Yesterday, we explored the relationship between loving Jesus and
following his commands. Though these can be summed up as loving God and
our neighbor, he gave plenty that were specific: Love your enemies. Give
to anyone who asks. Take up your cross and follow me. Proclaim the Good
News and heal the sick. Many of Jesus’ commandments are so
counter-cultural, counter-intuitive, not to mention inconvenient, that
keeping them is only possible for us from a place of love.
Such love also enables us to receive the gift Jesus promised his disciples that night before he was taken from them: ”And
I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate, to be
with you forever. This is the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot
receive, because it neither sees him nor knows him.”
Jesus
calls the Spirit “another Advocate,” suggesting this has been one of his
roles with them, to stand with them against spiritual danger, to help
strengthen them in ministry. In this role, he was limited by his time in
this earthly life. The Advocate whom the Father will send them, he
says, will be with them forever - a promise with no close-out clause.
Jesus
says this "Spirit of Truth” is a force whom the world - humanity at
large - does not see or recognize, and therefore cannot receive. The
gift of the Holy Spirit is given to all who have the capacity to receive
him – and what increases our capacity is love, giving and receiving
love. Athletes and musicians find their capacity for taking in and
holding breath increases with practice – I believe it’s the same with
love. Our capacity grows as we exercise it.
What gets in the way of your ability to receive love?
In what ways do you feel you are inhibited in giving love?
What are some ways you can envision to expand your capacity for love, given and received?
You
might try on a discipline of learning to love someone whom you find
challenging – start by praying for them each day to be blessed.
Or
is there someone whose love you keep at a distance, or someone who wants
to help you in some way that you won’t allow… can you, as an
experiment, allow that person into your life a little more, allow the
assistance they could render?
When our capacity to give and
receive love increases, it has a ripple effect. Our being more loving
invites the people around us to receive more and give more in turn.
Imagine if we lived in a culture based on love and more love? Think how
many stuck systems and stuck people might be released to function in
wholeness.
Well, we don’t have to dwell in such utopian visions
– let’s just start with ourselves, and our own hearts, inviting the
Spirit to expand our capacity for love. That's the way we can help God
with the big picture.
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