Finishing Strong: Strength, Love, and Longing for Christ
1 Corinthians 16:13-14, 22
"Be watchful, stand firm in the faith, act like men, be strong. Let all that you do be done in love...If anyone has no love for the Lord, let him be accursed. Our Lord, come! [Maranatha]."
Today, as it was in the days of Paul, we are living in a church age marked by immaturity, and worldly influences. And so, these words of exhortation from Paul serve as a fitting capstone to his entire epistle. He is calling all believers to be vigilant, watchful, operating in mature faith, while grounding everything in love for Christ.
He's writing to correct the errors of the party politics of the church. Today it would be people saying, "I'm of the Nazarene", "I'm a Baptist", "I'm Orthodox", "I'm of the One True Church", "I'm of Apollos", "I'm of Paul". Nothing new under the sun. And he lays out a methodology for correcting these errors.
Five Commands for a Compromised Church
Be watchful: Stay alert against spiritual dangers, false teaching, and the temptations of the flesh. Hold unyieldingly to the gospel truths amid any and all cultural pressures. Don't let the politically correct media or masses dictate how your faith works.
Stand firm in the faith: They were spiritually immature; always quarreling, tolerating sin, and drifting from one unsound doctrine to another. They are to put aside their childish fear and display bold resolve.
Act like men: Paul urges them to wake up, dig in their heels, and face these challenges with godly courage. This isn’t mere toughness; it’s the resolve of faith that refuses to compromise.
Be strong: The church must grow in their inner strength through dependence on God’s Spirit, not self-reliance. And wield that firmness of faith with gentleness, conviction with compassion. Strong in their love.
Let all that you do be done in love: Strength without love becomes harsh and divisive. Strength detached from love becomes brutality. Courage without love turns into arrogance. And even the most impressive spiritual disciplines are hollow noise without love. Agape love is the guardrail that keeps godly resolve from veering into harshness or division.
For truly the heart of ALL these matters is our affectionate love for Christ Jesus. To lack heartfelt love for Jesus Christ; the One who died and rose for us, is the ultimate spiritual failure. Not the familiar agapē of sacrificial choice, but phileō; the language of tender affection, warm devotion, and personal attachment.
This is serious stuff. Indifference, lukewarm feelings, or possibly even hostility toward Christ places one under a divine curse.
The Heart’s True Devotion
Everything culminates in verse 22. Paul uses the strongest possible language: If anyone does not love the Lord, let him be accursed. Maranatha!
Paul's not talking about mere doctrinal correctness or intellectual agreement with the facts of the gospel. He's talking about our passionate love for the Person of Jesus Christ, the One who loved us and gave Himself for us. Cold orthodox formality toward the Savior places a person under divine judgment. To lack this affectionate devotion is no small matter. The greatest threat to the church today is our hearts growing cold towards Christ Jesus. Churches divided over points of style, tribalism, doctrinal statuses. Truth compromised for cultural approval, immaturity masquerading as tolerance, and meanwhile affection for Christ growing cold in many hearts.
Will we stay watchful and stand firm, or will we drift with the current?
Will we act with courageous maturity, or shrink back in fear?
Will we grow strong in the Spirit, AND do everything in love?
And above all, do our hearts truly burn with affectionate devotion to Jesus, or have we settled for a cold, correct orthodoxy?
Have we carved out our love in statues, art works, in cathedrals, in collecting relics, and secondary doctrinal distinctives, truth softened or sidelined for cultural approval. Immaturity disguised as "grace" or "tolerance." Ministry busyness, programs, and buildings, or have our hearts be broken for Christ's sake. Have our wills been conformed to His. Have our souls been longing to be by His side day by day.
Have we poured our devotion into outward things, or has our will been surrendered daily to His?
A Living Love
True Christianity is not about erecting monuments to the past both materially and ritualistically; it's about a living, breathing relationship with the risen Lord. It is affection that says, "Whom have I in heaven but You? And there is nothing on earth that I desire besides You" (Psalm 73:25).
When you pray to Him, "Yeshua", it's out of love that you affectionately call his name. When you give Him honor, "Adonai", you're bending your will to His because you truly want your love to honor Him.
Grand cathedrals of stone, elaborate rituals repeated without heart, or cherished traditions clung to as ends in themselves, this is not love for Christ, its love of self.
Lives Ablaze with Love for Christ
It's ironic, because the many depicted saints were all people who lived that love of devotion. Thats what marked them, devotion to Christ that is born of our great love for Him. We build cathedrals, carve statues, paint icons, and venerate relics in honor of the saints; yet the very people we commemorate would be the first to redirect our gaze away from themselves and toward the One they loved with all their heart, soul, mind, and strength.
What set the saints apart was never the monuments erected in their memory, but the burning, affectionate devotion to Jesus Christ that consumed their lives while they walked this earth. They embodied exactly what Paul demands in 1 Corinthians 16:22, the warm, personal phileō love for the Lord that refuses to settle for anything less than wholehearted attachment to Him.
Think of the apostles who left everything to follow Him, facing martyrdom with joy because they loved Christ more than life itself.
Think of the early church fathers who contended for the faith amid persecution, not for fame, but because their hearts were captive to the Savior.
Think of men and women across the centuries; Augustine, Francis, Teresa, Spurgeon, Corrie ten Boom, and countless unnamed saintly believers, whose lives were marked by one thing...they loved Jesus deeply, tenderly, and passionately.
Their prayers were the cries of lovers. Their obedience was glad surrender. And their sacrifices and service to the gospel flowed from that same fountain of love. They did not point to themselves; they pointed to Him.
May we who bear the name of Jesus Christ refuse to settle for cold orthodoxy or empty tradition. May the Holy Spirit kindle in us the same fire of His love that burned in the hearts of the saints...a love for Jesus so deep, so tender, so all-consuming that the world takes notice and says, "See how they love Him."
Closing Prayer:
Adonai Jesus, Yeshua my Savior; my Master, forgive us for honoring Your servants with lips and monuments while our hearts have sometimes grown distant and cold. Set our affections ablaze again. Make us like the saints of old. Men and women whose greatest mark is undying, affectionate love for You. We long to love You as You deserve. Maranatha...come, Lord Jesus, and find us loving You when You return. Amen