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1 Corinthians
1 Corinthians 13 — Paul defines what love actually is
4 min read
had just spent the last chapter walking the in through spiritual gifts — who has what, how they fit together, why every part of the matters. The Corinthians were obsessed with the flashier gifts. They were ranking each other. Competing. Turning into a talent show.
So right in the middle of that conversation, Paul hit pause. Before he said another word about gifts, he needed them to understand one thing — the thing that makes every other thing matter. Without it, the most impressive gift in the world is just noise.
didn't ease into this. He started with a list of extraordinary things — and then dismantled every one of them:
"If I could speak in every human language and even the language of , but didn't have love — I'd be nothing but a loud, clanging noise.
If I had the gift of and understood every mystery and possessed all knowledge, and if I had so powerful it could move mountains, but didn't have love — I'd be nothing.
If I gave away everything I owned and handed over my own body to be burned, but didn't have love — I'd gain absolutely nothing."
Read that list again. Speaking in angelic languages. Understanding every mystery. that moves mountains. Giving away everything you have. Even martyrdom. Paul said every single one of those — without love — amounts to zero. Not "less effective." Not "slightly diminished." Nothing. That's a stunning claim. It means you can do extraordinary things for God and still completely miss the point. The person nobody notices who quietly loves the people around them? They're ahead of the person on stage who has everyone's attention but no love underneath it.
Now comes the part you've probably seen on wall art, at weddings, maybe even as a tattoo. But wasn't writing a poem. He was writing a correction. The Corinthians were arrogant, competitive, and divided — and every single line of what comes next is aimed directly at that:
"Love is patient and kind. Love doesn't envy. Love doesn't brag. It isn't arrogant or rude.
Love doesn't demand its own way. It isn't irritable. It doesn't keep a record of wrongs.
Love doesn't celebrate when someone fails — it celebrates when the truth wins.
Love bears everything, believes the best, through anything, and endures it all."
Notice something: almost every line is about what love doesn't do. It doesn't keep score. It doesn't insist. It doesn't boast. It doesn't get easily provoked. That's not a greeting card definition — it's a daily, grinding, unglamorous kind of love. The kind that doesn't post about itself. The kind that stays when it would be easier to leave. The kind that chooses patience at 11 p.m. when you're exhausted and the other person is being impossible. Every line here is a mirror. Hold it up to your closest relationships and see what reflects back.
zoomed out. All those gifts the Corinthians were fighting over? Temporary. Every one of them:
"Love never ends. But ? They'll pass away. Speaking in tongues? That will stop. Knowledge? It will pass away too.
We know only part of the picture right now. We prophesy only part of the picture. But when what is complete finally arrives, everything partial will disappear."
Think about what the Corinthians were ranking each other on — the equivalent of spiritual résumé items. Paul was saying: all of that has an expiration date. , tongues, even knowledge — they're tools for now, not forever. Love is the only thing that the finish line. It's the only currency that works in both this world and the next. Everything else is scaffolding. Love is the building.
Then got personal. He used himself as the example:
"When I was a child, I spoke like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I grew up, I left childish things behind.
Right now, we see like we're looking at a reflection in a dim mirror. But someday — face to face. Right now I only know part of the story. But then I'll know fully, just as I've been fully known."
Here's what he's saying: the way we see reality right now is limited. Not wrong — just incomplete. Like trying to understand a painting by looking at it through frosted glass. You can make out shapes and colors, but the full picture isn't clear yet. The gifts, the knowledge, the spiritual experiences the Corinthians were so proud of — all of that is the frosted glass version. One day, they'll see clearly. One day, they'll know as fully as they are already known by God. And in the meantime, what matters isn't how clearly you see — it's how deeply you love.
landed the entire chapter in a single sentence:
"Three things will last: , , and love. But the greatest of these is love."
That's it. matters — it's how you trust what you can't see. matters — it's how you endure what hasn't happened yet. But love is the greatest. Not because faith and are small, but because love is the one that continues when faith becomes sight and becomes reality. When you finally see God face to face, you won't need faith anymore — you'll be looking right at him. You won't need anymore — everything promised will be fulfilled. But love? Love just keeps going. It never ends. It never expires. It's the only thing that lasts.
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