Many, if not all, of us are aware of someone who is involved in a
relationship where we frankly don’t understand the motivation of one of
the parties toward the other. There is the devoted party that we all can
sympathize with that seems to display an extraordinary patience and
commitment to the other, meanwhile the other seems intent on abusing that love and compassion. We sit in amazement at how the lover
can be so tolerant and offer opportunity after opportunity toward the
other. We talk with other friends and maybe even plan an 'intervention' where we intend to confront our naive friend regarding the
recalcitrant object of their affection. However, no matter what we do, we cannot
convince the person of their naivety and persuade them to move on and devote their love to a more deserving subject.
This leads us to a discussion of what “love” is, and what is the
motivation for love? Scripture gives us many attributes of love:
patience, kindness, protection, trusting, hoping, and persevering are
all enumerated in 1 Corinthians 13. All of these are excellent
attributes and some may appear to bolster the side of our forlorn lover
from above. Surely they are demonstrating perseverance and hope in
offering opportunities to their wayward interest.
However, I offer that the attributes of love, much like the attributes
of God, do little to clearly define what we are talking about. They don’t
do justice to providing a definition because they are more a result of
what we are describing than what it is that is being described. The
river does not describe the clear mountain streams from which it
proceeds, even though it seems to be a greater object collectively than
the individual streams.
Instead of the attributes that proceed from love, can we perceive
that there are attributes or qualities that proceed into love? Perhaps
one such quality is vulnerability or maybe risk. Why vulnerability? If
vulnerability is a willingness to at least in some small manner relax
our personal defenses and protections toward another, then perhaps can it be
offered as an inherent quality of love? If I am willing to love, then I
am making some kind of tacit commitment that could allow another person
to accept or reject that love. It seems that within that relaxation I am
taking a small measure of the risk of rejection.
As each of us has at least some familiarity with that person who has
made themselves vulnerable to another and has been taken advantage of in
that situation, we can contemplate from within that context what
reckless love is. Reckless as defined by Merriam-Webster is marked by
lack of proper caution : careless of consequences. There might be many
reasons why a person would be willing to forgo customary caution and
accept the vulnerability of recklessly loving someone.
It is within this context that we perhaps get our first insight into the
recklessness of God's love. God expresses a love to His creation in
a manner that is clearly beyond a reasonable calling. We see throughout
the Old Testament time and again where God provides for the needs of
Israel and is yet rejected after each turn. Then, when the plight of
Israel seems so dark, God provides for the needs of Israel through
miraculous circumstances to again meet their most basic needs such as the
provision for manna or in providing streams of water from the Rock at
Horeb while they wondered in the desert.
I believe that the actions of God in the Old Testament are completely
consistent with the love of a parent for a lost child. This concept of
God as a Father is introduced by Jesus as a young boy in the
temple. When separated from Mary and Joseph on a trip to Jerusalem,
Jesus upon being reunited with his parents responds to the question of
where he was by replying in Luke 2, “about my father’s business.” This
view as Father becomes central to understanding the Old Testament
actions of God within the context of the New Testament — that
of a Father to a child. This view provides us with some sense of
understanding toward the reckless love of the Father.
We may have
sympathy for the parent that continues to extend love to the child in
spite of their rejection. The parental bond is strong and will so often
survive the most egregious of circumstances intact and does not make us question as much as elicit our sympathy. Thus from the perspective of
the Father, we can comprehend why God relentlessly pursues man to
restore the relationship, how many of us have done or would do the same
to restore a relationship with our own progeny?
If we only view God as the Father, we don’t seem to have a complete
view of the fullness of God. The theology of the trinity exists not to
make sense of the statements of Christ in the New Testament, but,
because the truth that was revealed to the apostles and early
Christians formed the basis from which we speak of a doctrine of the
trinity. To come to a more complete realization of the nature of God’s
relationship to man, we may need to look beyond the Old Testament and
“Father” toward the images presented within the context of the new
covenant.
One
of the most common illustrations found in the New
Testament is that of the bridegroom and the bride. With Jesus being
placed in analogies as the bridegroom, we have to come to grip with the analogy from within the context of the Jewish society that
Jesus born into. While I don’t intend to provide a in-depth discussion
of the Jewish marriage customs common in the first century, I think it
is an area that one would really benefit greatly from studying,
especially in regards to the covenant, betrothal, and consummation of
marriage. What is very important and needs to be considered is that the
marriage covenant of Jesus illustrations differs in the manner in which
we encounter and experience the love of God. This context of the
bride/bridegroom revives the reckless or reckless manner of God’s love.
It is wholly appropriate to view the love of the Father as parental in
context. That does not seem to be so appropriate in regards to the love
of Jesus which seems to suggest a deeper, more physically intimate
relationship of love than from within a parental context.
It is within the love of God from the context presented by Jesus that
we arrive at the the truly reckless aspects of the love of God. I think
the best picture of that love is actually found within the Old
Testament book of Hosea. Most of us are familiar with the story of Hosea
and his marriage to the harlot Gomer. Hosea is believed to be the first
prophet of the bible to use marriage as a metaphor for the relationship
of God to his people, and it is difficult to imagine a worse picture of
a “healthy” relationship. Gomer is relentlessly adulterous — so much
like Israel of the old testament and even many today who would take the
name of our bridegroom Jesus as Christians–”those of Christ”–yet
hesitate to remain faithful to that name.
Within this context we confront the love of God that is reckless.
This love that would test many of us in observing a friend that would
devote such love to the pursuit of another. This love, perfect not in
its acceptance but in its offering. Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler was a
20th-century Jewish rabbi who developed the theme that the philosophy of
Jewish love is “giving without expectation to take.” I don’t think any
picture paints the recklessness of God’s love more beautifully than
that. Love that is offered not in any expectation of a return, but only
from within the expectation of loving more, of giving more, of devoting
self so much more to perfecting the offering of that very love.
Within this context, God never pauses to count the cost. He never
pauses to question whether the payment has exceeded the ability of the
purchased to fulfill the motivation for the purchase. This can only be
accomplished when the lover is assured of the intrinsic value of the
object of their love. God is capable of surveying His position and recklessly
pouring himself more fully into His loving devotion rather than
withdrawing to reconsider His alternatives. In fact, God never presents
that there could be an alternative. From His first disappointment in the
Garden of Eden, He seems bent to the task of restoring the relationship
at all costs, even at the cost of offering himself up as a sacrifice.
This is reckless love! This is love that is brazen in its pursuit of
acceptance. This is love that cries out across the expanse of an eternal
heart for satisfaction.
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