by Audrey West
Celebrating God’s love for us and our
love for each other
Long before computers, before text
messages and e–mail,
my friends and I passed carefully folded
notes between classes and left cryptic
messages in each other’s lockers. We mailed
postcards as mementos of vacations and
scribbled coded designs onto the covers of
our notebooks. We didn’t sign these secret
missives (lest they fall into the wrong
hands!) but the handwriting was familiar, so
we always knew who sent them. The notes were
our declaration of friendship to one
another, our bond of love.
One day an envelope arrived in the mail
at my family’s house, addressed to me in an
unfamiliar hand. I ripped it open to
discover a hand–painted
card with a message in elegant calligraphy:
Valentines are messages,
Affectionate and dear,
Lines of warm remembrance,
Envoys of good cheer. They’re
Notes to say, I miss you so,
Thanks for being you,
I wish you every happiness,
Now and all year through. And
Each and every valentine,
Serious or light, is meant to make
somebody’s day enjoyable and bright.
There was no return address or signature,
but it didn’t matter. Somebody loved me, and
I had a custommade card to prove it.
Messages, affectionate and dear
Storytellers and poets speak of the time
before time, when God was infinitely alone,
before the seed of the universe exploded in
God’s first mighty act of creation. God was
lonely, they say. And so, the Bible tells
us, God created the heavens and the earth
and all the living creatures, including
humankind. In God’s own image, God made male
and female and breathed life and love into
them. During that first cosmic week — in the
beginning — God looked around and saw that
it was good. Earth and stars, sun and moon,
water and dry land, flowers and trees, fish
and birds and creatures that crawl: creation
itself was and is God’s first message of
love writ large.
This creation message, God’s love note to
the universe, came at a cost. Some
theologians suggest that only by pushing
aside God’s own being was God able to make
the void that would cradle God’s creation;
only into that opening could God’s voice
speak the word that would become our world.
A pregnant woman knows what it’s like,
this pushing aside of self, when her
ever-enlarging womb compresses internal
organs to make room for a baby. For a while,
mother and baby share the same space, as
mother’s body nurtures the life within, but
the day will come when the two must
separate, often with great pain. It is a
costly love that gives birth to new life. It
is a costly love that gives birth to the
world.
Creation celebrates the creative love of
its heavenly parent by glorifying the
Creator. "The heavens are telling the glory
of God; and the firmament proclaims God’s
handiwork!" (Psalm 19:1)
Lines of warm remembrance, envoys of
good cheer
The God who loved the world enough to
bring it to birth is the same One who
nurtures and sustains all living things.
Whenever we act in love toward others,
caring for their needs or looking out for
their interests, we tap into that ultimate
love. When it is impossible to be with those
we love, letters and notes, such as the
anonymous card I received on Valentine’s
Day, can be concrete expressions of that
love. The Apostle Paul, for example,
corresponded with his churches when he was
separated from them, and nearly every one of
those letters begins with an affectionate
greeting. He writes to the Philippians, "I
thank my God every time I remember you,
constantly praying with joy in every one of
my prayers for all of you…. It is right for
me to think this way about all of you,
because you hold me in your heart."
Today, in addition to written
correspondence, we have many ways to express
our affection even when we are apart.
Instant messages and cell phones connect
people across the globe; video cams make it
possible for loved ones to see "face to
face," even when separated by thousands of
miles. My niece and nephew, four–year–old
twins, like to send e-mails that are filled
with nothing but smiley faces. My dogs, on
the other hand, prefer to express themselves
by wagging their tails with such vigor that
cups fly off the coffee table, while my 84–year–old
neighbor stitches a hand–sewn
quilt out of my childhood clothing.
Whenever I’m preparing for a long road
trip, my father calls from across the
country to remind me to check the oil in my
car, a gesture that I have learned is one of
his ways of saying, "I love you." And I
still have a note that my mother tucked into
my suitcase more than 30 years ago as I left
town to compete in an athletic event. It is
good to know when somebody loves you, and
important to let others know of our love for
them.
Notes to say, I miss you so
That mysterious hand–painted
card arrived in the mail when I was long
past the age of mandatory valentines
distributed in the classroom at school.
There was no "special someone" in my life at
the time, but the card made me wonder if I
had missed the signs, and I was cheered by
the idea that somebody, even somebody so far
away as to require a postage stamp, was
sending me a love note. The card gave me
hope: I was loved.
There may be times, however, when no such
card arrives. Human love may fade, whether
due to illness or death or trust that is
broken. The people we love let us down or,
even worse, we let them down. There may be
times when, instead of the wonders of
creation, we know the darkness that covers
the face of the deep; when the stars seem to
pierce our hearts with their cold light
rather than joining a celestial hymn of
praise; when love seems to have left us far
behind, when we yearn for a voice from God
but hear only silence. We yearn for the
comfort of human love and the certainty of
God’s love, but all our efforts to find it
come up short.
Published letters written by Mother
Teresa and spanning most of her adult life
give testimony to the deep longing that
comes when God seems to be absent, even in
the experience of a faithful woman who
consistently testified to God’s love for
people forgotten by the rest of the world.
As she ministered to the poorest among the
poor, Mother Teresa longed for affirmation
that God approved her mission. Such
affirmation did not come, at least not in
the immediate way she had experienced in her
youth. Nonetheless, she continued to love
those whom she served.
For such a time as this, the promises of
Scripture are a light in the darkness. "With
everlasting love I will have compassion on
you, says the Lord, your Redeemer… I have
loved you with an everlasting love;
therefore I have continued my faithfulness
to you…. Many waters cannot quench love,
neither can floods drown it….For the
mountains may depart and the hills be
removed, but my steadfast love shall not
depart from you."
Reminding ourselves of these promises can
make it possible for us to affirm with the
Apostle Paul, even when things look bleak,
"For I am convinced that neither death, nor
life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things
present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor
height, nor depth, nor anything else in all
creation, will be able to separate us from
the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord"
(Romans 8:38). Despite the limits of our
experience, God’s love does not leave us.
God’s love endures forever.
Thanks for being you
Valentine’s Day reminds us that our best
love has its fullest expression when it is
embodied in real live people. We love and
are loved as individuals, unique and
irreplaceable; that is, our love is not
merely an abstract concept, but it is
enfleshed and expressed with particular
others. Those others evoke our love
precisely by being who they are. When my
best friend jumps for joy at the birth of
her child, she celebrates this child,
no matter how many other children may have
been born before. When she weeps at the
death of her mother, she weeps for this
mother, not for generic mothers
everywhere.
Our human loves cannot fully compare to
God’s love, but they do help us to capture a
glimpse of God’s love for each of us.
Indeed, in God’s desire to embody God’s love
for the world — and not for the world in
general, but for you and me and all the
other particular people who have come into
being, as well as for the whole of creation
— God dwells among us as the beloved Son,
Jesus Christ. It is the ultimate gift of
love that God would send God’s only Son into
the world.
Jesus makes it possible for us to know,
in the flesh, exactly what God’s love looks
like. In his relationships with the
disciples and with the people he met during
his travels, in his demonstration of justice
to the lost and marginalized, in his
teaching, in his compassionate and healing
touch, in his willingness to lay down his
life for his friends, Jesus gives concrete
demonstration of God’s love. And, most
important, through his death and
resurrection, Christ brings each of us and
the whole of God’s creation into loving
relationship with God: not because we are
good, not because we have done the right
things, but because God delights in our
particularity and uniqueness. While we send
flowers or cards to express our love, God
sends Jesus.
Now and all year through
I spent several weeks trying to figure
out who sent me that mysterious card. My
girlfriends all denied it, and as none of
them was particularly artistic (we were
better at music and math), I was inclined to
believe them. Besides, they could have left
a card in my school locker, instead of
sending it by mail. There was no romantic
interest (that I knew of) and, in any case,
none came forward to ask me out. Eventually,
when all leads were exhausted, I lost
interest in the hunt, but I never lost the
joy of knowing that somebody loved me enough
to paint a special card, just for me. Only
years later did I discover who put in the
effort to create and mail that Valentine’s
Day card. It was my grandmother. And she
lived next door.
From far or near, from God or from
grandmothers, messages of love enable us to
reach beyond ourselves in love for others.
"By this everyone will know that you are my
disciples, if you have love for one another"
( John 13:35).
Audrey West is associate
professor of New Testament at the Lutheran
School of Theology at Chicago.
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