Session 2: Confronting Envy, Boasting, and Pride

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Church Goals

Welcome back to our series Church Goals, where we’re journeying verse by verse through 1 Corinthians 13—the Bible’s masterclass on love. In our first session, we laid a foundation with patience and kindness, two essential qualities of love that actively sustain and bless others.

Love is Humble and Selfless

Today, we turn to three attitudes that love decisively rejects: envy, boasting, and pride. These aren’t just negative traits—they are spiritual toxins that corrode relationships and distort the image of Christ in us. Real love, the kind that reflects Jesus, is deeply humble and profoundly selfless. It seeks not to elevate self, but to uplift others.

Scripture Reading: 1 Corinthians 13:4 (BSB)

“Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud.”

Love Does Not Envy

Envy is a quiet thief. It often starts subtly—with a glance, a thought, a comparison. But over time, it breeds bitterness, resentment, and even hostility. To envy is to resent someone else’s joy, success, or blessing.

At its root, envy is born from insecurity and a scarcity mindset—the fear that someone else’s gain is somehow your loss. But love lives in abundance. It knows that God’s blessings are not limited, and His plans for one person do not threaten His plans for another.

“Rejoice with those who rejoice; weep with those who weep.” – Romans 12:15 (BSB)

Love refuses to compete. It celebrates. It lifts others up without hesitation, because it finds joy not in being above others, but in walking with them.

Love Does Not Boast

Boasting, on the other hand, is envy’s extroverted cousin. Where envy says, “I want what you have,” boasting says, “Look what I have.” It seeks attention and admiration. It elevates self—often at the expense of others.

But love doesn’t need applause. Love isn’t loud about its goodness. It doesn’t serve to be seen, and it doesn’t perform for praise.

Jesus gave us the perfect model of quiet strength. He washed feet. He healed without seeking recognition. He even told people not to spread the news of His miracles. That’s love—confident, content, and unconcerned with credit.

“Let someone else praise you, and not your own mouth; an outsider, and not your own lips.” – Proverbs 27:2 (BSB)

Love Is Not Proud

Pride is perhaps the most subtle and deeply rooted of the three. It’s not just about arrogance—it’s a mindset that says, “I’m above correction, above others, above serving.”

Pride makes it hard to forgive, hard to listen, and hard to love. It resists humility because it thrives on superiority. But true love begins with the realization that everything we are and have is a gift.

Humility, then, is not self-degradation—it’s a right understanding of ourselves before God. It says, “I am loved and valued by God, and so is every other person I meet.”

“Do nothing out of selfish ambition or empty pride, but in humility consider others more important than yourselves.” – Philippians 2:3 (BSB)

Love rooted in humility sees others not as competition, but as fellow image-bearers of God. It delights in serving and defers to others with grace and generosity.

Discussion Questions

Understanding Envy

  • How has envy shown up in your relationships or thoughts?
  • What helps you move from comparison to contentment and celebration?

Reflecting on Boasting

  • How do you feel when you sense someone is boasting?
  • Have you ever struggled with seeking recognition? What helps you shift the focus to others?

Confronting Pride

  • What are subtle signs of pride that might go unnoticed in your life?
  • How does humility invite deeper connection and stronger community?

Application: Living Love with Humility

Personal Reflection
Spend time this week asking God to search your heart for envy, boasting, or pride. Invite the Holy Spirit to reveal attitudes that need to be surrendered—and replaced with humility and love.

Celebrate Others
Make it a point to celebrate someone’s success or joy this week—publicly or privately. Let your words be free from competition, full of sincerity, and rooted in love.

Practice Humility
Choose one act of humility this week. Maybe it’s giving credit to someone else, asking for help, or doing a task no one notices. Do it not for applause, but as an offering of love.

Conclusion: The Hidden Power of Humility

What makes love powerful is not just its strength—but its humility. In a world driven by comparison and recognition, love stands apart by being unthreatened, unboastful, and unselfish.

Love doesn’t fight for the spotlight—it shines it on others. It doesn’t climb over people—it kneels to serve them. This is the love of Christ. And this is the love we are called to live.

The more we surrender envy, boasting, and pride, the more room we make for a love that truly reflects Jesus—humble, generous, and full of grace.

Next Session Preview:

In Session 3, we’ll explore how love expresses itself through courtesy, selflessness, and emotional maturity. Specifically, we’ll look at how love is not rude, not self-seeking, and not easily angered—and how those qualities reshape our everyday interactions.

Questions and Answers

Q: Why are envy, boasting, and pride listed together in this verse?
A: These three traits are deeply connected—they all center on self. Envy wants what others have, boasting wants others to see what we have, and pride believes we deserve more than others. Together, they oppose the selflessness of true love.

Q: Is there a healthy kind of pride?
A: It’s okay to feel satisfaction in what God has done through you—but love always gives credit where it’s due. Healthy pride celebrates God’s grace, not our greatness.

Q: How can I celebrate others when I feel overlooked myself?
A: Start with gratitude for what God has given you. Trust that His timing is perfect. When we love others without needing the spotlight, we reflect a deep trust in His plan and provision.

Let love lead—and let it lead with humility.of love on the right foundation—because everything that follows will depend on it.

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