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May 2, 2010Communion Sunday
“How's Your Love Life?”
Reverend Michael D. PowellJohn 13:31-35 |
Christ’s
“new commandment,” from the Gospel of John, is that we love one another as we
have been loved. This morning we’re
celebrating the Sacrament of Holy Communion, which is sometimes referred to as
an “Agape Meal” or “Love Feast.” I grew
up hearing it described as “The Last Supper” or “The Lord’s Supper” but, in any
case, it has always been a very meaningful act of worship for me. Somewhere along the line I began using the
words, “Feed on him in your heart by faith,” and the symbolism of being
nourished and strengthened by the Body of Christ that we may grow into the Body
of Christ is a powerful image.
What I pray for is that “sacramental
awareness” transcends a Sunday ritual and becomes a recognition that everything
is sacred and that we are always
feeding on the Body of Christ. That’s what I think heaven must be like. William Barclay defines eternal life as
"an infinitely high quality of life in living fellowship with God, both
now and forever."
It’s been my experience that, as we
begin to even dimly experience this infinitely high quality of life in
fellowship with God, then every other relationship in life begins to undergo a
transformation. If we really take into ourselves the words of John 3:16 that
"God so loved the world . . . that whoever believes in him shall not
perish but have everlasting life " then the process of transformation
begins with the realization that God is all of life, is love, and love is
eternal. Love is the creative force that continually creates, sustains and
redeems the entire universe. God's love finds expression in every rock, leaf
and tree. Go for a walk in the park.
Walk in love, looking and listening for God's presence. Look at the
glory of God's love being expressed in blooming flowers, budding trees, ducks,
turtles, swans, even the sparkling sunlight reflected in a pond or stream.
Listen to God's love song in the sound of rushing waters, singing birds and
gentle wind.
God's love is the meaning of
life. Each of us has been given a
physical body, as well as a mind and a soul. Each of us is a person of sacred
worth, and God is continually seeking to teach us life lessons so that we'll
grow into the likeness of Christ. God's greatest gift is that we have free
will. We can ignore God and refuse to believe the good news of God's love, or
we can open our eyes to look, our ears to listen and our heart to love. As we
love, we enter into that "infinitely high quality of life in fellowship
with God" and are able to say, with Paul, "It is not I who live, but
Christ who lives in me."
Not only our own self-image, but
also our image of others is transformed because what we begin to understand is
that when God loves the world, it's not a private or exclusive love. The lesson
we learn through Christ is to love even as we have been loved, to forgive even
as we have been forgiven.
When we share the sacrament of Holy Communion,
we’re focusing on the love of God, but we’re also being reminded that divine
love, whenever it takes on life in the real world, inevitably takes on the
aspect of sacrificial love. The Body of
Christ we are offered is the broken body, which reminds us that life in the
real world is hard! We all have our crosses to bear. Suffering is an inevitable part of life. But
suffering is transformed through looking to God, listening to Scripture, and
opening our hearts to love. We begin to realize that "all things work
together for good, for those who love God." (Romans 8:28).
Life is not random or meaningless.
There is purpose and direction. The best is yet to come, and in the person of
Jesus Christ the best is available right here and now. When we take the very
Body of Christ into our heart, when we “feed on him in our heart by faith,”
what we began to realize is that the Kingdom of Heaven is within. Eternal life,
that "infinitely high quality of life in fellowship with God" begins
now, for those who have eyes to see, ears to hear, and hearts to love.
A couple of years ago I shared a
list of 10 rules with you, but I have no doubt that you have forgotten them, so
I’ll repeat them. Before we share in the
sacrament of Holy Communion, here again are 10 "Rules for Being
Human."
1.
You will receive a body. You may like it or hate it, but it will be yours for
the entire period
this time around.
2.
You will learn lessons. You are enrolled in a full-time informal school called
life. Each day in
this school you will have the
opportunity to learn lessons. You may like the lessons or
think them irrelevant and stupid.
3.
There are no mistakes, only lessons. Growth is a process of trial and error
experimentation.
The "failed" experiments
are as much a part of the process as the experiment that
ultimately "works."
4.
A lesson is repeated until it is learned. A lesson will be presented to you in
various forms until
you have learned it. When you have
learned it, you can then go on to the next lesson.
5.
Learning lessons does not end. There is no part of life that does not contain
its lessons. If you
are alive, there are lessons to be
learned.
6.
"There" is no better than "here." When your
"there" has become a "here," you will simply
obtain another "there"
that will, again, look better than "here."
7.
Others are merely mirrors of you. You cannot love or hate something about
another person
unless it reflects to you something
you love or hate about yourself.
8.
What you make of life is up to you. You have all the tools and resources you
need. What you
do with them is up to you. The
choice is yours.
9.
Your answers lie inside you. The answers to life's questions lie inside you.
All you need to do
is look, listen, and trust.
10.
You will forget all this.
Yes, we forget. But the Good News is
that God keeps re-minding us with the Mind of Christ. God keeps re-membering
us, gathering us together as members of the Body of Christ. That's what the
sacrament of Holy Communion is about. It’s about Love. It’s about Life. Come, be re-minded,
re-member who and whose you are - In Christ. Amen.
(1)
Brett Blair, on-line Sermon Illustrations, 1999