New Church Life January/February 2017 | Page 8

new church life: jan uary/february 2017 When Jesus asked Peter if he loved Him, Peter said: “Lord, you know all things. You know that I love you.” Jesus just said to him – and to us: “Feed My sheep.” (John 21: 15-17) There is nothing complex or overly demanding in the Two Great Commandments. Consider the simplicity of: “Obey My voice, and I will be your God, and you shall be My people; and walk in the ways that I have commanded you, that it may be well with you.” (Jeremiah 7:23) The Lord’s love for us is constant. We know that if it ever ceased, if only for a moment, we could not survive. And how does He love us? His providence overlooks every moment of our lives, not shielding us from the consequences of our free choices – or the choices of others – but always bending us toward good, always lifting us up toward heaven, if that is what we choose, and never giving up on us. Our love for Him and for our neighbor should be as sure and constant – not as something added to our daily lives but just incorporated into the way we choose to live. That starts with loving the Lord’s commandments simply by living them. As we shun evil and turn to Him, goodness and love from the Lord flow into us and can be reciprocated. As we reflect on our day before going to sleep we might ask ourselves: Have I loved the Lord today? Have I read the Word? Have I been kind, grateful, useful? Have I loved the Lord with all my heart, with all my soul, and with all my mind? Have I fed His sheep? (BMH) religious feelings: a sense of holiness The life of religion encompasses feelings, thoughts and deeds. The doctrinal ideas and charitable works associated with religion are well known to us, but religious feelings are a little harder to pin down and are not discussed as often. So I plan to follow this with a series of editorials on the subject during the year. Feelings flow, like streams from a fountain, from the love that forms a person’s will and constitutes the essence of the person. The most profound feelings are religious, as are the thoughts they inspire; they have to do with God, heaven, and things that have the greatest value and significance for us. The first religious feeling we’ll look at is a sense of holiness, or Divine presence. It is what Jacob felt when he awoke from his dream and said: “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I knew it not.” (Genesis 28:16) It involves feelings of awe, wonder, mystery, and holy fear. "And he was afraid...." (Genesis 28:16) An adjective that has been used to describe the quality that provokes such a sensation is “numinous.” The noumenon is the realm of spirit, as opposed to the natural world of phenomena that we can apprehend by our physical senses. 4