Tuesday, November 13, 2012

"The aim of our charge"

LOVE'S THREE SUPPORTS: 1 Timothy 1:5

The aim of our charge is love that issues from a pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere faith.

"The ends justify the means." Though most folks would probably deny, when put so baldly, that this is their life's operative philosophy, it certainly appears to be an underlying principle for much of our culture. What Paul tells us is that ends and means are tied together, that one proceeds from the other and cannot be separated so cleanly as the world tells us.

Love is the end, the aim, the goal: love of God, both expressed and experienced, lived out in sacrificial service at the same time it is received as a free gift. Love of neighbor, both in word and in deed -- in the specifics of day-to-day life as we live it in the microcosm each of us calls "my life", and in the great questions of the day and their reach all around the world, addressing the great issues of justice (e.g., human need such as adequate food and water) and stewardship (e.g., the environment) and mercy (e.g., care for the unborn and elderly).

The aim of the Gospel is love.

This love rests on three great supports, like the porch of a temple on three great columns:

A pure heart. The heart that is single in its devotion to God, tolerating nothing that gets in the way: "Nothing between myself and my Savior". A life devoted to the Great Commandment of love of God with the whole being and neighbor as self.

A good conscience. A life which keeps short accounts. None of us is flawless, and none of us is sinless. But the Bible says that we can be blameless, washed in the blood of the Lamb of God received through repentance and confession and faith (trust) in His word and work. The "good conscience" lives out of that repentance with integrity (a life in which conviction and action align) and when it fails or falls short, trusts, repents, and acts again to realign it.

A sincere faith. How can faith be "insincere"? By playacting, the root meaning of "hypocrisy". It has been said that hypocrisy used to be the compliment that vice paid to virtue, but these days it's the charge which vice hurls at virtue. But whether it's an act or an accusation, this "external" view of hypocrisy misses an important point: that "internally" it's an illness, an ailment, which needs to be diagnosed by the laser-like light of the Holy Spirit, and healed by Christ our Great Physician. Left untreated, it is like a spiritual cancer which breeds and spreads and consumes all of life, leaving fruitlessness and cynicism and confusion and dispiritedness in its wake. It needs to be excised and replaced by sincere faith, which by definition relies not on the self ("my" holiness) but on Christ (grace).

Lord, let love -- love of you, and of neighbor, pure and true and unfeigned -- be the great aim of my life. Purify my heart; strengthen my conscience; actualize my faith ... and these not for my ends, but that I might better love and serve You and reflect Your great love in the lives of others. For Christ's own dear sake, amen.


Prince Frederick, Maryland

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