Lesson Focus:
Loving
God and loving neighbor are inseparable. We can love God and neighbor because
Jesus is the messiah.
Catch up on the story:
This
passage is the third of three questions that the religious leaders of Israel
put to Jesus. The first question was about paying taxes to Caesar, the second
was a question about the future resurrection. This final question, along with
the previous two, are all attempts by the religious leaders to trap Jesus into
saying something that will either get him in trouble with the political
authorities or cause him to loose credibility with the people. These questions
have come from both ends of the religious establishment. Both the Pharisees,
who tended to lean more toward the revolutionary end, and the
Sadducees/Herodians, who favored a more pro-Roman stance, questioned Jesus.
This final question comes from the Pharisees who are delighted that Jesus has
confounded the Sadducees in the previous section.
The Text:
The
text begins with Matthew noting that the Pharisees approach Jesus to test or
trap him because they say that Jesus had silenced the Sadducees. Literally,
Jesus had "muzzled" the Sadducees with his response to the previous
question. We will hear no more from the Sadducees in terms of questions. In
fact, at the end of this chapter, the Pharisees will no long attempt to trap
Jesus in his teaching either.
One
of the experts in the law approaches Jesus and asks him a question.
"Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?" The exact
way in which the expert in the law asks this question is important. Poia in
Greek is often translated as, "what kind of?" in distinction from
"which." The distinction is important. The lawyer is not seeking to
know which one law is the greatest, but rather what class of commandments
deserves to be elevated above the rest.[1] In other words, the lawyer wants to know what
law is most comprehensive and thus the most significant commandment.
Jesus
responds that what is most important is to "love the Lord your God with
all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.’ This is the
greatest and first commandment. And a second is like it: ‘You shall love your
neighbor as yourself.’ On these two commandments hang all the law and the
prophets." Here, Jesus combines two commandments from two different books
of the Old Testament into one over arching command. The first part of the
command comes from Deuteronomy 6:5 and was a particularly important command for
Israel. Devout Jews every morning and every evening of their lives would have
prayed it.
This
command to love God is the first and greatest command. But notice that this is
not just a mere command to love an impersonal and distant God. Rather, Jesus situates
this command in the midst of Israel's history. The command is to love the
"Lord your God." That is, the God of your fathers, Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob, the God who, with a mighty and outstretched hand, brought you up out of
Egypt. It is a command to love the God, who out of his love and grace did not
destroy Israel when she rebelled at Mt. Sinai, or when she refused to take
possession of the Promised Land. The command to love the "Lord your
God" is to respond to the great saving love that God has shown for Israel
throughout the generations.
How
are we to love this God who has first loved us? We are to love him with all of
our heart, soul and mind. At this point, I am not sure it helps us much to
parse out different meanings for heart, soul and mind. The point Jesus is
trying to make is that we are to love this God who has first loved us with the
entirety of our being. The Hebrew word for heart, lev, can be compared
to what we would call our "center."[2] Our love for God flows out from the core of
who we are, because we have first been transformed by God's love for us. If we
are honest with ourselves this kind of total and systemic love for God is hard
to achieve. Jesus will give us some help with this in a minute.
Jesus
then places this command at the forefront of everything. This command to love
God is the greatest and first command. Above anything else we might find
in all of the law and the prophets, this command is the one that trumps
everything. Jesus could stop here because throughout the law and the prophets
God has given us plenty of examples of what it looks like to love God. Almost
always these commanded expressions of love for God find their foundation in
God's previous actions for Israel (and us). For example, Israel is commanded to
care for the widow, orphan and alien. Why? Because Israel were once widows,
orphans and aliens in a strange land and God, in his love for Israel, cared and
provided for them. God seeks nothing less than our imitation of him in his care
for humanity.
Jesus
moves on and gives the second part of this double command. This second command,
to love our neighbors as ourselves, Jesus says is just like the first. The
"and a second is like it" is more than just Jesus' way of creating a
casual connection between love of God and love of neighbor. The Greek word for
"like," hominia, more fully means, "equal to" and
"of the same nature."[3] In other words, loving our neighbor is
equally as important as loving God. We cannot love God without loving our
neighbor.
At
different times and places, the church has separated these two commands. If we
honor the first command to love God with all of what we are, but neglect the
second command, we all too often fall into the trap of religious legalism. Love
often gets worked out as keeping to a strict list of dos and don'ts. We do read
our bible and pray because that is what God would want. We
attend
worship services regularly because that is what God would want. We don't use
foul language, or watch entertainment that promotes immoral behavior. We don't
engage in premarital sex or extramarital sex because that would not be how we
show love for God.
In
the same way as concentrating on loving God without loving neighbor is
dangerous, loving our neighbor without loving God is dangerous as well. When we
concentrate too much on loving our neighbor we tend to forget the individual
moral aspects of Christianity. We think that as long as we are caring for our
neighbor we can engage in other acts that would be displeasing to God.
In
combining these two commands, Jesus stresses the connection between God’s love
for us and our subsequent love for our neighbors. We are compelled to love our
neighbor because we have been loved first. Love for neighbor is the best
response to the love we have received.
Who
is our neighbor and how might we love him or her? Matthew, in this passage,
does not give us a direct answer. But we have Jesus, in other places, like
Luke's gospel, proclaiming that our neighbor is everyone. More specifically,
our neighbors are those whom we walk by and come in contact with every day. The
needs of our neighbors might vary from day to day. It is our job to constantly
ask our selves what it looks like to love our neighbor.
At
times, loving our neighbor looks like providing them with food, clothes and
water. It might mean providing comfort and support in times of loneliness or
mourning. At other times it might mean that we confront our neighbors when they
engage in wrongdoing. This command to love our neighbor comes from Leviticus
19:18 and includes the admonition to reprove our neighbor when they need it.
After
Jesus gives us this double command to love God and our neighbor, he states that
the entirety of the law and prophets hang on these two commands. Imagine, for a
moment, that you have a coat rack mounted to your house's entryway. There are
two pegs on that coat rack. Maybe you have a heavy backpack that you don't want
to touch the ground, so you use both pegs on the rack to support the bag. Jesus
is saying that this double command to love God and neighbor are those two pegs
on the coat rack. Together they support the rest of the law and prophets. Or,
another way to look at it is that the double command to love God and neighbor
provide for us a set of lens that we are to use to view all of scripture. We
must have both lenses in order to rightly see and interpret scripture. Using
only one of the lenses, or perhaps shutting one eye will yield a distorted view
of scripture.
Verses
41-46 might seem to be disconnected from the preceding verses. I don't want to
concentrate a lot of our effort on this part of the passage. Historically,
these two sections have been placed together in the lectionary. What is
important in verses 41-46 is the implied claims that Jesus is making about his
messiahship. The Pharisees believe that the Christ, or messiah, will be a
descendant of David. Jesus, in quoting Psalm 110, intends for the Pharisees to
see that this messiah who is the son of David will be much more than just a
man. Bruner comments, "All Jesus is attempting to do is to pry open his
hearers' minds to the possibility that the future messiah will be more than
a son of David, more than even David's glorious successor..."[4]
What
ties these two sections together is the messiahship question. If Jesus is the
messiah than his double command to love God and neighbor becomes the legitimate
authoritative way in which we must interpret all of the law and prophets.
Because we live on this side of Jesus' resurrection, we can confidently
proclaim that yes, Jesus is the messiah, the one we had been waiting for and
yes, his words and commands are right and true because they have been
vindicated by the death defeating, death defying power of the resurrection. Let
us live confidently in the power of the resurrection by loving God and our
neighbor as ourselves.
So What?
As
the church, not just our local church, but the church in America and else
where, we often get caught up in an unhealthy discussion about what one must do
or believe to be truly Christian. All too often in American Evangelicalism we
deny that others who do not practice Christianity or believe exactly the same
as we do, are not truly Christian. We have equated love of God with right
belief and have often failed to love our neighbor as ourselves.
This
passage, however, calls to always discern how it is that we hold together our
love for God, which certainly means moral obedience, with our love for our
neighbors. How might we express our love for God through our love for neighbor?
There
are two things that I think are of paramount significance about this double
love command. First, the command to love God and neighbor in equal and
complimentary ways makes Christianity not just about our own salvation. It
makes it about our seeking the salvation, both physically and spiritually, of
others. Christianity, then, is not about us, but about our becoming conduits of
God's love and salvation for the world. Second, but equally important, it
challenges us to read scripture in a Christocentric way. We must use this
double love command as a lens through which to read scripture. As we read
scripture do our interpretations of both the Old and New Testament violate our
command to love God and neighbor?
Critical Questions:
1.
How
does this text reveal to us the nature and character of God/What is God doing
in this text?
a. God is love. God commands us to love, out of
response to the love that we have first received.
- What does holiness look like in this text?
- Living a life of holiness means loving God and neighbor. As we allow the Holy Spirit to work within in us, showing us how it is that God has loved us, we can begin to respond to that great love by expressing our love for God through love for our neighbor. John Wesley described entire sanctification as the soul being completely filled with love for God and neighbor.
- How does an encounter with this story shape who we are and who we should become?
- This passage calls us to examine our approach to Christianity. Are we followers of Christ out of selfishness? Or, are we followers of Christ, lovers of God, because we have been loved first and now desire to spread God's love to our neighbor? It also compels us to examine our reading of scripture. It invites us to don the glasses of God's desire for us to love our neighbor in our reading of scripture.
Specific Discussion
Questions:
Read the text aloud. Then, read the text to yourself
quietly. Read it slowly, as if you were
very unfamiliar with the story.
1.
Why would one of the Pharisees ask which commandment
Jesus thought was the greatest or most important?
2.
Read Deuteronomy 6:1-8 and Leviticus 19:18. How similar are these two Old Testament
passages with the command that Jesus gives?
3.
What are the kinds of things that we do to show our
love for God?
4.
What are the kinds of things that we do to show our
love for our neighbor?
5.
Jesus seems to be saying that through loving our
neighbor we express our love for God.
Why do you think Jesus is saying that? Reference 1 John 4:19-21 as you discuss this.
6.
How does the church facilitate our love for God and
neighbor? Is it possible to love God and neighbor without participating in the
life of the church on an ongoing basis? Why or why not?
7.
As a Devotion Group, how are you doing with showing
love for each other?
[1] Frederick Dale Bruner, Matthew:
A Commentary: The Churchbook, Matthew 13-28, Revised & enlarged edition
(Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2004), 411.
[2] Gerhard Kittel, Geoffrey W.
Bromiley, and Gerhard Friedrich, eds., Theological
Dictionary of the New Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1964–), 606.
[3] Ibid., 186.
[4] Bruner, 425
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