Apr 25, 2021
From John 10:10b-11:
'I came that they may have life, and have it
abundantly. “I am the good shepherd. The good
shepherd lays down his life for the sheep."'
From 1 John 3:16-24: “We know love by this, that he
laid down his life for us— and we ought to lay down our lives for
one another.”
At the core of our Christian faith is love. God is love. Our
virtue is love. And it is through love that we may have life and
have it abundantly.
God is love. (1 John 4:8). God’s nature (Trinity) and
attributes are love. “Greater love has no one than this: to
lay down one’s life for one’s friends” (John 15:13) God in the
person of Jesus Christ offers himself and lays down his life, of
his own accord, for the sheep— all the flock, even those not yet in
the fold. Jesus death — yes— and life was exemplified by humility
and sacrifice. As Presiding Bishop Michael Curry reminds us
again and again, “If it’s not about love, it’s not about God.”
Our virtue is love. Because we are created in the image and
likeness of God who is love, we are created for love and to be
love. As we understand it, as Christians our core virtue — our
guiding moral compass, what Socrates or Aristotle might call our
disposition, and what we call our way is love. When we say we, as
the Episcopal Branch of the Jesus Movement, we live, and follow,
and practice the way of love we are speaking about our christian
moral life, our Christian ethics. And when we say as we heard in
our reading from 1 John “let us love, not in word or speech, but in
truth and action” we are talking about the importance of Christian
ethics and a way of life that is lived out actively in our
world.
Briefest of brief introduction to ethics and ethical
thought.
3 main schools of thoughts:
- Deontological ethics, or duty ethics
- Ask the question of: is it right?
- Am I living according to the laws and duties obligations set
forth?
- The ten commandments are a prime example of deontological or
duty ethics.
- The challenge of duty ethics though is that if we focus only on
ourself and our own duties and only these particular
duties and let everyone else do the same, when played out in
society our respect for the autonomy and liberty of the other
combined with our own tendencies to find loopholes or reframe said
duties to our own interest often results in a system that much like
what played out throughout the Torah and into the book of Judges
spirals in its sin until such point and this is a direct quote from
the end of the book of Judges: “ everyone was doing what was right
in their own eyes.”
- And in many ways, the worldly society and particular culture in
which we live was founded on this deontological ethical framework
and in many ways I imagine you join me in seeing how it too has
spiraled in sin and you too can see how here and now there are many
who are “doing what is right in their own eyes.”
- Teleological Ethics, or ethics that is concerned with the
telos, the end, the consequence of the action.
- It asks the question: wil the end be good?
- And this is the ethical branch that says the ends can justify
the means.
- And when the person or entity or society gets to define for
themselves what it good and what would be a good end then out of
this can come atrocities such as genocide.
- Not all teleological ethics are bad, for example, calls for
conservation of our earth, our island home, and the right use of
resources now in order for our great, great grandchildren and
beyond to have a better end also comes out of this school of
ethics.
- Likewise a focus on eternity in adoration and praise with God
is also a form of theological ethics.
- Virtue Ethics
-
- While both of the others do absolutely contribute to our
Christian moral life, this final school of ethical thought is far
and beyond the strongest in Anglican/ Episcopal Ethical
thinking
- Good disciplines have the potential of becoming good habits and
good habits are
the foundation of virtues that transform the world (Virtue Ethics
101).
- And to be clear, we understand this guiding virtue to be
love.
- The challenge is that others also follow virtue ethics, but put
a different virtue as the compass and guiding way. And we see this
conflict of virtues play out in our world and in our
society.
- For example, for many Americans, their guiding virtue is not
love but liberty. As Patriot Patrick Henry was known to have said:
“Give me freedom, or give me death.” And let me be clear, freedoms
are indeed important and I do appreciate and love the land in which
we live and I am part of a family who has given their lives to
protecting that.
- I also want to name that when liberty is your highest virtue,
the propensity for individual and systemic sin is incalculable.
Throughout our scriptures from Adam and Eve to Cain and Abel and
through every generation, we see what we sinners do with our
liberty. We kill our brother Abel, We enslave our brother Jacob, We
rape our sister Dinah. Liberty and sin are dangerous combination.
And while as Martin Luther says, we have our freedom in Christ, as
Episcopalians as Anglicans we ask, what do we use that liberty for:
love
- For us, in our understanding of the Christian way of life, the
virtue, the compass, the guiding principle above all others is
love. The way is love. Because God is love. Because Jesus shows us
the way of love.
And is through love that we may have life and have it
abundantly.
What does love look like in truth and action? It looks like
sacrifice. It looks like laying down our lives and liberty for the
sake of the flourishing of another.
Concrete example? This is why we where masks. Because the
science shows that our masks helps protect another. This is why we
get vaccinated. Because the science shows that a population who is
vaccinated and reaches herd immunity can protect the vulnerable who
are not. Laying down our personal comfort for the sake of the life
of another is love. In our understanding of following Jesus, the
highest guiding good is not liberty, but love. I hear all the time
about and sometimes from people who keep demanding to put their
individual rights first. And I will admit, that is very American,
but it is not Christian.
Liberty is in service of love. Our God freely laid down his life
for the sake of the world. We are called for the sake of using our
freedom in Christ for the sake of loving our neighbor. And when we
use our freedom for the sake of our own self and selfish desires
that is the definition of sin.
Beloved, we follow a God who is the Good Shepherd, who lays down
his life for the sheep. We follow a God of love. And so let us love
not only in word and speech but in truth and action. Let us own and
name our Christian ethic in every walk of our life. Let love be the
way.