, the task is considerably more difficult, but much more worth the effort.  In fact, Peter himself tells us that God shows no partiality … but anyone who fears him and does what is right is acceptable to him.  The love that Jesus wants to teach is like the words of wisdom that parents often will share with their children on the day of a wedding: words about building a life together, words about loving one another, words about caring for each other, words about practicing forgiveness. 

Sometimes (even today) these words are spoken publicly and at other times, they are exchanged in a setting away from the limelight, a place where the hearer is able to absorb them, and to begin to plumb the depth of meaning that such words contain.  Perhaps this is the reason why Jesus so often spoke of love in great crowds, but afterward called his disciples aside to explain his words in more depth.  He still does the same for us today, when we take the time to listen in the hidden places where we come to him in prayer.

Jesus’ love calls us to total giving. In and of itself, love is life-giving, a gift offered to the one who is loved.  Jesus’ love gives joy to others without any regard for the feelings of the giver.  Even more profoundly, giving out of love is a giving of our very self.  This is the beginning of laying down one’s life for another.  If we are to be able to give such love, we must first know it in our own lives.  Only once we have begun to understand and appreciate (with our minds and our hearts) the depth of God’s love for us, can we begin to share it with others.  Our presence at the Sunday liturgy allows us to learn, remember and celebrate this love, and in celebrating it, we are better able to know it in the depth of our being.

This weekend, society around us is observing Mothers’ Day.  What better way to celebrate our mothers than by remembering them at the table of the Saviour, by praying for them, and by asking Mary, the Mother of God to watch over them.  Like the couple who begin their married life today, let us be aware of the gift of love God offers to us.  Let us give thanks for yet another opportunity to experience its gentle reassuring presence, here in this place of prayer, and in so many facets of our lives. Let us pray also today for all those who help us to recognize the love that is from and of God, and come to appreciate it all the more every day.

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