Our reading from 1
Corinthians 13 is often read at weddings.
But that’s not its
original context.
Paul is writing to the Christian
church at Corinth, which he recently founded.
And no bride in Corinth
would have chosen this passage for her wedding.
In context it is a telling
off, really.
The Corinthian Christians
have been behaving badly and Paul is showing them the more excellent way of
love:
He’s telling them to stop
fighting and competing and so on, and to love one another like real Christians.
God’s love should cause
them to love one another.
They need to repent and
change.
It seems fitting to speak
of love at a funeral.
Death gives us
perspective.
It shows us what really
matters.
And love is surely what we
rightly care about most, when we stop to think about it:
Those we have loved.
Those who have loved us.
You’ll be thinking of your
love for ********, and her love for you, and all that she loved.
Love is what matters most
and what lasts, what we long for and what we remember.
The Bible would tell us
that we are made from love and for love.
That we often fall short
of love.
But that God is love.
And that he goes on loving
us – even though we’re not always entirely lovely.
In fact, he loves us so
much that he gives his only Son, whom he loves, for us, that whosoever believes
in him might not perish but have eternal life.
Jesus has a love stronger
than death.
He is the risen Lord of
life and love.
His love has won and death
is vanquished.
And he offers his love to
us today – to all who will receive him in repentance and faith.
So our great reading about
love is not just for weddings or for funerals.
It raises our eyes to the
God who is love, who loves us.
And it calls us to depend
on that love today and every day, to receive the free gift of his love, knowing
that even the grave cannot overcome it.
May you know and love the
God who is love, and may that love overflow to others, for Jesus’ sake.
Amen.
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