Maundy Thursday 2024
Exodus 12:1-4 [5-10] 11-14; 1 Corinthians 11:23-26; John
13:1-17, 31b-35
What’s love got to do with it?!
You know that I often get a song playing in my head that won’t go away, because it seems to be connected to the sermon. My earworm this week has been Tina Turner’s song, “What’s love got to do with it. What’s love but a secondhand emotion? Who needs a heart, when a heart can be broken?”
We might ask Jesus this question as he sits with the disciples and others at supper on his last night with them. Although most artists include only the 12 men, there were likely women and children present at this meal as well. Check out the print by Bohdan Piasecki for an expression of how this might have looked.
Matthew, Mark, and Luke portray this gathering as the Passover meal, but John presents it as the night before Passover. The purpose for John is so that Jesus can be executed at the same time as the Passover lambs are being slaughtered. Jesus is the Passover Lamb for Christians.
Jesus begins, or rather continues, to talk about what is next, saying that he will soon die and be raised in three days. The disciples are freaking out as Jesus talks about all this. They don’t understand what Jesus means about the Advocate who will come to guide them in the future.
And Jesus just says, “Love one another as I have loved you.
This is my mandate for you, that you love each other.” The word Jesus uses here
is agape, which refers to love in action. It is agape love which brings Jesus
to wash his disciples’ feet, and then challenges the disciples to agape love
others in the same way.
… Every year, we hear Jesus reminding us, with this story of
washing feet, to go out to love and serve, to agape love others. Each year, the
tradition of washing feet meets with resistance. We are accustomed to serving
others, to serving those in need, those with less than we have. We are not
accustomed to being served by our friends. We are like Peter, claiming, “No one
washes my feet!” And each year, I remind you all that the ritual is not
about being washed, but about receiving service offered with love.
It’s a loving deed, agape love, to wash the feet or hands of
someone else. It’s equally a loving deed, agape love, to let someone else wash
our feet or hands.
Even more, it’s an agape loving deed to wash feet that
really need washing. Some organizations and congregations have taken Jesus’
instruction literally, as they offer agape love by washing feet on a regular
basis.
The Church of the Common Ground in Atlanta understands what
a toll being homeless takes on feet. Because they often have wet feet and no
change of socks or shoes, fungal and other infections abound among people who
are homeless.
The Church offers Common Soles [s-o-l-e-s] clinics for non-medical foot care. Volunteers wash and massage the feet of those who request it. They also offer clean socks, lemonade, and a listening ear. The volunteers at Common Soles welcome all, listen to all, and learn to love as Jesus loved.
… While the agape love of washing feet is an important part
of this evening, I want us to think about something else as well. A recent post
from Diana Butler Bass suggests that when we focus on the cross and suffering
of Jesus, we are focusing on the wrong thing. Though I haven’t spent a lot of
time thinking about that over the years, I realize that that has been my
perspective as well.
What is most important for Jesus is the love offered to all,
especially as it is demonstrated at the many mealtimes mentioned in the
Gospels. Jesus feeds people, over and over again.
He joins all sorts of people at the table – wealthy and poor, Jews and
Gentiles, able and disabled, believers and those who refuse to believe. After
healing the man filled with demons and the daughter of the synagogue leader,
Jesus tells people to give them something to eat. At his last meal with the
disciples, he commands that they all follow his lead to welcome and love all as
he has taught them.
After the resurrection, there are more meals with the disciples, and he again sends them out to love and welcome all. The cross is how he died, but it’s the love that matters. It’s the love that has everything to do with it. It’s Jesus’ command, Jesus’ mandate, that we love one another as he loves us.
… So, Tina, what’s love got to do with it? Everything! It has everything to do with love.
Amen
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