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What Love Looks Like
a sermon based on 1 John 4:7-21
by Rev. Randy Quinn

I found a short history of Mother’s Day this week that I thought you might find interesting:[1]

The earliest Mother's Day celebrations can be traced back to the spring celebrations of ancient Greece in honor of Rhea, the Mother of the Gods.  It was a pagan celebration.  As Christianity spread throughout Europe the celebration changed to honor the "Mother Church" - the spiritual power that gave them life and protected them from harm.

During the 1600's, people in England celebrated a day called "Mothering Sunday".  Celebrated on the 4th Sunday in Lent, "Mothering Sunday" honored the mothers of England.   During this time many of England's poor worked as servants for the wealthy. On Mothering Sunday the servants would have the day off and were encouraged to return home and spend the day with their mothers.  A special cake, called the mothering cake, was often brought along to provide a festive touch.

Over time the church festival blended with the Mothering Sunday celebration as people began honoring their mothers as well as the church.

In the United States, Mother's Day was first suggested in 1872 as a day dedicated to peace by Julia Ward Howe (she also wrote the words to “The Battle Hymn of the Republic”).  Howe held organized Mother's Day meetings in Boston every year.

In 1907 Ana Jarvis, from Philadelphia, began a campaign to establish a national Mother's Day.  She persuaded her mother's church in Grafton, West Virginia to celebrate Mother's Day on the second anniversary of her mother's death, the second Sunday of May.  By the next year Mother's Day was also celebrated in Philadelphia.

Jarvis and her supporters began to write to ministers, businessmen, and politicians in their quest to establish a national Mother's Day.  It was successful as by 1911 Mother's Day was celebrated in almost every state.  President Woodrow Wilson, in 1914, made the official announcement proclaiming Mother's Day a national holiday that was to be held each year on the second Sunday of May.

While many countries of the world celebrate their own Mother's Day at different times throughout the year, there are some countries which also celebrate Mother's Day on the second Sunday of May, including Denmark, Finland, Italy, Turkey, Australia, and Belgium.

There you have it, the story behind our celebration of Mother’s Day.

However, our text for today is not about mothers.  It’s about love.  And while it isn’t as well known as it’s “cousin,” the “love chapter,” First Corinthians 13, our passage does include the oft-quoted line, “God is love” (1 Jn. 4:8b and 4:16b).

But, note, it does not say “love is God.”  That would be a form of idolatry, an idolatry often seen in the world around us – a world that claims to know about love, a world that strives to find love, but has, in fact, proven to not know what love really is.

Part of the problem is that we who speak the English language have used the word “love” in so many different ways.  We “love” pork chops, for instance.  Or we “love” the way someone has cut their hair.  We also speak about “love” in relationship to our country as well as our spouses.

More often than not, in our culture the word “love” is used as a noun to describe an emotion, an emotion that is better described, perhaps, as affection.  Our culture thinks of love as a “thing” that can be lost or found, sought after or cherished.  It becomes a god unto itself as people seek love in things and begin to treat people as things when they think it has been found.

And not only that, people often act as if there is no one who has control over this emotion.

In part of a video presentation I use when I meet with couples.  Dr. Howard Markman offers the suggestion that some people act is if they can fall out of love as easily as they fall into love.  The world speaks about falling into love and out of love in the same way we might speak about falling out of a tree[2]

(Although I’ve heard that America’s Funniest Videos is still waiting to catch someone falling into a tree!)

According to both the Apostles Paul and John, love is not an emotion.  It may stir our emotions of affection, but love is more a verb than it is a noun.  As I said last week, actions speak louder than words; love requires action to be recognized as love.

In the Biblical sense, love is a learned behavior, something that can be taught.

Only from that perspective can we understand what it means when we hear the command to “love our neighbor.”  God is not commanding us to like what our neighbor looks like.  God doesn’t say we need to enjoy being with our brother, either.  God is saying we are to love them, no matter what.  We are to care for our neighbor, to care about our sister, to meet the needs of the orphan and the widow – as if we had deep affection for them, as if they were our child or our spouse or our parent.

Bob is the parent of one of our cub scouts.  He hangs wall paper for a living – and from what I can tell, he does a fairly good job at it.  When I first met Bob, he had a long pony tail and was often wearing painter’s overalls.

But he cut his hair this winter.  So I asked him if he got more business without the ponytail, thinking that it may be a put off for some of his clients.  Bob assured me that it was the quality of his work that brought him business – primarily from referrals.  People weren’t interested in what he looked like; they only wanted to see the walls he had covered.

Actions speak louder than words.  And his deeds are the way people measure his work, not his appearance.

And in our text for today, John is reminding us that loving our neighbor is evidence of the love of God dwelling within us (1 Jn. 4:12).  It is the proof that we love God and God loves us.  Our loving acts are often the only means by which others see and experience the love of God in their lives.

I know it isn’t true in every home.  I know there are mothers who never teach their children how to love.  I know there are mothers who selfishly think children exist for the sole purpose of bringing joy to their parents.  I know there are mothers who only knew love as an emotion over which they had little control and were therefore not able to love their own children unconditionally.

But in the case of my mother, and in the case of many others I have known, the truth is she was the first person to love me in a way I could understand love.  It was a love that invited me to reciprocate, a love that allowed me to share love with those around me.

John, in our text for today, is suggesting that in much the same way, we learn to love from God.  God loves us first, he says, and without that model of love, we could never begin to love – not even the best of mothers.  We would all be selfish creatures who are only concerned about ourselves.

One of the joys of parenting is to watch a young child grow and learn.  And often, we learn about ourselves in the process.  We learn what words and phrases we use, for instance, as they repeat them back to us.  We see our own mannerisms in their imitative behavior – whether we like what we see or not. J

But anyone who has ever been around an infant or a toddler for very long also knows that children need to be taught how to love.  In children we see the truth that we are all born demanding that our needs be met – we cry when we’re hungry and we cry when we’re dirty.  We cry when we want to be held and we cry when we want to be left alone.  It’s all about us when we are a baby.

And when we learn to talk, it doesn’t get much better.  “Mine” becomes one of the first concepts we grasp – no pun intended.

The truth is:  love is something we must learn over time.  We only learn to love our mothers, for instance, when we see them loving us.  But the origin of all love, including a mother’s love, is the love of God, for “God is love.”

God comes to us and loves us, even when we act selfishly, even when we might be judged by others as unlovable.  For it’s God’s love that makes us both lovable and capable of love.

On Mother’s Day, many of us honor the first person in our lives who taught us what love looks like, our own mothers.  But I am convinced that none of them could have done that without first experiencing the love of God.  For “God is love.”

Thanks be to God.

Amen.


[1]  From the Internet Website, www.Holidays.net

[2]  Fighting for Your Marriage:  The PREP Approach, © 1995.