Reflection: Love for others
Further reading: Exodus 20:1-17
I have a habit of turning God’s commands into a menu. Instead of responding to all that God has said, I pick my favourites. The Ten Commandments is the classic statement of God’s will for his people in the Old Testament. And the list of commands In Exodus 20 has two discernible sections. The first section, commands 1-4, focus on rightly loving God. The second section, commands 4-10, focus on rightly loving people.
And yes, you did read that right. I include commandment 4, on the Sabbath, as reflecting both love towards God and love towards people. The Sabbath is a time for resting in the presence of our Creator and Redeemer. It is also a time for blessing everyone, from the highest to the lowly, with rest.
The Sabbath command shows that love of God inevitably flows into love for others. Holiness of life is expressed vertically and horizontally. It’s why you have “Love your neighbour as yourself” pop up in the middle of Leviticus, nested within a surrounding context of highly specific commands about keeping pure. Love of neighbour is part of the essential fabric of Old Testament law. And that whole “love your neighbour” thing? It didn’t start with Jesus – no, Jesus fulfils it!
Question: The Sabbath command calls us to love God and neighbour through the same command. Can you think of any ways – things we do in church, in everyday life, in our use of money – we might forget about ‘love of neighbour’ in our practice of ‘love towards God’?
Watch: Why You Need Christian Neighbours (https://youtu.be/45DbbapQsTQ)
Prayer: Dear God, thank you that in fulfilling your command to ‘love your neighbour’, Jesus gives us an example to live by. Please show me where I might be forgetting to love my neighbour, and to be more like your Son. Amen.