Sermon Tone Analysis

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I read of a Peanuts cartoon that shows Lucy standing with her arms folded and a stern expression on her face.
Charlie Brown pleads, “Lucy, you must be more loving.
This world really needs love.
You have to let yourself love to make this world a better place.”
Lucy angrily whirls around and knocks Charlie Brown to the ground.
She screams at him, “Look, Blockhead, the world I love.
Its people I can’t stand.”
Perhaps this is a sentiment you can relate with.
Here in 1 Corinthians 13, Paul emphasizes that Christians may be talented, gifted, devoted, generous in their giving, or endowed with mountain-moving faith; but it is of no value if love is not present.
As we saw last week:
LOVE REGARDS - “Love benefits others.”
- through patience and kindness
We began in John 13:34-35 and learned that Christ-like love is both the benchmark of true love and the badge of true discipleship.
And as we transitioned to 1 Corinthians, we learned two attributes of this love being patience and kindness.
Read along with me there in 1 Corinthians 13:1-8.
Here we find that not only does love regard, being:
Patient - to persevere or be willing to suffer for a long time under provocation
Kind - to be actively good for the benefit of others
but also, as we see in vv.
4-5:
LOVE REDUCES - “Love is not all about me.” it doesn’t envy or boast, it’s not arrogant or rude, it is not selfish
Love doesn’t envy
ζηλόω (zēloō) - jealousy/desire to advance at the disadvantage of someone else
There is a biblical account back in Genesis 37 of a young 17 year old boy named Joseph, whose brothers hated him because of his preferred status with his father.
As the story unfolds we find that their envy develops into a multiplicity of lies and cover ups and eventually they sell their brother into slavery and tell their dad that he got eaten by a wild animal.
Luke writes in:
We find that their jealousy of Joseph’s success prompted them to commit some unimaginable sins.
Likewise in our own lives, as a follower of Christ, our love for others is to be without envy.
Do you rejoice when others succeed?
Or do you find yourself resenting their advancement in place of your own?
There is another account of John the Baptist, who was the last Prophet before Jesus, and was well respected.
And as you remember back in John 3, how his followers came to him concerned about how the crowds had began to follow Jesus instead of John.
And John responded:
You see, John the Baptist understood his purpose.
He understood that life and love was not all about him.
In the big picture, it is all about Jesus!
The man who keeps busy helping the man below him won’t have time to envy the man above him—and there may not be anybody above him anyway.
—Henrietta C. Mears
There is a story published by the Minister’s Research Service of a well known and respected Pastor in England back in late 1800s that says:
F. B. Meyer told the following experience to a few personal friends: “It was easy,” he said, “to pray for the success of G. Campbell Morgan when he was in America.
But when he came back to England and took a church near to mine, it was something different.
The old Adam in me was inclined to jealousy, but I got my heel upon his head, and whether I felt right toward my friend, I determined to act right.”
“My church gave a reception for him, and I acknowledged that if it was not necessary for me to preach Sunday evenings I would dearly love to go and hear him myself.
Well, that made me feel right toward him.
But just see how the dear Lord helped me out of my difficulty.
There was Charles Spurgeon preaching wonderfully on the other side of me.
He and Mr. Morgan were so popular, and drew such crowds, that our church caught the overflow, and we had all we could accommodate.”
It has been said that envy shoots at others yet wounds herself.
Genuine, Christ-like love isn’t envious of the advantages of others, but rejoices with them in their success.
Love isn’t all about me!
So, love is patient and kind, it doesn’t envy and:
Love doesn’t boast
περπερεύομαι (perpereuomai) - to brag/desire adoration by promoting self-worth
Few people need voice lessons to sing their own praise.
—E.
C. Mckenzie
Boasting about oneself, literally, parading one’s own accomplishments is a natural expression for some.
With its roots deep in pride and self-focus, some tend to self-promote at any opportunity.
You know the type, right?
Always needing to say the last word.
Tell the bigger story.
For some, as the Malayan Proverb states, “If a fish escapes, it was a big one.”
But as Jean De Laharpe said, “We always weaken whatever we exaggerate.”
What is that instinct to make ourselves look better, stronger, and smarter?
No matter the context, our nature strives for glory.
Few prison rituals are more common than putting a troublesome prisoner on bread and water.
Then came Dale Carson, a former FBI agent, to Florida as sheriff of Duval County (Jacksonville).
He discovered that the young toughs gloried in being on bread and water, because it proved how tough they were.
They even brag about the bread-and-water treatment.
So Carson substituted baby food.
They eat it because they are hungry but they don’t brag about it.
One day usually gets them on their best behaviour,” observed Carson.
We strive to exalt ourselves in hope that others will respond in like manner, but as Jesus taught in:
Man’s economy and God’s economy work very differently.
Showing love, is not making relationships, conversations, or circumstances about us.
Love isn’t all about me!
Love is patient and kind, it doesn’t envy or boast.
Likewise:
Love isn’t arrogant
φυσιόω (phusioō) - to puff or inflate
Much like boasting, arrogance is thinking of ourselves not just as great, but actually greater than someone else.
Some people seem to be just born with a conceited attitude.
Mohammed Ali (the famous boxer) once said:
“If anybody ever even dreamed of beating me, he’d wake up and apologize!”
—Mohammed Ali
An arrogant spirit is nothing like God.
All throughout the book of John, for instance, we find Jesus constantly affirming that the message He was speaking was not His, but the Father’s.
In fact, the Holy Spirt, who abides in all believers, testifies not of Himself, but of Christ.
Again, Jesus sets the perfect example in the truth that:
Love isn’t all about me!
Love is patient and kind, it doesn’t envy or boast, it isn’t arrogant and:
Love isn’t rude
ἀσχημονέω (aschēmoneō) - to act unbecomingly
Real love is courteous and considerate.
Real love doesn’t behave dishonorably.
Real love sticks to pre-described standards.
Ill: First time golfing - fopaux walking across the putting green between my brother’s golf ball and the whole.
You see, love doesn’t step all over the understood standards of others.
It isn’t rude.
The wealthy Corinthian believers dishonored the poor believers back in 1 Corinthians 11, and we find that some were even dishonoring themselves.
So:
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