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Love Your Enemies? - Wrestling with Luke 6:27-38

23/2/2025

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Below is the service Brian led at First Church Belfast this morning. 
Love Your Enemies? Wrestling with Luke 6:27-38

During the 1994 Rwandan genocide, Immaculée Ilibagiza hid for 91 days in a tiny bathroom with 6 other people during which time her whole family was murdered, except her brother who was out of the country studying in Senegal. In the years that followed, in an act of profound courage and grace, she chose to forgive the perpetrators, saying that harbouring hatred would only destroy her own heart.

Luke 6:27-38 is probably among the most challenging passages in the Gospels. In these verses, Jesus calls his followers to love their enemies, to do good to those who hate them, to bless those who curse them, and to pray for those who mistreat them. He goes on to instruct them to turn the other cheek, to give freely without expecting anything in return, and to extend mercy just as God is merciful. These teachings cut across the grain of our natural instincts for self-preservation, fairness, and justice. They challenge us to reflect deeply on the nature of love, mercy, and discipleship.

This passage is part of Jesus' Sermon on the Plain, which mirrors the more well-known Sermon on the Mount in Matthew's Gospel. Luke places a particular emphasis throughout his Gospel on God's compassion for the marginalized and the poor, the call to radical love and mercy, and the inversion of societal norms. Luke’s Jesus also invites his own disciples to a life of radical simplicity which enables them to live with a much greater freedom of spirit unencumbered with a constant preoccupation with material possessions.  Combined with this Luke's Gospel presents a vision of a kingdom governed by grace, not retribution.

In this passage, Jesus offers a concrete expression of this vision: love without limits, mercy without conditions. It is a love that goes beyond human reciprocity and mirrors the boundless compassion of God.  "For God is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked," Jesus reminds us (vs 35).

This radical teaching naturally raises difficult and uncomfortable questions. Does this passage require Christians to be pacifists? Historically, the Christians of the first two centuries interpreted it as such. Early Christian writers like Tertullian and Origen argued that Jesus' command to love one's enemies prohibited participation in war and violence. For the early Church, the cross was the defining symbol of self-giving love, not the sword.

But what about the complexities of history? What if Nazi Germany invades your country? How does one respond to such an aggressive and oppressive force? Is it possible to defend one's country while remaining faithful to Jesus' call to love one's enemies? Can one fight without succumbing to hatred?

These are not easy questions. Some Christians, like Dietrich Bonhoeffer, concluded that opposing the Nazis through direct action was a tragic necessity to prevent greater evil. Yet even Bonhoeffer struggled with the moral implications of his decision. Others have sought to embody a non-violent response, figures like Mahatma Ghandi,  Martin Luther King Jr. and Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who all drew on Jesus' teachings to resist injustice without dehumanizing their oppressors.

Further questions it might raise is whether Jesus' command to love our enemies and to turn the other cheek means that his followers should passively accept injustice or allow harm to go unchecked.   Feminist writers in particular have raised deep concerns how these teachings have been used to keep victims of domestic violence and abuse within abusive situations preventing victims of abuse from setting healthy boundaries or from leaving their abusive partners.  

In the year 2000 I did a module of study on domestic abuse and was asked to write an assignment how these realities should inform and even challenge simplistic interpretations of Christian Theology.  The reading material for the assignment contained numerous stories of women in abusive relationships from a variety of religious backgrounds and how in reaching out to pastors, priests, ministers and rabbi’s for help, they were told they needed to go back to their abusive partners and forgive or that this was simply the cross in life that they had to bare. It was suggested that in such instances clergy become accomplices in domestic abuse and religious teachings have been used in such a way to enable the abuse to continue unchallenged.  We might well ask the question, is that really what Jesus had in mind if indeed Luke the Gospel writer has accurately conveyed the teachings of Jesus accurately in this passage?  (Such insights and questions can be equally applied to situations where men are the victims of such domestic abuse). 

As we wrestle with these and potentially other questions, I wonder if at the heart of these teachings of Jesus in Luke’s Gospel is an attempt to work out the radical implications of the true nature of love.  And the clue is in the text itself in verse 32 “If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you?  Even ‘sinners’ love those who love them. And if you do good to those who are good to you, what credit is that to you? Even ‘sinners’ do that. 

These verses challenge the transactional nature of much of human love — the instinct to love only those who love us back or to do good only towards those who do good back to us. Jesus points out that such love is not extraordinary; it is common, even among those who are not particularly spiritual. In fact it is an ethic that even gangsters and the mafia abide by. What Jesus is suggesting is that only loving those who offer love in return is ultimately in fact self-centred and self-serving and thus love given for purely transactional purposes, for getting something back in return, is not in fact true or pure love at all. 

True love, according to Jesus, is not self-serving or conditional. It is generous, extending itself beyond the boundaries of relationship, of affinity, or of expected return.  Jesus words, according to Luke, are suggesting that for love to be true and pure it ultimately needs to be self-less.  

What then does one make of Jesus teaching here in Luke, that we should love our enemies?  Jesus does not suggest that this is optional for his followers.  Why does Jesus think it is necessary?  Why might it be important? 

And perhaps there might be two responses to these questions: 

And the first response is about the nature of hatred, and here the Buddha’s teachings are helpful.  According to the Buddha, hatred is what he calls one of the three poisons – which also include greed and ignorance. As such, hatred is poisonous to the one who holds it and carries it in their own hearts.  To harbour hatred according to the Buddha is to bring suffering upon oneself.  Where there is hatred, there can be no real and deep happiness.  Hatred according to the Buddha poisons the pool of our own joy and happiness. As some have said, it is like holding onto a burning coal while hoping it will hurt one’s enemy.   And interestingly advances in holistic medicine that take seriously the connection between body and mind, have also begun to show that harbouring feelings of anger and hatred not only poison our minds and our hearts, but they also poison our bodies, leading to diseases including cancer if harboured within us for long enough. 

The second response to the question, why love for enemies is important, comes from Jesus, because Jesus in both Luke’s and Matthew’s Gospels suggest that in loving in this way we are becoming vessels and channels for Divine Love. And by implication, to the extent that we limit our love, as all of us actually do, is the extent to which we limit our experience of the Divine… 

But there is some really good news in all of this for those of us who are struggling to love in this way… according to Jesus in these verses, our falling short of the way of Divine Love, does not diminish the Divine Love towards us.  It might  limit our experience of the Divine Love, but it cannot and will not limit or change the Divine Love towards us.  For as Jesus says in this passage: “The Most High is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked.” When I hear these words of Jesus in Luke and the parallel words in Matthew’s Gospel, I am not sure how any Christian can take seriously the idea of God casting sinners into some kind of hell for all eternity. Such a view of God seems quite antithetical to the view that Jesus gives in this passage.  And how can it be possible that Jesus should call us to love our enemies if in the final analysis God does not hold Godself to the same standard? 

Getting back to Luke’s Gospel, rather than inviting his followers to passively accept abuse, some theologians and biblical commentators suggest that the words of Jesus in this passage were meant to be understood as non-violent acts of resistance towards an oppressive and abusive occupying army.   In a situation of oppressive and brutal occupation, such as the Jews experienced under the Romans, violent resistance would only bring about more violence and even harsher treatment.  When an oppressed and occupied people have no other options available to them, then turning the other cheek can become a chosen, non-violent act of defiance and a chosen, dignified act of free will in the face of violence. 

But advice and teaching given to an oppressed and an occupied people living under a brutal empire that cannot be escaped is not necessarily good advice to be given to a person living in an abusive domestic relationship, where a better option would surely be to leave the abusive relationship, and to set boundaries in place to protect one from further harm. 

Is it also possible, that under certain circumstances, for example when the Nazi’s are invading one’s country, it might in fact be necessary to take up arms to resist the spread of an evil regime?  And is it possible to do so while not allowing one’s own heart and soul to be poisoned by hatred?  

Words from the Tao Te Ching, the little book of Chinese Wisdom, give a thought provoking perspective on these things. 

Chapter 31: Weapons are instruments of fear; they are not a wise person's tools.
They use them only when they have no choice.
Peace and quiet are dear to their heart,
and victory should not bring them joy.
If you rejoice in victory, then you delight in killing.
The wise person enters battle gravely
with sorrow and great compassion
as if attending a funeral. 

And a final question… is it also possible that Jesus might be pointing us towards an inner joy and an inner happiness that does not depend on outward circumstances or possessions at all, an inner joy that once discovered can never be taken away because it is rooted not in temporary external things but in a timeless and formless spiritual dimension… otherwise known as The Eternal - what Jesus refers to as the Kingdom of God within. 

Just some food for thought today on a very challenging passage. It feel like we have only but scratched the surface and that there are more perspectives to be considered. 
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Blessings and Woes: The Great Reversal of Luke's Gospel

16/2/2025

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THE AUDIO-RECORDING OF TODAYS SERVICE: 
Video Recording  of Today's Sermon
Homily on Luke 6:17-26

In the past week and a half American President Donald Trump put a pause on all USAID to countries around the world. It has sparked strong opinions on all sides of the political debate. In Africa in particular there have been voices of deep concern about what this sudden loss of funding will mean particularly to HIV/AIDS programs, but more generally to disease control… will it potentially come back to bite America if serious diseases begin to spiral out of control? There is also the concern for food programs and those who currently depend on these.  One of the lone African voices in support of Trump’s decision was that of Paul Kigame from Rwanda who stated in an interview that Africa needs to wean itself off foreign aid to become self-sustaining.  

Some in America are clearly happy with the cuts in foreign USAid… on the basis that charity begins at home, especially when the US debt is running into the billions.  Others are saying that America’s stability in the world order depends on stability across the globe. If third world countries are plunged into deeper instability is it not going to fuel further migration issues, not just for America but for America’s Western allies? 

I guess we are all having to watch this space.  How is all of this going to play out not only for America and America’s Allies but also for Third World Countries? – Time will tell.  These things are perhaps a reminder that in a global world and a global economy where everything is interconnected it is all rather like an intricate spider-web. If you move one part of the web on the one side the vibrations and effects are felt on another.  If key strands on the web are unhooked, there are dangers that whole sections of the spider web collapse. 

These a complex issues and these are also fragile days for many many reasons.  

Against the backdrop of all of these things we read a very challenging passage from Luke’s Gospel set for today’s lectionary readings.  Now when we read any of the Gospels we need to remember that we are reading the Gospel ‘according to…’ Whatever stories or teachings we read in the four Gospels have been filtered through the understanding of the writer. That’s what it means when we say: ‘According to…’. And so while Luke’s Gospel may share a lot in common with Mark and Matthew, there is a lot of unique material in Luke’s Gospel. And in addition, Luke has his own philosophical and theological understanding of the significance of Jesus that is unique to Luke. 

I would be surprised if you heard today’s passage being preached on in a Gospel Hall or a Baptist Church, and also even in a Presbyterian church that doesn’t follow a structured program for working through the Bible like the Lectionary. This is a passage that doesn’t fit neatly into the neat salvation theories of most evangelical theologies and therefore is often simply avoided.  To be quite honest I think this is the first time I have ever preached on this passage myself! 

And that is the benefit of following the common lectionary passages Sunday by Sunday… it makes us read things that we would otherwise avoid. 

The passage we look at today from Luke 6:17-26 places us at the beginning of Jesus’ public teaching in Luke’s Gospel. It comes after Jesus has given his inaugural sermon in the Synagogue in Nazareth where the listeners were so offended by his reference to outsiders that they tried to throw him unsuccessfully off a cliff – that’s s a story unique to Luke’s Gospel.  After that Jesus calls his first disciples with a miraculous catch of fish – a story that some might regard as symbolic while others might regard it literally.  Following the flow of Luke’s narrative, today’s passage comes  immediately after Jesus has called the twelve apostles and follows a night spent in prayer on a mountain. 

The setting of today’s passage is deeply significant: while Matthew places Jesus’ famous sermon on a mountain (the Sermon on the Mount), Luke presents Jesus as descending to a level place, emphasizing his closeness to the people. Matthew by showing Jesus up a high mountain is emphasizing Jesus connection with God.  By contrast, Luke, by portraying Jesus preaching on a level plain is emphasizing that Jesus is not placing himself above other people, but coming down as it were to the level of ordinary people.  This ‘Sermon on the Plain’ is therefore characteristic of Luke’s  emphasis on Jesus concern for and closeness to the poor, the marginalized, and the suffering and his concern to raise them up. 

At the heart of this passage Jesus is portrayed proclaiming a series of blessings and woes. These beatitudes in Luke differ notably from Matthew’s version. Where Matthew spiritualizes the beatitudes—“Blessed are the poor in spirit” (Matt 5:3)—Luke is more direct and down to earth: “Blessed are you who are poor” (Luke 6:20). The contrast continues with the woes: “Woe to you who are rich” (Luke 6:24). Matthew’s beatitudes contain no such woes.  But in Luke’s version of the beatitudes he presents a stark reversal of fortunes, a theme deeply woven into his Gospel. From the outset, in Mary’s Magnificat (Luke 1:46-55), we hear of God who “has brought down the powerful from their thrones and lifted up the lowly; he has filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich away empty.” In the parable of the Rich Man and poor Lazarus later on in Luke’s Gospel we find a similar dramatic reversal of fortunes.  Jesus’ teaching here in Luke 6 re-emphasizes that particular understanding of the writer of Luke: that the coming of God’s kingdom brings a radical reordering of human society  what some might call “A Gospel of Reversal”.

Luke’s Gospel consistently portrays a world where the last shall be first and the first shall be last. This is not just a metaphorical or spiritual shift but an actual transformation of human relationships and economic realities. Jesus’ mission, as announced in Luke 4:18-19, is to “bring good news to the poor... to proclaim release to the captives... to let the oppressed go free.” Throughout the Gospel, we see this enacted in Jesus’ interactions: he eats with tax collectors and sinners (Luke 5:29-32), elevates the faith of the marginalized (Luke 7:36-50), and tells parables that overturn conventional expectations, such as the Rich Man and Lazarus (Luke 16:19-31) and the Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11-32). The blessings and woes in Luke 6 echo this trajectory, reinforcing a Gospel that calls for both personal and societal transformation.

In this passage, in keeping with the rest of the Gospel, Luke’s portrayal of Jesus underscores a divine bias toward the poor and the oppressed. This is difficult to understand, shouldn’t God be completely unbiased some might ask? But an analogy might be helpful – When a mother was once asked which of her children she loved the most, she refused to answer saying she loved them all equally. But as her questioner persisted and wasn’t satisfied with the mother’s answer, she eventually said the following – I love them all equally, but at any given time, the one who is suffering the most is the one who receives more of my love and concern. If there is a bias in God towards the poor as Luke’s Gospel suggests, then it is because the love of God is being directed towards those who are suffering the most – and in the ancient world the gap between the rich land-owners and the poor was extremely large (as it is across our world today).  This does not mean that wealth is inherently evil, but it does serve as a warning: those who are comfortable, who are satisfied with the present world order, may find themselves resistant to the in-breaking of God’s kingdom. And so the woes towards the rich and the comfortable in this passage function as a call to repentance, urging those with wealth, power, and privilege to align themselves with the values of God’s reign, generosity, justice, and solidarity with the least and the lowest. 

The message of Jesus here according to Luke is deeply challenging. It is easy to domesticate Jesus words, to interpret them in purely spiritual terms, but Luke resists this. Luke’s Jesus is concerned with the real conditions of human life, hunger, poverty, sorrow, and Luke’s Jesus calls his followers to radical trust in God’s provision and combined with radical generosity toward others.

Out of interest I saw this week that the word ‘alms’ as in ‘almsgiving’ comes from the word ‘nurture’… which is what a mother does to help her child to grow to maturity. Luke’s Jesus is not about charity that simply keeps the poor in a state of dependence, but rather their empowerment. 

As always, this is just some food for through for all of us today, as all of us wrestle with what it means to be followers of Jesus in a really difficult and fragile world. Amen. 
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Immersed in Divine Love

9/2/2025

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Luke 3:15ff & Isaiah 43:1-4 
Immersed and drenched in Divine Love

Most people in most mainline Christian denominations that practice infant baptism don’t remember their baptisms, which is natural, because most would have been baptised before they they were really aware what was happening. 

In looking through the baptismal records of the Dromore church I was interested to see that most of the older generation in our churches would have been baptised not in church but in their family homes.  The reason for this seemed to be an utterly practical one. The congregation in previous generations was so large, with so many children being born that to have had them all baptised in church would have meant that every second or third week it would have been a baptism service and there would have been very little room for much else in regular church worship. 

I was never baptised as an infant. Although my father had grown up as an Anglican in South Africa, he met my mother while attending the Salvation Army where he had become a member. My mom had grown up as a member of the Salvation Army. The salvation Army doesn’t practice baptism because in their theology they did away with all sacraments. In the Salvation Army they would say that what is important is not the outward ritual or outward sign of Baptism. What is important is rather the inward experience of baptism, the inner experience of being transformed by God’s saving love. And so Instead of being baptised as an infant,  I was taken to the Salvation Army to be dedicated. 

It was only later, when we moved to a small town away from the city where there was no Salvation Army, that my parents started attending a Methodist Church. It was there probably as a 3 or 4 year old that I was actually baptised... I still have a memory of sitting on the edge of my parents bed with my Dad explaining to me and my older brother Keith what baptism was all about, in as much as a child could understand and, asking us if we wanted to be baptised.  

It is not often in church that we have an opportunity to reflect deeply on the meaning of Baptism in Church and in light of the fact that we had a baptism service last week as well as the fact that we missed the lectionary passage on Jesus Baptism in Luke’s Gospel, . I thought it appropriate that we  consider this passage today and reflect a little more deeply on baptism itself. 

Firstly, in this passage, I believe that we see that Baptism is all about identity.  Baptism is meant to remind us, and the children among us, of who we really are.  In times past, baptism was used as a naming ceremony. In baptism the parents would formally name their child. This practice of naming a child at Baptism has largely fallen away now. But that practice is a reminder that baptism is all about identity.  But our truest and deepest  identity is not the name given to us by our parents, not our nationality or culture, not even what religion we are or what football team we support. Rather,  our truest and deepest identity is that we are God’s beloved. Children of God, made in God’s image. To put it another way, our deepest identify is to be found at the level of spirit rather than in any outward temporary form whether it is a role we might play, or even at the level of our physical body.  There is a time-less and formless spiritual reality at the heart of who we are that is our truest and deepest identity. 

In the passage we read from Luke this is captured in the language of son-ship (and we might also say daughter-ship) – that when Jesus is baptised, there is a voice heard from heaven saying: “This is my beloved son.” Although our deepest spiritual identity transcends, gender categories of son or daughter. 

Baptism is a reminder that we are, each and everyone of us, God’s beloved.  We are each infinitely valuable expressions of the Divine expressed in human form. 

Secondly, in this passage we see that the true Baptism is not in water.... that is the outward sign.   John the Baptist says in this passage: “I baptise with water, but one will come after me who will baptise with the Holy Spirit and fire.  The true inner meaning of baptism is that we are baptised into in God’s Spirit of love. 

The Greek word baptizo means to immerse, to put something under.  The real immersion is not immersion in water. The real immersion is in the Holy Spirit, God’s Spirit of Love. 

Acts  17:28 reminds us that every moment of every day we are already immersed and drenched in God’s Spirit. God is not far away from us in some distant heaven, for “In him we live and move and have our being”.  We are already living in God, surrounded, and immersed in God’s love and presence. And in Ephesians we read that God is over all, in all and through all.  

Baptism reminds us, and brings to our attention that which is already true, firstly that we are God’s beloved and secondly that we are, every moment of every day, swimming, immersed, drenched in God’s Loving presence and loving Spirit and that in fact the Kingdom of God, the Kingdom of the Spirit is within us.  When we awake to our true spiritual identity, the Kingdom of God within, we discover and awaken to the fact that we are indeed immersed in the Divine Life and Love. 

Thirdly, Luke uses another word to describe Baptism in this passage: The word Fire. John the Baptist speaks of being baptised with the Holy Spirit and with Fire... and he goes on to speak of it as an unquencheable fire.  

“I baptise with water, but one more powerful than I will come... He will baptise with the Holy Spirit and with Fire. His winnowing fork is in his hand to clear the threshing floor and to gather the wheat into his barn, but he will burn away the chaff with unquenchable fire.” vs 16-17.

Normally when Christians speak of unquenchable fire, their minds immediately think of the fires of hell and damnation where they believe that unbelievers and sinners will suffer in torment for all eternity.  

But the unquenchable fire of which John the Baptist is referring to is clearly not the fire of hell reserved for unrepentant sinners. The unquenchable fire is something he suggests that we will all be baptised into... immersed into and it is clearly a purifying fire.  In our passage, the image is that of wheat that has been harvested. Once it is harvested and the outer chaff has been removed because it is no longer necessary, it is burned. These fires of spiritual purification that burn away all that is not necessary, all that gets in the way of the Divine Life God has placed within us.

To be baptised into God’s love is to be immersed in a love that overtime will purify and cleanse us of all that is not necessary, of all that is not love until we come to know our deepest and truest spiritual identity that can never be destroyed or taken away because it is the Divine within us, that truest and most essential identity of the image of God within that is eternal and therefore indestructible.  

But the imagery of fire is not just about the fire that burns. Fire also brings warmth and energy, and when we are warm and energised we become passionate. To be baptised in the Fire of God’s Love is also meant to set our own hearts on fire, to make us passionate about life, to make us passionate about this world and to give ourselves away passionately as a blessing to others.  Baptism in the fire of Divine love invites us to ask: What is my essential nature? Who or what am I really in the deepest part of my being beyond the world of outward form of our bodies and our roles in life where we come to know oneness with God as the Beloved immersed in the Divine Life and Love?  I believe that baptism according to this story  also asks of us: What is it that sets my heart on fire?  What am I passionate about?... and in what way can that passion bring life and love to others and to myself and indeed to the world. What am I so passionate about that I would be willing to give my life away for it? 
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Invitation to Boundless Love (Reflection on Luke 4:22-30)

2/2/2025

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Please find the AUDIO RECORDING of todays Service (2nd Feb) immediately below,
​followed by a video reflection by Brian. 

(The Audio Recording of the Service includes a History of Eldership in Presbyterianism and the NSPCI.) 
Luke 4:22–30  - Invitation to Boundless Love

In today’s passage, Jesus has just delivered a powerful message in the synagogue—what some call his "mission statement" in Luke’s Gospel. He proclaims that Isaiah’s vision is being fulfilled right then and there: good news for the poor, freedom for the captives, sight for the blind, and liberation for the oppressed. It’s a bold, beautiful vision of God’s love breaking into the world. And at first, the crowd is impressed. They marvel at his words for they were an occupied oppressed people who longed for liberation and freedom from their  own foreign Roman oppressors.

But then things take a turn for the worse. Jesus reminds them that God’s grace isn’t just for them as the people of Israel—it’s always been bigger than their boundaries. He brings up two uncomfortable examples: in Elijah’s time, God provided for a Gentile widow, and in Elisha’s time, a Syrian leper was healed. Suddenly, admiration turns to anger. They feel exposed. Their sense of entitlement is shaken. And instead of celebrating the wideness of God’s mercy which goes beyond their narrow nationalistic boundaries, they turn on Jesus with such anger that they try to throw him over a cliff on the edge of town.

This moment is crucial because it shows us that real spiritual awakening isn’t just about feeling inspired—it can also be disruptive, challenging our assumptions (and the assumptions of society), and forcing us to rethink who we are in relation to others. Aldous Huxley, in his book The Perennial Philosophy, speaks of a universal spiritual truth at the heart of all great traditions: the idea that the divine is present in everyone, even if it is often obscured. And the awakening to this truth leads to an awakening to a love and grace transcend all barriers. But this kind of realization is deeply unsettling wherever we try and define our narrow identity by keeping divisions intact.

And this is where 1 Corinthians 13 speaks so powerfully. Paul reminds us that at the heart of our faith is love. A Love that is patient and kind. A Love that doesn’t insist on its own way. |A love which Jesus shows doesn’t draw neat lines between insiders and outsiders. This is the love that Jesus embodies, a love that reaches beyond boundaries, a love that is always expansive, for God’s Love can not limited by our human boundaries.   It is a love that cannot be contained, but constantly moves outward.  And in the end, it invites us into something far greater than ourselves—the boundless and infinite Love of God Itself. 

In closing, at a personal level, we might ask ourselves two questions: Where am I holding onto an identity that separates me from others? What fears keep me from embracing a wider love? Amen. 
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