The Will to Love
Trevor Thomas
February 14, 2011
Today is Valentine’s Day, and thus “I will show you
the most excellent way.”
I believe that the one most revealing, the most essential
characteristic of our Creator is love. By His love He made us, and because of
His love He redeemed us. We are closest to His nature and what He created us to
be when we are living our lives according to His idea of love.
He also told us that His entire law can be summed up
with one command: “Love your neighbor as yourself.” What does that mean? What
does it mean to love your neighbor as you love yourself?
First of all, who is our “neighbor?” Most of us have
heard of the “Good Samaritan.” Through this parable, Christ taught us that our
neighbor means more than those who live near us, or those within our circle of
family and friends. In effect, what He was saying was that loving our neighbor
also means loving our enemies.
Secondly, how do we “love” ourselves? If we are
honest, we should all admit that there are times when none of us is
particularly loveable. In fact, most of us have probably been pretty
disappointed in and disgusted by our own behavior, and thus, in ourselves. We
may even have seen ourselves as downright nasty.
Therefore, loving our neighbor does not mean always
having pleasant feelings about him, or being happy with everything she does. As
C.S. Lewis put it, it does not mean “thinking them nice either.” In fact, love
in the Christian sense isn’t a feeling at all. It is a matter of the will.
As Lewis put it, “It is a state not of the feelings
but of the will; that state of the will which we naturally have about
ourselves, and must learn to have about other people.” In other words, do not
bother so much about how you feel towards someone; act like you love them. In
other words, do and say the things that true love requires. Feelings and
emotions come and go, but our will can be forever unwavering.
Consider 1 Corinthians chapter 13, where the Apostle
Paul reveals to us what true love is. “Love is patient, love is kind. It does
not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It is not rude, it is not
self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record
of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always
protects, always trusts, always hopes, always
perseveres. Love never fails.”
Patience, kindness, a lack of envy or boasting;
humility, politeness, and controlling your temper; keeping no record of wrongs,
and so on—these all are matters of the will. As soon as you do these things,
Lewis notes, “we find one of the great secrets. When you are behaving as if you
loved someone, you will presently come to love him.”
Jesus said that the greatest act of love is to lay
down one’s life for another. What is that if not an act of the will? No one
“feels” like doing such a thing. Jesus even prayed that His act of sacrifice,
if possible, would pass from Him, but His will was surrendered: “Not My will,
but Yours be done.”
Now, of course, romantic love can generate a torrent
of emotions within us. Most all of us have been tied in knots over one person
or another in our lives. But, even in the strongest of relationships, these
feelings don’t last—and thank goodness! How would we function day-to-day and
year-to-year with such emotions?!
Yet popular culture has chosen to highlight this
brief and passing aspect of love and held it up as the ideal. Of course,
popular culture has also made love synonymous with sex. This is especially true
with our youth. They enter relationships—even marriage—with their hearts and
minds full of the wrong ideas about love.
Thus, the most important relationship on the
earth—that between a husband and a wife—often rests upon a very shaky
foundation. If a marriage rests upon this feeling of “being in love” alone, it
almost certainly will fail. Couples need to understand that when this feeling
subsides, it does not mean that we should stop loving. Love in this deeper
sense is about a promise or vow that nearly every couple makes upon marrying.
And keeping this promise is a matter of the will.
However, Christians know that, left to ourselves, our
own will is not enough. On our own we cannot love as we should. The
selflessness that true love requires runs very contrary to our born nature.
That is why, in order to love truly, we must look to the One who is love.
Happy Valentine’s Day!
Trevor Grant Thomas
At the Intersection of Politics,
Science, Faith, and Reason.
Copyright 2011