True love is always
linked to sacrifice
By
Fr. ROY CIMAGALA, roycimagala@gmail.com
May 7, 2026
THAT’S how true love is.
Without sacrifice, love at best can only be apparent. For love to be
true, it will always involve sacrifice and great effort, considering
the way we really are as God’s children as well as the way we are
now in our earthly condition, marked as it is by our woundedness.
Genuine love for one
another will always involve sacrifice simply because it cannot avoid
the certainty that it will always entail understanding, compassion,
the willingness to bear the burden of the others, and ultimately to
offer mercy and to forgive to anyone who may do us wrong. It will
always involve a total self-giving that is not only gratuitous but
continues to give and give even if it’s not reciprocated or, worse,
contradicted.
For love to be true, it
has to reflect Christ’s love for all of us, irrespective of how we
are to him. And that’s simply because whether we are good or not to
God, God will continue to love for the basic reason that we are all
his children.
A hallmark of genuine love
is when we are willing to give up our own interest for God and for
everybody else, reflecting the ultimate expression of love of Christ
to all of us when he made himself a sacrifice on the cross.
Yes, we can say that true
love expresses itself in sacrifice. In other words, given our
wounded condition here on earth, sacrifice is the very language of
love. Love cannot truly be love without sacrifice.
This means that unless we
love the cross, we can never say that we are truly loving. Of
course, we have to qualify that assertion. It’s when we love the
cross the way God wills it – the way Christ loved it – that we can
really say that we are loving as we should, or loving with the
fullness of love.
We have to be wary of our
tendency to limit our loving to ways and forms that give us some
benefits alone, be it material, moral or spiritual. While they are
also a form of love, they are not yet the fullness of love.
So, let’s be clear about
this point. Love will always require sacrifice. Where there is no
sacrifice, there cannot be love. Love grows only to the extent that
we are willing to make sacrifices. Without sacrifice, we sooner or
later will be swallowed up by our own egoism, our own selfishness.
And this selfishness can
take the form of laziness, attachment to certain things to the point
of self-absorption, etc. We have to be ready to do battle against
these anomalous tendencies of ours.
We should always remember
that the very essence of love is self-giving. In love, the lover
needs to lose himself in his beloved. He has to be identified with
his beloved. And this will always involve self-denial.
The self-giving and losing
that love requires would actually enrich the person in his dignity.
This way of loving conforms to what Christ himself said: “Whoever
would save his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my
sake will find it.” (Mt 16,25)
That’s why Christ himself
said that if anyone wants to follow him, that person has to deny
himself and, in fact, should carry the cross also. Otherwise, he
cannot love. And true love is personified in Christ himself.
In other words, we can
only love truly when we identify ourselves with Christ who precisely
commanded us to love one another as he himself has loved us. That is
why, he once said: “As the Father has loved me, I also have loved
you. Abide in my love.” (Jn 15,9)