Formation to Transformation | A Worship Devotional
1 Corinthians 13 was not written for your wedding. It was written to the most gifted, most divided worship gathering in the New Testament. If you have ever sat through love is patient, love is kind read by a maid of honor in a string of pastel dresses, you know how this chapter sounds. We have flattened it. We have framed it in calligraphy. We have made it sentimental. It is not a sentimental chapter. It is the chapter where Paul looks straight at a worship team in chaos and tells them the gifts they are so proud of are not worth much without one specific posture. Look at where chapter 13 sits in the letter. Chapter 12 is the body, the gifts, the booth we talked about at the beginning of this season. Chapter 14 is what to do when the gathering itself becomes chaos, when people prophesy over each other, when somebody speaks in tongues without an interpreter, when the order of worship falls apart. Chapter 13 sits in between those two, and it is not a romance interlude. It is the bridge. Paul is talking to musicians. He is talking to people who prophesy. He is talking to people who speak in tongues. He is talking to people whose gifts are real and obvious and getting in the way of each other. And he reaches for an image from the stage. Sounding brass. Clanging cymbal. Those are instruments. Loud ones. He could have said, if I speak without love, I am like a tree that bears no fruit. He picks instruments. On purpose. Because the people listening to this letter are the gifted ones in the worship gathering, and he wants them to hear themselves. The skill is real, Paul says. The gift is real. The prophecy is real. The faith that moves mountains is real. Without love, all of it is noise. Now the verb. Love is patient, love is kind. That word for patient is makrothymeo. It means to suffer long. To stretch your anger out into a longer line than your provocation. To not snap when you have every right to. That is a team verb. Every single wound this season has named requires it. The volunteer who keeps declining. Makrothymeo. The musician who is better than the room. Makrothymeo. The booth that finds out last. Makrothymeo. The setlist fight that will not die. Makrothymeo. The parking lot conversation. Makrothymeo. The peacekeeping you have called peace. Makrothymeo. The pastor you wrote the story about. Makrothymeo. The comparison you cannot quit. Makrothymeo. Every move we have named in this season requires a love that suffers long. Without it, the season is just diagnosis. With it, the season is formation. Paul does not say love is a personality trait that some teams have and some teams do not. He says love is the skill that makes every other skill on the worship team mean anything. Without love, the gifted bass player is brass. Without love, the vocalist with the best range is a cymbal. Without love, the audio engineer with twenty years of experience is noise. A question to sit with today: if my team described how I treat them, would 1 Corinthians 13 come to mind? Read the written version and get extra notes at ryanloche.substack.com.
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