2013 picture of Ray Sparre

Insightful Musings on theScriptures

by

Raymond P. Sparre
Northwest University class of '67



July 15, 2014

Greetings, dear ones.

he dog saga continues. Yesterday morning as I passed a house on the corner of the road where we typically turn up to do our walk/jog, I thought I heard a couple yips of a dog. I stopped and looked around the area—puzzled, because I didn’t think these people had a dog at this time. Nothing. I returned to the house, cleaned up, and went back to that house. I could not get a response to my knock on the door. I went back later and met a family member. Sure enough—they had Dandy contained there. They reasoned that they were protecting him from being hit on that main high-speed road. I can only figure that Dandy had left our property following his nose to their putting out dog or cat food. I could tell more, but the main point is that Dandy is home again.

We leave in a few minutes for an appointment with a cardiologist. My triple bypass surgery was back in 97—but I’m sensing that my plumbing is getting clogged up again. I’d much rather opt for a rigid diet than do that surgery thing again. We’ll see.

Blessings on your day. May the peace of God rule and referee in your heart—at least that’s the quality of life I most value.

Love, Dad/Ray.


15 July
Passage: 1 Corinthians 8
Focus: "Knowledge puffs up, but love builds up.” 1 Corinthians 8:1.

This is a proverb that would be fitting to hang on the walls of every professing Christian home and Church fellowship. And of course, it would be better if it were made to hang on the inner walls of the hearts of all believers.

Because it is so easy for us to forget, let’s do a brief review of the concept of LOVE from a Biblical perspective. That impresses me as a very worthy exercise when I am reminded that LOVE is of supreme importance in the Kingdom of God. Jesus confirms that there is absolutely nothing of higher priority than for believers to first and foremost sincerely LOVE GOD (the vertical component), and secondly sincerely LOVE OTHERS (the horizontal component) (Matthew 22:37-40). Jesus goes on to state,“All the Law and the Prophets (the whole plan and purpose of God’s dealing with men) hang on these two commandments.” Paul affirms in 1 Corinthians 13 that any kind of external performance of Christianity apart from the internal motivation of love amounts to a worthless waste. That sounds like something pretty important to keep on the front edge of our minds.

Let’s also be reminded of the comparison and contrast between God’s love and man’s love. LOVE could be one of the most widely misunderstood words in the English language. Other languages, like New Testament Greek, communicate the meaning better by using at least 3 distinct words for different forms of LOVE. The highest form, and the word that most accurately describes God’s LOVE, is “agape.” I call it “commitment love.” It is a love that begins in the will and may involve the emotions. It is a LOVE standard that honestly says, “I desire God’s best for that person and will do what I reasonably can to help them achieve it.” It is a standard that empowers one to LOVE even unlikeable people. I confess that there are many people around me that I do not really like and I have little natural desire to be around. But that does not prevent me from LOVING them by God’s standard and still desiring and working toward God’s best for them. And by this standard, LOVE BULDS UP. Man’s common standard of LOVE, however, is one that begins in the emotions and may involve the will. It is highly dependent on personal satisfaction, attention, and tends to be reciprocal. It says, “If you like me, I like you. If you say something nice to me I say something nice to you. You slap me, I slap you.” It’s easy to see how this attitude provides a very shaky foundation for any relationship—marriages, families, churches, schools, businesses, etc. Based on this standard, a man may reason, for example, “My wife irritates me—and I just don’t have those delightful feelings for her anymore. I guess I no longer love her.” Separation or divorce then becomes the solution.

In this passage before us, God is instructing us via Paul that our fulfillment of His edifying LOVE standard requires large measures of God-seeking (A HEART AFTER GOD) and self-denial. Self-denial? Now there’s the real stumbling block for our inherent selfish nature. Think about it.


“The measure of our love is the measure of our sacrifice.”