Brothers and Sisters in Christ, Our souls and bodies are broken, as Christ's body was broken on the cross. Our souls are redeemed in His most precious sacrifice, just as His body was resurrected. The Church is broken as our humanity is broken. The Church, through the power of the Holy Spirit, can transcend the brokenness of our humanity to love as Christ loved the world with that complete and full love only God can provide. When Christians talk of "repentance" I fear that they are standing by with a checklist of dos and don'ts. I fear that they feel God has empowered them to decide what is acceptable behaviour. I fear that they are being judgemental. When I talk of "love" I speak of the love that Jesus Christ taught in His parables and His life and His Holy Sacrifice. God empowers me to love those whom I cannot love through my own strength. The Holy Spirit enables me to seek to live a "Christian Life" and to be a light in this dark and broken world. God opens my eyes to see the hope, potential, love and caring all around me. For me, the central message of the four gospels is not "Sinner, Repent!"; it is "Love Your Neighbour". One of the teachers of the law came and heard them debating. Noticing that Jesus had given them a good answer, he asked him, "Of all the commandments, which is the most important?" It seems to me that when Christians make absolute statements about what God will or won't approve of, they are treading on very shaky ground. If we value only our "good works", and are afraid of associating with people who are not making the same decisions are we are, I fear that our works will become a burnt offering. God calls us to love others, not to place conditions, and certainly not to consider ourselves "more holy" or "less sinful" than another. We must place our confidence in God, and know that He knows our innermost hearts.
This familiar passage is not an aside, it is a central theme of the gospels. Jesus Christ came to earth to teach us how to love. Old Testament passages already brought this news to Israel, but the people were not able to hear it. The teaching of Jesus was based on the Law:
I know in my heart that God has blessed the work of the Christian Boylove Forum, and despite what Focus on the Family might say, we are doing His work. And yet, CBF is not to become a sacrifice in itself. And we are called to share this love and hope with others. With whom must we share our story? The following parable is so well known, perhaps we are not able to seize its real meaning. For me, it meant loving the members of my church-based support group more than I wanted to. It also meant taking risks on behalf of people who have opinions with which I may disagree. Unlike the verse in Leviticus, our neighbour is not only our own people, but all peoples to the ends of the earth.
Questions of Christian Ethics must be asked and replied to in the context of this love and grace. I do not understand the people who would ignore the premaritial sex and condemn the homosexual. I can't understand the wealthy person who would sincerely consider sins of sexual conduct to be more significant than his choice to not share with his brothers and sisters in need. I am not able to ignore the BLs at CBF when they imply that they are more holy, more deserving or more moral than the BLs at BoyChat. I am a Christian. I choose to follow Christ. I do not follow Him because I am scared of Hell. I do not follow Him because I want to be a good person. I do not follow Him so that others will think I am an upstanding Christian. I follow Christ because I love Him. I obey God's will for my life out of love. It is *I* who chose Him, after He chose me. And in this love affair, I want to do everything His way. There is no place for fear in this paradigm.
I told A.I. Watcher that I agreed that Christians are judgemental. And that "Love the sinner, Hate the sin" is exactly that. (an act of judgement) Hating sin is not so much for God, as for ourselves. We must hate the sin, because we are fearful that our faith is not strong enough to withstand it. If we were full of love, we would not fear temptation. As I said at the beginning of this missive, we are in a broken world, and we are a broken people. Temptation is real. But with God in our lives, we should be able to cast out fear, and embrace love. We should be able to truly love the sinner, who is our neighbour and ourselves, and that sin will have no hold on us. And so when we judge, we let ourselves become distant from God, and we no longer feel His love.
Keep the Law - Love Your Neighbour. This is the Gospel of Christ. May the Holy Spirit fill us all with the Peace of Christ, Bach |