I enjoy reading history books. Recently I have been reading about The War of
the Roses in England. The final battle
of the War of the Roses was on August 22, 1485.
King Richard III met the outnumbered forces of Henry Tudor at the Battle
of Bosworth Field. William Shakespeare
wrote a historical play on the life of King Richard III around 1590.
In the play the pivotal moment of the battle is shown. The
morning of the battle, Richard hurriedly sent a servant to make sure his favorite
horse was ready. “Shoe him quickly,” the
man told the blacksmith. “You’ll have to
wait,” the blacksmith answered. “I’ve
shoed the king’s whole army the last few days, and now I’ve got to get more
iron.” “I can’t wait,” the groom shouted
impatiently. “The king’s enemies are
advancing right now, and we must meet them on the field. Make do with what you have.”
So the blacksmith bent to his task. From a single bar of iron he made four
horseshoes. He hammered and shaped and
fitted them to the horses’ feet. Then he
began to nail them on. But after he had
fastened three shoes, he found he didn’t have enough nails for the fourth. “I need one or two more nails,” he said, “and
it will take some time to hammer them out.”
“I told you I can’t wait,” the king’s servant said impatiently. “I hear the trumpets now. Can’t you just use what you’ve got?” “I can put the shoe on, but it won’t be as
secure as the others.” “Will it hold?”
asked the groom. “It should, but I can’t
be certain.” “Well, then, just nail it
on.
When the armies clashed, Richard was in the thick of the
battle, riding up and down the field, cheering his men and fighting his foes. In the thick of battle as he valiantly rode
into the enemy lines, one of the horse’s shoes flew off. The horse stumbled and fell, and Richard was
thrown to the ground. Before the king
could grab at the reins, the frightened animal rose and galloped away, leaving
Richard all by himself. Richard looked
around him. He saw that his soldiers
were turning and running, and Henry’s troops were closing around him. He waved his sword in the air. “A horse!” he shouted. “My kingdom for a horse!” But there was no horse for him. A moment later Henry’s soldiers were upon Richard,
and the battle was over.
Not long after the battle the following rhyme appeared in
print. For want of a nail, a
shoe was lost, For want of a shoe, a horse was lost, For want of a horse, a
battle was lost, For want of a battle, a kingdom was lost, And all for the want
of a horseshoe nail.
As Christians we are in a battle; the battle between good
and evil. On the battlefield small
things have big consequences. In reality
there are no small things on the battlefield.
The Apostle Paul gave us a list of spiritual gifts in 1 Corinthians
chapter 12 verses 7-10. “To one person
the Spirit gives the ability to give wise advice; to another he gives the gift
of special knowledge. The Spirit gives special faith to another, and to someone
else he gives the power to heal the sick. He gives one person the power to
perform miracles, and to another the ability to prophesy. He gives someone else
the ability to know whether it is really the Spirit of God or another spirit
that is speaking. Still another person is given the ability to speak in
different languages, and another is given the ability to interpret”.
Whether they are big or small, all spiritual gifts are
important. Spiritual gifts are given
only to help others. They are not for
our own selfish benefit. Spiritual gifts
are service oriented, and those who use them, those who exercise them, will grow.
I call it the River Principle. If your life flows like a
river, always passing along life and energy to those around you, then you will
be pure and clean.
But if you’re like a pond, face it; you can only hold so
much stuff. And then, no growth takes
place. The water becomes stagnant and
stinky and bad stuff grows there and mosquitos breed.
That’s why I believe Paul wrote what he did after giving us
the lists of spiritual gifts in 1 Corinthians 12. What's the next chapter after 12?
I Corinthians 13 is often called the love chapter. In verses
1-3 Paul writes, "Though I speak with the tongues of men and of
angels." (That's a spiritual gift) "But have not love, I have become
sounding brass or a clanging cymbal. And
though I have the gift of prophecy."
(That's a spiritual gift)
"And understand all mysteries and all knowledge." (There's another spiritual gift) "And though I have all faith." (That is a spiritual gift). "So that I could remove mountains, but
have not love, I am nothing. And though
I bestow all my goods to feed the poor."
(There is yet another spiritual gift)
"And though I give my body to be burned." "But have not love, it profits me
nothing."
Love is the underlying principle of every spiritual
gift. No matter what we are doing, if
love isn’t the underlying principle it is meaningless.
For want of a nail, a
shoe was lost, For want of a shoe, a horse was lost, For want of a horse, a
battle was lost, For want of a battle, a kingdom was lost, And all for the want
of a horseshoe nail.
Love is the nail that holds our lives together. It is what gives us purpose. Whatever else we think we are accomplishing,
whatever gifts we have, everything will fall apart and the battle will be lost
if we don’t have love.
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