“[Love] does not rejoice in iniquity, but rejoices in the truth.” (1 Corinthians 13:6)
Paul’s anatomy of agapē continues with a moral calibration of the heart. If verse 5 exposes love’s restraint—its refusal to be rude, self-seeking, reactive, or resentful—verse 6 reveals love’s moral compass. Here, love is not merely relational; it is ethical. It is not blind affection, but discerning allegiance. It does not celebrate what wounds, distorts, or deceives. It rejoices in what heals, reveals, and redeems.
“Love does not rejoice in iniquity” is a sobering indictment of spiritual complicity. Iniquity—unrighteousness, injustice, moral failure—is not entertainment for love. It is grief. Love does not gloat over another’s fall, nor does it find satisfaction in scandal, cruelty, or sin. In a culture of voyeurism and vengeance, where failure is monetized and pain is politicized, Paul insists that love refuses to cheer for brokenness. It does not delight in the downfall of enemies or the exposure of flaws. It does not weaponize truth to shame, nor does it twist grace to excuse. Love is not a spectator of suffering—it is a healer of it.
“But rejoices in the truth” is love’s moral joy. Truth here is not mere factuality—it is reality as God sees it. It is the unveiling of what is good, right, and holy. Love celebrates integrity, not image. It delights in repentance, not reputation. It rejoices when justice rolls down like waters, when mercy triumphs over judgment, when the light pierces the shadows. In this way, love is not neutral—it is fiercely loyal to the truth that liberates. It does not bend to sentimentality or tribalism. It rejoices when the truth is spoken, even when it costs. It rejoices when the truth is lived, even when it hurts.
Together, these twin postures, grief over iniquity and joy in truth, form the moral rhythm of agapē. Love is not passive. It is not permissive. It is not indifferent. It is morally awake, emotionally honest, spiritually courageous. It weeps with those who weep and rejoices with those who rejoice, but only when the rejoicing is righteous. In verse 6, love is not a mood—it is a moral movement. It is the ethic of Christ, who wept over Jerusalem’s sin and rejoiced in the faith of a centurion. Who confronted hypocrisy and celebrated humility. Who bore the weight of iniquity to unleash the joy of truth.
In the divine economy, this kind of love is not sentimental—it is sanctifying. It does not merely feel—it forms. It does not merely comfort—it convicts. It is the love that exposes and embraces, that wounds and heals, that judges and justifies. It is the love that hung on a cross, not to rejoice in iniquity, but to rejoice in the truth that sets us free.
And in practicing it, we do not merely echo heaven—we embody it. For love, Paul insists, does not rejoice in iniquity. It rejoices in truth. And in doing so, it becomes the truth that rejoices over us.
No comments:
Post a Comment