Who Do You Love?

Rest in Peace to Craig Morton who died yesterday at 83 years of age. A terrific passer, but one of the slowest human beings to ever play quarterback in the NFL. Morton lost a Super Bowl while starting for the Cowboys and won the Cowboys a Super Bowl by starting for the other team. He was pulled in SB XII for Norris Weese. If you remember that, you’ve been around for a while. Man, I love those old gray pants. Remember when the Cowboys pants matched their helmets? That’s a long time ago, dude.

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I’m still processing so much of what I heard and soaked up while at the Pepperdine Lectures last week in California. Just reflecting on a sentence here and a phrase there about the primary position of love in our churches has me strangely encouraged and deeply convicted. You know, this stuff will preach.

Fate Hagood asked a really simple question in one of his sessions on Wednesday: “Who do you love?”

The question was not, “Who do you say you love?” or “Who are you supposed to love?” or “Who do you think you love?” The question is simply “Who do you love?” And Fate said you know exactly who you love and who you don’t love by the metrics of 1 Corinthians 13.

Who are you patient with? That’s who you love.
Who are you not patient with?

Who are you kind to? That’s who you love.
Who are you not kind to?

Who do you protect? Who do you defend? That’s who you love.
Who do you accuse? Who do you insult?

If you are rude to someone, you do not love him or her. If someone angers you easily, you do not love that person. If you’re keeping a mental list of the wrongs of a particular person, you do not love him or her.

I’m wondering what these people I’m thinking about have in common. The people I’m nice to, the people I defend, the people I’m patient with–is there anything they have in common I need to pay attention to? What about the people 1 Corinthians 13 suggests I don’t love? What do they have in common? Is that something I need to reflect on and pray about?

What do the people I love and the people I don’t love say about me? Anything?

Yeah, something.

Who do you love?

Peace,
Allan

Nothing

“If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am only a resounding gong or a clanging cymbal. If I have the gift of prophesy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. If I give all I possess to the poor and surrender my body to the flames, but have not love, I gain nothing.” ~1 Corinthians 13:1-3

Think about the last time you defined yourself. You made a statement, you drew a line, you chose a side. I am this! I sure ain’t that! I believe this! I do that! You declared who you are and what you’re all about. The last time you proclaimed your values.

Was it about love?

Because if it’s not about love, it’s nothing. If it’s not about love, you are declaring that you are nothing. Your position is nothing. Your beliefs and your values are nothing. Without love, your identity is wrapped up in nothing.

The Bible makes this clear. Scripture tells us in 1 Corinthians 13 that any action or belief or value or deed done or proclaimed without love is nothing.

That means if your core values, your religious convictions, your political positions, your career priorities, or your personal beliefs are not founded on and motivated by love, they are nothing. You are nothing.

Love is patient, love is kind (13:4). Is the group with which you identify known for patience and kindness?

Love is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs (13:5). Do your core values line up with this or not? Is the side you’ve chosen causing you to be more loving or less loving?

Love does not delight in evil, but rejoices with the truth (13:6). Do your convictions or priorities contribute to more truth in the world or less? Do the people with whom you identify speak truth. Do they delight in evil?

Whether you’re in a heated argument or in an echo chamber, when you dig in and define yourself, is it about love?

Because if it’s not about love, you are nothing.

Peace,

Allan

Strange Bedfellows

I’m in Malibu this week with our two amazing GCR Youth Ministers, Jadyn and J.E.,  for the annual Pepperdine Bible Lectures. Oh, and Shiloh. Jadyn’s precious daughter, Shiloh, has made the trip with us, too. Of course, as is my tradition, we flew into town a day early so we could take in a baseball game. Last night we watched Mike Trout strike out looking–twice!–as the White Sox crushed the Halos at the Big A in Anaheim. 6-0. Not much of a game. But we had awesome seats, sat by some really super nice Angels fans, and almost ate for the cycle.

 

 

 

 

 

 

We drove up to Hollywood Boulevard this morning to check out all the weird stuff there: the creepy Spiderman, the sad Mickey Mouse, all the people pushing their CDs while they bark for Hollywood bus tours, mixed in with the more historical sites like the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Grauman’s Chinese Theater, and the Hollywood Bowl. We also ate a hearty lunch at the Hollywood Hard Rock Cafe, right there on the strip, and spent almost two hours on the windy and freezing beach in Malibu off the Pacific Coast Highway.

We took a little rest at our rooms on campus before eating our traditional opening night dinner at Malibu Seafood, again, right on the PCH, with a wonderful view of the ocean. And then we gathered with a couple of thousand Christians from all over the country to worship God with our great friends in United Voice Worship and to listen to God’s Word proclaimed by one of the best ever, my good friend Rick Atchley. It was as good–no, way better!–as what you would think.

The theme of this year’s lectures, “The Most Excellent Way,” comes from 1 Corinthians 13. The line of the night from Rick’s keynote sermon came while he was addressing the recent tendency in our churches to be seduced by worldly power and control, which distracts us and turns us away from our mandate to love. Rick told us the Church is pursuing a love of power instead of the power of love. But here’s the line:

“When the Church gets in bed with worldly power, the baby doesn’t look like Jesus.”

We hung around to talk with some of our favorite people and then shut down the Jack-in-the-Box up the road with some late night Oreo shakes. You can tell from this picture that I was still going strong at 10:00pm while J.E. was fading and Shiloh was already gone pecan. Lightweights.

This week at Pepperdine is one of my all-time favorite things every year. My soul needs this. My Lord always meets me here. He nourishes me and encourages me. I am being strengthened and refreshed. And I am not alone.

I cannot wait for tomorrow.

Peace,
Allan

The Prophetic Tasks

How about a loaded quote today from a true Christian prophet who passed from this life to the next almost two years ago. The quote is more than 15 years old, but it’s never been more true than right now.

“The prophetic tasks of the Church are to tell the truth in a society that lives in illusion, grieve in a society that practices denial, and express hope in a society that lives in despair.” ~Walter Brueggemann

Offseason Comes Early

https://media.sportsnaut.com/cdn-cgi/image/width=788,height=444,fit=crop,quality=90,gravity=auto,sharpen=1,metadata=none,format=auto,onerror=redirect/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/NHL-Stanley-Cup-Playoffs-Dallas-Stars-at-Minnesota-Wild-28850711.jpg

Now what are we supposed to do for the next month?

Sign Jason Robertson to a long term deal. Take the Captain’s “C” away from Benn and give it to Robo. See what you can get for Myers. And everybody rest up. Have a great long offseason for the first time in years and gear up for another run. The window is still wide open on this team.

The Load In

Equipment began arriving late yesterday afternoon, the big trucks and trailers and crews were here early this morning, and the Worship Center at GCR is starting to look like a concert venue. Colton Dixon plays GCR tonight on his “The Love I Have For You” tour, along with Tasha Layton and bodie. They have raised and expanded our stage, rearranged many rows of seats, and secured several large canisters of some kind of flammable gas to each side of the stage for, I think, some kind of effect (they’ve promised us they’re not shooting confetti). Everybody’s super nice and it should be a really good show.

 

 

 

 

 

Doors open at 6:30 this evening and the concert starts at 7:00. You can still buy your tickets on the GCR website here, or you can get them tonight at the door. If you live in Midland or anywhere in the Basin, I hope to see you here.

Peace,
Allan

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