Showing posts with label 1 Corinthians 13. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1 Corinthians 13. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Looking For Love In All The Wrong Places

Love in its truest sense needs at least two parties to be involved.  And while there are many advantages to technology, let's not kid ourselves and think that Skyping or using Facetime is the same as a discussion - face-to-face - over coffee or a meal or while sitting in a park.  Watch, learn, and live differently.



- tC

Monday, July 14, 2014

Love: Learning From A Child


I've been pondering the topic of love a lot these days.  If you follow the news at all, you'll know that defining what love/legitimate love is has come to the forefront in the national discussion.  And so when I've been thinking about it, many things have come to me.

1. "Love is a verb."  People love to say this, and yes - love entails action - but it is more than just doing things - there is emotion that should, in most scenarios, be involved.

2." You can love whoever you want."  I suppose this is true.  I can't force you to love someone or to not love someone.  That said, just because I love someone or something doesn't make it - theologically/biblically speaking - o.k.

Let me share with you what God showed me about love through my 4 year old Stella the other day.

Stella was using the hose in the backyard and before I went inside to grab something, I turned the faucet way down so as to not waste a great deal of water.  When I returned, I noticed the water was turned back up again.  I asked her if she had turned the faucet up and she told me that she didn't...3 times...and then the 4th time she admitted to doing it.  We had a little heart-to-heart about telling the truth and why she needed to always be honest with me, and that not telling the truth meant that there would be consequences.

A day later, I was in the garage and when I came back into the house, Stella was dashing back to the couch from sitting close to the television...in Hudson's seat (Hudson is 6 months old, so it is not a chair made for a 4 year old).  I honestly didn't care about the chair or her sitting in it, but when I asked, "Stella, were you sitting in Hudson's chair" she told me "No."  I asked a few more times and she finally told me that in fact she ha been sitting in his chair.  I turned off the t.v. and sat down with her to talk about lying.  She told me she didn't want to tell me the truth because she was scared I'd be mad.  I can tell you I have never struck this child and I can't tell you the last time I really even raised my voice at her.  She didn't need to be scared, and it grieved me to think she didn't know my heart for, or she has misconstrued my heart, or worse that I had misrepresented my heart to her.

She began to cry as I told her there would be consequences to her not being honest with me, and as she wept, I understood God in a whole new way.  I was not mad at her, I was sad she wasn't honest with me and that she didn't know my deep, deep love for her.  I didn't long to be 'right' and to say, "See I told you I was serious about consequences!"  I just wanted her to know I love her and she has to be honest with me and I want the best for her, even when it sometimes feels like me limiting her freedom.

And so it is with God.  His love is a love of giving us boundaries because He loves us.  His love is a love that desires honesty because He knows the truth even before we speak it.  No part of God desires or needs to punish us to prove His point - He doesn't have an ego problem and He isn't insecure.  His correction (His consequences) are not because He likes to see us cry or suffer, but because sometimes only the consequences will show us what is good and what He truly desires for us.

God's love TOWARD us is always rooted in good FOR us.
May that truth penetrate our hearts deeply.

- tC

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

In the end, love


(Photo by David Castillo Dominici - FreeDigitalPhotos.net)

A handful of years ago I watched a round-table discussion between 3 well-known Christian leaders - Mark Driscoll, Joshua Harris, and Francis Chan. In the process of the discussion, Driscoll asked Chan a question based around the topic of money.  He asked if he (Chan) thought that poverty was innately connected to holiness. Chan had given away all the proceeds from his NewYork Times best-seller Crazy Love.

I will never forget Francis Chan's response.

"The core issue has to be love."

He's right, biblically. This is confirmed all throughout the Bible but let me give just a few examines.

1. Deuteronomy 6:4-9. This is a call to the chosen people of Israel on how to live. The basis - hear what is being said, know God, and love Him.

2. John 3:16. This is it. God has no need for us but chose to interact with us, and His interactions with us are rooted in love.

3. 1 Corinthians 13. While this entire chapter is about love, consider how Paul ends this passage. He tells us that 3 things remain - faith, hope, and love - but then he ends by declaring that the greatest of these is love.

4. Galatians 5:6b. This one is not nearly as well-known as the others but once again Paul makes a very strong statement about love, not as merely the greatest thing, but as the only thing that matters in the end.

It's not a particularly hard case to make that love is the ultimate point of The Bible, the Christian faith, and life, but now we've addressed it directly from the Scriptures.

Over the next few posts we will discuss what love truly is and by contrast, what it is not. If love is the ultimate calling for humanity, it serves us well to know what it is and how to do it.

-tC