Author(s):
Mühling, Markus
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Mathys, Hanspeter
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Avemarie, Friedrich
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Lindemann, Andreas
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Herms, Eilert
[German Version] I. Meaning – II. Old Testament – III. Early Judaism – IV. New Testament – V. Ethics
I. Meaning Love of one's neighbor is the love of creaturely persons, for other concrete creaturely persons (“neighbors”) as being in the image of God; it includes love of enemies (Matt 5:44 = Luke 6:27; Enemy,). The Reformers believed that the twofold law of love (Mark 12:29–31 parr.), expressive of a well-ordered creation, embodies all the demands of the law (cf. Luther, BSLK 586). The love of one's neighbor required by this twofold law is beyond human reach after the fall and before justification; it is therefore not the same as humanistic benevolence. This is clear in Luther's exposition of the so-called golden rule (Mark 12:31 parr.): love your neighbor as you now wrongly love yourself (WA 56, 518.4–10). The real relationship of believing trust (Fiducia,), through which the love of the Trinitarian God for humankind is received unconditionally, is a sufficient condition for realizing love of one's neighbor; its absence conversely is a falsifying criterion for faith or love of God. Where love of one's neighbor is answered, it becomes a real, not simply intentional relationship (Relationality,) of mutual brotherly and sisterly love among believers (1 John 4:7–21); this realized love does not reduce the universality of love of one's neighbor, as some stil…