Calvary Baltimore Weekly Sermons
Love is an action, not just emotion: True biblical love involves doing, caring, and going out of your way. If you claim to love someone but treat them poorly, you do not actually love them. 1 Corinthians 13 (Love as Verbs): In the original Greek, Paul’s famous list ("Love is patient, love is kind...") does not use adjectives; it uses verbs. Love does patience, love does kindness. No bookkeeping... True love is not resentful and keeps no ledger of past wrongs. This directly mirrors the cross, where Jesus wipes our ledger completely clean. Love is not devoid of emotion. Jesus was moved to compassion and wept; love involves both inward affection and outward action. The scribe's question: weightiness of the Law... A scribe (lawyer) approaches Jesus after hearing Him answer the Sadducees well. The scribes constantly debated the "weightiness" of the 613 Old Testament commands. Idolatry and murder were "heavy" laws carrying the death penalty, while failing to tithe herbs from a garden was a "light" law, etc. The scribe genuinely wants to know which law Jesus considers the heaviest or most important. The greatest commandment, loving God... Mark 12:29-30: Jesus starts by quoting the Shema (Deuteronomy 6:4). Before diving into theology, Jesus establishes who God is (Yahweh, the Eternal One, the King). You cannot debate the King's commands. We are called to love God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength. The specific categories matter less than the overall point: love God with absolutely everything you have and hold nothing back. The 2nd Commandment, loving your neighbor... The order matters (Mark 12:31)... Jesus quotes Leviticus 19:18. You must first learn to love God rightly before you can truly love your neighbor rightly. If you prioritize loving people without loving God first, you fall into a liberal theological trap (building wells for physical needs but ignoring their eternal soul). True love cares for a person's immediate needs and their eternal salvation! Near the Kingdom vs. In the Kingdom... The scribe spent his life categorizing rules, but Jesus collapses the entire law into a relationship (love). The scribe recognizes this is true and agrees. Mark 12:32-34... Jesus tells him he is "not far from the kingdom." Agreeing intellectually with Jesus puts you near the kingdom, but surrendering to and loving Jesus puts you in the kingdom. Many people today are near the kingdom (they wear crosses, attend on Easter, agree with the morals) but have never actually entered in through genuine surrender! Love is God's being: Christianity is utterly unique because it has a trinitarian God. A unitarian god cannot be inherently loving, because before creation, there was no one to love. From eternity past, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit have perfectly loved and deferred honor to one another. Salvation is an invitation to be brought into this eternal loop of love. Receiving and pouring out God's love... Deuteronomy 7:7-8: God doesn't love us because of anything special we did; He loves us because He is love. Because His love is unearned, it cannot be lost. Through the Holy Spirit, God is constantly pouring an ocean of love into our hearts every single day. Our response is to splash that love back onto God and out onto others. We are never asked to give what God does not supply. Like the widow of Zarephath's oil or the feeding of the 5,000, God miraculously replenishes the love we give away. Satan wants us to believe selfishness brings satisfaction. In reality, because we are made in the image of a giving God, we will never be more joyful or satisfied than when we are generously pouring out love to others, and giving God the glory!
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