Biblical Love
I want to challenge you with what I believe is the greatest mountain climb in all of life: love. Not lightweight love. Not sentimental love. I’m talking about the kind of love that asks everything from us. The kind of love Paul writes about in 1 Corinthians 13 when he says faith, hope, and love remain, but the greatest of these is love.
I spend time unpacking why I believe that chapter has far more to do with how we live together as human beings and communities than it does with weddings. I talk about my own relationship with scripture, why I treasure the Bible deeply, and why I also believe the Bible can become dangerous in the hands of angry and judgmental people. I share why I think Jesus calls us beyond simply being “biblical” and toward becoming people rooted in faith, hope, and radical love.
Along the way, I reflect on Paul’s transformation on the road to Damascus, the importance of being willing to let go of certainty, and why love is the true measure of spiritual maturity. I talk about spiritual refugees, disappointment, discomfort, hope, and what it means to keep loving people even when it would be easier to pull away or condemn them.
More than anything, this episode is an invitation. An invitation to slow down, breathe deeply, and remember that faith, hope, and love are still worth the risk. And that no matter what else happens in this world, love remains the greatest thing we have to offer each other.