Monday, April 22, 2024

Sermon: Lessons in Love

 1 John 3:16-24
Lessons in Love
James Sledge                                                                            April 21, 2024 

You’ve likely heard this before, but there are several words in Greek, the original language of the New Testament, that get translated into English as “love.” There is filos (fi/los) which speaks of affection and is the root for Philadelphia which refers to brotherly love. Then there is eros (e/rws) which refers to passionate love and is the root of our word erotic. Finally there is agapĂ© (aga/ph) which might best be defined as Christ-like love. When Fred Rogers said that love was an active verb like struggle, he was thinking about this sort of love, as was the Apostle Paul when he wrote Love is patient; love is kind

In English, you have to use context to tell what sort of love is being talked about, but I do think that the eros sort of love is the favorite. This is the love they make movies about and write poetry about, the true love that conquers all. There is an intensity about this love that is powerful, that would make people go to great lengths for the sake of their heart’s desire, but this love doesn’t show up much in the Bible.

Most often the word translated love in the Bible refers to the agapĂ© sort. There is nothing terribly romantic about this sort of love. I think of the love of a parent that gets up with a sick child at 3:00 in the morning, the love that endures a child’s ire and disgust because it is willing to say “no” and discipline children so they will grow up to be responsible adults. Shakespeare didn’t write sonnets about the love that dutifully attends a child’s sporting events, the love that struggles and saves to help pay for a child’s college education.

This kind of love doesn’t only show up in parents. I’ve seen grandparents lovingly raising their grandchildren due to inability or unwillingness of the parents. You can see it when an older sibling takes loving care of a younger sibling. You can find such love in many places, but for the moment, I’m going to focus on parental love. I realize that some people did not have loving parents, but I hope you had someone who loved you with the love that I’m talking about.

Many of us learned a lot about love from parents or people who know how to love like them. Much of what we learn in society is about looking out for yourself, winning, doing whatever it takes to get ahead of the other guy. But the love associated with parents stands as a counter lesson, a reminder that true life is impossible when there is no self-giving, no caring about others more than self. For many of us, our ability truly to love another is a gift from a mother or father or someone who knew how to love like one.

Learning how to love sounds a little strange when you think about romantic love, the love of poetry and Hollywood love stories. This kind of love is a feeling. You simply experience it. It can’t be taught or learned. It feels wonderful when it’s there and it hurts when it’s gone. You can learn things to help romance last, to help create an environment that is conducive to it, but no one can really teach you to be in love.

Not so with parental love. I suppose a certain amount of it may be inborn or instinctive, but primarily it is learned. It is observed in and taught by the love we were given by a mother, a grandparent, a father, or someone else who knew how to love us in this special way. We know what this sort of love is because it was given to us. And for those people who never experienced such love, life can be difficult. They often struggle truly to give or receive love.

Our reading from 1 John talks about love that is learned. John is the writer who says “God is love,” who repeatedly calls us to love one another. And in our reading this morning he tells us that someone has taught us what this love looks like and showed us how to give that love to others. We know love by this, that he laid down his life for us.

We know love by this, that he laid down his life for us. There’s an awful lot being said in these few words. If we know love by Christ’s dying for us, then we must not know love without it. There’s something deficient in our knowledge of love. If we haven’t learned love from Jesus, then we don’t quite understand it. If we have not experienced the love of the good shepherd who lays down his life for the sheep, we are like those unfortunate adults who never experienced parental love from someone. We cannot live a full and complete life because we lack the basic knowledge, experience, and training. It’s that simple, that straightforward. If we have not experienced God’s love for us in Jesus, we don’t fully know or understand love.

Experiencing the depth of God’s love for us in Jesus is an incredible thing. God loves us so much that death, even death on a cross is not too much to bear. But of course, the point of experiencing God’s love for us in Jesus is not simply so we can enjoy it. It is wonderful to feel such love, to know we are loved in this way. But just as a parent’s love is not simply for our own benefit, but teaches us and gives us an example of how to love, so the love we see in Jesus also teaches us and gives us an example. We have been taught love by Jesus so that we can love like Jesus.

We know love by this, that he laid down his life for us—and we ought to lay down our lives for one another. How does God’s love abide in anyone who has the world’s goods and sees a brother or sister in need and yet refuses to help? Little children, let us love, not in word or speech, but in truth and action. 

When we truly experience Jesus’ love, when his love dwells in us, it changes the way we live. When we know Jesus’ kind of love, love is no longer a feeling or a desire. It is a way of life, a way of giving ourselves for others; it is action—something parents know all about.

Unfortunately, there seems to be a human tendency to receive love and not fully appreciate it. It is a common experience for children not to realize the depth of their parent’s love until they get older. It is easy to take love for granted, and so we need lessons in love. We need to learn love from parents and people like them, but we also need to learn how to appreciate love. We need to learn how to respond to that love.

The same is true with God’s love in Jesus. It is easy to take God’s love for granted. I’ve heard people say things like, “God has to love me. It’s his job.” Such people have not learned the love lesson our scripture seeks to teach, the need to love in return.

Many of you are probably familiar with the wonderful writer Anne Lamott. In one of her books she talks about making her then teenage son go to church even though he hated church. She writes,

Then why do I make him go? Because I want him to. We live in bewildering times, and a little spiritual guidance never killed anyone. I think it’s a fair compromise that every other week he has to come to the place that has been the tap for me: I want him to see the people who loved me when I felt most unlovable, who have loved him since I first told them I was pregnant, even though he might not want to be with them. I want him to see their faces. He gets the most valuable things I know through osmosis.

Also, he has no job, no car, no income. He needs to stay in my good graces.

While he lives at my house, he has to do things my way. And there are worse things for kids than to have to spend time with people who love God. Teenagers who do not go to church are adored by God, but they don’t get to meet people who love God back. Learning to love back is the hardest part of being alive.”[1]

Learning to love back is hard, but it may also be the most important part of being alive. Jesus came, in part, to show us the true shape of human life, and that love loved God and loved neighbor even when it cost him his life. When that fact really sinks in, how can we not want to love God back?

Our scripture is talking about exactly that. When we realize the depth of God’s love in Jesus, it changes us. And so John can write, How does God’s love abide in anyone who has the world’s goods and sees a brother or sister in need and yet refuses to help? Little children, let us love, not in word or speech, but in truth and action. 

The great rabbi, the teacher par excellence, has given us the ultimate lesson in love. He has showed us how much God loves us, no matter what wayward children we might be, and he has shown us what it looks like to love. How is Jesus calling you to love today? Who is Jesus calling you to love today? How will you love God back?



[1] Anne Lamott, Plan B: Further Thoughts on Faith (New York: Riverhead Books, 2005), 195-196.

1 comment:

  1. Thank you for this and all of your other wonderful sermons. I hope you find a way to continue to share your words with the world ( but still enjoy retirement)!

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