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The Essence of Gigantic and Noble Love

By Mark Davis Pickup

If you go into Canada’s Jasper National Park, you may see the beautiful and majestic Mount Edith Cavell. The mountain’s namesake was the daughter of an Anglican vicar. Edith Cavell (1865-1915) was a British nurse and patriot during the 1st World War. Although she tended wounded soldiers on both sides at the Berkendael Medical Institute in Brussels, she helped nearly 200 allied soldiers get false documents and flee into neutral Holland and escape to England.

Edith Cavell was caught by the German military, arrested, tried for treason and sentenced to be executed by firing squad on October 12, 1915. On the night before her execution she wrote to a friend: “My dear girl, how shall I write to you this last day? Nothing matters when one comes to the last hour but a clear conscience.” That same evening Cavell told a prison chaplain:

I have no fear or shrinking. I have seen death so often that it is not fearful or strange to me. And this I would say, standing in view of God and eternity: I realize that patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness against anyone.

In life, Edith Cavell’s Christian faith motivated her brave and selfless actions of human service. Facing death, her faith gave her strength to look toward heaven with expectation, courage and love for others—even forgiving those who were about to shoot her. It was with these sentiments and her towering faith that Edith Cavell drew her last breath and crossed the threshold from this world to the next. She was 49 years old.

Edith Cavell is an example to all Christians to live larger than life, even today more than a 100 years after her death. She took seriously Jesus’ commandment that we should love one another as He first loved us. He said that all people would know that we are his disciples by the way we love each other (John 13.34-35). Love is our greatest witness for Christ.

How did Christ love us? He loved us with a self-sacrificing love that included dying for our sake even when we are his enemies. Gigantic and noble love that is rooted in Christ can raise the best of human ideals to the height of mountain peaks and the realm of angels. Christian love seeks the welfare of all and never seeks to wrong any. Christian love looks for opportunities to do good not only to fellow believers but to everyone. When society’s love waxes cold, Christian love excels.

Never underestimate the power of divine love expressed through human action. I can personally attest to it. Even at my lowest points I have been the recipient of Christ-like love. It was Christian love that brought me into the Catholic Church.

Watching vivid applications of Christian love through people like my friend Monsignor Bill Irwin brought Christianity alive for me and multitudes of other people. His witness was Christian love in action that spoke to me more than eloquently than words, clever apologetics or powerful homilies. His spiritual legacy lives on in communities through Catholic Social Services which he founded in 1961.

I visited Father Bill as he was dying in 2004. Although he could not speak I had the privilege of sitting beside his bed to say goodbye to my old friend, until we meet again in eternity.

Like Edith Cavell, Monsignor Bill Irwin was another example of living larger than life for the sake of Christ’s work on earth. There may not be a mountain named after him but his witness was just as large. He taught me that “impossible” is often just a state of mind. With Christ all things are possible.

The Church teaches that charity is a theological virtue “by which we love God above all things for his own sake, and our neighbor as ourselves for the love of God. Jesus makes charity the new commandment” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1822 and 1823).

Christian love expressed can change individual lives and even entire societies. It was Christian love and its charitable ethic that motivated the establishment of many of the earliest hospitals, orphanages and schools. When considering Christian charity, names immediately come to mind like Vincent de Paul and the Daughters of Charity, Mother Teresa and the Sisters of Charity. Millions of ordinary Christian charity workers and volunteers have also chosen to live above life and elevate human service to a love offering to God. We commonly see it in pro-life pregnancy care centres for women in crisis pregnancies and their babies. We see it in Christian end-of-life care that always affirms life and never denies it. We see it in Christian outreach ministries throughout inner cities across North America. These examples are the essence of gigantic and noble love that soars to the height of mountain peaks and the realm of angels.

Mark Davis Pickup has lived with aggressive multiple sclerosis for over 33 years. Although electric wheelchair dependent, Mark has spoken across the United States and Canada promoting the sanctity, dignity, and equality of all human life. He has addressed politicians and legislative committees (both Canadian and American), university forums, hospital medical staffs, religious and denominational leaders, community groups, and organizations about the critical importance of protecting all human life from conception to natural death. Mark is also a widely published writer on bioethical and Christian issues. He writes a column for Canada’s Western Catholic Reporter newspaper. Mark is the recipient of numerous awards including the Monsignor Bill Irwin Award for Ethical Excellence, the William Kurelek Award for fostering respect and appreciation for the dignity of human life (Canada), and a Governor General’s Medal for Community Service.

This article has been reprinted with permission and can be found at humanlifematters.org/2017/09/the-essence-of-gigantic-and-noble-love.html

image: BinoCanada via Flickr | CC-2.0