| 
				
					
						
							
							What does it mean to love someone else in the 
							Christian sense of the term? Love is the hallmark of 
							the Christian faith, yet almost none of us really 
							spend a lot of time thinking or talking about it. So 
							if this is something you have not really considered 
							fear not, because God's love, and hence Christian 
							love itself, is on full display right here in these 
							verses from Ephesians. To set the stage, the author 
							has been clear in the verses leading up to these 
							that humanity is rubbish, and I think any of us who 
							watch the news or have been to Wal-Mart on Black 
							Friday can agree with this sentiment. We are mostly 
							bad. And in God's eyes, we are certainly mostly bad. 
							So here we have a God who created us out of divine 
							love to live in perfect relationship with us, but 
							then watched us fall in a most miserable way and 
							then was faced with the prospect of deciding what to 
							do next. Did God give up? No. Did God walk away? No. 
							Did God punish and destroy? No. God continued to 
							love, and that love is manifest nowhere more clearly 
							than in Christ. 
 Through Christ all is made well. All those bad 
							things you have done...whoosh, wiped away. All those 
							sins you committed...gone. In fact, everything that 
							had previously separated you from God is overcome, 
							and you will be restored to God through Christ. Now 
							that is love; to look past all that your beloved has 
							done wrong, the myriad ways in which they have 
							failed you, and to still, still love them 
							abundantly. This is the type of love God has for us; 
							that nothing in life nor death can separate us from 
							the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. That, my 
							friends, is Christian love. It is unfailing, 
							undying, unrelenting. It is eternal, and it is 
							offered freely by God through grace. How about them 
							apples!
 | 
            
			 
            Prayer: Holy God, thank you for loving me today. I am sorry I have 
			sinned against you and my neighbor, but I thank you for loving me 
			anyway. I am your devoted servant, and I pray in Jesus' name. Amen.
 [Phil Blackburn, First Presbyterian Church]
 |