I am jot in the least proud to have to admit that I have
spent years believing and teaching something false. I was thinking about
something quite unrelated to the bible as I was driving home last night when
the realisation suddenly hit me that something I have always said Jesus taught
was, in fact, not what the bible shows at all.
I said and written on many occasions that Jesus gave us
three commands concerning love: love the Lord your God…love your neighbour…love
each other. The last of these is from Chapter 15 of John’s account of Jesus and could not be
clearer: ‘My command is
this: Love each other as I have loved you.’ He repeats this in the
same chapter: ‘This is my command: Love each other.’ No one in their
right mind could argue that Jesus did not command us to love each other. The
bible tells us that Jesus said these things directly to his followers. These
are direct commands. But what about the other two, the commands to love God and
love our neighbours?
You may rightly infer that I am going to suggest that the
bible does not tell us that Jesus directly gave his followers these two
commands. Let me be clear, therefore, that I firmly believe that Jesus wants us
to love God and love our neighbours. Where I have gone wrong in the past is not
in teaching that he wants us to do
so, but in falsely claiming that he worded this desire as two direct commands.
Matthew 22 tells us that:
‘One of them (the Pharisees), an expert in the law,
tested him with this question: “Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?”
Jesus replied: “Love the Lord your God with all
your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the first and
greatest commandment. And the second is like it: Love your neighbour
as yourself. All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.”’(1)
Did Jesus say the words “Love the Lord your God with all your heart,
etc.”? Yes, of course he did. Did he say these words as a command? No! He
was giving an answer to a Pharisee who was out to test his credentials and was
certainly not one of his followers. His response that this was the greatest
commandment from the Old Testament law demonstrates how important he thought
it, but he did not give it as a command of his own. The second was likewise
given as an answer, not as a command.
Jesus said, ‘All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments’ because
he was speaking to those who remained under the Law. He was saying to the
Pharisees, who constantly tried to trip him up with petty rules and misused quotations,
that the Old Testament commandments were intended to encourage love, not to enslave
people to rules and regulations. The message is, in fact, equally valid for those
of us living under the freedom of the Spirit, but that is not the same as
saying that Jesus stated these two commands. He did not.
I will no longer tell people that Jesus
commanded us to love our god, Yahweh, with every fibre of our being and to love
our fellow humans as ourselves. Instead, I will tell the truth, that Jesus wants
us to do these things and described them as being exceptionally important. But
we, who are under the freedom of the Spirit, love Yahweh through the person of Jesus,
and love our neighbours not by following rules, but by sharing the love of Jesus.
His only command was that we love
each other (2), which he knew was not going to be easy when we have so many
ways of disagreeing over so many things.
(1)
In reality, neither of these
was accurately an Old Testament ‘commandment of the Law’. The first adds to the
commandment; the second is a summary of several other commandments. This, of
course, does not alter the importance of what we read, but we should be aware
that Jesus was not a great one for quoting word for word. He placed more
emphasis on the message than the letter.
(2) I have believed and taught until now that he also commanded us to ‘Go and make disciples of all nations...’
He did not. It is true that he told
us to do this and more, but he did not command
this. Had he wanted to give a command he would surely have chosen to use the
word ‘command’. This does not diminish the need for us to do all he asks of us,
but we should not claim that scripture says something that it does not. Words
are powerful and should be used carefully.
No comments:
Post a Comment