Love
All Surpassing in
Death
and Life
..“"
reflections by Dave
Quintana
Carrying Death,
Manifesting Life
It is said that for the Christian it is
always Good Friday and Easter Sunday at the
same time. We are always living this
dual reality of Christ’s suffering and death
on one hand, and his victory over sin and
death in his resurrection on the other. In
this life, they go together. They can’t be
separated. In fact, even in heaven he still
stands (victoriously) as though slain, but we
won’t go into that today! The point is that
even as an “Easter people,” we experience
loss, failure, weakness, limitation – in a
word, the cross. But transcending that, and
overcoming that, we experience Jesus alive and
with us, sharing with us his resurrection
life. Let us yield more fully to him, that we
might become more fully like him.
But
we have this treasure in earthen
vessels, to show that the transcendent
power belongs to God and not to us. We
are afflicted in every way, but not
crushed; perplexed, but not driven to
despair; persecuted, but not forsaken;
struck down, but not destroyed; always
carrying in the body the death of
Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may
also be manifested in our bodies. For
while we live we are always being
given up to death for Jesus' sake, so
that the life of Jesus may be
manifested in our mortal flesh. So
death is at work in us, but life in
you.
– 2
Corinthians 4:7-12 (RSV
translation)
A Good Day to Die
I am not a
morbid guy – really, I’m
not. But I agree with chief Geronimo
as he encouraged his warriors as they
prepared for a day’s battle, “Today is a
good day to die”. It is. It has to be. If
it isn’t a good day to die, then how could
it possibly be a good day to live? How
could it possibly be a good day to live
life to the full if it isn’t also a good
day to give it all, to leave nothing back?
There is nothing worth living for if there
is nothing worth dying for. Let us be
those who gladly spend themselves for what
and for whom they hold dear.
For to me to live
is Christ, and to die is gain. If it is
to be life in the flesh, that means
fruitful labor for me. Yet which I shall
choose I cannot tell. I am hard pressed
between the two. My desire is to depart
and be with Christ, for that is far
better. But to remain in the flesh is
more necessary on your account.
–
Philippians 1:21-24 (RSV
translation)
The Depths of his Love
Corrie Ten Boom
was quite a lady. You might be familiar with her
story through the book or film, “The Hiding
Place.” She was a single Dutch woman, the
daughter of a Christian watchmaker. She and her
sister were both committed Christians who found
themselves resisting the evil of Nazism and
providing a “hiding place” for Jews who were
fleeing for their lives. Eventually, she was
taken to a prison camp where she suffered
terribly before eventually being released, thus
being able to tell her story. Faced with the
atrocities of concentration camps, the horrors
of this seemingly God-forsaken place, she
resolutely proclaimed, “There is no pit so
deep, that God’s love isn’t deeper still.”
How much have we truly fathomed the depths of
his love?
I love the LORD,
because he has heard my voice and my
supplications. Because he inclined his ear to
me, therefore I will call on him as long as I
live. The snares of death encompassed me; the
pangs of Sheol laid hold on me; I suffered
distress and anguish. Then I called on the
name of the LORD: "O LORD,
I beseech you, save my life!"
– Psalm
116:1-4 (RSV
translation)
The Little Lady Who
Lived a Big Life
You’ve gotta love Mother Teresa. Small,
frail, bent over, wrinkly – but with a fire
in her eyes and a fire in her heart – never afraid to
say the hard word, to do the hard thing, to
choose a hard path. She “did small
things with great love.” She “loved Christ in
his many disguises.” While others asked
“Why?”, she asked “Why not?” I find her words
a constant challenge:
- “God
doesn't require us to succeed; he only
requires that you try.”
- “Good works are links that form a chain of
love.”
- “I am a little pencil in the hand of a
writing God who is sending a love letter to
the world.”
- “If you can't feed a hundred people – then
feed just one.”
- “I have found the paradox, that if you
love until it hurts – there can be no
more hurt, only more love.”
- “I know God will not give me anything I
can't handle – I just wish that
He didn't trust me so much.”
Finally,
all of you, have unity of spirit, sympathy,
love of the brethren, a tender heart and a
humble mind.
– 1
Peter 3:8 (RSV
translation)
Revolution
of Love
Fr. Stan Fortuna is a CFR (Franciscan Friar of
the Renewal) and is a good friend. He comes over
from the Bronx to do our YI (Youth Initiatives)
camps for us. He is quite a musician and he is
at his best when he does a spontaneous rap with
all his funky reverberaters and sound
machines! Anyway, he will regularly sing
about what he calls the “revolution of love.” He
says that love is to revolutionize our lives and
our world – that
our lives need to be and must be, completely,
absolutely, supremely re-ordered by love. That’s
the life I want to live. That is the life I
challenge you to live – a life that
is completely, absolutely, supremely re-ordered
by love. That’s the stuff revolutions are made
of!
And I will show you a still more
excellent way. If I
speak in the tongues of men and of angels,
but have not love, I am a noisy gong or a
clanging cymbal. And if I have prophetic
powers, and understand all mysteries and all
knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to
remove mountains, but have not love, I am
nothing. If I give away all I have, and if I
deliver my body to be burned, but have not
love, I gain nothing. Love is patient and
kind; love is not jealous or boastful; it is
not arrogant or rude. Love does not insist
on its own way; it is not irritable or
resentful; it does not rejoice at wrong, but
rejoices in the right. Love bears all
things, believes all things, hopes all
things, endures all things.
–
1
Corinthians 12:31 and 13:1-7 (RSV
translation)
If
He has your Heart
I can’t explain to you exactly why it happened
this way, but what I do know is that when God
grabbed a hold of my life oh so many years ago
that he did so in such a fashion so as to never
let go. And just as much to the point, he did so
in such a way that I would do my best to never let
go of him as well. And so the journey began. A
journey with many ups and downs to be sure, and
with the occasional “missing the boat” or straying
from the path – but
my life has always been clearly in his hands. He
has taken me places I never dreamed of going. He
has called me to a life I never imagined
possible. And he has also called me to a
death that I never thought bearable. He has
asked of me things I would have never thought
myself capable of giving, and he has woven it all
together for good
– according to his plans and
purposes. And so I think I am beginning to learn
the lesson of giving myself fully, whole-heartedly
to him – and
of not holding back in fear or self-concern. As
someone once said, “if he has your heart, what
does it matter if he asks for … (you fill in your
own blank!)?”
"Hear, O Israel: The LORD
our God is one LORD; and you
shall love the LORD your God
with all your heart, and with all your soul,
and with all your might".
– Deuteronomy6:4-5
(RSV
translation)
What
Love is First?
A dear Fijian Methodist brother led me to a
Methodist spiritual writer named William
Sangster. He says that “there is only one love
in this life to which all other loves are
subordinate and in which all other loves must
find their place.” I know, or at least am
beginning to know, this to be true. I suppose
I have always been somewhat simple-minded in
my approach to life. Certainly life in today’s
world is plenty complex – but why
complicate things that don’t need to be
complicated? For each and every one of us,
does not one love stand out above all others?
Does not one love receive first place? One
love drive us more than all others? Sure, it
could be love of a person or love of a thing,
love of a career or love of a concept.
For me however, and from my perspective for
every true Christian – the love of
God must be first. And just as importantly,
and as a consequence of the love of God being
first – love
of all other things must be subordinate to the
love of God. So I suppose the question I ask
myself each morning, and the question I ask
myself each evening is – “is the
love of God first in my life? How do I, today,
subordinate all other loves to the love of
God?”
"'I
know your works, your toil and your
patient endurance, and how you cannot bear
evil men but have tested those who call
themselves apostles but are not, and found
them to be false; I know you are enduring
patiently and bearing up for my name's
sake, and you have not grown weary. But I
have this against you, that you have
abandoned the love you had at first.
– Revelation
2:2-4 (RSV
translation)
Dave Quintana is an elder of the Servants
of
the Word, a missionary brotherhood of
men living single for the Lord. He is also
Vice-President for the Sword
of
the Spirit in Europe and the Middle
East. He currently lives in Beffast,Northern
Ireland.
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