The Commands of Love


Our culture sees love as a mere feeling, a passing fancy or stage. Most television shows and movies involve people who “make love” without the slightest hint of commitment or, needless to say, marriage. Our divorce rate, hovering around 50 percent, indicates a whimsical view of the love professed on the wedding day. We have reduced love to (in Chesterton’s words), an episode like lighting a cigarette, or whistling a tune.

As a result, we immediately rebel against the implication that love somehow involves commandments. We have difficulty understanding our Lord’s words: If you love me, you will keep my commandments…[w]hoever has my commandments and observes them is the one who loves me. For our society, love is a feeling that comes and goes. How could it possibly command anything?

The truth, however, is that love is demanding. This is the huge fact to which Chesterton refers. The commands of love form our natural relationships. A husband’s love for his wife prompts him to remain faithful, to be with her for life, to create new life with her. A mother’s love for her children requires her to dedicate herself to their well-being and never to abandon them. Love for our friends prompts us to be truthful and honest. No outside force imposes these things: love itself commands them.

In that way, the very structure of love makes demands on us. Love binds our hearts and prompts us to say and do certain things. It demands sacrifice and effort; it commands commitment and patience. And we cannot rest until love’s commands are fulfilled. Love does not free us from obligations, but transforms obligations into expressions of love.

The words lovers use reveal just how demanding love is. The language of love does not consist of half-measures, conditions, or limitations. It involves vows, oaths, promises and pledges – all those things that fasten the lover to the beloved. In short, love commands. If you love me, you will keep my commandments. But these commandments do not seem like burdens because of our love. For this reason our Lord also says, My yoke is easy, and my burden light (Mt 11:30).

The commands of love also form our relationship with the Lord. In this regard, priests and religious provide the greatest examples of love’s commands. At ordination a young man lays down his life for the Church because his love for the Lord requires it. A young woman enters religious life and takes vows of poverty, chastity and obedience because her love desires to make that gift of herself as a bride of Christ.

Because we love God, we desire to do His will — to follow His commandments. We keep them not as impositions but as expressions of our love for Him. We cannot say that we love Him and then ignore His commandments. If we fail to keep His commandments — that is, if we sin — then we fail to love Him. But perfect love seeks to be expressed perfectly and rejoices that the commandments of the Lord give that opportunity.


(This article courtesy of the Arlington Catholic Herald.)

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Father Paul Scalia was born Dec. 26, 1970 in Charlottesville, Va. On Oct. 5, 1995 he was ordained a Deacon at St. Peter’s Basilica, Vatican City-State. On May 18, 1996 he was ordained a priest at St. Thomas More Cathedral in Arlington. He received his B.A. from the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass., in 1992, his STB from Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome in 1995, and his M.A. from the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas in Rome in 1996.

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