Union City S0923P07
Love is a Verb
Several weeks ago, we began a series titled 3 on 3, inspired by 1 Corinthians 13:13;
"And now these three remain: faith, hope and love."
I told you
then we’d spend three weeks talking about each of those powerful internal
concepts.
Today, we begin our final three week look at an internal reality that can change
your life forever.
Paul said that faith and hope were two powerful concepts, that would stand the test of eternity.
But the
greatest force of all, he wrote, is love.
Nothing motivates like love.
I remember when Pat and I were dating in college.
I came back
to the dorm room one night and said to my roommate, "I think I’m in love."
He said, "How do you know?"
I said,
"Well, we were out driving with the windows down, just listening to the music,
and we came to this romantic little spot near an old church on the outskirts of
town. She said, Rod, if you’ll put the top down on the car, I’ll give you a
little kiss.’"
I told my roommate, "Man, I had the top on that car down in five minutes."
"Five minutes?" he said. "I can put the top down on my car in thirty
seconds."
"Yeah," I said, "But you have a convertible."
Love will motivate you.
The problem is, we’re confused about what love really is.
We have a
strong, positive passion about something or someone and we just call it love.
So the first thing we need to be clear about is what love is and isn’t.
Look with me in 1 Corinthians 13.
If you want to know what love is, this is where you go to learn.
Read l Corinthians 13:1–13
Let’s start this first look at love, by dispelling some myths about love.
Let’s talk about what love is and isn’t.
1. Love isn’t a
spiritual gift, but rather a fruit of the Spirit.
In chapter 12, Paul began addressing some
questions the Corinthian church had about spiritual gifts.
In verses 7-11 he mentions the gifts of wisdom, knowledge, faith, healing, miracles, prophecy, discernment, and languages.
This is by no means an exhaustive list.
In other parts of the book and in other books he mentions many more
spiritual gifts.
But a common mistake is to assume, that since Paul has been talking about gifts of the Spirit,
in chapter 12, love is just another in the list.
But love is not a spiritual gift.
You can’t excuse unloving words, behaviors or attitudes by saying,
"Well, love just isn’t my gift."
In Galatians 5 Paul discusses the fruit of the Spirit; that is,
the behaviors and character traits,
that are produced by the presence of the Holy Spirit, in the life of a believer.
Love is the first thing he mentions.
So what’s the difference between a spiritual gift and a fruit of the
Spirit?
A gift of the Spirit, enables a believer to be effective in some ministry of the church.
You can
have the gift of encouragement, or the gift of teaching, or the gift of
administration.
A fruit of the Spirit is
evidence of the Spirit living in your life.
If you are a spirit filled believer, it will be shown by the love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control in your life.
In John 13:35, Jesus said,
"By this all men
will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another."
He didn’t say, "They’ll know you are my disciples, if you have the gift of
administration or the gift of compassion or even the gift of ministry."
He said,
"They’ll know you are my disciples if you show evidence of the number one fruit
of the Spirit -- love."
If you want to follow Jesus, then love must be in your repertoire.
Now the good news here, should be obvious;
if love is a spiritual gift, there isn’t anything you can do to get more of it, or grow better at it.
You either have it or you don’t.
But if love is a fruit of the Spirit, then it can be cultivated.
In Philippians 1:9 Paul wrote, "And this is my prayer: that your love may abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight."
In 1 Thessalonians 4:9 he said, that we had been taught to love by God.
Love can grow.
Love can be learned.
Love isn’t a spiritual gift.
It is a fruit of the Spirit.
2. Love isn’t a fuzzy feeling, but rather a focused action.
Jerrie Barber used to say that “Love’s not a felling you get when you feel a feeling that you have never felt before.”
We all know
how powerful our emotions are.
A little league baseball coach was talking with one of his players.
The coach asked the boy, "Do you know what cooperation is? What it means to be a team?"
The little
boy nodded.
"Good," the coach said. "Do you understand that what really matters is
that when we win, we win as a team and if we lose, we lose as a team."
The little
boy nodded again.
The coach continued. "So when you are at bat and a pitch is called a strike,
or if you are called out at first, then you don’t argue with or cuss out the
umpire. Do you understand all that?"
The little
boy nodded yes a third time.
"Good, said the coach. "Now, go explain all that to your mother."
Emotions are extremely powerful things.
God wired us up to be emotional creatures.
From burning anger, and cold hatred, to warm affection, and delirious delight,
our emotions can create enormous problems for us,
or spur us to heroic action and sacrifice.
Even with the problems they sometimes cause, though,
I wouldn’t want to live a day without my emotions.
OK, is there anyone here that used to watch the original Star Trek Series?
I have watched a few episodes in my life and I picked up on some things.
Do you remember Mr. Spock?
He was from the planet Vulcan, and Vulcan’s didn’t have emotions.
Right now
some of you ladies are thinking, "Well of course, he was a man!"
But can you imagine living like that?
I can’t!
Never experiencing the joy that comes from a pleasant surprise,
or the sadness that comes from a crushing disappointment.
Some things are worth being sad about.
It’s like imagining worship without emotion?
Well that
might be a bad example.
To tell you the truth, I can’t think of a single emotion, that I would be
willing to give up.
I wouldn’t even want to live without anger.
We need anger.
Sometimes it’s the only thing that gives us the courage to stand up
to injustice or oppression.
As necessary as they are, however, our emotions,
even the positive ones, are not the same thing as love.
You can’t command emotions.
If I had all the authority in the world --
even if you recognized and agreed to abide by my authority --
I couldn’t command you to experience an emotion.
I could order you to be sad, and you could fake it, perhaps.
But there’s no way you can force yourself to truly experience the emotion of sadness.
Which is one way you can tell parents are at the end of their ropes with their kids.
Ever hear a frustrated parent say to a child, "Stop your crying and Get happy,"?
That never works, because you can’t command an emotion.
Yet all through the Bible, love is a commandment.
Look with me at Mark
12:28-31 One of
the teachers of the law came and heard them debating. Noticing that Jesus had
given them a good answer, he asked him, "Of all the commandments, which is the
most important?" 29 "The most important one," answered Jesus, "is this: 'Hear, O
Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one. 30 Love the Lord your God with all
your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your
strength.' 31 The second is this: 'Love your neighbor as yourself.' There is no
commandment greater than these."
If love for God is the first and greatest commandment, and love for others the second,
then love is not an emotion.
You can’t command emotions.
In Matthew 5:44, Jesus even told us to love our enemies.
He doesn’t expect us to have warm, fuzzy feelings for Osama Bin Laden or Sadam Hussien.
Or for that guy at work who routinely undermines you to the boss.
Or that kid at school who spread a vicious rumor about you.
He isn’t telling us how to feel.
He’s telling us how to act.
Now go back to our original text for the morning; 1 Corinthians 13.
Start in
vs. 4.
Love is patient.
Patience is the opposite of emotion.
Lyman Abbot
said patience is "passion tamed."
Love is kind.
How do you feel today? I feel kind, thank you.
No one ever says that.
Kindness isn’t a feeling.
It’s what we do.
Later on in vs. 5 Paul says that love is not easily angered.
Love has a long fuse.
When it comes to anger, love is like a dachshund.
You know, a weenie dog.
Every heard this poem?
There was a dachshund once so long,
He
hadn’t any notion
How long it took to notify
His tail
of an emotion.
And so it happened, while his eyes
Were
full of woe and sadness,
His little tail went wagging on
Because of previous gladness.
So if love is more about what we do, and less about how we feel,
then most of our cultural conclusions about love are wrong.
You can’t fall into it or out of it.
You can fall into or out of a feeling, but you can’t tumble into or spill out of love.
We may choose to start or stop behaving in loving ways,
but the choice is entirely within our control.
Apply that knowledge to our relationships, and we suddenly discover enormous leverage, where we didn’t think we had any.
Some of us here this evening don’t feel like being married any longer.
The feelings we once had for our spouses,
the desire, the affection, the quickened heart rate, the sexual attraction,
have been dulled by passing years and habitual routine
and
unresolved conflict and lazy inattention.
Since we don’t feel any of those positive emotions,
we’ve concluded that the marriage might not be worth working on.
So some of us are thinking about ending it.
"We don’t love each other anymore," we say.
Do you know
what you’re really admitting when you say that?
Husbands, when you say, "I just don’t love my wife anymore,"
what you’re really saying is,
"I’ve stopped behaving in loving ways toward my wife."
Wives, you’re saying, "I’ve stopped behaving in loving
ways toward my husband."
Remember the Righteous Brothers song, "You’ve lost that loving feeling, whoa, that loving feeling. You’ve lost that loving feeling, now it’s gone, gone, gone."
What if I told you this evening, that you could bring it on back?
You can.
But you have to get this ridiculous idea, that love is a feeling, out of your head.
Love is not a feeling.
It is focused action.
It is the things we do, not the emotions that
drive us.
Here’s one way to do it.
Look over Paul’s description in 1 Corinthians 13:4-7.
Find the one or two areas you are weakest in.
Once you find one you need to work on, then get to work.
Pray about it. Learn about it.
Find other scriptures that talk about it.
Confess your struggle to a trusted brother or sister.
Ask them to pray with you and for you about it.
Then practice.
For example, let’s pretend that your main struggle is the second one mentioned in vs. 5; love is not self-seeking.
You have a hard time putting your spouse’s needs above your own.
She’s number three on your list; right behind God and you.
You’ve started praying about it.
You’ve looked up scriptures on selfishness.
You’ve confessed to a brother and he’s praying for you.
Now watch for an opportunity.
Sometime very soon, you will be faced with a situation,
in which her needs compete with yours.
When that moment comes,
your natural reaction is going to be to look out for number one; you.
You’ve developed a habit of seeking self.
But this
time, you are going to intentionally put her needs first.
It isn’t going to feel good.
It isn’t going to feel right.
But love is not a feeling.
It’s what you do.
So when the moment comes,
you actively love her with your behavior, by
putting her first.
Two things will eventually
happen if you behave in loving ways.
First, the one you are loving,
will respond back to you in loving ways.
Second, the warm and
fuzzy feelings will be rekindled.
I’m not going to tell you it will happen over night.
It won’t.
But it will happen.
Love is not a warm and fuzzy feeling, but rather a focused action.
3. Love is not a temporary high, but rather a lasting commitment.
In 1 Corinthians 13:7, Paul used the word "always" four times to describe the perseverance of love.
In vs. 8 he said, "Love never fails."
In vs. 13, he said that love, along with faith and hope, remains.
It lasts.
Do you realize how important it is, that we have something that
remains?
In the last few years we have seen two of the worlds tallest building brought down by terrorists.
We have seen hurricanes devastate the Gulf Coast.
We have seen integrity erode.
Marriages dissolve.
Commitments wane.
Friendships have failed.
Promises have been forgotten.
We need something that remains.
Dr. Albert Palmer was the minister of Central Union Church of Honolulu, Hawaii.
While serving there, he oversaw a massive building project for their church.
Just before
it’s completion, the architect asked Palmer to provide him with an inscription
to be placed high in the chancel, above the pulpit and communion table.
"I want you to give me a text of no more than sixteen letter or spaces, to fit in that particular space," he said.
Palmer pondered over what text to use, which would have just the right number of letters,
and yet would be appropriate for all occasions.
It would have to be appropriate at weddings and funerals,
for worship services and baptisms, for every season of the year.
Additionally, since Hawaii is a place where many races meet,
the text had to speak to people of all backgrounds;
Hawaiian, Korean, Portuguese, Filipino, Chinese, Japanese and American.
So with all those varying needs in mind, Palmer chose these sixteen letter and spaces;
Love Never
Fails.
No matter what you are going through,
no matter who you are,
where you are from,
or where you are headed,
those words carry weight.
They become especially powerful,
when you remember, that before you were ever called to live up to that standard,
God set it himself ...
on a cross and in an empty tomb.
His love for you never fails.
It lasts.