This
week, we have been looking at a prevalent and powerful myth about love and
lasting relationships called the right person myth. Yesterday, we looked at a section
of a letter in the Bible called the book of Ephesians that revealed for us a
timeless truth when it comes to love and lasting relationships. And that
timeless truth is that love and
lasting relationships are the result of becoming the right person, not finding
the right person. Unlike the right person myth is celebrated by our culture and
spread by Hollywood, the Bible reveals for us the reality that love and lasting
relationships are the result of becoming the right person.
Love and lasting relationships
are not the result of people falling in love. Instead, love and lasting
relationships are the result of people who walking in love by giving those who
they are in relationship with what they need most when they deserve it the
least. Andy Stanley conveys this
timeless truth this way: “You need to become the person that the person you are
looking for is looking for”.
Now you might be thinking to
yourself “well Dave, how do I know when I am becoming the right person? How do
I know when I am walking in love? How do I know that I am giving someone what
they need most when they deserve it the least?” If those questions are running
through your mind, I have some good news for you.
In another letter that is
recorded for us in the New Testament of our Bibles called the book of 1
Corinthians, we see the Apostle Paul unpack what walking in love practically
looks like in our day to day lives. So let’s look at this section of this
letter together, beginning in 1 Corinthians 13:4:
Love is
patient, love is kind and is
not jealous; love does not brag and is
not arrogant, 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.
In
these verses we see Paul reveal the qualities that characterize the life of a
person who is walking in love. When Paul states that love is patient, the word
patient literally means to bear up under provocation without complaint. A
person who walks in love is longsuffering in their dealings with those around
us.
When
Paul states that love is kind and is not jealous, he is revealing for us the
reality that a person who walks in love is positively gracious and generous as
they serve others. Instead of rivaling for position or recognition; instead of
wanting what others have or not wanting others to have what they do have, a
person who walks in love focuses on reflecting Christ’s grace and generosity to
others.
When
Paul states that love does not brag and is not arrogant, he is explaining that
a person who walks in love does not have an exaggerated self concept that
results in one being full of themselves and in one taking pride in their own
accomplishments.
In verse 5, Paul explains that love does not act
unbecomingly. In other words, a person who walks in love does not behave disgracefully or dishonorably with poor
manners. In addition, a person who walks in love does not seek its own; it does not seek one’s own
advantage or benefit by being insensitive and careless.
A
person who walks in love, Paul
explains is not easily irritated or provoked into sudden outbursts of anger.
When Paul states that love does not take into account a wrong suffered, he is
painting a word picture of a scorecard. Paul’s point here is that a
person who walks in love does not
keep a scorecard as to keep track of all the times that one has been offended.
Paul then continues in verse 6 by stating that love does
not rejoice in unrighteousness, but rejoices in the truth. What Paul is
communicating to us in this phrase is that a person who
walks in love is driven to be
excited about the truth of the Christian life and to rejoice in what is good,
proper, and right when it comes to how they relate to God and one another.
Paul then concludes his description of the qualities
that characterize the life of a person who is walking in love by stating that love bears all things, believes all
things, hopes all things, endures all things. To bear all things means to
protect and guard others from exposure to harm.
When Paul uses the phrase believe all things, he is
reveal that a person who walks in love has no suspicion or cynicism. To hope all things, for
Paul, involves having a positive outlook on the future, regardless of our
current circumstances. Paul then concludes by explaining that Biblical love
endures all things. In other words, a person who
walks in love is not fickle, but
instead holds on and remains faithful.
So are these the qualities
that characterize how you conduct your life when it comes to your relationships? Would the person that you are seeking to experience a
loving and lasting relationship say that those are the characteristics that
mark your life? Would the people around you say that those are the
characteristics that mark your life?
Because these are the characteristics of a person who is
focused on becoming the right person and that conducts their day to day life
that reveals and reflects the love of Christ in their relationships with
others. And the timeless reality is that love and lasting relationships are the
result of becoming the right person, not finding the right person.
So how are you attempting to experience love and lasting
relationships? Are you attempting to
experience love and lasting relationships through the right person myth that is
celebrated by our culture and spread by Hollywood? Or are you attempting to
experience love and lasting relationships by becoming the right person that the
person you are looking for is looking for?
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