Intro
St. Isaiah foretold it.  St. Paul described it.  Jesus lived it.  But even 
more, Jesus is it!  I am speaking of Love.

So, what is love?  What is real love?  Our world has become used to seeing 
emotions and feelings as love.  In our fallen world, love is not an action 
verb, but more often about how you feel or how someone makes you feel.  In our 
world, love is even something selfish.  We say someone is making love when all 
they may be doing is having sex.  Often, making love is nothing more than a 
glorified form of self-pleasure.

So what is real love?  What is God-made love?  To know such love, we need only 
to look to Jesus, the real Jesus, the Jesus who is Love.

Main Body
Love is an attitude, a bearing and behavior toward the one you love.  Love is 
an intentionally active exercise of the will that someone holds.  It’s an 
attitude held toward the one loved above all considerations, even one’s own 
welfare.

Yes, it’s true: Emotions attend and are tied in with love.  But never confuse 
your emotional response at any given moment with love itself.  True Love is 
never safe.  But love is always good!

The love God’s Word speaks about is dangerous.  Sometimes it is even deadly.  
It takes courage, and it takes fortitude, and it takes boldness, to have the 
Love we heard about in our Epistle reading.

The Love God’s Word tells us of is dangerous.  Paul writes to the Corinthians 
that such love is not provoked and always endures.  That takes incredible 
strength and commitment to live out, doesn’t it?

Jesus lived that love.  Jesus is that love.  Jesus is patient and kind.  He 
does not envy or boast.  He is not arrogant or rude.  He does not insist on His 
own way.  He is not irritable or resentful.  He does not rejoice at wrongdoing, 
but rejoices in the truth.  He always protects, always trusts, always hopes, 
and always perseveres.  That’s Jesus!

In such love, Jesus said:
The Son of Man will be handed over to the chief priests and teachers of the 
law, and they will condemn Him to death.   Then they will hand Him over to the 
Gentiles to be ridiculed, flogged, and crucified.  But He will be raised on the 
third day (Matthew 20:17-19).
That’s what God’s Love demands.  It’s the opposite of sentimentality.

True love, God’s love, overrides emotions.  Think of the night Jesus was 
betrayed.  He prayed fervently for His Father to take His cup of suffering from 
Him.  Yet, no matter how He felt, regardless of His safety, of His 
self-interest, Jesus prayed, “Not My will, but Yours, be done” (Luke 22:42).

When you hear that Jesus loves you, know what that means!  It doesn’t mean that 
Jesus is your boyfriend.  It means that Jesus faced down the eternal torments 
you deserved--for you!  That’s real love.  That’s God’s love.

With an intensity, determination, and strength beyond imagination, God’s love 
flings itself into the jaws of pain for the sake of one who is loved.  That’s 
what Jesus did for you.  Every miracle of Jesus--restoring sight to a blind 
man, raising Lazarus from the dead, producing the equivalent of 800 bottles of 
wine for a wedding--shows the real Jesus.  Such miracles show that Jesus is the 
Promised One, the Messiah, who came to rescue you from eternal death.

God loves with a love so unbounded, so intense, that He sets all other 
considerations aside.  Only God loves with such love.  Yes, the One who never 
sinned grasped the world’s sin and took it into Himself to become Sin itself.  
Jesus became the Sinner that you could become the righteousness of God.

It’s only with that strong, wild, and heedless love that you, a sinner, could 
be raised from eternal death to life, and be declared a son of God.  Because of 
Jesus’ love, the Holy Spirit wraps you in the righteousness that only God, that 
Jesus has.

So now when the Father sees you, He sees His Son, Jesus.  For you have put on 
Jesus by His promise of forgiveness, life, and salvation.  You received this by 
His Word in Holy Baptism.  You are receiving this now by the Word ringing the 
eardrums of your heart.  You receive this when Jesus sets before you at His 
Table His feast of forgiveness for you.

Now here’s the challenge Jesus gives you.  Jesus teaches you to love, as well.  
Jesus, through the Spirit He has sent, inspired Paul to describe His love.  
Yet, Paul’s words do more than that: He also calls you to love one another with 
such love.  Jesus calls you to love your lost-and-dying neighbor in the same 
way that He loves you.

Jesus sets His love in front of you and says to you, “This I give you.  This I 
do for your sake, for your life.  Now you take this love I give you, and love 
your neighbor with the same abandon, with the same selflessness, with the same 
courage, and strength, and endurance.”  Jesus puts this challenge to you when 
He says to you, “Take up your cross, and follow Me” (Luke 9:23).

Jesus has made you alive, and with such life, you can look at the harm that may 
afflict you in this world and see it for what it is: a speed bump on the way to 
eternity.  You can even look into the open eye of your own grave as it stares 
back at you.  For now it’s nothing more fearsome than your own bed.  For it is 
from your grave that you will arise in such glory as the world blind in sin has 
not seen.

“Greater love has no one than this, that someone would lay down his life for 
his friends” (John 15:13).  That’s love.

This is also love.  The man, Valentine, whose martyrdom we don’t remember every 
February, would not stop following Christ.  Valentine would not stop even when 
the emperor commanded it.  And so while he was walking to his execution, 
because of Jesus, he handed a note to his jailer’s daughter telling her about 
the new life that is ours in Christ.

It was love that propelled our Lutheran fathers in the Faith to share the grace 
of Jesus.  From such love, they became poor, were badly treated, endured 
hardship, and died far from their homes, so the life-creating and strengthening 
Word of Jesus might be propelled even a little bit farther, to even a few more 
ears.

Now you, you take this fierce, unconditional, God-made love that you have 
received from Jesus, your Savior, and you live in it.  As you live in Christ’s 
love, extend it to others through your hands, lips, and life.  For when you 
live out such Christ-filled love, you are simply being a Christian.  You are 
simply living the Christian life.

If you have children, raise them in Christ.   If you have the opportunity, 
speak the comfort and joy that you have in Christ to those who wonder at the 
hope you have.  If you have treasure, invest it in the service of the Gospel.  
For such treasure is laid up where neither moth nor rust destroys and where 
thieves do not break in and steal.  Invest in the dividend of gaining others in 
Christ, an investment that won’t devalue before the throne of our God who 
reigns.

As God loves you, love others.  Take up your cross and follow Jesus.  “Let your 
light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and praise your 
Father in heaven” (Matthew 5:16).

Conclusion
And while you are fervently living out such love, you will become disgusted at 
you failures.  So do not forget to take your failures, your sins, your fears, 
and self-seeking to Jesus.  For Jesus does more than teach you to love.  He 
also forgives your sins.

So take all that shames you and take it all to Jesus.  For He IS Love, and 
forgives you your every sin.  He IS Love, and takes that burden from you that 
you may then follow Him.  For His burden is easy and His yoke is light.  And He 
leads you at last to a life beyond this valley of tears to a Home that is 
everlasting, prepared for you.

For you are loved with Jesus’ love.  In Him, you have a Peace that passes all 
understanding.  You have that Peace even when those around you are in panic and 
travail.  For the Peace of Jesus guards your heart and mind now and even 
forevermore.  Amen.


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and spirit.

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