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The Supremacy Of Love

by "Carl" <saints@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 20, 2008 at 03:14 AM

Steve Zeisler delves into the Biblical teaching of love. It's definitely 
worth the time to read it. 'Nuff said.

May God bless,
Carl
website -- http://www.nettally.com/saints/
blog -- http://www.anniemayhem.com/cgi-bin/wordpress/

---

THE SUPREMACY OF LOVE
by Steve Zeisler

Every generation has its quota of adventurers who set out to discover a
way 
of escaping the ordinary, the humdrum in life. But, having found what they

sought, many end up with destination sickness, that terrible malady that 
afflicts those who discover that what once held out so much promise failed

to bring fulfillment after all. Instead of filling the void, the conquest 
left the heart as empty and lacking as ever. In this study we will
encounter 
a uniquely Christian form of destination sickness.

In chapters 12-14 of 1 Corinthians, the apostle Paul challengers his
readers 
to realize that they have special capacities-gifts bestowed by the Holy 
Spirit-that qualify them to meet needs, build up the body of Christ, and 
extend the kingdom of God. Paul is actually calling the Corinthians to an 
adventure. That is what the Christian life is meant to be. However, our 
calling into Christian service must be loving. If it is not, like the 
destination-sick secular man, we may find that great effort and apparent 
success have not accomplished anything.

Listen to these opening words of 1 Corinthians 13:

If I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but do not have love, I 
have become a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. And if I have the gift of 
prophecy, and know all mysteries and all knowledge; and if I have all
faith, 
so as to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing. And if I
give 
all my possessions to feed the poor, and if I deliver my body to be
burned, 
but do not have love, it profits me nothing. Love is patient, love is
kind, 
and is not jealous; love does not brag and is not arrogant, love does not 
act unbecomingly; it does not seek its own, is not provoked, does not take

into account a wrong suffered, does not rejoice in unrighteousness, but 
rejoices with the truth; bears all things, believes all things, hopes all 
things, endures all things.

FIVE KINDS OF CALLING

Five times in these opening verses the word "if" is used of five
categories 
of endeavor. In every generation, men and women with gifts of the Spirit 
have set off down these five paths to serve God, often forgetting that the

heavenly evaluation at the end of things does not concern the extent of
the 
accomplishment, but the quality of love shown along the way. Let us
consider 
these:

1. Miracles

"If I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but do not have love, I

have become a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal," says the apostle. It is
God 
who gives the gifts of tongues and the interpretation of tongues (I would 
include in this category other "supernatural" gifts-healings, miracles, 
etc.), and he expects them to be used in his service. Paul will say later,

"I speak in tongues more than anyone." These gifts therefore are im****tant

elements of God's plan for his church. But they are capable of creating a 
"cause" mentality that will divide Christians, and result in arrogance and

superficiality. Here, Paul is referring to the passion to over-leap the 
rational and touch God. Tongues bypass the human mind, according to 14:14:

"If I pray in a tongue, my spirit prays but my mind is unfruitful." Many 
Christians experience a longing for undiluted interaction with God; that 
which is not mediated by rational thought-i.e. learning something about
the 
nature, purpose, or actions of God-in which he will do miraculous, 
unexpected things, overturning, changing, and allowing expression that is 
unpredictable. God gives such gifts and grants such experience, but if
they 
become a cause, they can lead to division and lovelessness.

2. Knowledge

"And if I have the gift of prophecy, and know all mysteries and all 
knowledge;... There are other spiritual gifts (often encountered here at 
Peninsula Bible Church) that can lead to other kinds of useless endeavor.
It 
is possible to be so entranced by the love of studying the Scriptures, to 
see what they reveal, codifying the truth of God, marveling at the
coherence 
and the wisdom of the depth of the ideas of God, and the prophetic 
announcement of the truth, that people are stepped on along the way. 
"Knowledge puffs up, but love edifies," said the apostle earlier.
Arrogance 
is one of the frequent companions of the love of knowledge. It is wrong
for 
Christians to feel exalted because of what they know. Certain churches, 
communities, groups and causes rally around knowledge, preaching, 
information, ideas, and they are loveless and worthless as a result.

3. Vision

"And if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love,
I 
am nothing." The gift of faith is the gift of being a visionary, one who
can 
see what God is doing in the big picture and acting upon that. But some
are 
so entranced by the big picture that they are willing to fudge and lie and

disregard ordinary people in their rush to see their plans implemented.
Some 
people are filled with dreams and energy and cannot help but see and
respond 
to the longing to evangelize, teach, feed or uplift the whole world in one

generation. Because these gifts demand energy, vast organizations are
called 
into being and high-tech mobilizations are planned. Misrepresentation is 
excused because of the critical nature of the ministry. But Paul says that

"love does not rejoice in unrighteousness but in the truth." If the gift
of 
faith runs out of control, it can be as loveless as any other gift.

4. Mercy

"And if I give all my possessions to feed the poor..." Some Christians
feel 
closest to God when they are meeting the needs of the dispossessed and the

suffering. Those who hear the cries of the poor and get caught up in
meeting 
those needs so much so that they have forgotten love also can become
pushy, 
arrogant and self-righteous. They can look down their noses on those who
do 
not feel as they do. They can forget the inner lives of others so burdened

are they to meet the needs of the body. They too can reject brothers and 
sisters who do not see things as they do.

5. Fire

"...and if I deliver my body to be burned, but do not have love, it
profits 
me nothing." Here, Paul is referring to people who strike off on their own

in utter rejection of compromise of any kind. This speaks of a tendency 
towards martyrdom. In the same way that a fever can burn up a body, this 
kind of spiritual singlemindedness can produce lives bent on a unique 
wor****p or an active service that is bright, intense and consuming. People

like this might go out into the desert and live lonely lives in an attempt

to create a wor****p or an obedience to God that is extraordinary. They
burn 
themselves out, spending themselves in some act of dedication. But that
too 
can be accomplished selfishly and in disregard of others. And if it is, it

is useless.

In this section then, Paul lists five causes, possibilities, open doors
that 
our gifts might lead us toward. These are things in which we may discover 
ourselves to be useful: the miraculous, the knowledgeable, the visionary, 
the concern for the poor, the martyr's brilliance. They are all capable of

drawing us out of ourselves and yet may be accomplished without love and
be 
useless as a result. Having arrived at our destination, we discover that
we 
have accomplished nothing.

If love is so im****tant then, how do we define love? If love must be
present 
in order for our gifts to be pleasing in service to God, what is it? In
the 
remaining verses of the chapter, Paul lists the characteristics of love.
It 
is im****tant here to see how concrete is the apostle's description of
love. 
He is not speaking about the theoretical, but the active-how love acts and

what it does. Love is an element of your character that can be developed. 
Love is a choice that you make, not just an idea that you assent to.

MISUNDERSTANDING LOVE

Let us first look at how the word "love" is used in our day, ways that
bear 
no resemblance to the things mentioned here. Many think love is a physical

act, or at least a romantic feeling. But romantic love often justifies 
jealousy, and Paul says that love is not jealous. Romantic love is often 
insistent, angry and selfish and feels perfectly justified in being so. 
Fraternal, family or community love can be exclusive, self-impressed and 
competitive, and thus the opposite of what the apostle speaks of here.
Some 
have written recently of the problems of those who "love too much"-parents

who are so solicitous of their children that they do not do the hard
things; 
wives who love their husbands too much and are used by them.
Co-dependency, 
a term that is in vogue today, refers to how the pathology of one partner 
can be fed by the pathology of the other. These observations can be
helpful, 
but they are not describing love as we find it in 1 Corinthians 13. The
word 
used here, agape, is always offered in strength; a gift from a whole
person, 
It is not a response torn from someone who is too weak or confused to do 
otherwise.

BEING "OTHER-CENTERED"

Beginning in verse 4, Paul describes agape-the love which comes from God.

Love is patient, love is kind, and is not jealous; love does not brag and
is 
not arrogant,

This verse declares first of all that love is "other-centered." We see
this 
in what love is not (jealous, bragging, arrogant). The opening
announcement, 
"Love is patient," talks about an orientation towards other people. That 
word is always used in the New Testament of patience with people, not with

cir***stances. "Love is kind." Kindness requires that you listen
attentively 
so that you know what others will receive as an act of kindness. You can 
make the same gesture to two people and have it be meaningful in one case 
and not at all in the other. If you really want to be kind, you have to
know 
the person whom you are trying to reach. A birthday card that has been 
mailed to you by a computer on behalf of some company or other is not
nearly 
as meaningful as one which has been lovingly and carefully selected by 
someone who wants to genuinely wish you a happy birthday.

Love is "other-centered," declares Paul. It is patient, expressed by a 
willingness to wait for someone who is not quite as quick as you. You know

why they are burdened and why they cannot go as fast as you. This is a 
quality that is really needed in parenting. Children have their own pace 
which, generally speaking, is much slower than adults'. But love is
patient 
and will wait.

Next, Paul gives three characteristics of the opposite of 
"other-centeredness," which is self-centeredness. Love is not
self-centered 
in that it "is not jealous, does not brag and is not arrogant." Jealousy
is 
a rejection of other people because they have what you do not have. 
Braggadocio is a rejection of other people because you have what they do
not 
have. And arrogance is to be so inflated with self-im****tance so as not to

notice others at all. Love is none of those things. On the contrary, love
is 
patient and kind.

NOT SELF-INDULGENT

Verses 5, 6 and 7 point up the contrast between self-indulgence and a 
willingness to sustain others. Love is not self-indulgent. Love does not 
give itself the right to pout and act irresponsibly and selfishly. Love is

not committed to pampering itself. There are four characteristics of 
self-indulgence in verse 5. Love does not act "unbecomingly," i.e. 
gracelessly or crudely. Rudeness and crudeness are acts of
self-indulgence. 
If you do not take the time to understand the sensibilities of those
around 
you, you are being self-indulgent. Love "does not seek its own," says
Paul. 
Self-indulgent people are always looking out for themselves. They are
always 
at the front of the line, making sure they get first choice, seeking their

own advantage. Love is not "provoked." If you give yourself the right to
fly 
off the handle, to yell and scream and push people around, you are being 
self-indulgent. You are refusing to control what is in your power to
control 
and you are making others miserable. Love is not provoked but rather 
restrains itself. Love "does not take into account a wrong suffered." Love

is not vengeful; it does not look for a way to pay back and hurt someone.

How does love reject self-indulgence? Love "does not rejoice in 
unrighteousness, but rejoices with the truth; bears all things, believes
all 
things, hopes all things, endures all things." What gives you joy are the 
things that resonate the deepest inside, not the surface reaction but the 
deep reaction. If the love of Christ is present, then you will not rejoice

when unrighteousness gains a brilliant attraction. It means you are 
committed to the truth; that you will not let lies be part of the process.

Then we are told in verse 7 about the staying power of love. Love does not

indulge for the moment but is there for the long haul. It "bears all 
things." It does not give up and quit. It does not cancel out others after
a 
few failures.

And love "believes all things." It does not assume that the bad motives of

an individual cannot be done away with but continues to hope for and
believe 
in people when it would be easy to quit, even when they have stopped 
believing in themselves. And love "hopes all things." Love insists that
the 
outcome is going to be of Christ. It refuses to despair, to let hard times

take away its belief that God will triumph. Lastly, love "endures all 
things." It does not crumble under stress.

These characteristics I take to be the opposite of self-indulgence. They
are 
part of the long commitment to see things through until the end, not the 
momentary gratification of some surface intent.

THE GREATNESS OF LOVE

Verse 8 begins a description of the greatness of love:

Love never fails; but if there are gifts of prophecy, they will be done 
away; if there are tongues, they will cease; if there is knowledge, it
will 
be done away with. For we know in part, and we prophesy in part; but when 
the perfect comes, the partial will be done away with. When I was a child,
I 
used to speak as a child, think as a child, reason as a child; when I
became 
a man, I did away with childish things. For now we see in a mirror dimly, 
but then face to face; now I know in part, but then I shall know fully
just 
as I have also been fully known. But now abide faith, hope, love, these 
three; but the greatest of these is love.

"Love never fails," i.e. it never ceases to be valuable; it never outlives

its usefulness. Spiritual gifts do, however. They reach a point when they 
are no longer needed. We are given gifts and we are told to use them in
the 
service of the Lord. We are made to serve the body of Christ as a hand, an

ear, or an eye. We have a calling and it is exciting. But eventually our 
gifts will not be needed anymore. Paul gives a couple of ways to think
about 
the eventual demise of our spiritual gifts. In one case, he says, "when
the 
perfect comes," i.e. when the complete comes the partial will no longer be

needed. We prophesy only in part now; we are not capable of knowing all 
truth, but when the complete comes there will no longer be need for the 
partial.

Have you ever tried to find a place using poorly drawn directions? You may

get part of the way, but that is all. Once I took a group of young women
to 
a volleyball tournament in another city. The directions were very vague,
so 
vague that if we had not found another driver to follow, we would never
have 
arrived at our destination. But if all you had was an incomplete map, as 
soon as someone gave you a detailed map you would throw the incomplete one

away.

Another way in which we could think of spiritual gifts not being required 
anymore is to compare the childish with the mature: "When I was a child, I

acted as a child," etc. But on growing up, becoming mature, I no longer
act 
childishly. Our wonderful singers and musicians who ministered to us this 
morning did not have the same degree of skill when they were children. 
Spiritual gifts are like that, says Paul. They testify to the presence and
the knowledge of Christ and to the plan of salvation. But there is coming
a 
day when Jesus himself will fill the horizon and no more testimony to him 
will be needed. When the mature is there, the immature is no longer
needed. 
What is being suggested here is that all the things which we are doing in 
ministry, valuable as they are, are one day going to be set aside. All of 
the things that we construct, all the books that have been written, tapes,

etc., will not be needed because Jesus will be fully present.

If you began reading the Bible in Genesis 1 and continued on reading, one
of 
the most startling verses you would come across is Exodus 1:8. You would 
first read about creation, then the call of God to Abraham, the
patriarchs, 
etc. Then the end of Genesis focuses on the remarkable individual, Joseph,

the son of Jacob, who graduated from prison and slavery to become the
right 
hand man of Pharaoh. He ruled the world, saved thousands from starvation, 
and brought his own brothers to repentance and to humility before God. 
Joseph was a man of extraordinary power, influence, and personal
magnetism. 
He was loved by all, believer and unbeliever alike. But Exodus 1:8
declares 
that there came upon the scene a Pharaoh who did not remember Joseph, the 
very man who had dominated the world stage in his day. Eventually a ruler 
came along who did not remember him or his influence at all. In Joseph's
own 
generation he loved those who did not love him and their lives were
changed 
by his love. They repented of their sins and they will live forever.
Joseph 
cared for his brothers, for his fellow-prisoners, for his employers and
for 
Pharaohs, all of whom were hard to love. But his fabulous accomplishments 
were forgotten.

THE THINGS THAT LAST FOREVER

The same will be true of us. Whatever we get done in this church, all the 
plans we make, the additions and corrections to the minutes, the files,
all 
of the things which for the moment are appropriate and useful, will not be

needed one day. But whether or not we love one another; whether or not
lives 
were touched in the Lord's name; whether we refused to be arrogant but
were 
committed to the truth; and demonstrated patience and kindness; refused to

be jealous or indulge ourselves and rejoiced in the truth; those things
will 
last forever. They will always be useful.

Do you see the contrast between the first three verses and the last two 
verses of this chapter? The word "nothing" dominates the opening verses.
All 
of the pursuits and results which Paul mentions there come to nothing: 
cymbals, gongs, useless mountains of information, lives burned out with 
enthusiasm, faith which creates great enterprises, all amount to nothing. 
But at the end of the chapter we discover what will last forever: "faith, 
hope, and love, and the greatest of these is love."

In closing, we should look carefully at verse 12. Throughout this chapter,

love is described in terms of its qualities and characteristics. We can 
clearly test ourselves as to whether love is filling our experience or
not. 
But in verse 12 we see another critical component to our understanding of 
Christian love, and that is that love essentially is knowledge of a
Person, 
knowledge by a Person. "For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to

face; now I know in part, but then I shall know fully just as I also have 
been fully known." Looking through an opaque piece of glass we see a
Person 
on the other side. Ultimately, love comes from Jesus Christ who knows us 
fully, and we are growing in knowledge of him. All we have now is partial 
information but that is enough to sustain us; it is enough to help us be 
loving men and women even now.

Think of a soldier who must be separated from his wife and family for long

periods of time. All he has to remind him of his loved ones is a
photograph 
of them, a two-dimensional representation of them. But that is enough to 
keep him praying for them, help him choose purity rather than sin, and
make 
him act responsibly toward them. But the day inevitably comes when he will

be face to face with his beloved.

What we have now as believers is the Person we see only dimly. We see
enough 
of him to know how to live. We have been changed by him enough so as to
act 
lovingly in the use of our gifts. But the day is coming when we shall know

him as he knows us. Love comes from a relation****p which we have with a 
Person. And love will last forever. But three things remain: "faith, hope,

love, these three; but the greatest of these is love."

WHEN THE SON OF MAN COMES

In Matthew 25, Jesus refers to the end of everything and talks about the
day 
when the mature will replace the childish, when the complete will replace 
the partial, when the opaque screen will be done away with, when we will
see 
everything as clearly as it can be seen. Here is what he says, beginning
in 
verse 31:

"But when the Son of Man comes in His glory, and all the angels with Him, 
then He will sit on His glorious throne. And all the nations will be 
gathered before Him; and He will separate them from one another, as the 
shepherd separates the sheep from the goats; and He will put the sheep on 
His right, and the goats on the left. Then the King will say to those on
His 
right, 'Come, you who are blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom
prepared 
for you from the foundation of the world."

And what will he speak to them about from his glorious throne? Will he
speak 
of theology, of the brilliant analysis of the truth, of the hospitals and 
the cathedrals that were built, of the computer banks that were dedicated
to 
his service? No, he will not speak of any of those things. Here is what he

will refer to:

"'For I was hungry, and you gave Me something to eat; I was thirsty, and
you 
gave Me drink; I was a stranger, and you invited Me in; ****d, and you 
clothed Me; I was sick, and you visited Me; I was in prison, and you came
to 
Me.' "Then the righteous will answer Him, saying, 'Lord, when did we see
you 
hungry, and feed You, or thirsty, and give you drink? And when did we see 
You a stranger, and invite You in, or ****d, and clothe You? And when did
we 
see You sick, or in prison, and come to You?' And the King will answer and

say to them, 'Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did it to one of 
these brothers of Mine, even the least of them, you did it to Me.'

The Lord will not refer to the enterprise you were involved in but to the 
individuals along the way whom you had the op****tunity to love. You could 
have treated them with arrogance but you did not; you might have
disregarded 
or been jealous of others. The truth you told, the righteousness in which 
you rejoiced, those with whom you bore and believed and hoped, all of the 
op****tunities along the way, those are the things he will speak to us
about.

But three things remain: "faith, hope, love, these three; but the greatest

of these is love."


Copyright © 1988 Discovery Publi****ng, a ministry of Peninsula Bible
Church. 
This data file is the sole property of Discovery Publi****ng, a ministry of

Peninsula Bible Church. It may be copied only in its entirety for 
circulation freely without charge. All copies of this data file must
contain 
the above copyright notice. This data file may not be copied in part, 
edited, revised, copied for resale or incor****ated in any commercial 
publications, recordings, broadcasts, performances, displays or other 
products offered for sale, without the written permission of Discovery 
Publi****ng. Requests for permission should be made in writing and
addressed 
to Discovery Publi****ng, 3505 Middlefield Rd. Palo Alto, CA. 94306-3695.
 




 3 Posts in Topic:
The Supremacy Of Love
"Carl" <sain  2008-05-20 03:14:29 
Dream Giels/Supremes
Dixe Hollins <mikeakle  2008-05-20 03:50:35 
The Supremacy Of Love
"Carl" <sain  2008-05-20 12:04:54 

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tan13V112 Fri Jul 25 4:01:43 CDT 2008.