Love over Freedom

Love over Freedom

Blake Payne Updated Staff Photo

Blake Payne

Pelham Campus Pastor

In this passage, Paul responds to a question that has caused division in the Corinthian church: is it permissible to eat meat sacrificed to idols? Paul answers by addressing the larger issue, which is that believers who are confident in their spiritual freedoms are dismissing others’ more sensitive consciences, all for the sake of being right. Based on the example of Christ, Paul makes the argument that love is more important than freedom.

Application

  1. In what situations or relationships are you motivated by a desire to be right (e.g., at work, with your family or friends, under spiritual authority)? What would it look like in those moments to stop, repent, and let love be your motivation?

  2. What spiritual freedoms are you saying “yes” to that you know could be tempting a brother or sister in Christ to violate their conscience? Choose a spiritual freedom that you can say “no” to this week, out of consideration for someone.

  3. If you are prone to judgmentalism towards others’ freedoms, how can you move towards community in honesty about an area in which your conscience is sensitive, rather than isolating or sowing division?

Key Points

  • Love is more important than freedom.

  • Knowledge without consideration is arrogance.

  • We don’t always have to reject our spiritual freedoms, but we are called to manage them.

  • Just because we are free in Christ to do something doesn’t mean we should do it freely.

  • The person in a position of strength should always move toward the person who is weak.