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  • March 12, 2023
  • by Sara Baron

“What Can Separate Us from the Love of God?“ based on Romans 8:31-28

“For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor powers-that-be, nor things that are, nor things that will be, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Redeemer.” -Romans 8:38-39 1

“There is no Jew or Greek, there is no slave or free, there is no male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.”-Galatians 3:28 2

If I were picking the most central Bible verses from the Christian Testament, these two would be it. To be fair, I think the Gospels have the best stories, and stories are more important than verses, but nevertheless. With all the issues I have with Paul, I’ll give him these. They’re everything. I’m not preaching on Galatians today, but I figured if I told you I had 2 favorite Christian Testament passages and didn’t share them both, I’d lose you to wondering what the other was. And, anyway, they’re especially beautiful and whole together.

Today we’re on Romans, on nothing can separate us from the love of of God.

Nothing.

This is so core to faith that I don’t feel like it can ever be emphasized enough, and also I fear that most of you already know this and aren’t that interested in it. Except…

One of my dear ones, a mentor and friend, suggested that the reason we have to keep telling people that God loves them is that it is really hard to believe, and a lot of messages are out there which tell people they aren’t lovable. So we keep coming back to God’s love in hopes of convincing people it applies to them, and to everyone else too.

Paul does a good job talking about what doesn’t get in the way of God’s love. It goes without saying that God’s love is also not impacted by wealth or poverty, race or ethnicity, sexual orientation or gender identity, history of trauma, mental or physical health status, abilities or disabilities, guilt nor shame. God’s love isn’t dependent on us being good, or useful, or even kind. God’s love applies to all, even the ones we think are awful, even the ones we think are evil, even the ones who have done great harm.

Which is to say that God’s love isn’t the same as God’s approval, clearly. Rather we lack the power to stop God’s love, even when we are at our worst, even when we do great harm to others of God’s beloveds.

That is: God’s love is the foundation of the universe, the essence of life itself, and the ground of our being.

Love is at the center of it all.

Now, I can be honest. That’s a faith statement for me. I believe that love, God’s love in specific, is at the center of it all. Others… don’t. Even some of you may not, perhaps because the use of the word God may confuse things enough for some of you that you’d rather withhold judgement. (For the record, I love that this is a church with enough spaciousness for people to wonder about the meaning of the word God and how we should and shouldn’t be using the word.)

So, knowing that I am speaking as myself, with some hope it might be useful for others, let me share a little a bit about what that means for me. If love is at the center of all that is, then judgement is not. That’s pretty important to me, even though I think accountability, apology, and growth matter a lot. But I see in many theologies a premise that God is first and foremost out to judge us, and that punishment and reward are at the center of the all that is. I don’t agree.

Alongside this, I fear that a lot of what we are doing as human being is trying to prove ourselves worthy. Maybe that sounds like “worthy of the space we take up on the planet,” maybe like “worthy of the resources we consume,” often I fear it is simply “worthy of love.” It may be that this is prevalent right now because of the internalization of exploitative capitalism and its obsession with worth itself. It may be that this is simply a basic human fear. It may be that our society’s structure explicitly devalues and dehumanizes some, and that keeps the rest of us afraid of falling into that category… I don’t know WHY. But I know a whole lot of our energy is about trying to be worthy. And I know that if God’s love for each of us and all of us is at the center of all that is, then we are already worthy and can stop trying so hard to prove it. Which can be a relief for as long as we remember it.

Now this is a place that progressive Christianity can get a little bit confusing. Because I talk a lot about “building the kindom of God” and others about “being the beloved community” and quite often we analyze what isn’t working in hopes of motivating people to work towards a better system that does a better job of valuing all of God’s people.

But there is a nuance here that I want you to know about: the goal is not to be good enough of a person, or good enough of a Christian, or enough of a do-gooder to be worthy of God’s love. WE DO NOT HAVE TO EARN IT. Rather, if we are able to soak in any amount of God’s love for us, to soak up the abundance of goodwill God has for us and for all, (and if we are able to do that with any life energy still with us, which is questionable for many right now, so please take that seriously too)… then quite often we wish to respond to love with gratitude and hope, and when we wonder what that should look like, THEN we hear the suggestion that God would like us to love one another as a form of loving God back.

Do you hear the difference? IT ISN’T AN OBLIGATION!!!! You don’t have to work for the church’s committees (I say with trepidation), or volunteer with worthy causes, or give generous donations, or even smile when you are cranky. God loves you as you are, and you don’t have to earn it.

Instead, when you are able to be upheld by that love, and you have extra to share, you are invited – welcome – to use that energy, passion, power, and resources toward loving God’s others beloveds. But first, breath it in, soak it in, and let it change you from within. First, it penetrate the guilt, and the shame, let it have it’s time with your exhaustion.

FIRST, remember that there is nothing that can separate us from the love of God, nothing, nothing, nothing. And then, maybe, then when you are ready, then when you WANT TO, then when it feels right, THEN you can see how you want to love in return. Amen

1 A Women’s Lectionary Translation

2Ibid

Rev. Sara E. Baron 
First United Methodist Church of Schenectady 
603 State St. Schenectady, NY 12305 
Pronouns: she/her/hers 
http://fumcschenectady.org/ 
https://www.facebook.com/FUMCSchenectady

March 12, 2023

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#FUMC Schenectady #Progressive Christianity #Rev Sara E. Baron #Thinking Church #UMC first umc schenectady Lent Nothing. pandemic preaching Romans 8 Schenectady Sorry about the UMC

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  • First United Methodist Church
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