Luke 6:27-38 I had an
interesting experience this week. I sat
down at a table with a group of Lutheran pastors, with their bibles open to our
gospel lesson today, who did everything in their power, with their considerable
intellectual gifts, to explain away these words—to assure themselves and their
congregations this week that Jesus did not really mean what he says right
here.
Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless
those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you. To one who strikes you on
the cheek, offer the other also, and from one who takes away your cloak do not
withhold your tunic either. Give to everyone who begs from you, and from one
who takes away your goods do not demand them back.
I want to be very, very clear: I am not criticizing my brother pastors, not
in the least! I want to explain away
these words too! I want to console
myself with some reason why Jesus is
not really saying, what he is clearly saying, about love for others. I want to say…
Jesus, do you really mean to say I
have to give to everyone who begs from me?
What about all of those who are going to misuse my money? What about all the scammers?
Jesus,
do you really mean I have to pray for those who mistreated me and misused me
and bless those who have cursed me?
Jesus,
do you really mean that I have to love my enemies and do good—active, concrete
acts of goodness to those who hate me?
Can that actually be what you mean?
You
understand now, don’t you, if you have really thought about these words just a
bit, the dilemma of the pastors around that table? We are made up of exactly the same flesh as
you are. We are no different! Our hearts and minds rebel at the thought of
this kind of love because we know how those around us will misuse us and
mistreat us if we love them like that.
Surely
this can’t be what the Lord means! And
yet, these are the plain words Jesus spoke.
These are the plain words the Holy Spirit caused to be written down in
Luke’s Gospel. There is no other honest
way to read them than as Jesus spoke them and Luke wrote them: Love
your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray
for those who abuse you.
Our
flesh screams out its protest! And yet,
here’s the thing: this is exactly the same
kind of love that we not only wish for
FROM others, but expect and demand!
Jesus says: As you wish that others would do to you, do so to them.
Don’t
we expect and demand that our spouse forgive us and keep on forgiving us no
matter how many times we make the same mistake?
Wouldn’t we be, in turns, furious and heat-broken if they said to us,
“That’s it! No more forgiveness for you! I’ve had it!
We’re done!?”
Don’t
our children expect (as their right)
our cloak and our tunic and our goods?!
Wouldn’t we all be appalled and ashamed to count us the number of times
we said to our parents, “I want” compared to “I love you.”?
We
may want to explain away the words of Jesus about loving our enemies but we
have very clear ideas about what kind of love we want from others: and that is the kind of love he describes
that has no limits. Now then…
What
we are actually able to give to others and what we actually receive from them
is something else altogether.
“If you love those who love you, what benefit is that to
you? For even sinners love those who love them. And if you do good to those who
do good to you, what benefit is that to you? For even sinners do the same. And
if you lend to those from whom you expect to receive, what credit is that to
you? Even sinners lend to sinners, to get back the same amount.
Here is a “love” that we are
familiar with, isn’t it! Here is a love
that we can accomplish! In fact, here is
the love we think we ought to give—the love we measure love by.
We
know all about a love for friends and family.
We know all about social obligations that carefully measures where I am
in every personal interaction and moderates my response so that it is
proportionate to what I have already received.
We know all about a love where we give to get.
But so does everyone else know and
practice that kind of love—even those who are not Christians.
And
truth be told, even by this low standard of a sinner’s love for another sinner,
we don’t always-- or even often measure up.
Who can honestly say that we love those who love us like we should-- to
say nothing of loving our enemies?
You
see now why my brother pastors wanted some way of escape for themselves and
their congregations from Jesus’ words about loving our enemies—because they
seem so impossible. And of course, they
are!
And
yet they are God’s expectation of us regarding the love we have for our
neighbor. These words are what love
really is and when we read those words about loving our enemies and doing good
to those who hate us-- and even when we measure ourselves the standard of a
sinner’s love for another sinner, we begin to really grasp—perhaps for the
first time—how lacking love for others is in our lives.
If
Jesus is serious—if this really is the standard—if this is really God’s
expectation for us in our love for others—we have failed and we will fail again
and again. And that’s true.
But
there is one who didn’t. There is one
who loved others just exactly this way and it is the one who spoke these
words. It is Jesus.
Jesus
was the one who loved his enemies. Jesus
was the one who cared for those who hated him.
Jesus was the one who spoke blessing from the cross to those who cursed
him below. Jesus waas the one who never
turned his back on the needs of others. Jesus
is the one who forgives again and again no matter how often we fail.
Jesus
is the one who was stripped of his last earthly possession and was buried in a
borrowed tomb. Jesus is the one who bestows the riches of his resurrection upon
those who sent him to his death.
Dear
friends in Christ, let us be very, very clear:
that is you and me. It is our
lack of love, our self-seeking concern for others, our pinched and narrow and
limited care for those around us, that led Jesus to the cross where Jesus died
for those who did not love him.
This
is the love that Jesus has for us and there is no limit to that love. We can go to him again and again with the
same sins and failures and know that we will be forgiven. We can wander from him again and again and
know that he will seek us out each time to welcome us back. We can go to him again and again in our needs
and trust that he will give us more than we could ever imagine or hope
for.
That
is the merciful love that Jesus has for us and that is the merciful love that
we are to have for others. Jesus says:
Love your enemies, and do good, and lend, expecting nothing
in return, and your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Most
High, for he is kind to the ungrateful and the evil. Be merciful, even as your
Father is merciful.
Jesus is the Son of the Most
High. He is the only-begotten Son of
God. He is the Son given into death for
sinners—the Son given for us-- so that we too would be sons and daughters of
the Most High and show that in how we love others.
You
see dear friends in Christ, that while the words of Jesus about love were most
certainly fulfilled in his life, death, and resurrection, they also still stand
as God’s enduring will for us and they have been changed forever by Jesus from
words of condemnation, to words of invitation to live a life of genuine,
sacrificial, merciful love for others—even for our enemies.
Trusting
in this God of mercy we are different people than we were before and we begin
to see a way forward, a way of possibility, a way of growth in Christ-likeness.
Joseph
knew that way. He forgave those same
brothers who sold him into slavery and he poured out the riches of Egypt upon
them. Corrie Ten Boom forgave the Nazis
who sent her to a concentration camp and killed her family and did everything
in her power after the war to heal the wounds of her nation. The Amish forgave the man who killed their
little daughters and made it their first concern to care for his orphaned
children after his suicide.
I
knew an elderly lady in Kingsville who as a child was abused and mistreated by
men in her family in ways too terrible to mention. And yet throughout their life she cared for
them and forgave them.
And
here’s the thing: looking at those folks
from the outside I still wonder how anyone can forgive Nazis, and care for
those who have destroyed our family, and love those who have hurt us. There is no human way to understand that love
and mercy and forgiveness and care until you have known the same from
Jesus.
He
is the one who shows us that the way of love leads to blessing for us and those
around us. He says:
“Judge not, and you will not be judged; condemn not, and you
will not be condemned; forgive, and you will be forgiven; give, and it will be
given to you. Good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will
be put into your lap. For with the measure you use it will be measured back to
you.”
When we stand, by faith,
at the foot of the cross we see God’s innocent Son judged guilty of our
sins. We see the condemnation of a holy
God poured out upon his sinless Son rather than us. And we hear words of forgiveness spoken to a
world full of sinners.
Judgment and condemnation do not rest in our hands but
in God’s. We do not get to pronounce it
upon others because it has already been pronounced upon the Savior for a world
full of sinners—including those who have harmed us.
What HAS been
given to us, forgiveness and mercy and love, a good measure, pressed down and
shaken down, has been given to us so that it might overflow into the lives of
others—including those who have harmed us.
You see dear friends in Christ, that is what changes for
us as we hear these words of Jesus about loving our enemies—not the words
themselves, not what they mean.
Never! But what changes IS US, in
hearts and minds that are so full of mercy and forgiveness of Jesus that we
say: yes, Lord, with your help I will
love my enemies! Amen.
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