From a treatise on John by Saint Augustine, bishop
The perfection of love |
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Dear brethren, the Lord has marked out for us the fullness of love that we ought to have for each other. He tells us: No one has greater love than the man who lays down his life for his friends.
In these words, the Lord tells us what the perfect love we should have
for one another involves. John, the evangelist who recorded them, draws
the conclusion in one of his letters: As Christ laid down his life for us, so we too ought to lay down our lives for our brothers. We should indeed love one another as he loved us, he who laid down his life for us.
This is surely what we read in the Proverbs of Solomon: If
you sit down to eat at the table of a ruler, observe carefully what is
set before you; then stretch out your hand, knowing that you must
provide the same kind of meal yourself. What is this ruler’s table
if not the one at which we receive the body and blood of him who laid
down his life for us? What does it mean to sit at this table if not to
approach it with humility? What does it mean to observe carefully what
is set before you if not to meditate devoutly on so great a gift? What
does it mean to stretch out one’s hand, knowing that one must provide
the same kind of meal oneself, if not what I have just said: as Christ
laid down his life for us, so we in our turn ought to lay down our lives
for our brothers? This is what the apostle Paul said: Christ suffered for us, leaving us an example, that we might follow in his footsteps.
This is what is meant by providing “the same kind of
meal.” This is what the blessed martyrs did with such burning love. If
we are to give true meaning to our celebration of their memorials, to
our approaching the Lord’s table in the very banquet at which they were
fed, we must, like them, provide “the same kind of meal.”
At this table of the Lord we do not commemorate the
martyrs in the same way as we commemorate others who rest in peace. We
do not pray for the martyrs as we pray for those others, rather, they
pray for us, that we may follow in his footsteps. They practised the
perfect love of which the Lord said there could be none greater. They
provided “the same kind of meal” as they had themselves received at the
Lord’s table.
This must not be understood as saying that we can be
the Lord’s equals by bearing witness to him to the extent of shedding
our blood. He had the power of laying down his life; we by contrast
cannot choose the length of our lives, and we die even if it is against
our will. He, by dying, destroyed death in himself; we are freed from
death only in his death. His body did not see corruption; our body will
see corruption and only then be clothed through him in incorruption at
the end of the world. He needed no help from us in saving us; without
him we can do nothing. He gave himself to us as the vine to the
branches; apart from him we cannot have life.
Finally, even if brothers die for brothers, yet no
martyr by shedding his blood brings forgiveness for the sins of his
brothers, as Christ brought forgiveness to us. In this he gave us, not
an example to imitate but a reason for rejoicing. Inasmuch, then, as
they shed their blood for their brothers, the martyrs provided “the same
kind of meal” as they had received at the Lord’s table. Let us then
love one another as Christ also loved us and gave himself up for us.
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