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Jesus’ Command to Love: The Hardest and Holiest Calling

Jesus gives us His commandment to “love one another,” . . .

. . . emphasizing that true love, as exemplified by Jesus, is the most difficult yet most essential commandment.

Rather than focusing on religious rituals like daily prayer or tithing, Jesus calls for radical, sacrificial love modeled after his own. The Homily underscores that love is only possible through the Holy Spirit and involves humility, equality, and self-giving.

The Early Church

It also recounts the early Church’s struggle with integrating Gentile believers, particularly at the Council of Jerusalem, where leaders chose not to impose the full burden of Jewish law on Gentile converts . . . except out of love and respect for others’ consciences. The Church’s journey through subsequent theological disputes (e.g., Jesus’ divinity and nature) illustrates that doctrinal clarity often takes centuries, but division still persists today between “conservatives” and “progressives.”

The Homily calls for unity in the Church through love empowered by the Holy Spirit, rather than through labels or legalism

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Jesus’ Command to Love: The Hardest and Holiest Calling
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Maestà : Italian Artist: Duccio: ( 1311)

Jesus giving the Farewell Discourse to his eleven remaining disciples after the Last Supper, croed image from the Maestà by Duccio, c. 1311
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Gospel Reading: John 15: 12-17
First Reading: Acts 15: 22-31
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Quote From the Homily

And yet love is possible only because of the spirit. He says to us, how do we love one another? Look at me the way I have loved you.