15th Sunday After Pentecost – Orthodox Homily on Love

Художник Джеймс Тиссо. «Иисус и фарисеи»

Today we’re challenged by Christ to “love our enemies” and to “lend without hoping to receive anything in return.” But before we can begin to understand the “how” of such commands that are so contrary to the way our world works today—the way we’re all trained to think in the world, the way our sinful impulses would have us behave—we have to understand what Christ means by love. And there’s a lot of confusion today about what love really means.

First, we need to recognize as Christians that true love is learned from God. He is the Author of love. Without that reference to God as our starting point, we could not know what love is. The word translated “love” used in this passage in the original Greek is ‘agape.’ It is a word specifically used to describe God’s unconditional love and the love He calls us to as those who are “in Him.” It’s a selfless, giving love, which is manifests itself in humility, service to others, and self-emptying—kenosis in the Greek. The prime example of such agape love, is God’s condescension to us in the Incarnation in which God takes on human nature and becomes one of His own creation in order to enter into our human nature as man and redeem it as God. This same agape love is also witnessed in Christ’s willing offering of His own life to defeat sin and death on behalf of our salvation.

Agape always desires what God desires for us and for every human being. Agape is not what is pleasing to the senses or the passions. Instead, it’s the heavenly love that God, in turn, calls us to exercise if we’re to live in communion with Him and each other, living out our calling as Christians in witness to His truth and life in the world around us.

Now, “Love” as our culture often understands it is often actually lust (a twisted form of eros), driven by the passions, as well as ego and pride, of a “me-first” attitude instead of a “God-first” attitude. Love is often seen manifesting itself as something focused on wants and rights, on a self-focused understanding of individual fulfillment, such as we see in the ‘identity’ politics of today. Such is not and cannot be the agape love I just described.

And so if that’s how we understand love in terms of whatever we decide it is even when it’s clearly not what God has revealed, there it’s no wonder people, even some in the Church, are confused. It’s no wonder that Christ’s calling seems so impossible. If love is changed into a temporary emotional feeling, an obligatory attachment, or a twisted eros, then no wonder so many marriages end in divorce, why many young people ask, “why bother with marriage, why wait for sex in marriage when I ‘love’ this person at this moment, even as others, as a result, even venture to change what marriage is or to change their gender. The further we get from apage love, the more such confusion and lawlessness will abound, just as Christ warns.

Indeed, without agape love, the very idea of loving one’s enemies or being generous in our giving seem almost ‘quaint’—surely not something to be expected of a Christian living in the 21st century. I’m here to assure you that the need has never been greater. Where confusion and hedonism abound, so too does the need for true Christians to live out the Gospel—with vigor, with faith, and with authenticity!

So, rather than putting Christ’s commands aside, relegating them to a by-gone era of Church history, we have the obligation here, as we do with ALL the Holy Scriptures of the New Testament, to honor them and strive to apply them and bring the truth of Christ to bear on our lives; there’s nothing unintentional in any of Christ’s commands. Rather, our Lord is unlocking for us a part of what it means to be in Him, to live for Him and help change the world around us.

In the Old Testament, the rule was, “an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth” (Lev. 24:20). At the same time, the Law also laid out a vision for something better, fulfilled, saying, “You shall not take vengeance, nor bear any grudge against the children of your people, but you shall love your neighbor as yourself. But Christ comes to interject the Kingdom of God into the Law, as He who is the Law Giver Himself, saying, “Do not think that I came to destroy the Law or the Prophets. I did not come to destroy but to fulfill” (Matt. 5:17). The command to “love our enemies,” to“give without hoping for anything in return” need to be seen in this light: as a supreme opportunity to see the Kingdom of God manifested now, in our lives, in our church, in the world around us—to be part of being Christ’s “light” and “salt,” the hope of a better way.

Now, one of our biggest impediments to loving as God loves, as God calls us, in turn, to love, is pride in all its variances, especially ego, self-focus, and, therefore, lack of agape love. Indeed, pride is so wrapped up in our modern understanding of ‘love,’ that we don’t even see how it can be separated. It’s pride that causes us to be self-focused and indifferent to the need of others; it’s pride that makes us easily offended and that convinces us in our over-sensitivity to act as if Orthodox Christianity is only ‘my thing’ and not what Christ God calls the world to in His love for us. Pride keeps us from sharing our faith in embarrassment for the ways that Orthodox Christianity conflicts with the culture around us. Pride keeps us from using our gifts and talents to God’s glory. Pride makes us dependent on ourselves rather than on God and causes us to neglect the divine services, the Sacraments, and daily prayers God gives us to grow in His love and grace. Pride becomes our greatest impediment to trust in God, to grow in faith, to work out our salvation, to give of ourselves and our treasure, and glorify God with our lives.

St. John Cassian says of the prideful man, “He is not to be appeased when one admonishes him; he is weak in curtailing his own wishes, very stubborn when asked to yield to those of others… he is always more ready to trust to his own judgment than to that of the elders.” The expectation these days is that if you ‘love’ someone you’ll let them do whatever they want to. Without God, there’s no objective understanding of what is harmful to them or to us, and this is not love.

Christ, in admonishing us to “love our enemies, to do good, to lend, hoping for nothing in return,” promises us great spiritual reward if we let our hearts put this kind of active agape love into action, saying that we’ll be His adopted children, co-heirs with Christ and fellow victors through Him over sin and death because such virtues are the fruit of life with and in Christ.

Humility exercised through love in this way is powerful, courageous; it’s a strong witness of the truth of Christ in a world often characterized by enmity, hatred, and pride. It’s a manifestation of the Kingdom of Heaven in our midst. Exercising agape love in our own lives is a uniquely Christian practice that comes by the power of the Holy Spirit working in us and through us. With God working through us in our striving to model humility and love in our own lives, those around us will certainly be affected and encouraged in the life in Christ as well. This is love.

And so, we daily struggle against the passions, our pride. We pray for the courage and humility to love sacrificially. We continue daily to strive to submit ourselves to God’s will, not giving preference to our own ideas. We pray to courageously speak the truth to our culture, unashamed of being an Orthodox Christian. We avail ourselves of the deifying worship of Christ’s Church and the Sacraments—and make time for them. We struggle with our focus on Christ so that we may grow in what it is to be His beloved sons and daughters. We give of ourselves and our resources sacrificially. This is the love the world needs, agape—the love God would give us in abundance, so that we can, in turn, give it to others and love—yes—even our enemies—and to give—yes—even without expecting in return, knowing, as Christ promises us today, that your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Most High.

Fr. Robert Miclean
Holy Archangels Orthodox Church
Sunday, 2 October 2016
Loving Your Enemies with Agape Love
Epistle: II Cor. 9:6-11
Gospel: Luke 6:31-36

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