"I love Star Wars."
"I love tacos."
"I love listening to praise music."
We often use the word "love" to describe the
affection we feel toward a finished work ingenuity or cleverness. We see
something that is well-made and call it “good.” In this way, we are like God,
who marveled at his creation in the beginning:
Genesis 1:1, 10
“In the beginning, God created…and God saw that it was
good.”
But God’s love doesn’t stop there. He responds to the
enjoyment of something beautiful by surging forward to create yet more
marvelous and satisfying things in an unending cycle.
God's love is an active force, alive and on its feet,
producing new and appealing compositions. His love prompts him to produce works
of art and write poems; specifically, us.
The word "poem" comes into English directly from
the Greek poiema.
Ephesians 2:10
“You are God's workmanship (poiema)…”
We are God's crafted poems. We are composed in the ardor of
his passion, the passion that renews and sustains all things.
Psalm 139:13
“You formed my inward parts, you knit me together in my
mother's womb.”
The word "knit" calls to mind the image of a
grandmother smiling to herself as she stitches together a scarf for someone she
loves, humming a gentle tune as she works. That is the spirit of our origin
story: affection, care, intentionality.
When we see a person freshly in love, we may say that she
is “glowing.” This is what is meant in the Blessing of Aaron, “The Lord make
his face to shine upon you” (Numbers 6:25).
Another person newly in love might find himself possessed
by the inexplicable urge to sing, just as God sings songs over us: “He will
exult over you with loud singing” (Zephaniah 3:17).
We were created in love, by love, since God is himself is
the very essence and epitome of love.
1 John 4:8
“Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is
love.”
1 John 4:12
“No one has ever seen God; if we love one another, God
abides in us and his love is perfected in us.”
John is saying that even though God is invisible, he can be
seen most clearly through the love Christians show for one another. He's saying
that the love of God radiates through us and finds its fullest, truest
expression when we give and receive love; it is then "perfected in
us."
In fact, the night before Jesus died, he made a point about
love. He could have said so many other things. He could have commented on when
communion should be taken, the proper age for baptism, or worship styles.
Instead he speaks of love.
John 13:35
“By this all people will know you are my disciples, that
you love one another.”
The calling of our own lives is to imitate God by pressing
into the very force that brought us into being, returning love back to God and
extending it outward to one another.
In other words, the essence of Christianity is this:
God is love. Love writes poems. You are God’s poems. Now go
and love.
Dear Lord, fill us with your loving-kindness so that it
overflows to those that You bring into our life. Help others see Your love in
us. In the Name of Jesus, Amen.
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