Monday, December 30, 2013

Holy Nights 2012, Born in Us

Holy Nights
1 John 4: 7-13

Sulamith Wulfing
Dear brothers, let us bear love toward one another, for true love comes from God; everyone who is truly loving is born of God and knows God.

Whoever does not truly love has not known God, for God is love.

And this is what revealed God’s love among us, that God has sent into the world his only begotten Son in order that we might live through Him.

God’s love consists in this: not in the way that we have loved him, but that he has loved us, and has given his Son to save us from the banishment of sin.

My dearly beloved, if God has so loved us, so also should we bear love toward one another.

Until now no one has seen God with his eyes. When we bring love to one another, God dwells in us and his love is fulfilled in us.

By this we know that we dwell in him and he in us, because he has given us of his Spirit.

Holy Nights
Sulamith Wulfing
December 30, 2012
1 John 4: 7-13

Studies have shown that people often fall in love in response to the overtures of those who are in love with them. They fall in love because they are loved.

Today’s reading say that God’s love is different. God doesn’t love us because we love Him. God’s love generates itself. He loves us no matter whether we reciprocate or not. Even when humankind has turned away from Him, or has failed to recognize Him, He poured out His Being of Love in the form of His Son, the Word Incarnate.

Ancient scripture says that God’s intention for humankind was that we were to be His image and likeness. To become like Him means that we so evolve our capacity to love, that it can generate itself; that it can pour itself forth toward our fellow human beings; that our love is ever fresh, even if they don’t return it; even if they aren’t aware of it.

To be able to fulfill this high goal of love means that Christ has been born in us. It means that He dwells in our heart. In fact, that was why He came, hoping that we would give Him a dwelling in our heart. For as Angelus Silesius says

Though Jesus Christ in Bethlehem
A thousand times his Mother bore,
Is he not born again in thee
Then art thou lost for evermore.[1]



[1] Angelus Silesius, “GOD MUST BE BORN IN THEE” in Selections from the Cherubinic Wanderer.