(L, P)br...
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(L, P)
This great passage is called the Shema ("Hear"), from its opening words, "Hear, O Israel." It is truly one of the great laws of God, with its proclamation that "God is One." The difficulty we face comes with the admonition to "love God with heart, soul, and might." Can there really be a law such as that? Laws can tell us to obey. Can they actually tell us to love?
It has been said that there are really only two kinds of laws -- those that proclaim the way things ought to be (a NO TRESPASSING sign demonstrates that kind of law) and those that proclaim the way things are (the law of gravity demonstrates that.) This law to love God is actually the second kind, even if its form seems like the first. We are created to love God -- it is a very vital part of our being -- and the command to love God is a statement of the way things are when we are authentic.
Rod McKuen begins one of his poems about human love with the words. "Away from you I don't exist; nothing's true or even false. I've no one to dress up for -- no reason to leave home ..." The same thing could be said about God: Apart from our love relationship with God, we don't really exist.
This Scripture passage speaks of teaching children the love of God by working the words of God into the daily routine of life. God's love is a part of our existence; that's the way things are. Our call is to recognize that fact and to be ourselves. God is love -- but each one of us is love also. That's what creation is all about.
- Aber
This great passage is called the Shema ("Hear"), from its opening words, "Hear, O Israel." It is truly one of the great laws of God, with its proclamation that "God is One." The difficulty we face comes with the admonition to "love God with heart, soul, and might." Can there really be a law such as that? Laws can tell us to obey. Can they actually tell us to love?
It has been said that there are really only two kinds of laws -- those that proclaim the way things ought to be (a NO TRESPASSING sign demonstrates that kind of law) and those that proclaim the way things are (the law of gravity demonstrates that.) This law to love God is actually the second kind, even if its form seems like the first. We are created to love God -- it is a very vital part of our being -- and the command to love God is a statement of the way things are when we are authentic.
Rod McKuen begins one of his poems about human love with the words. "Away from you I don't exist; nothing's true or even false. I've no one to dress up for -- no reason to leave home ..." The same thing could be said about God: Apart from our love relationship with God, we don't really exist.
This Scripture passage speaks of teaching children the love of God by working the words of God into the daily routine of life. God's love is a part of our existence; that's the way things are. Our call is to recognize that fact and to be ourselves. God is love -- but each one of us is love also. That's what creation is all about.
- Aber
