A Prescription for Love

Mark 12:28-30 “One of the teachers of the law came and heard them debating. Noticing that Jesus had given them a good answer, he asked him, “Of all the commandments, which is the most important?”  “The most important one,” answered Jesus, “is this: ‘Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one.  Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’”

 

 

So much of life is performance based, isn’t it?  We’re always evaluated by what we can say, do and accomplish.  We get jobs based on our experience and skills.  We gain friends and followers with our words and actions.  We earn awards and recognition by our accomplishments.  So, when it comes to our spiritual lives, it’s no wonder we often misunderstand what God expects of us and how we should love Him.  So many ‘religions’ put emphasis on effort…man’s effort, in order to gain God’s love and approval.

 

What if…..what if we just followed Jesus’ words?  What if we simply believed and obeyed?  What if we removed all of the labels: “Baptist”…“Presbyterian”… “Methodist”, “teacher”, “preacher”, “member” and we were simply known as a “Christ-followers”?  What if we simply loved Christ and, in loving Him, were able to let others see Him in and through us?  It’s what Jesus calls us to do. 

 

But the teachers of the law were very concerned about rules.  They wanted to keep the law to a “T”.  They missed the truth of the gospel in the midst of their obsessions with following rules.  Too often, it seems, we do the same.  We check boxes or sign statements that affirm we believe the right things.  We do ‘all the things’ that demonstrate our commitment.  But it becomes works based and we pat ourselves on the back for being so dedicated, so knowledgeable, so … ‘Christian’.  Yet, we lack the very thing that God says is most important.

 

 In Mark 12:30, Jesus told the teachers of the law what the most important commandment was- “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’”

 

He calls us to love Him.  The Greek word used here is ‘agapaio’ (1) which means to welcome and entertain, to be fond of and to love dearly.  It also means to be well-pleased and contented.  Are we contented with Christ or do we seek out other people and things to fill us?  Do we rely on our efforts and associations to prove our faith or are we so in love with Jesus that everything is an outpouring of that relationship?

Next, He says we should love with all of our heart, soul, mind and strength.  Isn’t it curious that Jesus doesn’t talk about emotions?  Far too often we equate ‘love’ with how we ‘feel’, but emotions are a by-product, not the source of love.  Hence, if people are dependent on emotions, they fall in and out of love because their feelings change; they no longer ‘feel’ for that other the way they once did.  Jesus says, first we must love Him with our heart- the seat and center of our physical and spiritual life, the inner man (2).

Then He calls us to love Him with our soul-the very breath of life He breathed into us when He created us.  Our soul is that spiritual force that animates the body and is not dissolved by death.  Ecclesiastes 3:11 says God has set eternity in the heart of man.  Our soul is ‘built’ for eternity.  It is the spiritual part of us that can truly connect with God (3).  It is the part of us that is drawn to that very relationship with Him.

Then, Jesus asks us to love Him with our mind- the faculty of understanding, feeling, and desiring (4).  When we love with our mind, we make a choice to intentionally choose to commit our lives to Jesus.  It’s a rational decision based on our understanding of Who God is and how He loves us.

Finally, Jesus calls us to love Him with all of our strength.  That is what the Greek defines as might, ability, force, to hold oneself to a thing, be joined to- to the extent of one’s ability (5).  He wants us to cling to Him with all that is in us. 

Do our sons and daughters love Jesus well?  Or, do we hear them saying “I just don’t ‘feel’ close to the Lord.”?  Today, let’s pray that they will love the Lord with all their heart- the center of their being, with all their soul- the very part of them that connects to eternity, with all of their mind- an intentional choice to pursue Christ, and with all of their strength- clinging to Jesus with every ounce of ability He provides.

“Father, You love us so well.  Thank You for being constant, faithful, unshakeable and merciful to us in our weakness.  I pray for (name) today.  Help them to pursue You with all that they are and have.  Remind them it’s not about ‘feelings’ but about faith, commitment, and a choice to follow Jesus with all they have and all they are.  It’s about obedience-no matter what.  Lord, I ask that You would work in (name)’s heart- the very center of who You created them to be.  Lord, You knew them before You formed them in the womb.  Stir in their heart a desire to live for You.  Draw them, Lord, and speak to their soul.  Cause (name) to thirst after You (Ps. 63:1).  Give them a longing for more than what this temporary world can offer.  Satisfy them with a love that is far deeper and more fulfilling than any they’ve ever known.  Lord, give them a clear understanding that committing to and loving Jesus is what they were created to do.  Help them to make the intentional, wise choice to follow in obedience and love You with all that they are.  Give them strength to follow through on their commitment, especially when life gets hard.  Lord, in those difficult times, we waver, we falter, we lose strength and we despair.  Sometimes our frail hearts and minds can’t understand and embrace the enormity of Your love and of Your promises to us.  We filter things through our own human experience and understanding- but You are so much more!!  Lord, I pray that today, (name) would see and understand how much You love them. I pray they would catch a glimpse of the beauty and soul-embracing love of God.  Help them be satisfied, as with the richest of foods and may their lips praise You (Ps 63:5).  I pray this in Jesus’ name, amen.”

Pray without ceasing.

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