CW 728 – This is My Will
The sixth Sunday in Easter has one clearly defined theme that is noticeable the second you start reading the gospel lesson (John 15:9-17): love! Jesus uses that word nine times in just eight verses! So it’s with good reason that we spend an entire Sunday thinking about love.
The entirety of God’s Word can be summed up in the command to love. “Love the Lord your God with all your heart…” and “Love your neighbor as yourself.” (Matthew 22:37,39) God’s people are defined by their love, which Paul identifies as the greatest virtue in the church. “And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.” (1 Corinthians 13:13)
So we know love is important. But how are we supposed to show that love? The hymn for this week is a musical version of Jesus’ words from John 15. In this hymn, the hymn writer helps us understand how we show love to one another.
Verse 1: This is my will, my one command, that love should dwell among you all. This is my will, that you should love as I have shown that I love you.
Often times people will talk about a “bucket list.” That’s a list of things people want to do before they “kick the bucket,” that is, to die. Maybe it’ll be something like see the Grand Canyon, or swim with dolphins, or go skydiving. Jesus didn’t really have a “bucket list” when he died. It was more of a single wish or a request for his followers. And his request wasn’t as big or grand as skydiving or the Grand Canyon. Quite the contrary, it was something simple and easy for anyone and everyone to do. The wish was that his followers love one another. The way Jesus describes this is important too! By loving one another, we aren’t supposed to just love every now and then. Instead, love is supposed to dwell among us. This means that our love for one another doesn’t come and go, but it stays for good. But what does that love look like? How are we supposed to do that? Verse 2 explains what Jesus means by that.
Verse 2: No greater love can be than this: To choose to die to save one’s friends. You are my friends if you obey what I command that you should do.
What’s the difference between an acquaintance and a friend? Generally, an acquaintance is someone we know of and maybe have spoken to a few times, but that’s it. A friend is much more. A friend is someone you have a bond with. They’re someone that you know you can go to if you need something and they’ll help you. We can all think of people we have formed close friendships with, but would you be willing to die for that friend? It’s the ultimate test of one’s friendship, and thankfully most of the time we aren’t asked to die for our friends. But that’s exactly what Jesus did for us. Jesus willingly laid down his life for his friends by going to the cross so that they might be with him forever. Talk about dedication! But that begs the question, then: who are Jesus' friends? Jesus gives the answer: those who listen to him and show that same love and dedication to others! Jesus doesn’t expect his friends to die for him, he’s done that already. All he asks is that his friends listen to him. It doesn’t have to be difficult. By looking at how Jesus cares for us, it’s a natural response to want to respect him and listen to him.
Verse 3: I call you now no longer slaves; no slave knows all his master does. I call you friends, for all I hear my Father say you hear from me.
It’s been said before “There are no secrets between true friends.” Part of having a strong friendship is confiding your secrets to one another. By doing this, we express our trust in our friends and look to them for help in carrying our burdens. As our true friend, Jesus doesn’t have any secrets he keeps from us. Instead, Jesus has revealed to us his will, his word, and his plans for our future. Before Jesus came, we were enslaved to our sinful natures. We didn’t have the freedom to go before God or for God to speak so freely to us. We didn’t have the hope of the future. Jesus changed that. Through his teaching, Jesus told us what God was really like. He showed how much God cared for us and what he was willing to sacrifice his only son to have us back not as slaves, but as friends. Through his death, Jesus showed us that God is love. This amazing truth shows us what love is really like. No secrets. No barriers. Just a wonderful friendship between God and humans.
Verse 4: You chose not me, but I chose you, that you should go and bear much fruit. I chose you out that you in me should bear much fruit that will abide.
The way most friendships work, you choose who your friends are. As two people grow closer to each other, generally what will happen is the two will naturally start choosing to spend more time with that person, to joke around with them, and to do things with them. It’s not like you can become someone’s friend against your will. It’s a natural choice that happens as you get to know someone. Our friendship with Jesus was the exception to that rule. We didn’t choose to love Jesus or to be friends with him. We didn’t choose to be his followers or his disciples. Instead, he chose us! The Holy Spirit worked faith in our hearts through our baptisms and through God’s word to call us to be Jesus’ friends. Out of all the people in the world, Jesus decided that he wanted us to be his friends! And as his friends, Jesus has a very important job for us: to go out and show others what true friendship and true love looks like. By bearing fruits of faith, we show others what it means to be a friend of Jesus.
Verse 5: All that you ask my Father dear for my name’s sake you shall receive. This is my will, my one command, that love should dwell in each, in all.
Part of showing love to our friends is we do things for them when they ask. If they ask us to help them with something, we go and help. When they ask for advice about something, we give it. And often times, we do this without expecting anything in return. That’s part of being a good friend and showing love to them. As our friend, Jesus promises to do just that. Jesus will freely give and expect nothing in return. Now that doesn’t mean that if we ask Jesus for a million dollars or a brand new car or the newest phone that he’ll give it to us. Jesus promises that what we ask “for his name’s sake” he will give. If we ask for help through times of trouble in our lives, he’ll give it, because that’s what friends do. If we ask him to help us show love to others he will, because that’s what friends do. Jesus does this all because he loves us. He loved us so much he died for us. And Jesus’ love doesn’t just end at the cross. It keeps on giving all the days of our lives. That love that he gives us is what empowers and enables us to show that same love to others. How are we supposed to do Jesus' will? How are we supposed to show love? By letting him be our friend and loving us first
In his first letter, the apostle John writes “We love because he [God] first loved us.” (1 John 4:19) Jesus came to this world and showed us what true love looks like. It’s a cross! On that cross, Jesus, our friend, gave his life so that we might live. And it’s on that cross that Jesus shows us what true love is: to serve others! Jesus is a lifelong friend who promised to help us and give us all that we need to love and serve others. May he always help us to show love to not just our friends, but to all who need to feel his love. Amen.