Easter 5,
2024
Today’s lessons are rich and wondrous.
Acts tells us of Phillip’s journey to a ‘wilderness road’ to baptize an
Ethiopian eunuch who was in charge of the treasury of the queen.
Phillip interprets Isaiah, baptizes
the man and is mystically transported to Azotus, where he preached the gospel
all the way to Caesarea.
Psalm 22 has the beautiful and hopeful
verse:
“The poor shall eat and be satisfied,
And those who seek the Lord shall praise
him:
‘May your heart live forever.’”
Then the Epistle of John teaches us
about love. Love.
And in John’s Gospel, Jesus asks us to
ABIDE with him.
Today, I want to talk about LOVE and
ABIDING.
You probably know that there are three
Greek words that are all translated into English as ‘love’.
The three Greek words that are all
translated in English as ‘love’ are “Eros”, “Phileos’ and ‘Agape”.
The words have very different meaning.
“Eros” we can figure out—‘erotic
love’…the love between two lovers.
“Phileos” is ‘brotherly or sisterly
love’—as in the city Philadelphia.
But “Agape” is the love that gives
itself away—love that is total and complete, love that knows no limits or
bounds.
Near the end of the Gospel of John,
you might recall, Jesus asks Peter three times, “Peter, do you love me?” And
three times Peter answers, “Lord you know I love you”.
Seems odd in English, that exchange,
but in Greek it is different story. The first two times, Jesus askes, “Peter,
do you ‘agape’ me” and Peter replies, “Lord, you know I ‘phileos’ you.”
The third time Jesus asks he says “do
you ‘phileos’ me?” and Peter responds, “Lord you know I ‘phileos’ you.”
Peter didn’t feel worthy to give
‘agape’ love.
But ‘love’ in today’s epistle of John
is always “agape”!
We are to have ‘agape’ love for each
other, for those around us, for everyone on the planet!
We are to love without bounds, without
limits, without any restrictions.
And we are to BE ‘agape’ in the world
because ‘agape’ is from God and ‘whoever does not ‘agape’ does not know God.’
A heavy responsibility for us—to give
ourselves away to ‘agape’ so we might know God.
There’s so much hate in our country
and our world right now that we are needed by God, to give ourselves away to
love and love and love.
And we must support and…hold each
other in our hearts so we might ‘love’ as God calls us to ‘love’.
But what I really want to talk about
today is ‘to abide’.
“Abide” has been a part of the English
language since the 11th century. It sounds a little dated, but it is
a word I love.
Webster’s dictionary has a lot of
meanings to “abide”.
One is ‘to obey’, as in ‘abide by the
law’ or ‘abide by the court’s decision.
But that’s not what Jesus meant.
He meant “to wait or await”, “to
continue in a place—to ‘sojourn’ there”, to “remain with and stay around”—or as
teens would say, to ‘hang out with’.
I grew up in Southern West Virginia
and when I would walk around the neighborhood in Spring and Summer and Early
Autumn, people would be sitting on their front porches and often they would
say, “Jim, come up and ‘bide a spell.”
Nothing was expected in ‘biding a
spell.
No questions were asked. No
conversation was required. You were just invited to sit in a rocking chair and
‘abide’ for a while.
That’s lovely. And that’s Jesus’
invitation to us—to come up on the porch and take a rocking chair and ‘abide’
with him, so he can ‘abide’ with us.
Jesus invites us to be ‘a part of the
vine’.
I am someone who does not think
‘individuality’ is more important than ‘commonality’.
The American concept of
‘individuality’ is the root of many of the problems in our country.
‘Individuality’ is at the root of
racial inequality, childhood poverty, the divide between right and left, the
lack of attention to the ‘common good’.
We need community, we need to be ‘part
of the vine’, part of the whole.
And we need to ‘abide’ in the vine,
‘abide’ with all people, ‘abide’ with God, ‘abide’ with each other.
I want to invite you for a few
moments, just to ‘bide with each other. No expectations, no requirements. Just
‘be’ with each other in silence. Join me.
(silence)
Thanks for
‘abiding’ with me. Amen and Amen.