There
is nothing about love that is mathematical. If someone keeps account of love,
as if it is like a debt to be paid or collected, it is not love. If someone
easily subtracts love because of an offence, it is not love. If someone divides
love, as if one child gets half and so does the other, such is not love. If
someone thinks love multiplies in a logical way, like 2X2=4, like love was
predictable, sorry, not love either. None of these equations resemble love at
all.
The
love God has for us, and that we are capable of, defies mathematics. In the
midst of nothing, love can happen (we call this creation). In the midst of
hatred and war, love can happen. In the midst of pain and suffering, love can
happen. In the midst of joy and celebration, love can happen.
Love
is what inspired Paul and Silas to invite their jailor into a relationship with
the divine.
Love
is what causes Jesus, in one of his final prayers, to pray for the unity of his
followers; so that, whatever trials we face we will have one another, and God,
and Jesus, and the Holy Spirit.
Mathematics
needs at least one of something that can be added to, subtracted from,
multiplied or divided. Love, thankfully, can start with nothing. Love can be
the most unlikely thing, yet somehow it becomes present.
Far
too many politicians and business leaders deny love, and act as it if doesn’t
matter. They treat love as if it is a commodity that can be tacked onto some
sort of mock platitude. Far too many religious leaders are sorely afflicted
too.
But
love does matter, it is what we were created for. It is the one and only thing
that each action should be tested by. From my Ascension Day sermon:
“The
theological importance of the Ascension points to a particular significant point
about our understanding of the incarnation (that is, God taking on human form,
in the person of Jesus Christ): and that is, each of our lives, and everything
we do, matters to God, our creator. God cares about us and loves us, beyond
measure.”
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