Matthew 22:34-40 · The Greatest Commandment
"He Who Commands Is He Who Fulfills"
Matthew 22:34-40
Sermon
Loading...

Some years ago, a parishioner gently offered his pastor a piece of criticism. It had to do with the way one of the rubrics in the weekly bulletin had for decades been phrased: an asterisk in the margin indicated those times when "the congregation reverently kneels."

"You can command people to kneel," said this lay theologian, "but you can’t command that they be reverent about it."

Interesting observation. On the one hand he had a point: some people kneel humbly and reverently; others kneel haughtily (because kneeling is "liturgically correct"); some kneel tentatively and others unthinkingly; some reflectively and some reflexively. Directing them all to be reverent in their kneeling in no way assures that they will or are even capable of doing so. Reverence is not something you can simply conjure up in yourself at will, your will or that of another. And as anyone who has ever parented a child or adolescent knows, you can make and enforce rules about behavior and actions; attitude is another matter entirely.

But on the other hand, doesn’t Jesus go beyond the matter of behavior and actions and into the realm of motives and attitudes when he suggests that anger receives the same judgment as killing (Matthew 5:22) or when he says that lust is a form of adultery (5:27)? Even the commandment against coveting is a matter of the heart and soul and not yet of outward action.

So what does it mean when he tells the testy Pharisees that the greatest and heaviest commandment is the one repeated daily by all the devout people of God: "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and soul and mind"? Heart and soul and mind: do they not refer to the inward center of the person? Are they not the seat and residence of emotion, motive and attitude? Does God’s greatest and heaviest expectation of his people then have to do with the way they feel rather than the way they act?

There is no time to ask such questions, for Jesus immediately proceeds to part two of his answer: to love God with heart and soul and mind is the greatest and first commandment. A second is like it, equal to it and inseparable from it: love your neighbor as yourself. These two commandments are the hinges on which hang the door of the law and the prophets.

To use a word that is much in vogue these days, Jesus’ answer is "wholistic": it embraces all of life, attitude and actions. "One can love God only by loving one’s neighbor".1 By the same token, "only through a sense of love for one’s neighbor, experienced in concrete actions and embracing all of life, is the Law fulfilled."2

The Law’s concern for justice; the prophets’ passionate pleas for loyalty to God and righteous behavior: all of this is summed up in the bifocal command: love God, love your neighbor. This is the righteousness which "exceeds that of the Pharisees and scribes" (5:20).

One of the problems with the Religious Right and the fundamentalist movement is precisely its unloveliness. For all its fanatical attachment to a literal interpretation of scripture, it seems not to have grasped one of the more direct and uncomplicated of all biblical injunctions: this one to love. What it has in its vision of moral rectitude and strident biblicism it woefully lacks in love, in tenderness, in mercy, in kindness and in gentleness.

Where a soft word of healing is called for it will too often speak a shrill word of condemnation. Where a work of mercy is called for, some pious - or perhaps impious - platitudes are mouthed. And the heart of God is grieved, for the scribes and Pharisees are with us still, and the love command is honored more in the breach than in the keeping.

By evangelical insight, there remains another problem. Love God, love your neighbor may be the great and only commands, but they are still and yet precisely that: commands. And if it is doubtful that one can command people to kneel reverently, how much more in doubt is it that one can command them to live lovingly, either in their attitudes or in their actions?

A rule is a rule is a rule. A law is a law is a law. The Golden Rule may be golden but it is still a rule. A golden shackle may be golden but it is still a shackle. And evangelical insight is this: true freedom proceeds not from rules and laws but from faith and the liberating good news which engenders faith.

Where is such good news to be found if not in rules and commands, even Golden Rules and greatest commands? The good news of freedom is found not in the rules and commands themselves, but in the One who alone issues the commands, for he is the One who alone is able to fulfill them.

Remember Jesus’ own self-description, according to Matthew: "Think not that I have come to abolish the law and the prophets; I have come not to abolish them but to fulfill them" (5:17).

The twin commands to love God with all our heart, soul and mind and our neighbors as ourselves forever and relentlessly convict us of faithlessness and disobedience, both in attitude and in action.

We acknowledge that sad reality in our confession each week: "We have sinned against you in thought, word and deed . . . We have not loved you with our whole heart; we have not loved our neighbors as ourselves."3

Those commands and that confession continually remind us of who we are: those who have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.

But they also point us to the one who commands, for he is the one who alone fulfills. He alone among God’s people steadfastly and relentlessly loved God with his whole being and his neighbor as - no! more than! - himself. And such love carried him to the cross.

Where our disobedience, faithlessness and lovelessness is bad news, his obedience, steadfast love and faith have become for us good news. Good news eloquently expressed by St. Paul in his letter to the Romans: "One man’s act of righteousness leads to acquittal and life for all ... By one man’s obedience many will be made righteous" (5:18).

The greatest commands, those articulated by Jesus as love of God and love of neighbor, have at last been fulfilled - by Jesus himself, by his self-giving love and that love’s perfect deed: his innocent suffering and death.

How is this good news for us? By our baptism into Christ, we are joined to that death and raised up new beings. By the grace of God and in spite of our faithlessness, disobedience and lovelessness, we share in the resurrected life of our crucified and risen Lord. His unbounded love for us has worked in us a change of heart, a change in the way we view our lives and live them.

To the new creature who lives by faith, no longer are the words "love God, love your neighbor" only demands or commands. No longer are they merely prescriptions, but rather also descriptions of our new life in Christ. No longer are they but rules and laws stated in the imperative: you shall, you must. They are now also narratives stated in the indicative: you will, you are. Who are we? We are, by the grace of God, the people of God, new beings in Christ. And how might the life of that community of new beings be described? We are those who live out our love of God by loving our neighbors as ourselves.

And how does that play itself out? In many and various ways: we resettle refugees, make quilts for those who shiver at night, give food for the hungry at home and funds for the hungry abroad. We sit at table and join in conversation with mental health AfterCare patients, give insulin shots to our elderly neighbor, and sit awhile with her to ease the burden of her loneliness. We tutor and transport, listen to a troubled co-worker, put down the newspaper in order to talk and play and simply be with our family; we give time at the Free Clinic, the Crisis Counseling Center, the women’s shelter. We take advantage of opportunities to love as we’ve been loved.

Of course we fail. Everyday we fall short, in attitude and in action. Every week our confession accumulates new dimensions of truth, new ways we’ve found to be disobedient and faithless. And the Great Commands continue to do their job of convicting us and directing us again and again and again to the One who commands, for he is the One who alone fulfills. And again he takes up residence in us, in our hearts, souls, and minds. He dwells with us. His unconditional love for us makes of us new creatures, new beings in him; beings who live by faith and just and only so in love: love of God with all our being and love of neighbors as ourselves.

That’s who we are. That’s what we do.


1. Eduard Schweizer, The Good News According to Matthew, John Knox Press, Atlanta, 1975, Page 426.

2. Ibid. (Emphasis added)

3. Lutheran Book of Worship, Page 57.

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio,