Love: The Best Thing We Do
In late March, one of my favorite TV shows, “How I Met Your
Mother”, wrapped up it’s 9 year run on CBS. The series finale, like most things
of this world, came to an end, albeit with much fanfare and debate by it’s
devoted fan base about how Ted Mosby finally met his true love under a yellow
umbrella. Debating how the writers concluded the show is not my focus, nor will
you find my opinion about it here; like most things of this world it is
inconsequential.
But as I watched the final episodes I found myself rewinding
and replaying the following line, by protagonist Ted Mosby, from the second to
last episode entitled “The End of the Aisle”.
“Love doesn’t make sense. You can’t logic your way into or
out of it. Love is totally nonsensical but we have to keep doing it or else
we’re lost and love is dead and humanity should just pack it in… Because love
is the best thing we do.”
This quote from the show contains much truth. It reminds us
that the perfect love of God runs deeper in our souls than our superficial
senses and is beyond our complete human understanding; yet God has equipped us
with the faculty to receive this highest virtue and show it to others. Love
does not mean easy or painless or pleasurable; in fact, at times it stands in
direct opposition to our passions and desires. This love led the Israelites in
the form of a fiery cloud through a desert for 40 years, despite complaints of empty
stomachs and parched lips from ornery pilgrims who were constantly asking “are
we there yet” or “why did I leave,” at every unknown turn.
It’s not just the wandering sheep that God’s unfathomable
love perplexes, it even confounds the saints. St. Thomas’ reply when the love
that has conquered all stands before him shattering his doubts, is “My Lord and
My God (John 20:28).” This encounter surely leaves him with a deep sense of awe
and wonder, but also a personal knowledge of what Christ has done to win his
salvation.
Yes, God’s love can be as tangible as reaching into the
wounds of Christ and as mysterious as a fiery cloud of smoke leading the
wandering through a desert. This seeming paradoxical reality leaves the world
baffled and confused, but for those who encounter and experience His love we
don’t need a complete explanation to know it is good, to persevere through
trial or to demonstrate it to others. His Love compels us to keep loving,
reminding the world we were created good by God.
Ted Mosby couldn’t be more right in saying “love is the best
thing we do”, because we were created by Love itself and are made for love. If
we stop attempting to love, humanity should pack up and say goodbye because
without love we are nothing but dust. All of heaven knows this and so love has
become the object sought after in the battle between Good and Evil. Angels and
Saints are perpetually waging war against Satan and demons who seek to destroy
love, the greatest of all virtues. The Ancient One who reigns on high has
withheld nothing, not even His Only Begotten Son, and has won the victory.
Let us then imitate Christ in loving one another, and in
doing so we might just be surprised at who we find standing under a yellow
umbrella…
Comments
Post a Comment