Jesus said, "The first commandment is this: Hear, O Israel:
The Lord your God is the only Lord. Love the Lord your
God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your
mind, and with all your strength. The second is this: Love
your neighbor as yourself. There is no commandment
greater than these." Mark 12:29-31
The new youth pastor of a church in Palo Alto spoke to a group of high school students gathered at Mount Hermon Camp and Conference Center in the Santa Cruz Mountains, and drawing on Romans (somehow) made a diagram with his hands and forearms, showing a triangle whose points (self, others, God) drew closer together: as you become closer to God you become closer to others; as you become closer to others you become closer to God. I have not forgotten that in 49 years, though that preacher is long retired.
But I would submit, today, an addition to his chart: as we become closer to God or one another we also become closer to our selves - our true selves, anchored in Grace, visible or invisible, sought or not. For as every Southerner knows...
[On the causeway between Daphne and Mobile Alabama, in the middle of Mobile Bay, is a good old diner that serves breakfast. I ordered ham and eggs, and sure enough when the waitress brought me breakfast there were grits on the plate. "But I didn't order grits." - "You don't have to, honey. Grits just come."*]
... grace just comes. It is inexorable as the love of God and we might as well admit it. And if we do -
[Archbishop Desmond Tutu spoke at the Trinity West conference at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco, and said that like many preachers he had only one sermon: his was "God loves you." But the implications of that ...]
- if we do admit the unbreakable unfathomable inexorable grace of God, there are implications for our behavior, toward God, others, and even ourselves.
We can no longer be party to the hate we have absorbed in the past. We must work toward healing, of ourselves, yes, but not through a Ministry of Self-esteem: through the experience of love in action.
Giving and receiving, noticing, acknowledging, practicing, experiencing, love in action: grace.
And that grace we experience in and through our fellow creatures.
The famous situation-ethicist Joseph Fletcher summed up his message in a single phrase, which makes more sense now, in light of what we've covered above. He wrote: "Love God in your neighbor."
Because love in reality, though harsher than love in dreams, is indeed grace: it is the proper working out of the good news of Jesus Christ in the world. The beloved community he calls us into - beloved by God, first of all, with all else to follow - is not yet but already being fulfilled in the world.
Love in action is the work of the holy Spirit, grace working in us, doing more than we could hold in our own arms, do with our own hands, embrace with our own minds: except God is always at work in us.
Glory to God whose power, working in us, can do infinitely
more than we can ask or imagine: Glory to him from
generation to generation in the Church, and in Christ Jesus
for ever and ever. Amen. Ephesians 3:20, 21
the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, be with us all evermore.
Amen. 2 Corinthians 13:14
For St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, Tucson (standrewstucson.org) the Twenty-First Sunday after Pentecost, 2020.
Leviticus 19:1-2,15-18
Psalm 1
1 Thessalonians 2:1-8
Matthew 22:34-46
https://www.earlpalmer.org/
http://edgeofenclosure.org/proper25a.html
*Apocryphal southern story - except for the meal. The grits were excellent.
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