loved by God, loving one's enemies - 11th week tuesday 2014
Our
belief in the grace of God in our life is central to our faith as
Christians. Salvation after all is a
grace. We are sustained by grace. We will attain eternal life through
grace. Grace is a benefit freely granted
by God to his creatures. The important
words in the definition of grace are “freely” and “gratuitously”. These words are opposed to what is due or to
anything I can rightfully claim. It is
something we cannot rightfully claim as our own, and it is something that is
not due. In other words it is given to
us by God even if it is unmerited or undeserved. This is an important outlook which we need to
recover otherwise we cannot understand the Christian attitude. Why is this?
Some
look at God as a good businessman, and like a good businessman, God never gives
anything for nothing. And so I have to
pay for God’s goodness.
This
kind of relationship with God destroys the very concept of grace as something
undeserved, something unmerited and something freely and gratuitously
given. We cannot pay for God’s goodness,
we cannot buy salvation.
Some
look at God as a demanding God who, to use an idiomatic expression, exacts his
pound of flesh. In other words I have to
earn God’s approval. I need to earn
heaven.
Again this is contrary to our belief in grace which is freely
given. You cannot buy your way to
heaven. Why? Because it is freely given.
St.
Paul has a beautiful expression to describe the grace of God in our lives. He said, God loved us even while we were yet
sinners. You can find that in Romans
chapter 5 verse 8. To paraphrase it we
could say, we were loved by God even when we were yet unlovable.
Now
why am I speaking about grace when our gospel today is about loving one’s
enemies and doing good to them? I am
speaking about grace and God’s relationship with us because we can never
understand our gospel today if we have the mind of a businessman – a mindset
that teaches us that we cannot give anything for nothing. Our relationship is not a tit for tat; it is
not a give and take; it is not “I will be good to you if you are good to
me.”
I am
speaking about grace and God’s relationship with us because we can never
understand our gospel today if we look at God as somebody who exacts his pound
of flesh, with an outlook of earning heaven, with an outlook of earning the
love and favor of God. God gives even
if it is undeserved. God gives even if
it is unmerited. God love even if we are
not worthy of his love. In the same way
one doesn’t have to be good to me in order for me to be good to him; one
doesn’t have to be lovable to me in order for me to love him. You don’t have to
be good to me to make me good to you. I
can be good to you even if you are not good to me. This is my point. Loving one’s enemies is first and foremost an
understanding of my relationship with God.
It would be difficult to understand loving one’s enemies if you do not
understand how God really loves each one of us.
God
loved us even while we were yet sinners.
We did not deserve to be loved and yet he loved us. There are people out there who do not also
deserve our love. But does one have to
deserve it in order for me to give it?
Consider
this.
Comments