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1 Corinthians 13:1
1If I speak with the languages of men and of angels, but don`t have love, I have become sounding brass, or a clanging cymbal.
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1 Corinthians 13:1-13 encourages the long obedience of prayer, fasting, and mercy—today, not someday.
1 Corinthians 13:1-13 comforts us: the Church’s remedies are for the wounded, not the perfect.
1 Corinthians 13:1-13 anchors us in God’s character: He speaks, acts, and calls us to faithful response.
1 Corinthians 13:1-13 encourages hungry hearts: ask, receive, and keep seeking God’s presence—today, not someday.
1 Corinthians 13:1-13 comforts us: the future is not chaos; it is held in God’s sovereign timeline.
1 Corinthians 13:1-13 makes room for the wounded: God sees the overlooked and calls the Church to solidarity.
We read 1 Corinthians 13:1-13 through the Lutheran Lens as a profound exposition of the Gospel, revealing the centrality of love that flows from justification by faith alone. This love is not a work we perform to gain favor with God but is the fruit of the Gospel's work in us, enabled by the Holy Sp
We read this passage as the ultimate definition of love grounded in the character of God, as revealed in Jesus Christ. The Apostle Paul, under divine inspiration, communicates that love is the most excellent way, transcending all spiritual gifts. This passage is a call to embody the self-sacrificial
We read this passage as a profound assertion of the supremacy of love in the Christian life. Paul, under divine inspiration, emphasizes that without love, even the most extraordinary spiritual gifts and sacrifices are meaningless. This underscores our belief in the necessity of love as the fruit of
We read 1 Corinthians 13 as the quintessential description of Christian love, which the Church Fathers and the Magisterium have consistently taught as the highest virtue. This passage is understood as a depiction of the love that flows from God's own Trinitarian life, which we are called to particip
It is faith that gives the Christian a new relationship to God, making him son of God and joint-heir with Christ.
We read 1 Corinthians 13:1-3 as a profound commentary on the indispensability of love within the covenant community, situated within the redemptive-historical context of the New Covenant in Christ. This passage emphasizes that spiritual gifts and knowledge, while valuable, are nothing without the lo
Born in Tarsus to respectable tentmakers, circumcised on the eighth day and named Saul after Israel's first king, the apostle emerged from intensely Jewish household worship.
We read 1 Corinthians 13:1-13 as a profound exposition of the nature and primacy of love within the covenant community, which finds its ultimate fulfillment in Christ. This passage is not merely an ethical exhortation but a theological revelation of the character of God’s sovereign grace as it manif
Joseph Exell's 1887 *Biblical Illustrator* frames this eschatological promise through three movements.
We read 1 Corinthians 13:1-3 through the Lutheran Lens as a profound illustration of the Law and Gospel distinction. The text convicts us under the Law by highlighting that even the most extraordinary spiritual gifts are nothing if not accompanied by love. This reveals our human inability to fulfill
We read this passage as a profound declaration that without love, all spiritual gifts and acts of sacrifice are empty. In the Black Church Tradition, love is not an abstract concept but a lived experience rooted in the struggle for freedom and justice. Love is the force that binds us as a community
Imagine a vast, swirling cosmos, a tapestry of stars and galaxies, where a desperate astronaut named Cooper finds himself teetering on the edge of despair. He has plunged into a black hole—an incomprehensible abyss that stretches beyond the limits of...
In the Roman Catholic Lens, we read 1 Corinthians 13:1-3 as a profound exposition on the primacy of love (caritas) in the Christian life. It reminds us that no matter the spiritual gifts bestowed upon us, without love, they are meaningless. This passage calls us to embody the self-giving love of Chr
We read 1 Corinthians 13 as a powerful declaration that love is the ultimate expression of divine liberation and justice. Love, as described here, is not passive or merely sentimental; it is active, enduring, and transformative, embodying the radical love of Jesus who stood with the oppressed. This
The Apostle Paul speaks of a fundamental constraint upon human perception.
In the heart of a sprawling city, Theodore Twombly is a man adrift, surrounded by the glaring screens of modern life. His days are spent composing heartfelt letters for others, but his nights echo with the loneliness of his own...
In the film *Everything Everywhere All at Once*, we follow Evelyn Wang, a weary laundromat owner, who is suddenly thrust into a chaotic multiverse filled with infinite versions of herself. Each universe reveals the countless choices she made—or didn’t make—as...
In 1928, a young pianist named Ervin Nyiregyházi dazzled New York critics with his astonishing technique. He could play Liszt with a ferocity that left...