Sunday Gospel Reflections
May 18, 2025 Cycle C
JN 13:31-33A, 34-35

Love One Another
by Fr. Miserendino

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It often seems odd that Jesus commands us to love.

“Command” here is the challenging word, the imperative. We’re instructed to love, plain as day in our Gospel: “I give you a new commandment: Love one another.” How can you command someone to love?

Our modern sensibilities are rankled, and we respond skeptically: Isn’t love all about emotion and preference? By most cultural definitions, you can no more command one person to love someone else than you can command them to like pineapple on pizza or to feel happy. So, where does Jesus get the idea that we can be commanded to love?

Our Lord persists: “As I have loved you, so you also should love one another. This is how all will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”

At stake here is a vital point: Our Lord offers us a differing portrait of love than the one commonly displayed in the world. The world (and its love) is not enough. Our hearts hunger for something more. And Christ meets that need, bringing a fuller love, one that is more profound, powerful, provocative, and recreative.

If we look at the wording of Jesus in today’s Gospel, we realize that the love Christ brings must be distinctive from that of the world. After all, if people are to know that we’re Christians by our love, it implies that we’d love differently than what’s found in the world. Our love as Catholics needs to have pop, curb appeal, that sets us apart from our non-Christian neighbors. If it weren’t so, Jesus would no longer make sense, saying: “They will know you are my disciples by the fact that you love each other just like everyone else does.” This raises the question: What sets our love as Christians apart from worldly love?

As mentioned earlier, the world tends to categorize love in terms of feelings and preferences. Unflinchingly, people can say “I love my mom and I love donuts” in the same sentence. Though we sometimes hear the phrase “love is love,” the above phrase suggests that there’s more to the picture. We love donuts because they please us and they’re delicious. Hopefully, we don’t love our family in the exact same way. Yet for many, even love of family is a matter of feeling, emotion and preference. All too often, people sever family connections for just those reasons: The feelings are gone, and they don’t enjoy the other person’s company.

In contrast, Christ presents a love that is not principally a feeling or a preference. Rather, it’s a choice followed by action. St. Thomas Aquinas defines love as “to will the good of the other for the other’s benefit” and to do what you can to bring that good about. Love is a choice to live sacrificially to bring about another person’s true good insofar as we’re able. Sometimes (and hopefully often), the feelings and preference are present for the person we’re trying to love. Yet, sometimes they are not. The choice to wish that person’s good and reasonably help them to attain it remains the same, regardless of our feelings.

It’s worth noting a few things here: First, the deepest good we can wish for a person in any situation is their union with God and their salvation. So, true love never leads to sin. Second, what that love looks like in practice depends on our relationships and the duties of those relationships. For example: I am commanded by Christ to love both my mother in Virginia and strangers in Kuala Lumpur. Yet, the choices I make in love for my mother’s good are different than for the stranger both in terms of practical distance and personal relationship, and that is completely acceptable.

Last, note that this distinctive love is exactly the love Christ manifests to us. Christ wills our good — our salvation — and makes the necessary sacrifice to bring it about — the cross and Resurrection. There is much more to say on this than space affords here.

One final thought. Often, people ask what to do if the feelings of love go away in a relationship? What then?

One of the monks at Holy Cross Abbey in Berryville, Brother Aelred Joseph, shared a quote from Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel that is helpful: “While love is hibernating, loyal deeds must speak.” (This quote applies to more than this single topic. Sit with it a while.) Often, love is present but dormant like a fuzzy critter slumbering in a cave.

What saves the day, meanwhile? Christ holds the answer out to us: The loyal deeds of love, making the choice to will the good of the other. Those actions nourish us until love awakens in fullness and truth, be it in this life or the one to come.

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