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Forming Rick Shafer Forming Rick Shafer

A Liturgy of Love

During a pandemic, washing your hands is a spiritual act of love.

As the world tries to deal with the COVID-19 coronavirus, I’m reminded of this liturgy of love. Love (agape) is a willful love. It’s charitable love—caritas. This is the love Jesus calls us to practice when we’re commanded to:

  • Love ourselves

  • Love one another

  • Love our neighbor

  • Love our enemies.

Agape love is the way of God’s kingdom.

What is this liturgy I am reminded of?

It’s the spiritual practice of washing our hands.

Whenever we wash our hands to rid them of bacteria and viruses, we are participating in an act of love that resists the spread of illness, even death. It can have a multiplying effect that saves family, friend, and foe alike.

So, when you wash your hands, see this time as a liturgy of love. And pray an extended prayer as you wash for an extended time. In this sacred act, you will be giving a gift of love to the whole world.

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Knowing Rick Shafer Knowing Rick Shafer

Three Holy Habits

Tune in, enter in, and join in. Three habits for spiritual formation.

The life of a Jesus follower can be difficult and demanding, but it’s not so hard to describe. Consider these three holy habits—called holy because they define a life that is set apart to God: Tune in, Enter in, and Join in.

Tune in — Concentrate

“Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength. Fix your eyes on Jesus. Proclaim the greatness of the Lord with me, and let us exalt his name together! The Lord has done great things for us. We are glad.”

The world distracts and our hearts are prone to wander. In the busyness of life, we need to develop a habit of seeing—focusing our attention on God who is sovereign over us and over all things. We grow in our awareness that we live life before God’s face.

Enter in — Immigrate

God is inviting us in. “Enter my kingdom!” “Become part of my family!” In God’s kingdom, all things are made new. We’re given a new identity and we are made part of a new culture. Over a lifetime, we need to figure out what that means. And then adapt. We should live with an ever-fading accent. God’s kingdom is becoming more normal, less foreign in our lives.

Join in — Participate

As we grow into our new identity and culture, we are to become participants in Kingdom activity. We learn to see what God is doing to love and pursue others, then join in as his ambassadors. God’s work of redemption and restoration must become our work too, by his grace and through the power of the Spirit.

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Forming Rick Shafer Forming Rick Shafer

Law or Commands?

What’s the difference between a law and a command? Relationship and shared mission maybe?

And Jesus came and said to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”
— Matthew 28:18-20

In this final commissioning of his disciples, Jesus says to teach new followers to obey all of his commands. I know someone who has counted Jesus’ commands and he has found around 200 of them. Do these commands make up a new body of law that we must obey?

I have always found it interesting that the word ‘obey’ is sometimes translated ‘observe’ or ‘keep’. There appears to be some nuance to this. Might it be that the difference between laws and commands is our perception of them?

I think of laws in terms of restraint. Laws force us to do what the lawmaker wants done. Laws also keep us from harming one another. Laws are external and impersonal.

But commands seem to be more about organization. Assumed is a common vision, mission, and passion. Like plays on a football field, every player has the same objective but different assignments. Obeying/observing their assignment is essential to success. The same is true on a battlefield. A commanding officer gives orders, not to impose a moral code, but to accomplish a mission. “Here’s how we must work together.”

As followers of Jesus, we share vision, mission, and passion with Him. In some 200 ways, Jesus is showing us our role — the ways we must work together with Him to accomplish the mission. Jesus says: “A new commandment I give you: Love one another. Just as I have loved you, so also you are to love one another.” (John 13:34) He says the greatest commandment is: “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the first and greatest commandment. The second is like it: Love your neighbor as yourself. All the Law and the Prophets depend on these two commandments.” (Matthew 22:37-40) Even the original Ten Commandments (Exodus 20) can be seen as externally applied laws, or as ways to participate with God as his people.

How do we perceive Jesus’ commands? As outsiders who see them as constraints — laws? Or as insiders who see them as gifts of shared vision, mission, and passion — assignments for participation? Obedience to (observance of) God’s commands isn’t optional, but our perception of them will change our disposition toward them.

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