Etheridge(i)
1 Though in every tongue of men and of angels I spoke, and had not love, I should be as brass which soundeth, or a cymbal which giveth voice.
2 And though there were in me prophecy, and I knew all mysteries, and all knowledge, and though there were in me all faith, as that I could remove the mountain,[Mountains. - WALTON'S edit.] and love were not in me, I should be nothing.
3 And if all I have I make to feed the poor, and I deliver my body to burn, and love be not in me, I profit nothing.
4 LOVE is patient and benign; love envieth not; love is not tumultuous, nor inflated;
5 it acteth not with unseemliness, nor seeketh its own; it is not angry, nor thoughtful of evil;
6 it rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth.
7 It endureth every thing, believeth every thing; it hopeth all, endureth all.
8 Love never falleth;[Lo nophel.] for prophecies shall be abolished, and tongues be silent, and knowledge be abolished:
9 for it is a little of much that we know, and a little of much we prophesy;
10 but when the perfection shall have come, then shall be abolished that which is little.
11 When I was a child, as a child I spake, and as a child I thought, and as a child I reasoned; but when I had become a man I abolished these things of childhood.
12 But now as in a mirror we see in a figure;[Or, parable.] but then- the face before the face. Now I know a little of much; but then shall I know even as I am known.
13 For these are the three that remain, faith and hope and love; but the greatest of these is love.