The Denial of Revelation
And if I have prophetic powers and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. 1 Corinthians 13:2 ESV
Have not – How we agonize over this verse! Paraded before the cringing audience in the pews, preachers hammer believers for their lack of “love.” When we read Paul’s statement in quiet meditation, we come away convicted. We are crushed under a standard that few if any can achieve. Our world is filled with the pursuit of prophetic powers, of understanding mysteries, of bottling faith that moves mountains. But love? Oh no, that is too much to ask. That, we are told, means sacrifice, denial, crucifixion. How can Paul expect such behavior of simple men and women?
There is an easy answer to the weight of this glory. It is to move in the opposite direction. It is to treat love as part and parcel with Christian morality. How can we meet the standard? All we need to do is reduce Paul’s exhortation to acting ethically, being a good person, treating our neighbor with occasional kindness, being “nice” to others. That will do, won’t it? After all, if we go the route of sacrifice, who will be left to run things? If everyone becomes a humble servant, who will be in charge? We may not have all knowledge, but that won’t matter if all that is necessary is to live a moral life.
Both directions are wrong. Neither relieves the tension. Love cannot be a standard so high that no human can achieve it nor can it be a method so easy that no one can miss it. When Paul uses the Greek echo me, he tells us that this “love” is conditional. In order for it to be present, some conditions must be met. Without those conditions, no matter what else is added or subtracted, “love” vanishes. Jacques Ellul provides the insight that explains these conditions. “No recognizable revelation exists apart from the life and witness of those who bear it. . . . If Christians are not conformed in their lives to their truth, there is no truth. This is why the accusers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were right to infer the falsity of revelation itself from the practice of the church. This makes us see that in not being what Christ demands we render all revelation false, illusory, ideological, imaginary, and nonsalvific. We are thus forced to be Christians or to recognize the falsity of what we believe. This is undeniable proof of the need for correct practice.”[1] In other words, “love” is the practice of our claims of believing, and for those who follow YHWH, that practice turns out to be specifically defined by Torah. This means that Torah-less practice actually denies the revelation of the God of Israel. Torah-less faith is biblically inconceivable since the God who instituted Torah is the God of the Bible. Ellul is absolutely correct. If we do not live the Scriptures, we deny the revelation of all the Scriptures.
It is obvious that Christianity does not practice Torah. Theologians since 200AD have carefully and deliberately distanced themselves from the “Jewish” Torah. But doesn’t that imply they have also distanced themselves from the God who reveals Himself in the history and practice of Israel? Is it even reasonable to claim that Yeshua, Paul, James, John and Peter were not practicing the faithful observance of the revelation of God in Israel? Would any of these men have claimed that the Tanakh is no longer valid?
This line of thought forces us to ask, “How did Christianity become so far removed from its own source that it denied Jewish practice?” Until we answer that question, we have no right to claim to be biblically-based “Christians.” When we answer that question we may discover that we have no reason to be separate from Messianic Judaism.
Topical Index: love, history, Christianity, practice, Torah, 1 Corinthians 13:2
[1] Jacques Ellul, The Subversion of Christianity, pp. 5-6.
In New York Harbor stands a lady,
With a torch raised to the sky;
And all who see her know she stands for
Liberty for you and me.
I’m so proud to be called an American,
To be named with the brave and the free;
I will honor our flag and our trust in God,
And the Statue of Liberty.
On lonely Golgotha stood a cross,
With my LORD raised to the sky;
And all who kneel there live forever
As all the saved can testify.
I’m so glad to be called a Christian,
To be named with the ransomed and whole;
As the statue liberates the citizen,
So the cross liberates the soul.
Oh the cross is my Statue of Liberty,
It was there that my soul was set free;
Unashamed I’ll proclaim that a rugged cross
Is my Statue of Liberty!
(Words & Music by Neil Enloe)
From one of the earliest surviving sermon manuscripts:
“And we must not seek to please men or desire to please only ourselves, but by doing what is right to please even outsiders, so that the Name may not bee scoffed at on our account. For the Lord says, “My name is continually scoffed at by all peoples”; and again, “Alas for him through whom my name is scoffed at!” How is it scoffed at? By your failing to do what I want. For when the heathen hear God’s oracles on our lips they marvel at their beauty and greatness. But afterwards, when they mark that our deeds are unworthy of the words we utter, they turn from this to scoffing, and say that is is a myth and a delusion.
When for instance, they hear from us that God says, “It is no credit to you if you love those who love you, but it is to your credit if you love your enemies and those who hate you,” when they hear these things, they are amazed at such surpassing goodness. But when they see that we fail to love not only those who hate us, but even those who love us, then they mock at us and scoff at the Name.”
My favorite old writing on love is this one.
Love is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never ends. But as for prophecies, they will come to an end; as for tongues, they will cease; as for knowledge, it will come to an end… And now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; and the greatest of these is love.
1 Cor. 13:4-8
And my favorite old way to look at is thru the lense of 1 John 4:8
Jesus is patient; Jesus is kind; Jesus is not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude. Jesus does not insist on His own way; He is not irritable or resentful; He does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth. Jesus bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Jesus never ends. But as for prophecies, they will come to an end; as for tongues, they will cease; as for knowledge, it will come to an end… And now faith, hope, and God abide, these three; and the greatest of these is God.
Out of the 3; faith, hope & love, faith will disolve away –for faith is in the unseen–, but one day all things we hope for will BE seen, and hope will wash away in the permanence of bedrock reality, heaven will be more than we could ever imagine, and that leaves GOD, the greatest, forever and ever, for He can be no other way than He is.
We’ll finally be home where we can walk and talk with Him as Adam and Eve did in the garden. And everything we ever thought we knew will disolve away into the glory of being in His presence and the splendor of His eternal kingdom and government of love, and only the language of love will be spoken there.
Perhaps it will take us thousands of ‘years’, if ever, to get over the fact that Jesus loves us so much that He kissed His Father’s cheek and left that wonderful place to step into flesh and drag the cross up the hill. Likely we’ll be wise enough by then to never ‘get over it’.
Have you read my analysis of this famous Corinthian passage called “The Grammar of Love”? It’s on the web site. You will find that Paul’s words say a lot more than the English can capture.
No, I didn’t know of its existance, — but I have found it now and will read it soon. Thanks
Dorothy, I liked the “Jesus is…”
Thanks for sharing. Also keep posting; your thoughts, ideas and insights are like a refreshing spring rain and, like the rain, always welcome and sometimes much needed (even if some of us all wet)! MS
Ah, dear brother and sister, I appreciate you, too.
It is Our Good Shepherd Who refreshes us all, and annoints us, and showers blessing.
God our Father is Sweetness enthroned!
From HOW TO STOP THE PAIN by Dr. James B. Richards:
“If anything will work, love will. If love will not work, nothing will.”
There is no if, — Love definitely will work.
Love never fails = Jesus never fails
Hi Dorothy,
I wholeheartedly agree with you that LOVE (Yeshua) NEVER FAILS. LOVE (MY loving efforts–which could be misinterpreted as controlling or manipulative) “APPEARS” TO FAIL when what I thought and hoped and prayed would happen doesn’t happen according to MY time table.
That’s when I simply need to LOVE without expectation, and LET GO of the outcome. To truly LOVE another for THEIR benefit, at cost to myself. Then patience kicks in, and I rely upon and TRUST YHWH, as in Hebrews 10:36: “Patient endurance is what you need now, so that you will continue to do God’s will. Then you will receive all that He has promised.” (NLT)
.. and so I continue to LOVE those who don’t or won’t love me in return, as in, I continue to do good to them and speak life over them and pray for them as I (humbly) walk with the LORD.
So, that’s my perspective of a situation where it doesn’t seem that “love” is working.
I see. You are suffering from suffering. *little smile*
I have waited thru long years myself for some. In hopes it encourages you, I have seen some of the ‘difficult people’ in my life mellow and have full restoration with one of them. Your hope is safely placed in the Right One!
These are but thorns that keeps us from trusting ourselves! It teaches us to give thanks in everything. Would we need Christ, if we could cause every wish of our hearts, to come to pass? Would we need Him, if we could stop every heartbreak from occurring?
Another thing that happens, –as years of disappointments and heartbreaks pile up, the world begins to lose some of its allure; and our love for Christ increases along with our desire to be with Him. (not the same as not loving life).
May I give you a couple of gifts? Imagine these wrapped in fresh tender-green paper tied with a transparent peach-colored bow. Enjoy! 🙂
He giveth power to the faint; and to them that have no might he increaseth strength. Isa 40:29
But they that wait upon the LORD shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint. Isa 40:31
As we were reading this and discussing as a family the children were reminded of the following scriptures:
Matthew 7:21-23 “Not everyone who says to me ‘Lord, Lord’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of my Father…depart from me you who practice lawlessness!”
and Psalm 119:15 “Depert from me, you evildoers, For I will keep the commandments of my God!”
YHWH’s self revelation is His Torah which Yeshua lived. He came to show us the Father. Yes, “Jesus is…”, and it cannot be separated from His ways revealed in Torah. The Great merciful and gracious One-abounding in goodness and truth! O, He is great and greatly to be praised! Let all the earth rejoice!