
Making All New Through Love
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde
Special to the Herald
(From the issue of 5/13/04)
The following homily was given by Arlington Bishop Paul S. Loverde
during the Baccalaureate Mass at Marymount University in Arlington on
Saturday, May 8, 2004 for the Vigil Mass for the fifth Sunday of Easter.
What is it that makes the Christian message timeless yet relevant in
every generation? Its newness and fresh vitality! Indeed, at the end of
today’s second reading from the Book of Revelations, the Lord affirms this:
"… ‘Behold, I make all things new.’"
Newness-freshens: this is what Christian living is all about: a new
relationship between God and human beings; new relationships among the
members of Christ’s body, the Community of His disciples; a new purpose to
life itself; and a new strength rooted in God’s life within us, divine
grace, which reaches its fullness beyond the grave.
This image of newness is confirmed by the world of nature; it is
springtime — the season of new beginnings. This image of newness is
confirmed also by the liturgical season of Easter; the Risen Christ is the
very cause and source of newness. As one of the Easter Prefaces proclaims:
"In him a new age has dawned, the long reign of sin is ended, a broken world
has been renewed and man is once again made whole" (cf. Easter Preface IV).
Yes, the newness and freshness of the Christian message finds its source
in the Risen Lord Jesus and its clearest expression in the new commandment
which Jesus gives us. "I give you a new commandment: love one another." The
command to love one another is not new to Christianity because it is found
in the Jewish faith and in eastern religion. What is new is loving
one another in the same way as Jesus loves us. "As I have loved you,
so you also should love one another." There is newness and freshness in our
lives and relationships only when we love one another in the same way as
Jesus loves us.
So if the way Christ loves us is the measure our criterion for our love
of one another, then we must consider how Christ loves us. "Jesus
loves us just as we are, in spite of our faults, our dull minds and our
stubborn wills; he loves us in spite of our sins … ." (cf. Magnficat,
May 2004, p. 125). The movie "The Passion of the Christ" depicts vividly and
unequivocally how much Jesus loves — faithfully, unconditionally,
without end. All our love for one another must constantly seek to imitate
Christ’s; we must never give up trying to forgive, to reconcile, to reach
out, to show kindness and mercy again and again and again.
Obviously, it would be impossible for us to love in this way completely
on our own. However, the Lord does not ask us to love on our own; He gives
us His transforming power to love the way He loves us if only we invite Him
into our lives and ask Him to send us the Holy Spirit who will empower us to
love with the love of Jesus Himself. "Without me, you can do nothing" Jesus
reminds us, and St. Paul affirms that "I can do all things in Him who
strengthens me."
Dear members of the Class of 2004, your education and formation here at
Marymount University have equipped you to make the decided difference in our
society. Whether in the smaller circle of the family or the workplace, or in
the wider circle of the community, in the arenas of persuasion, influence
and decision-making, yours is the privilege and the challenge to bring the
light of Christ’s truth and the fire of His love. In your relationships and
interactions, love others the way Christ loves us. Christ’s love is
life-giving precisely because it is rooted in the truth, and when you live
the truth and love like Jesus, you will be life-giving. Witness to the
Christian message, which is forever new and fresh, Saint Augustine puts this
so well: "This is the kind of love that renews us. When we love as [Jesus]
loved us, we become new [people], heirs of the new covenant and singers of
the new song."
Members of the Class of 2004, may you be the singers of the new song,
building a new civilization of life and love, above all, by living the new
commandment of love given us by Jesus the Lord. Jesus tells us one more
time: "This is how all will know that you are my disciples, if you have love
for one another."
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