If you love me, you will keep my commandments.
(Jn 14:15).
During the last supper, before leaving his friends and returning to the
Father, Jesus wants to unite them closely to himself and among themselves
with the most solid and lasting bond: love. He loved them to the
end (Jn 13:1), with the greatest love, that is, to lay down
ones life (Jn 15:13). In return, he asks to be loved with
the same love.
The love that Jesus asks for is not simply a feeling; it is doing his
will as it is described in his commandments. Above all, it is loving our
brothers and sisters, and achieving reciprocal love. It is such an important
truth for Jesus that in this last discourse to his disciples he forcefully
repeats it three more times: Whoever has my commandments and observes
them is the one who loves me (Jn 14:21); Whoever loves me
will keep my word (Jn 14:23); Whoever does not love me does
not keep my words (Jn 14:24).
If you love me, you will keep my commandments.
Why must we keep his commandments?
Since we human beings are created in his image and likeness,
we stand before God as his you, capable of a direct, personal
relationship with him, a relationship of knowledge, of love, of friendship
and of communion.
I am to the degree that I say yes to the plan
of love that God has for me.
The relationship with him is essential to human nature. The more it is
actively pursued, deepened and enriched, the more men and women fully
develop their true personalities.
Look at Abraham. Each time God asks him to do something, even when it
seems to be absolutely absurd, like leaving his country to go off to an
unknown land or like sacrificing his only son, he immediately holds fast
to his trust in God, and a future he could never have imagined opens up
for him.
The same is true for Moses. On Mount Sinai the Lord reveals his will
to him in the Ten Commandments and the adherence to them gives birth to
the people of God.
It is true for Jesus as well. His yes to the Father is the
most complete: Not my will but yours be done (Lk 22:42).
To follow Jesus means to carry out the Fathers will in the best
way possible, as Jesus taught us and as he was the first to do.
The commandments that Jesus left us help us to live according to our
nature as sons and daughters of a God who is Love. They are not, therefore,
arbitrary impositions or an artificial superstructuremuch less something
to alienate us. Nor are they like the commands that a master gives to
his servants. Rather, they are the expression of his love and of his concern
for the life of each one of us.
If you love me, you will keep my commandments.
How can we live this Word of Life? Lets try to listen attentively
to what
Jesus tells us in the Gospelhis commandmentsand lets
allow the Holy Spirit, throughout the day, to remind us of his words.
He teaches us, for example, that it is not enough not to kill; we must
avoid being angry with our brothers and sisters. We not only cannot commit
adultery, but cannot even desire the wife of others. If anyone strikes
you on the right cheek, turn the other also (Mt 5:39). Love
your enemies and pray for those who persecute you (Mt 5:44).
Above all, lets live what Jesus called his commandment,
the one that sums up all the others: mutual love. Love is the fulfillment
of the law (Rm 13:10); it is the more excellent way
(1 Cor 12:31), the way we are called to follow.
Someone who understood this very well was Father Dario Porta, a priest
from Parma, Italy, who died on Holy Thursday, 1996. Even though he had
a close relationship with God from the early years of his priesthood,
he grew to understand ever more clearly that he needed to see Jesus in
every neighbor, and then evangelical love became his passion. To remain
faithful to this commitment, he tried to be more and more attentive to
others, putting aside his own plans, to the point of writing in his diary
one day: Now I see that in the end the only thing we would like
to have accomplished is to have loved every neighbor. (1)
We can do the same: each night we can ask ourselves, Did I always
love every neighbor today?
The commentary to the Word of Life is translated
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would like to read experiences of life related to this or to past
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New York 10465
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