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True Love

Homily at the Marriage of Heather Kent and Lincoln Ludwig
St. Mark’s Episcopal Church
Glen Ellyn, Illinois
August 12, 2006

1 Corinthians 13: 4-8
Poem: “True Love”

At last Sunday’s morning worship service, I slightly embarrassed Heather and Lincoln by asking the congregation to keep them in their prayers as they prepared for their upcoming marriage. After the service, one woman came up to me and said, “Is it legal for them to be married? I mean, are they old enough?” Indeed, Heather and Lincoln are youthful looking, but they are old enough to be legally married. I won’t disclose their ages, but I have seen their documents and can attest that they are 18 or older. So yes, they are eligible to be legally married. But we are here today for more than legal marriage. You will notice on the front of your bulletin that this is a Celebration and Blessing of a Marriage. The legal part of marriage is a contract, like buying and selling a house or getting a car loan. There is a commitment on both sides to agree to the terms of the contract – to pay a set amount of money on time or to hand the keys over at the agreed upon date. Contracts can be breached, canceled and voided. Unfortunately, many marriages end up this way having bogged down in a legal quagmire. And that is why it is important to see this ceremony as more than a legal arrangement. For one thing, we are in a church building, using the language of prayer and scripture. Those provide for the appropriate setting and help us realized that this is a celebration. Cake, dancing and champagne will help with that too, later on. It is however, the Blessing that moves us beyond the realm of contracts. Heather and Lincoln have made a choice to make their commitment to each other in public in front of their parents, siblings, cousins and friends. It is your job to support them as you have agreed to do just a few minutes ago. You are blessing them with your presence and commitment. Heather and Lincoln have also made a choice to acknowledge God’s presence and mystery in their vows to each other, seeking not only God’s presence but blessing, which is an invitation to make their union not just their own, but one that is united with God. This is a powerful and awesome decision, and one that will sustain them through the good and bad.

While listening to the radio this week, I heard one of the “This I Believe” essays on NPR. The author is Betsy Chalmers who lives in Richmond, Va., where she is a deacon and musician at her church. Her topic: faithfulness. Listen to her essay: I met him when I was 19, married him at 20 and we were separated when I turned 22 because he was arrested for and then convicted of a violent crime. He had failed himself, his family, his wife and his future, but he was my husband. I was mad, sad, disappointed and frightened, but I loved him, and he needed me, so I stayed. I stayed through weeks of trials, years in jail and decades in prison. I have faith in the covenant of marriage and of the God we stood before when we took those vows. I have faith in my husband and his ability to grow and change and become a better man, no matter where he is -- and he has. I have faith that time makes changes in us all we cannot avoid or ignore. I am now 50. He is 55. He is still my husband and my best friend. I see him four hours every weekend and I talk to him on the phone twice a week for 20 minutes. I am not deceived or a martyr. I am not stupid, uneducated or desperate. I am a wife. I work, have a mortgage, a 9-year-old car, two dogs and bills just like everyone else. Yes, I get angry at the situation. I have grieved the loss of many of the normal things others have done, like having children and vacations abroad. This is not the life I would have expected for myself 30 years ago and it isn't one I recommend to others, but it is my life. At 50, I have come to the conclusion it is not the life I have that defines me, it is the way I choose to live that life. I choose to live it being faithful. This brings me peace, this allows me to have joy, this keeps me aware of my husband. My spiritual faith has given me the foundation to live this life, not just survive it. Faith in a God who has not abandoned me; faith in a man who loves me; faith in myself. I believe in faithfulness.

This essay by Betsy Chambers gives us a glimpse of a marriage that goes beyond contractual obligations and expectations. She gives us a glimpse of the meaning of love that is empowered and sustained by God’s presence. This is the True Love that the poem we have heard describes. True Love is not any love – it is a love that burns eternally. It is a love that is patient and kind. It is a love that never ends, as we have heard in the familiar passage from 1st Corinthians. There is love and there is True Love. Ordinary, run-of-the-mill love is a often like a candy bar that satisfies your hunger for a while, whose burst of sugar leaves you hyper and then fades, leaving fatigue and more hunger in its wake. It is easy. It is cheap. It can be bought for $1. This is the love that is a flash in the pan – which burns hot and then exhausts itself. But True Love is a love that goes beyond anything reasonable and rational. It is extreme to the point of insanity in its duration, strength, forgiveness, gentleness and humility. It is of course an impossible expectation for anyone – especially someone who is a day over 18 - but not for any two who are blessed and sustained by God.

Heather and Lincoln, you have been blessed by God with supportive parents whose marriages can be a guide to you and with loving siblings who are some of your best friends. You are blessed with talents that will sustain your life together as you build your own family. Heather is gifted in caring for and nurturing children as Cate and Elle will certainly tell you. Lincoln is a skilled craftsman and project manager who makes sub-divisions rise out of the cornfields. What you are doing for others, you will be able to do for yourselves and your own family. And it is God’s blessing that will enable you to always love each other with True Love.

Amen.



 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 


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