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Love Is The Line

A meditation on Romans 13

Romans 13 has been used like a muzzle.
A spiritual duct tape slapped over mouths.
“Submit,” they say.
“Be quiet,” they say.
“God put them there,” they say.

But Paul doesn’t end the chapter there.

He lands it here:

“Love does no harm to a neighbor. Therefore love is the fulfillment of the law.”
~Romans 13:10

That’s the line.
Love.

Not authority.
Not power.
Not empire.
Not force.

Love.

Which means… anything that harms a neighbor has already stepped outside the will of God, no matter how official it looks, no matter how many flags wave behind it, no matter how many Bible verses are quoted to prop it up.

Paul isn’t baptizing the state.
He’s subordinating it.

He’s saying: All authority answers to love.

And when authority stops loving…
When it cages, crushes, dehumanizes, erases, bombs, starves, scapegoats…
It forfeits its moral claim.

Because love does no harm.

Not selective love.
Not tribal love.
Not “people like us” love.

Neighbor-love.

Which raises the uncomfortable question Jesus always raises:

Who is my neighbor?

The immigrant.
The refugee.
The poor.
The unseen.
The other.
The one without a voice.

Love doesn’t look away.
Love doesn’t comply with cruelty.
Love doesn’t confuse silence with faithfulness.

Love speaks.
Love resists.
Love stands in the gap.

The same Paul who wrote Romans 13 also spent plenty of time in prison for refusing to cooperate with injustice.
The same Scriptures that call us to order also call midwives to defy Pharaoh.
Prophets to confront kings.
A Savior to stand before empire and say, “My kingdom is not from this world.”

Submission to God has never meant submission to violence.

Love is not passive.
Love is not neutral.
Love is not obedient to systems that destroy what God loves.

Love fulfills the law.

Which means if it isn’t loving, it isn’t lawful… no matter what badge it wears.

So speak.
So protest.
So lament.
So pray with your feet.

Because the truest obedience is not compliance with power,
but allegiance to love.

And love, Paul says,
does no harm.

That’s the test.
That’s the line.

He Waited. And He Didn’t Miss It.

A Meditation on Luke 2:22-35

Simeon was old.

Not old like tired.
Old like seasoned.
Old like someone who had learned how to wait without going numb.

Scripture says he was righteous and devout.
Which is another way of saying: he stayed faithful when the story felt slow.

He was waiting for the consolation of Israel.
Waiting for God to make things right.
Waiting for the ache to ease.
Waiting for hope to take on flesh.

And the Spirit had whispered to him,
You won’t miss it. You’ll see it.

Not when.
Not how.
Just that he would.

So Simeon kept showing up.

Day after day.
Prayer after prayer.
Temple courts. Ordinary rhythms.
No headlines. No angel choirs.

And then…
moved by the Spirit…
he went to the temple that day.

Not because it looked special.
Not because the schedule said “Messiah arriving at 10:30.”
Just a nudge. A holy restlessness.
That quiet inner go.

And there they were.
Two tired parents.
A poor family.
A baby no one was watching.

Except Simeon.

He takes the child in his arms.
Not a symbol.
Not a sermon illustration.
A living, breathing infant.

And he says, Now I can rest.

Not because everything is finished…
but because everything has begun.

“My eyes have seen your salvation.”

Not an idea.
Not a system.
Not a strategy.

A person.

A light.
For all nations.
For outsiders.
For the overlooked.
For the ones who never thought they’d belong.

And then Simeon blesses them.
But he also tells the truth.

This child will disrupt.
He will expose hearts.
He will unsettle power.
He will be opposed.

And Mary…
yes, even you,
will feel the cost.

Because salvation is beautiful.
And it is never tame.

Friend, hear this:

God is still coming to the temple in unexpected ways.
Still arriving quietly.
Still choosing the small and the overlooked.

And the question isn’t, Is God at work?
The question is, Are we still waiting well?

Still listening?
Still sensitive to the nudge?
Still willing to be interrupted?

Simeon didn’t miss Jesus because he stayed open.
He didn’t grow cynical.
He didn’t harden into nostalgia.
He waited..with hope.

May we be the kind of people
who recognize Christ
when He comes wrapped in vulnerability
and not applause.

May we have eyes to see.
Arms willing to hold.
And hearts ready to say,

Lord, you have kept your promise.

_____________________

Luke 2:22-35

22 When the time came for the purification rites required by the Law of Moses, Joseph and Mary took him to Jerusalem to present him to the Lord 23 (as it is written in the Law of the Lord, “Every firstborn male is to be consecrated to the Lord”), 24 and to offer a sacrifice in keeping with what is said in the Law of the Lord: “a pair of doves or two young pigeons.”

25 Now there was a man in Jerusalem called Simeon, who was righteous and devout. He was waiting for the consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit was on him. 26 It had been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not die before he had seen the Lord’s Messiah. 27 Moved by the Spirit, he went into the temple courts. When the parents brought in the child Jesus to do for him what the custom of the Law required, 28 Simeon took him in his arms and praised God, saying:

29 “Sovereign Lord, as you have promised,
    you may now dismiss your servant in peace.
30 For my eyes have seen your salvation,
31     which you have prepared in the sight of all nations:
32 a light for revelation to the Gentiles,
    and the glory of your people Israel.”

33 The child’s father and mother marveled at what was said about him. 34 Then Simeon blessed them and said to Mary, his mother: “This child is destined to cause the falling and rising of many in Israel, and to be a sign that will be spoken against, 35 so that the thoughts of many hearts will be revealed. And a sword will pierce your own soul too.”

The Dust That Dances

A Meditation on Ezekiel 37

There’s a valley.
You know this valley.

Not because you’ve walked through Ezekiel’s vision,
but because you’ve walked through your own.
The valley where hope has been buried.
Where the laughter has long stopped echoing.
Where the bones … your bones … lie scattered,
bleached by time, brittle with disappointment.

It’s that place where the dream died,
the relationship cracked,
the faith went silent.

Ezekiel is led there…
not by accident, not by misstep,
but by the hand of the Lord.
God takes him to the place of loss.
Not away from it.
Not around it.
Right into it.

And the question comes:
“Son of man, can these bones live?”

It’s almost cruel, isn’t it?
The question you don’t want to be asked.
The one that forces you to look
at the wreckage of what once was.

Ezekiel hedges:
“O Sovereign Lord, you alone know.”
Which is Hebrew for:
“I can’t say yes, and I don’t dare say no.”

And God doesn’t explain.
God doesn’t hand over a five-step plan.
God doesn’t analyze why the bones got there in the first place.
Instead, God tells Ezekiel to speak.

“Prophesy to these bones.”
Speak life into what has no ears.
Call to breath when there are no lungs.
Preach resurrection into the silence of the graveyard.

And as he speaks…
the bones start to rattle.
Bone finds bone,
ligament finds ligament,
flesh wraps around skeleton.
It looks alive.
But it isn’t.

Not yet.

Because form without breath is still death.
Order without Spirit is still emptiness.
Religion without Ruach is still a valley of bones.

So God says again:
“Prophesy to the breath. Call it from the four winds.”
And when the Spirit comes,
the bones rise.
An army of the resurrected,
standing on their feet,
alive by the Word and the Breath.

And maybe that’s the whole point.

God takes us to the places we’ve buried,
not to shame us with what we’ve lost,
but to remind us that resurrection begins in the valley.
Life doesn’t start in the temple…
it starts in the tomb.

Your bones … those broken dreams,
that faith you thought was gone,
the parts of you you left for dead…
they are not beyond the Breath.

Resurrection is not about trying harder,
but about yielding to the Spirit
who comes from the four winds
to do what you cannot.

So maybe the invitation is this:
Step into the valley.
Name the bones.
Prophesy anyway.

Because in the hands of God,
even the dust knows how to dance.

Scars Over Swords

A Meditation on Revelation 6

The seals are breaking.
One after another.
And the world …
our world …
comes undone.

A white horse rides.
Conquest.
Victory at the expense of peace.

A red horse rides.
War.
Blood staining the soil.

A black horse rides.
Greed.
Bread for the rich, famine for the poor.

And then …
the pale horse.
Death.
Followed by Hades.
The shadow we all fear.

Do you see it?
It’s not just future.
It’s now.
Every time empire marches.
Every time the powerful take.
Every time we worship profit instead of people.
Another horse is unleashed.

And under the altar …
voices cry out.
“How long, O Lord?”
How long until the violence ends?
How long until justice rolls down?
How long until mercy has its day?

And we feel that cry, don’t we?
When the news breaks our hearts.
When another child goes hungry.
When another war begins.
How long?

But then …
don’t miss it …
the scroll is in the hands of the Lamb.

The Lamb.
Not the emperor.
Not the generals.
Not the ones with crowns and swords.

The Lamb.
Slain.
Scarred.
Risen.
The one who conquers by laying down his life.
The one who opens the seals because only love
only sacrifice
only resurrection
is strong enough to hold history.

So yes …
the world unravels.
Yes …
the horses ride.
Yes …
the martyrs cry out.

But the Lamb holds the scroll.
The Lamb holds history.
The Lamb holds us.

And maybe …
just maybe …
every time we forgive instead of retaliate,
every time we share instead of hoard,
every time we choose love instead of fear,
we silence the hoofbeats.
We resist the riders.
We live the Lamb’s way.

Because in the end …
it’s not the horsemen who win.
It’s not death who wins.
It’s the Lamb.

Always.
The Lamb.