Love in a Dangerous Time

“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”                 [John’s Gospel 13.34-35]

When we read scripture, one of the cardinal rules is context – location, location, location, as the roadside signs proclaim.

[Momentary Excursus: There was a monstrous (by every definition) sign for a temporary political party in the recent federal election just past Bendemeer, on the way to Armidale and its impact appeared minimal, in terms of votes gained. Perhaps it’s about more than just location…]

If we are careless, we will lift this extraordinary paragraph of Jesus’ words and ignore the path before and behind him. We do this at our peril.

Jesus has just washed the feet of his disciples, shared a meal with them, and Judas has walked into the night. The next moment, Jesus talks about loving each other, which is how people will know that they belong to Jesus.

Immediately, Peter falls into the frame, proclaiming his courage and loyalty, which last less than a few strident heartbeats.

Shortly, Judas’ betrayal will bear its malign fruit, and Jesus will be arrested and taken to the cross.

Jesus’ commandment to love each other describes the core of discipleship, bracketed by betrayal and denial. This is the essence of what Jesus offers – to love in such a way that people are drawn to Christ. When we realise that we are asked to love (and wash the feet of) those who might betray us, deny our relationship, or even cause us harm, his commandment weighs more heavily than the winsome chorus many worshipping communities will sing this weekend.

This week I attended a rally in solidarity with the people of Palestine, and Gaza in particular. Muslims and Jews, Christians, atheists and agnostics, we gathered in a local park. I turned to a disciple beside me, and asked what resolution looks like – what reconciliation looks like – in Gaza and Israel, especially now.

We pondered together, sadly.

This is the context in which Jesus’ command is placed. Not simply loving those who love us, but loving those who betray, deny and defile. And Jesus is definitive: loving in such way is evangelical. Loving in this way proclaims worth and value and hope, and the One we follow.

Loving in the way we are commanded, in the way Jesus loves, transforms those we love, and transforms us.

It is easy to find an enemy, to name and accuse them, and to settle into retribution. That is neither who we are called to be, nor how we are to live. In a world scarred by generational injustice and understandable anger, we are called to discern both how love calls us to act and speak, and to discern what love might offer, reconcile and make new in our community and our world.

We walk in the steps of Jesus, knowing first that we are loved by One who will never cease to do so.

Leave a comment