I’ve been preaching on Encountering God for 5-ish weeks now, and we encounter a whole lot of God in Maundy Thursday’s Gospel
—Here in chapter 13 Jesus is receiving, holding, in his hands all that God has
given him.
He is fully aware of his origin from God and that his destiny is a return to
God.
Similarly, the glory of God—the heavy presence of God—is pointed to by
Jesus.
Look, the fullness of God, past, present, future,
God with us in a most radical way…
Jesus is utterly full of God
—and his immediate response is to empty himself in other centered serving
love.
This is mind blowing!
God’s fullness, fully emptying before our eyes and changing us
forever
—that’s the truest theology—God Talk—that I can think of…
that’s the kind of stuff that makes for Christian Songs,
because just saying it doesn’t do it justice.
In fact, one of the earliest Christian Hymns (found in Philippians 2) sings
this very song:
“Christ, who, though he was in the form of God,
did not regard equality with God as something to grasp.
Christ, who emptied himself,
taking the form of a slave…”
It
goes on—magnificently so—but that’s the thrust of it.
When God is fully present, God steps back, and only love remains.
Or to borrow from still another Christian letter, 1st John—“God
is love.”
Beloved
friends
—Love is what we need,
love is our only tool,
and love is our singular goal.
Prayer
Love is what we need, love is
our only tool, and love is our singular goal.
We need love,
the whole world does,
but all you need to do is look around,
to know that we lack love.
Perhaps we lack love
because we are disillusioned or greedy,
convinced that love is just a scam,
and there are better scams to run.
Better ways to get what we want, what we need
—failing to realize our ends and our means ought to align.
Perhaps we lack love
because we’re confused or our life has gotten disjointed.
We mistake strong emotions,
with the strength of loving action.
Or maybe it is a little more technical,
we just don’t know how.
Perhaps we’ve traded love in for
hatred or indifference.
Famed Author and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel called the latter,
“A strange and unnatural state in which the lines blur
between
light and darkness,
dusk and dawn,
crime and punishment,
cruelty and compassion,
good and evil.”
Perhaps
the world struggles to love
because we cling to scarcity,
are scared, cramped in a timid crouch,
or have been scarred one to many times,
and just can’t risk it again.
God
help us all. We need love!
Love
is more than an emotion,
but crucially, an action
—a tool to get through this life alive,
even after we’re dead!
Jesus
doesn’t just give us a command, he seeds our imagination—love.
Love in a way that is transformative,
a way that uplifts the other,
a way that is humble,
a way that gets in the muck!
He
takes on the position of the slave,
strips down to working clothes in the middle of an important feast.
He
does the task of washing feet,
in a “sword and sandals” world,
that’s not just symbolic,
that’s dirty work…
and that’s the sort of work he calls this community to when he says, “Love
one another.” Not just feel good about each other,
not just romanticize the community,
not just have a sense of belonging—family even
—but practice other centered serving love!
Such
love:
moves mountains,
maintains and
gains trust,
creates community,
and blesses the seekers and the meek ones.
Love
is our only tool
Our
magnetic north is love. It is our right direction and our guide in troubled
waters. Love constitutes both our values and our goals.
Jesus’ farewell actions
—atypical for John’s way of telling the Gospel
—precede Jesus’ farewell words.
He
grounds the disciples,
this earliest of church,
in love.
In
his deeds he is saying, “I’m leaving, but you are to continue this, this is the
foundation of our community. A washing!
A washing that is call to service,
the care of relationships,
an ongoing collective life of interconnected ministry.
Ministering to one another,
loving each other.
A community of love,
that was the first-place resurrection was seen,
and it will continue to be so even today!
If you want to see new life, look here!
A New Creation is breaking out with-in the Body of Christ!
Love is our highest value, and
our true goal.
As we are ambassador of love,
we are also pursuing love…
love, which, ultimately, pursue us,
kneeling, washing, cleaning, caring.
Our love for each other becomes Christ’s love for us
—just as surely as the bread and wine we partake of is his body.
Love is our singular
goal.
When we encounter God, we find
love.
Love is what
we need,
love is our only tool,
and love is our singular goal. Amen.








