Monday, February 3, 2014

God’s Love Letter

Sermon 1 in Love Stories Sermon Series
February 2, 2014


           In the late 1990’s my primary seminary professor, Dr. Doug Dickens, traveled to the former Soviet Union.  As a professor of pastoral ministry, a pastoral counselor and hospital chaplain supervisor, Dr. Dickens worked with hospitals, psychiatrists and psychologists around the country.  He traveled to a gritty, post-soviet wasteland of a Russian city to meet with doctors, hospital administrators and clergy to talk about building a pastoral ministry component into their hospital services.    
            Needless to say, Dr. Dickens faced a skeptical audience as he addressed an atheistic medical staff.  The staff had been very kind and receptive to him all week as they toured him around the hospital campus.  Friendships had been formed, despite the language, cultural, and religious divides.  At one of the final gatherings, Dr. Dickens stood before an audience of atheist friends and spoke about the value of prayer, emotional and spiritual connections, and kindness in the healing of patients.  One psychologist succinctly uttered what everyone was thinking, “We do not believe in your God.  How do you even know God exists?  How do you know this kind of care works?”
            Quicker on his feet than I, Dr. Dickens asked the psychologist who he now called friend about his wife and family. 
“Do you love Nadia, your wife, and your three girls?”
            “Of course, I do,” the doctor responded.
            “How do you know you love them?  What does love look like?”
            “Well … my heart hurts for them.  I would give my life for them.  They make my life better.”
            “Exactly,” Dr. Dickens responded.  “This is exactly what the love of God feels like.  This is how we know God - God first loved us and gave his life for us.  It is this kind of virtue that changes lives in a hospital.”
            Love points us to God and demonstrates the presence of Jesus within us.    
            In Paul’s first letter to the church in Corinth, he addresses a variety of conflicts within the church:  Whose followers will control of the church – Paul or Apollo’s?  How will the church celebrate communion that doesn’t ostracize members of the community?  And … what are the roles of the spiritual gifts in the community – are certain gifts like the gift of speaking in tongues more important in the community than say service or teaching?
            In the middle of this letter – Paul, like Dr. Dickens, points the Corinthians back to the heart of faith and life:  love.  As all of these issues are swirling around the church – people are taking sides, individuals are being slander, including Paul – and they have forgotten the true essence of what it means to a follower of Jesus:  Love. 
            For Paul, Love sits at the heart of a life with Jesus.  Without love, we miss Jesus.  Without love, we miss the heart of the church.  Without love, we are just being religious.  Without love, our hearts and our lives dry up. 
            1 Corinthians 13 demonstrates this more beautifully than any other biblical or nonbiblical writing.  The passage is written as a Greek rhetorical device common in the first century called an encomia.  An encomia was written to praise either an individual or a virtue.  1 Corinthians is an encomia in praise of love.  We can simply call this Paul’s love letter to the world.  Rather than our typical kind of love letter – expressing love for another person, Paul addresses love in the in the life of the church. 
            If we are patient and attentive enough, this love letter of Paul’s can teach us how we can love the world as God loves us.   Over the next few weeks, I will preach a series of sermons called Love Stories.  Each week, I will take a description of love from 1 cor13 and describe how this aspect of love is lived out within individuals in the Bible.  February is a month to celebrate love – I hope this February we will also be shaped by God’ divine love for us and the world. 
            In chapter 13, Paul singles out love as the defining characteristic of our faith. 

1.  Love Matters (1 Corinthians 13:1-3)
The first thing we see in the prologue of the chapter (v.1-3) is that Love matters!  In chapter 12, Paul has been teaching the Corinthians on spiritual gifts – speaking in tongues, prophecy, and faith.  In Chapter 13, Paul instructs that while we may have all of these spiritual gifts – if we miss love, everything has been in vain.  Love matters.  Listen for the spiritual gifts listed in these verses.   
If I speak in the tongues of mortals and of angels, but do not have love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. 2 And if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing. 3 If I give away all my possessions, and if I hand over my body so that I may boast,[a] but do not have love, I gain nothing.
The prologue establishes love as the essential element of a faithful life in Jesus. 
            For most of his letter, Paul points the Corinthians to view and emulate his life as a positive example of Christian living.  Here Paul does so again –this time as a negative example.  Paul shows himself as one gifted with many spiritual gifts – tongues, prophecy, faith, knowledge, and even sacrifices – yet, he says – when he exercises these gifts without love – they are useless. 

            Hugh MacLeod is a cartoonist and writer.  He makes this statement in one of his cartoon pieces:  “A story without Love is not worth telling.”  He goes on to describe this statement:  “The best stories are about things we care about, told to the people we care about. This is true whether we’re talking fiction, fact, people, ideas or yes, the story about the business you’re trying to get off the ground." 
Think about the stories we share:  the funny stories about when we laughed so hard mike came from our noses; the sad stories about the last moments we had with a loved one as he or she died; the business stories about the customer or the sale who saved the company or the job or the day.  What makes these story so power is love – our love for someone or something in this story.  A story without love is not worth telling.
            Paul would say the same thing about a life of faith.  Life is not worth living without love.  We might build the biggest church or have the most people attend or be completely out of debt –but if we fail to love, it’s not a life worthy to be lived.  We might raise our kids to stay out of trouble or get all the way to retirement with a portfolio full of money or make good on a test – but if we fail to allow love to shape us, we might as well have just let everything go to waste.  We might even be a great singer in a church choir or quartet, a great preacher seen around the world via youtube or have the bestselling book at lifeway – yet if we fail to love, we should have simply stayed home. 
            Paul wants us to know as we live our lives – LOVE Matters and we should never forget it. 

2.  Love described (1 Corinthians 13:4-7)
            In the middle verses of the chapter (v. 4-7), Paul describes love.  This is love described and it’s beautiful.  We learn the characteristics and functions of love.  Each word and phrase brings out a particular angle of love lived.  The first two descriptions are positive and show what Love is:  4 Love is patient; love is kind;
The next 4 phrases describe love by what it is not:  love is not envious or boastful or arrogant 5 or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; 6 it does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth.
Paul concludes this description with sweeping claims about what love does when lived out in the world:  7 Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.
Love is this two way street.  It provides a context for mutuality, understanding and relatedness between believers, God, and the world.  When we love God, others, and the world – we experience love ourselves. 
This is the ambiguity of love that makes no rational sense.  There is nothing in this description about what love provides for me, while one of the greatest needs in all of humanity is to be loved.  How many stupid things are done in the name of being loved by another person:  standing outside a window serenading the girls of our dreams, going too far to prove you really love someone, risking our jobs or careers for what we think is true love? 
Paul demonstrates the ambiguity of God’s love – to be loved we must love – for the sake of another person.  To understand the love of God, we are called to love God and love others.  We find love when we love another person. 
C.S. Lewis puts it this way: 
“When I have learnt to love God better than my earthly dearest, I shall love my earthly dearest better than I do now. In so far as I learn to love my earthly dearest at the expense of God and instead of God, I shall be moving towards the state in which I shall not love my earthly dearest all. When first things are put first, second things are not suppressed but increased.”
God loves us and makes us whole.  This love gains expression as we love others.  It cannot be held – it can only be given. 

3.  Love Forever (1 Corinthians 13:8-13
            The conclusion to this chapter (v. 8-13) makes this bold statement:  love forever!  Love given extends into eternity. 
Love never ends … v. 12 For now we see in a mirror, dimly,[b] but then we will see face to face. Now I know only in part; then I will know fully, even as I have been fully known.  And now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; and the greatest of these is love.
The eternal nature of love allows it to be present fully now and yet guaranteed to be present in the end times for which we believe and hope. Life as we know is only a partial glimpse of what life is with god is about.  We know only in part.  We prophecy only in part.  We see only in part.  The analogy Paul uses has entered into a popular lexicon – Life now is like looking into a mirror – dimly.   Yet, there is hope.  One day we will reach full maturity.  One day, we will see face to face. 
The Greek word here is Telos – which mean complete, full, end.  Paul reminds us there will come a time when God pulls back the curtains to this world and we will see with brand new eyes the full world of God all around us. 
And here’s Paul’s point – the love we experience and practice today is eternal.  This love which we share in this world will also be felt and shared in that world to come.  Love transcends this world.  Fully present now – is guaranteed to be present in the future. 

The novel Bridge of San Luis Rey by American author Thornton Wilder tells the story of several interrelated people who die in the collapse of an Inca rope bridge in Peru.  The plot centers on a Catholic friar who witnesses the tragic accident who begins inquiring into the lives of the victims, seeking some sort of cosmic answer to the question of why each had to die. At the very end of the book, Wilder writes this statement on the eternal nature of Love which Paul describes:  "There is a land of the living and a land of the dead and the bridge is love, the only survival, the only meaning."  In all that we do in life – from this life to the next – what matters most, what gives the most meaning, what survives us – is the love we pour into the world. 
Paul concludes this way:  And now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; and the greatest of these is love.

Conclusion
            Usually, this is where we stop reading in 13:13.  Yet – Paul doesn’t stop there.  If we read one more verse into chapter 14, we see Pauls’ challenge for the Corinthians and for us:  “Pursue love and strive for the spiritual gifts.”  1 Corinthians 14:1)  Pursue love!  Paul not only writes an encomia on the virtue of love – Paul challenges the Corinthians and us to love!  This is our purpose as Christians and as a church. 
Because eternal, other centered love matters –pursue love in our lives.  Because love is described, pursue love. Because love is eternal, pursue love.  Practice love so much that it defines our lives and our church. 
            In the middle part of the 20th Century, Frederick Franck traveled to the middle of the deepest part of Africa to visit a man who sought simply to pursue the love found in 1Cor13.  His name was Dr. Schweitzer.  Frank wrote these words about him. 
“Here was the extraordinarily gifted son of a small-town Lutheran pastor who has developed his immense potentialities to their utmost limit—as a revolutionary theologian, as a profound, yet practical philosopher, and as a great organist and musicologist who by the age of thirty had written a definitive study of Johann Sebastian Bach.”
“Then, suddenly, he gave up these careers, resigned from his professorship at the University of Strasbourg and decided to study medicine. This decision came after reading a plea from the Paris Mission Society for help in Equatorial Africa, where the people were in desperate need of a medical service that was totally lacking.”
“Becoming a doctor, he reflected, would enable him to ‘work without having to talk. For years now”, Schweitzer said, “I have been giving of myself in words, but in this new commitment, I’ll not be a talker about the ‘Religion of Love’, but one who puts it into practice.’”
With much practice, Schweitzer became a loving witness to the ‘Religion of Love’; he rendered a limitless service of love and compassion in the spirit of its founder;  and he became the presence of Jesus in the heart of darkness and human suffering.”

            Will you join me in becoming a practitioner in the religion of love?  As we love with this eternal love – we will know more about the love we have already received from God.  We love because he first loved us!  Amen

2 comments:

  1. Thank you for sharing this important message on love.

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