2016 picture of Ray Sparre

Insightful Musings on the Scriptures

by

Raymond P. Sparre
Northwest University class of '67



Friday, Sept 03, 2021

Good day, Zane.

Crazy day! It’s 6pm at present. Very rare for me to be running around at this late hour of the day while still wearing my jog clothes. Today seems to have been a perpetual course of chores, interruptions, and distractions. Oh well…at least I don’t have a boss yelling at me…other than me.

Hope you’re doing well—giving your best attention to the priorities of life.

Love and prayers—Tua/Ray.


3 September
Galatians 4:21-5:15
Focus: “The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.” (Galatians 5:6)

I cannot imagine a more concise statement of Biblical priority and purpose than this. Paul cuts right through all the fat, froth, fraud, frivolity, futility, and formalism and drops on us a simple, yet profound, all-encompassing standard to live by. It’s another one of those high-impact statements that would be worth painting on our walls, hanging on our refrigerators, and etching across our bathroom mirrors. In spite of an epidemic trend in our culture, I would rather not recommend turning it into a tattoo. But we would be wise to use it as a measuring stick for everything we see, do, and desire. Use it in assessing the authenticity and value of ministries and so-called “revivals” that emerge around us. Use it for judging church programs that can consume so much time and energy. And use it in determining the value of your own pursuits and ambitions. “The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.” Wow!

It helps me to lace together some vital Biblical concepts this way: LOVE is a COMMAND, but the Gospel is a CONDITION—it’s a conditional OPPORTUNITY that allows and equips one to fulfill the COMMAND. You can’t fulfill the COMMAND without embracing the CONDITION. So the Gospel is not a COMMAND to do right (to LOVE), but offers the CONDITION or FREEDOM to do right—to fulfill the COMMAND to LOVE. Look again at the last 3 verses of our reading. “You, my brothers, were called to be free. But do not use your freedom to indulge the sinful nature; rather serve one another in love. The entire law is summed up in a single command: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ If you keep on biting and devouring each other, watch out or you will be destroyed by each other.”

Repeat it again: “The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.” Say it again. Again. Again. Again. What would we do without this positive form of brain washing (Ephesians 5:26)? We would probably make a bunch of other stuff count more—stuff that is either detrimental or not really worth counting.

“We do not need to possess a faith as much
as we need a faith that possesses us.”