LOVE:
A PARAPHRASE OF 1 CORINTHIANS 13
If I talk a lot about God and the Bible and Church, but I fail to
ask about your needs and then help you, I'm simply making a lot of
empty religious noise.
If
I graduate from Bible college and know all the answers to questions
you'll never even think of asking, and if I have all the degrees to
prove it and if I say I believe in God with all my heart, and soul
and strength, and claim to have incredible answers to my prayers to
show it, but I fail to take the time to find out where you're at and
what makes you laugh and why you cry, I'm nothing.
If I sell an extra car and some of my books to raise money for some
poor starving kids somewhere, and if I give my life for God's service
and burn out after pouring everything I have into the work, but do
it all without ever once thinking about the people, the real hurting
people - the mums and dads and sons and daughters and orphans and
widows and the lonely and hurting - if I pour my life into the Kingdom
but forget to make it relevant to those here on earth, my energy is
wasted, and so is my life.
Here is what love is like - genuine love. God's kind of love. It's
patient. It can wait. It helps others, even if they never find out
who did it. Love doesn't look for greener pastures or dream of how
things could be better if I just got rid of all my current commitments.
Love doesn't boast. It doesn't try to build itself up to be something
it isn't. Love doesn't act in a loose, immoral way. It doesn't seek
to take, but it willingly gives. Love doesn't lose its cool. It doesn't
turn on and off. Love doesn't think about how bad the other person
is, and certainly doesn't think of how it could get back at someone.
Love is grieved deeply (as God is) over the evil in this world, but
it rejoices
over truth.
Love comes and sits with you when you're feeling down and finds out
what is wrong. It empathizes with you and believes in you. Love knows
you'll come through just as God planned, and love sticks right beside
you all the way. Love doesn't give up, or quit, or diminish or go
home. Love keeps on keeping on, even when everything goes wrong and
the feelings leave and the other person doesn't seem as special anymore.
Love succeeds 100 percent of the time. That, my friend, is what real
love is!
David Sanford
David Sanford serves as adjunct professor of journalism at Western
Baptist
College (www.wbc.edu). David and
his wife Renée are co-authors of the
400 pages of devotional application notes in the Living Faith Bible
(www.parable.com/parable/item_0842373586.htm).
You can mail him at
drsanford@earthlink.net
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