The Twin Commandments
of Love
What
are these two commandments? Join me, my brethren, in recollecting them. They
ought to be thoroughly familiar to you and not just come into your mind when we
recite them: they ought never to be blotted out from your hearts.
Always
and everywhere, bear in mind that you must love God and your neighbour, love God with all your heart, and with all your
soul, and with all your mind; and love your neighbour as you would love
yourself.
We
must always ponder these words, meditate them, hold them in our minds, practise
them and bring them to fruition. As far as teaching is concerned, the love of
God comes first; but as far as doing is concerned, the love of our neighbour
comes first. Whoever sets out to teach you these two commandments of love must
not commend your neighbour to you first, and then God, but God first and then
your neighbour. You, on the other hand, do not yet see God, but loving your
neighbour will bring you that sight. By loving your neighbour you purify your
eyes so that they are ready to see God, as John clearly says: If you do not love your brother, whom you
see, how can you love God, whom you do not see?
You
are told “Love God”. If you say to me “Show me whom I should love”, what can I
say except what John says? No man has
ever seen God. But you must not think yourself wholly unsuited to seeing
God: God is love, says John, and whoever dwells in love dwells in God.
So love whoever is nearest to you and look inside you to see where that love is
coming from: thus, as far as you are capable, you will see God.
So
start to love your neighbour. Share
your bread with the hungry, bring the homeless pauper into your house. Clothe
the naked, and do not despise the servants of your kin.
What
will you get from doing all this? Your
light will break forth like the dawn. Your light is your God, your dawn,
because he will come to you to end the night of this world — he who,
himself, neither rises nor sets but is eternal.
By
loving your neighbour, by having care for your neighbour, you are travelling on
a journey. Where are you journeying, except to the Lord God, whom we must love
with all our heart and all our soul and all our mind? We have not yet reached
the Lord, but our neighbour is with us already. So support your neighbour, who
is travelling with you, so that you may reach him with whom you long to dwell.
Source:
The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From St Augustine's tractates on St JohnPhoto taken from mbgrigby
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