Vigils Reading

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Vigils Reading

May 22

LOVE ONE ANOTHER

From a homily by St Gregory the Great

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Since all of our Lord’s sacred utterances contain commandments, why

does he say about love as if it were a special commandment: This is my

commandment, that you love one another? It is because every commandment

is about love, and they all add up to one commandment because whatever is

commanded is founded on love alone. As a tree’s many branches come from one

root, so do many virtues come forth from love alone. The branch which is our

good works has no sap unless it remains attached to the root of love. Our Lord’s

commandments are then both many and one: many through the variety of the

works, one in their root which is love. He himself instructs us to love our friends

in him, and our enemies for his sake. That person truly possesses love who loves

his friend in God and his enemy for God’s sake.

There are some people who love their neighbors, drawn by blood

relationship or by natural affection, and Scripture does not oppose this kind of

love. But what we give freely and naturally is one thing, and the obedience we

owe to the Lord’s commandments out of love is another. Those I’ve mentioned

indisputably love their neighbors, yet they don’t attain love’s sublime rewards

since their love does not come from spiritual but from natural motives.

Therefore when the Lord said: This is my commandment, that you love one

another, he added immediately: Just as I have loved you, meaning, ‘You must

love for the same reason that I have loved you.

Dearly beloved, we must consider this carefully. When our ancient enemy

draws our hearts to delight in temporal things, he is stirring up a weaker

neighbor against us. This neighbor may be plotting to take away the very things

we love. In doing this our ancient enemy is not concerned to do away with our

earthly possessions; he wants to destroy our lives. Suddenly we are set on fire

with hatred, and while we desire to be outwardly unconquerable, inwardly we

are gravely wounded. When we defend our small outer possession, we lose our

great inner one, since when we love something temporal we lose our true love.

Everyone who takes away our possessions is an enemy. But if we begin to hate

our enemy, our loss is of something internal. When then we suffer something

external from a neighbor, we must be on our guard against a hidden ravager

within. This one is never better overcome then when we love the one who

ravages us from without. The unique, the highest proof of love is this, to love the

person who is against us. This is why Truth himself bore the suffering of the

cross and yet bestowed his love on his persecutors, saying: Father, forgive them

for they know not what they do.

Why should we wonder that his living disciples loved their enemies, when

their dying master loved his. He expressed the depth of his love when he said:

No one has greater love than this, than that he lay down his life for his friends.

The Lord had come to die even for his enemies, and yet he said he would lay

down his life for his friends to show us that when we are able to win over our

enemies by loving them even our persecutors are our friends.

But no one is persecuting us to the point of death. How then can we prove

that we love our friends?… John the Baptist says: Let him who has two tunics

give to him who has none. Will a person, then, who will not give up his tunic for

the sake of God during quiet times give up his life during a persecution?

Cultivate the virtue of love in tranquil times by showing mercy, then, so that it

will be unconquerable in times of disorder. Learn first to give up your

possession for almighty God, and then yourself.

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Date:
May 22
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