Acts 10:34-48; 1 Corinthians 13:1-13
On One-Anothering
James Sledge June
14, 2015
One
Sunday, right after Shawn and I first got engaged, we were sitting in a pew at
her home church, First Baptist of Gaffney, SC. We were beginning to think about
the actual service, and Shawn mentioned wanting to use the famous Bible passage
on love that was our scripture for this morning. So I grabbed a pew Bible and
started looking for it. This was long before I ever thought about being a
pastor, and I didn’t know exactly where to look. I thought it might be one of
Paul’s letters, but I searched and searched without finding it.
Turns
out my scant biblical knowledge was only a part of the problem. That pew Bible was
a King James version, and in place of the word “love” it had “charity.” And
now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is
charity.
Doesn’t
quite have the same ring to it, does it? “Charity” isn’t really the best
translation, but discovering that word was my first hint that Paul never
imagined that his difficult letter to a troubled and fractured congregation
would become a staple at weddings. Not that Paul’s words are bad advice to
newlyweds, but he has a larger community in mind.
Paul
was not happy when he wrote the Corinthians. He’d received reports of quarrels
and divisions in the congregation, and he sees that as a clear indication that
the Corinthians have not yet grasped the full meaning of their faith.
We
humans are remarkably skilled at dividing ourselves into groups, clustering
into clumps of those who are like us. We get started as toddlers on playgrounds
and only get more sophisticated at is as we grow older. This likely served some
evolutionary purpose in our ancient past, but now it seems more a curse. We
tend to fear and distrust those who are different from us, and we presume that
our group is better than their group. It’s a problem that afflicts even our
most noble undertakings. Just consider the connotations of that word “charity.”
Very often it is something that we
do for them.