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Christianity in Action
1 Corinthians 13:1-13
by Rev. Randy Quinn

Before I read the text:

Some passages of scripture are so familiar that we don’t always hear them.  On those occasions, I find it helpful to read from a different translation so it isn’t said in the way I remember it.

At the same time, we find it comforting to hear familiar words in familiar ways.  Somehow it reminds us that God’s truth is eternal.  That’s part of why some people insist on using the King James translation of the Bible.

The King James translation was completed in 1611 in response to an edict of the King that an accurate translation of the Bible be made available in the common language of the people in England.  The translation committee was chosen by King James and worked with the best tools they had available to them.

While the English language has changed significantly in the past 400 years, the King James translation was really the only English translation until the 1950’s and it’s what many of us grew up hearing.  So we want to hear the 23rd Psalm and the Lord’s Prayer using those translations rather than a more recent one.

Today’s text, however, is one that is more familiar to most of us when read from a more recent translation than it is from the King James translation.  So I want to read it using the translation of 1611, to see if the older English usage may help us hear it better.

Read text from King James Version.

“Charity.”  That’s the way the King James translation team decided to translate agape, a word that is now more often translated “love.”  The dilemma is that in Greek there are several words for the various nuances of the concept of “love,” of which agape is only one.  Curiously, the translation team was not consistent.  There are other places where they chose “love” over “charity.”

Despite the common use of this passage at weddings, the truth is that Paul is not talking about romantic love here.  He is not talking about the love between a man and a woman, a husband and a wife.  Instead, he is talking about the unconditional love of God for us and the reflection of that love in our lives.

By using a word other than love in this chapter, the seventeenth century translators help us hear some of that nuance even if it robs it of some of the poetic form we are more familiar with.  “Love is patient, love is kind” becomes “charity suffereth long, and is kind” and “the greatest of these is love” becomes “the greatest of these is charity” (comparing NIV with KJV in verses 4 and 13).

In modern usage, charity is often understood with an attitude of condescension, but in 1611, charity was a high ideal of giving and caring for another person.  It is giving because of who the giver is, not because of who the benefactor is.  A better synonym might be “mercy” rather than “love.”

In essence, Paul is saying that what gifts we have are not as important as the ways our gifts are used.  In our “Methodist Theology” class on Thursday, we noted that our denomination has often been more concerned with how our faith is being lived out than the particular words used to describe it.  Paul is suggesting that our actions are more important than our words.

In that sense, it is very much like the story of the three hermits that Leo Tolstoy tells.  In that story, there are three hermits who live on an isolated island.  They spent their time in prayer, praying for their own salvation and the salvation of the world.

When a Bishop was on a passing ship, he asked to be allowed to visit the hermits.  When he met them he was appalled that they didn’t even know the Lord’s Prayer!  So he spent hours with them teaching them how to pray.  One word at a time.  One phrase at a time.  Until they had the entire prayer memorized, each helping the others when they lost their place.

The Bishop was pleased that they were finally praying correctly, gave them a blessing and returned to the ship.

As they resumed their journey, however, the captain noticed something on the sea between the ship and the island.  As time passed, the captain and the Bishop noticed the object on the sea getting larger – as if approaching the ship.  In a few short minutes, they could see that it was the three hermits walking on the water.

When they arrived at the ship, they explained that they had already forgotten the prayer the Bishop taught them.  They came seeking further instruction.  Humbled, the Bishop assured them that the prayers they had been making before were sufficient and asked them to pray for him – no matter how they prayed.[1]

Clearly their actions spoke louder than their words.

When read in context, this chapter of Paul’s letter is not a grand piece of romantic poetry, but rather is a very pointed reminder to people who have forgotten the commandment of Jesus to “love one another as I have loved you” (Jn 13:34).  When read in its context, in fact, the focus seems to be on the part of this chapter that is least often read at weddings, the last paragraph, beginning at verse 8.

Read again verses 8 – 13.

We all know people who carry pictures with them.  Pictures of their children and grandchildren.  Pictures from their favorite vacation spot.  Some people carry pictures of their dog while others carry photos of their boat.

But those pictures are not the same as the real thing.  A picture may tell a thousand words and it may help us know what something looks like, but it is not the same as the real thing.

Paul uses a mirror to capture that same thought, a “glass” in King James English.  Except he reminds us that when we look in a mirror we ought to be seeing a reflection of Christ.  When Christ lives in us, others will see God’s love in us.  God isn’t necessarily heard in the words we say, but in our actions.

Several years ago, I read a study on communication.  It said that only about 25% of what we say is communicated through our words.  Over half of what we say is communicated through body language and tone of voice – of course the study was done before the advent of Email which may eventually change the dynamics of speech.

But the truth remains true, even in Email, that words and deeds are not the same thing.  Just because a website promises to take our name off their “spam” list does not mean they will.  Actions speak louder than words.

We can say we love someone, but unless there is action to follow it, the words become hollow and meaningless.  It’s the activity that gives meaning to our faith, too.

That is no less true for you and me than it is for God.

And the greatest expression of God’s love may be found right here, today, at the communion table.  Here we meet God face to face, here we see and experience the love of God that reaches out to us and welcomes us as beloved children.

Thanks be to God.  Amen.


[1]  Leo Tolstoy, “The Three Hermits,” Walk in the Light and Twenty-Three Tales (Plough Publishing, 1998), pp 253-260.