Wednesday in the Word

41 Why Some Gifts are Greater (1 Corinthians 14:1-25)


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True spirituality is not measured by dramatic experiences or ecstatic speech, but by whether our words clearly build others up in the truth. 

In this episode on 1 Corinthians 14:1–25, Krisan Marotta traces Paul’s contrast between tongues and prophecy, showing that while both are genuine works of the Spirit, one serves mainly the individual and the other serves the whole church by communicating understandable content. 

In this week’s episode, we explore:

  • How 1 Corinthians 12–14 hangs together, and why chapter 14 returns to Paul’s earlier point about “greater gifts” after his focus on love in chapter 13 
  • What Paul means by “prophecy” (clear explanation and exhortation from God’s already-given Word) and “tongues” (real human languages given by the Spirit), and why Paul’s main point doesn’t depend on how we settle every detail of that debate 
  • Why Paul urges the Corinthians to aim their zeal at what truly matters: love first, and then gifts that most clearly edify others, especially prophecy
  • Paul’s basic contrast: the tongue-speaker prays to God and edifies himself, while the one who prophesies speaks intelligibly to others “for edification and exhortation and consolation,” building up the church 
  • Why understandable content is central: from musical instruments and battle bugles to foreign languages, Paul argues that sounds only help if they communicate meaning people can grasp and respond to 
  • How Paul can both “wish you all spoke in tongues” and yet insist he would rather say five clear words that instruct others than ten thousand in a tongue no one understands
  • What it means for tongues to be “a sign for unbelievers” in light of Isaiah 28, and how foreign speech there functions as judgment on people who refused to listen to God’s prophets
  • The difference between a visitor walking into a chaos of unintelligible tongues (and thinking everyone is mad) versus walking into a gathering where clear truth is spoken and hearts are laid bare, leading to conviction and worship 
  • How this passage challenges both modern charismatic practice and an emotion-driven view of “good sermons,” reminding us that real edification comes through truth communicated, not bare intensity of feeling 

After listening, you’ll come away with a clearer sense of why Paul prizes intelligible speech over impressive-sounding experiences, and how that shapes our understanding of tongues, prophecy, and church life today. You’ll be invited to value content over noise, to seek gifts and opportunities that genuinely build others up in the gospel, and to see everyday conversations, teaching, and prayer as powerful ways God uses clear truth—not just heightened emotion—to strengthen the faith of his people. 

Series: 1 Corinthians: Pride & Prejudice in the church

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Wednesday in the WordBy Krisan Marotta

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