Almost
everyone is familiar with the command that Jesus gave His disciples, “.
. . love your enemies . . .” (Matthew
5:42-78).
And almost
everybody thinks that, while it’s what we should aim for, it’s hopelessly
unrealistic. Maybe. But maybe some context might help us
understand how central this really is to being Christian.
What does it
mean to be Christian? It’s not to save
ourselves, as perhaps we might think.
God has done that for us. No, our
job is to continue the work of Jesus – the Jesus who called people to change
their priorities and submit to God’s gentle reign. Christians are a community of disciples,
having disciple roles, and doing disciple work.
We need to
ask ourselves: If someone is mean and hateful and spiteful, self-centered and
angry – in short, our enemy – do we want that person to go into eternal
damnation? We can’t want that. Jesus gave Himself for that person, just as
much as He did for me. Jesus counts on
us to help that person accept the love God offers. How can that person know of God’s forgiveness
if he doesn’t experience it in me?
But love our
enemies? Once again, we bump up against
the inadequacies of translations. “Love”
as it is meant in this gospel isn’t a matter of warm fuzzy feelings or the
affection of friendship. The verb used
by Matthew might be better translated as “to care about”, or “to be concerned
about”, “to care enough to want to help”.
It’s with that kind of care and concern that Jesus and Stephen prayed
for those who were killing them (Luke 23:34, Acts 7:54-60). Saving such individuals is precisely why Jesus
came and why we’re Christians.
From my
vantage point, there’s a huge difference between me and my persecutor, between
me and the terrorist bomber, between me and the child rapist. But the simple fact is that both of us are
equally in need of God’s saving love, which God freely gives, as this passage
from Matthew clearly attests. “Our
heavenly Father causes
His sun and rain to fall upon the good and the bad, the just and the unjust” (Matthew 5:45).
Love our
enemies? Unrealistic? It can’t be – must not be! As St. Paul says, “.
. . test the genuineness of your love by your concern for others.” (2 Corinthians 8:1-9). All others. Even enemies.
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