“First and Foremost…” (1 Corinthians 15:1–11)

“[1 Corinthians 15] brings to a climax the theme of grace as God’s sovereign free gift through the cross to which ’the dead’ contribute no special ‘knowledge’ or ‘experience,’ but do indeed undergo transformation of life and lifestyle through ‘God, who gives life to the dead’ (Rom. 4:17) on the basis of promise.”

Anthony Thiselton

Worship That Reflects God’s Character of Order and Peace (1 Corinthians 14:26-40)

God’s Kingdom: “a sphere of rulership, in which his will is done in the fallen world as it is in the sinless heavens; in which cruelty and disorder and the distortion caused by sin are supplanted by love, order and righteousness. Loving obedience to God produces much more than individual goodness, respectability and the alleviation of suffering. It builds the kingdom of heaven.”

Richard Lovelace, Renewal as a Way of Life

The Enduring Reality of Love (1 Corinthians 13:8-13)

“It is love who mixed the mortar
And it’s love who stacked these stones
And it’s love who made the stage here
Although it looks like we’re alone
In this scene, set in shadows,
Like the night is here to stay
There is evil cast around us
But it’s love that wrote the play
For in this darkness love can show the way”

—David Wilcox, “Love Will Show the Way”

Building a Foundation on the Rock (Luke 6:46-49)

“When God sets out to embrace the enemy, the result is the cross. On the cross the dancing circle of self-giving and mutually indwelling divine persons opens up for the enemy; in the agony of the passion the movement stops for a brief moment and a fissure appears so that sinful humanity can join in. We, the others—we, the enemies—are embraced by the divine persons who love us with the same love with which they love each other and therefore make space within their own eternal embrace.”

Miroslav Volf