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Love Never Fails Featured
LOVE NEVER FAILS
“Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. 5 It does not dishonour others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. 6 Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. 7 It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. 8 Love never fails.”
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1 Corinthians 13:4-8 (NIV)
This is a famous passage of scripture that many of us will be familiar with. It is often heard at weddings and makes the congregation go ‘awwwww’. Nice and romantic isn’t it!
The thing is, this passage is so much more than just a romantic notion. This is challenging, gritty and is at the core of who God calls us to be as Christians. Indeed, we are all striving to become a reflection of Jesus, that perfect embodiment of love. Therefore, we need to pay attention to what the Bible says about love and build our lives on that foundation. Jesus said that the greatest commandments are to love God and to love others (Matthew 22:37-40) and that all the 613 laws of the old testament could be summed up in those two simple statements.
So how does this apply to us? Let’s put our own names into this scripture for a moment: “Tim is patient, Tim is kind. He does not envy, he does not boast, he is not proud”. That is who God is calling you and me to be. Whilst my life may be a partial reflection, I certainly don’t live out this statement out to the full!
Indeed, when I apply these words to my life, I can see a sliding scale based on the significance of that person to me. I think with regard to my wife I do a reasonable job of being that reflection of love. Not perfect but doing okay. Similarly, with my friends, though maybe less consistently. But, what about those I don’t know? What about the unhelpful call centre assistant who despite a 50-minute call and who put you on hold 3 times

Timothy Wilson
Marketing Manager
still can’t fix your broadband contract? That’s where I see myself starting to fall down.
As John’s Gospel (John 13:34-35) says, it is our love for one another that sets us apart. That is how we show people Jesus. Through audacious, exceptional love. This is not limited to just Christians, Jesus says to love everyone. The full spectrum, from those who love you to those who hate you.
This is what it really means to love. Love is not a nice feeling, that makes you warm and fuzzy inside. It’s about being willing to lay down yourself, pick up your cross and follow Jesus.
So here, we could really expand on the Apostle Pauls words (insert your own name into the blanks):
____ is patient with those are
____ is kind to those who are cruel. ____ doesn’t envy those who have
____ does not boast to those he
____ protects those who are weak.
____ trusts those who are
____ hopes for the hopeless.
____ perseveres for the faithless.
____ loves with a love that never
frustrating. what he wants.
wants to impress.
untrustworthy.
fails.
Love comes first, everything else comes thereafter. As Paul goes on say in Corinthians, if we miss out on love, we are a clanging bell and our efforts count as nothing. When we put love first, everyone will know that we are his disciples.
THE MINISTRY OF GIVING
A Biblical view on generosity
Throughout the Bible, God teaches us about the importance of giving. As we read stories of giving, generosity and the blessings that flow from it, both for the giver and the receiver. In 2 Corinthians 8 and 9 we read about Paul’s teachings on what he calls the ‘Ministry of Giving’ and how Titus, a preacher of the Good News, was also tasked with the collection for the believers in Jerusalem.
The believers in Corinth had a reputation of being generous and eager to help. Paul had been boasting to believers in Macedonia about this, which as a result stirred them up to begin giving. He then compares their giving with farming, with generous sowing resulting in a generous crop. He explains that God loves a cheerful giver and connects a promise to this principle that God will generously provide all that you need, increasing your resources and produce a great harvest of generosity in you.
In verse 12 Paul shares the 2 great benefits of this ‘Ministry of Giving’ as he calls it: i) the needs of the people will be met and ii) they will joyfully express their thanks to God.
Your giving to CBN is not only meeting the needs of the people we serve. But it is also giving glory to God! THANK YOU for your generous gifts during our January Faith and Fundraising weeks, and for exercising this Ministry of Giving through your partnership!
