Owe no
one anything, except to love one another; for the one who loves another has
fulfilled the law (Rom. 13:8).
Our spiritual lives can take a qualitative leap.
All we need do is focus on the core thing required of us: love for one another
that fulfils God’s will.
In the preceding verses (Rom. 13:1-7) Paul refers
to what we owe the civil authorities (obedience, respect, paying taxes etc.).
He stresses that this debt should also be paid in a spirit of love. Of course,
such a debt is easily understood, all the more so because if we neglect it, we
are penalized by law.
On this basis, Paul goes on to speak of another debt,
one that’s a bit more difficult to understand. It is our debt, following the
instructions Jesus left us, towards every neighbour. It is mutual love in its
various expressions: generosity, thoughtfulness, trust, mutual esteem,
sincerity and so on (see Rom. 12, 9-12).
Owe no one anything, except to love one another;
for the one who loves another has fulfilled the law.
This Word of Life emphasizes two things.
In the first place, love is presented as a debt,
that is, as something we cannot be indifferent to, something we cannot put off.
It is presented as something pressing on us, spurring us on, leaving us no
peace until it is satisfied.
It’s like saying that mutual love is not an
‘extra’, the result of our largesse, whose strictures we can set aside without
incurring any legal penalty. This Word urges us to put mutual love into
practice on pain of betraying our dignity as Christians called by Jesus to be
instruments of his love in the world.
Secondly, this Word of Life tells us that mutual
love is the moving force, the soul and the goal of all the commandments.
It follows that, if we want do the will of God
well, we cannot rest content with a cold and legalistic observance of God’s
commandments. We must always keep in mind the goal that God sets before us through
the commandments. So, for example, to live well the commandment not to steal,
we cannot limit ourselves to not stealing, but we ought to be seriously
committed to eliminating social injustice. Only like this will we demonstrate
love for our neighbour.
Owe no one anything, except to love one another;
for the one who loves another has fulfilled the law.
How should we live the Word of Life for this month?
The subject of love for our neighbour, which it
puts before us once again, has infinite shades of meaning. Here we pinpoint one
in particular that would seem to be suggested in a special way by the words of
the text.
If, as Paul says, mutual love is a debt, we need to
have a love that is the first to love as Jesus was with us. It will be,
therefore, a love that takes the initiative, that does not hold back, that does
not delay.
Let’s do this in the coming month, then. Let’s try
to be the first to love each person we meet, we speak to on the phone, we write
to or we live with. And let’s love in a concrete way, knowing how to understand
the other, foresee the other’s needs, be patient, trustful, persevering,
generous.
We will notice that that our spiritual life takes a
qualitative leap, to say nothing of the joy that will fill our hearts.
Chiara Lubich
First published in September 1990
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