15/22July 1 Corinthians 6-8
In this fourth sermon
in our series on 1 Corinthians, we come to chapters 6,7 and 8. In these
chapters, we find Paul referring to letters that he has been sent by members of
the Corinthian church, and responding to the issues that they have raised. As
he tackles their questions, Paul keeps the heart of his message the same as it
has been, and will be throughout the letter: followers of Jesus must try to
live in unity. The need for unity is more important than differences between
believers. The need for unity is more important than being on the winning side
in an argument. The need for unity is more important than whether you believe
yourself to be the one who is technically in the right.
Paul, living in Ephesus
at the time that he wrote his letter, may well have had opportunities to learn
from the apostle John, both in Ephesus and in earlier years in Jerusalem. He
may well have heard John’s stories of Jesus’ teaching, many of which would
later be put together to form John’s gospel. Paul would have learned from John,
and from his own listening to the holy spirit, that unless the followers of
Jesus are as one, living in unity and love, then the world will not believe in
their message. Jesus prayed (John 17.22) that coming generations of followers
would be one, so that the world might believe. But why should the world believe
a message of love delivered by a church which demonstrates a lack of love? Why
should the world believe in a God of love when we are seen to argue amongst
ourselves? When we are heard belittling each other? So often what we
demonstrate is that we do not love each other – or at least we don’t act as if
we do. When that is what people see, why should they believe in our God of
love?
In Corinth, Paul had
heard, two believers were at loggerheads with each other, and had taken their
case to the public courts. See these Christians, how they sue one another! Paul
was troubled that their disagreement was being dealt with so publicly and
acrimoniously. They should, he felt, have found wise people within the
Christian community to help mediate the problem and find a loving way to sort
it out. By going to court, the church – and by association, Jesus himself – was
brought into disrepute.
The church – and Jesus
– was brought into disrepute too by the behaviour of some members of who told
Paul ‘I have the right to do anything’. Paul taught that Jewish law no longer
applied, but his teaching was being misused by some church members to justify
and ‘anything goes’ attitude that included a horrifying strand of sexual
immorality. Paul had to put their thinking straight. The law may no longer
apply, but the way of love and unity with God is a way of holiness. As the body
of Christ, we must strife to behave like Christ. Or, if you like, what Cranmer
described as a ‘godly, righteous and sober life’. Using deliberate shock
tactics, Paul returned to his image of the church as Jesus’ body, and that body
as a vessel for God’s spirit. So if a church member uses a prostitute, or
commits adultery, he was taking Jesus into that liaison with him. It’s a
sobering thought. Our bodies should always honour God, and what we do with them
matters. What we do with our bodies reflects on God. Sexual relations can be
godly and beautiful. Sex is a gift from God. Sex is not shameful, nor is it
unholy – so long as it only happens within marriage.
In chapter 7 Paul
turned to their questions on marriage. Some of the members were anxious about
what sort of relationships were acceptable. We still hear the same concerns from
people joining the Christian community now. A young person engaged to a
longtime girlfriend or boyfriend, finds faith in Jesus. But their partner is
not persuaded. What do they do? Can a follower of Jesus commit to living with a
non-believer? Paul responds that commitments already entered into should be
honoured. Yes, marry him, he says. Though if you’re not engaged, don’t marry at
all – single people can serve God ore effectively. Unless of course, temptation
is so strong it will distract you from serving God. Then you must marry.
The important thing is
to live out God’s love in a holy way, and to be properly loving and respectful
in all of our relationships. This way, we reflect God’s love, and it will be
seen and respected by others.
Chapter 8 is a section
of the letter addressing questions raised by members about food sacrificed to
idols. Members who were wealthy or well connected would regularly be invited to
feasts in temples or private homes. Meat served at such feasts would have been
dedicated to one of the gods. Leftover meat from temple feasts was sold in the
market. So, as a rule, any meat available wold have been from a sacrifice of
some sort. Some Christians, Paul included, had no problem with this. The gods
weren’t real, Paul did not accept them or join with the worship of them. So
when he ate meat he didn’t feel he was joining himself with a god, he was just
enjoying his dinner. But not everyone saw it that way. For some people, eating
this meat was offensive, or suggestive of double standards. And for some it
carried strong memories of their days of joining in with the feasting and other
indulgences at the temples, and was both a reminder of a sinful life and a temptation
to return to it. Paul called upon Corinthian Christians who shared his ‘strong’
position to be more considerate to ‘weak’ ones who could not in conscience eat
this meat. To force them to do so would be unloving. The ‘strong’ Christians
who relied on their liberal understanding risked becoming ‘puffed up’, Paul
warned. Remember, Paul included himself among this group, and perhaps was
reminding himself as much as advising his fellow Christians, that an attitude
based on what you ‘know’ to be right can lead to behaviour that is unloving towards
others. Knowledge, Paul said, puffs you up, while love builds you up.
So we are not to approach
any issue that we disagree on from the point of view of ‘I know best, I know
the right answer’. Perhaps you do, but that doesn’t mean that the community is
ready to act on what you believe. Instead, prioritise love. Prioritise a loving
approach that builds up the people you disagree with and builds up the
community as a whole.
Love that builds up undergirds
unity. In this case, it meant that for a while at least some people would have
to abstain from eating meat in order to support a loving and united community.
So be it.
As we look at the
issues that divide us today, when does knowledge puff us up, and risk exacerbating
division instead of supporting unity? When do we put our desire to be in the
right ahead of loving treatment of our fellow Christians? When do we allow
division to be more important than unity, rightness to be more important than
love?
Let’s examine ourselves
carefully. What is our equivalent of meat sacrificed to idols, or of taking our
fellow Christians to court? Is it the way we speak of each other in emails? Or
on social media? Is it our fallings out over how best to care for our historic
buildings? Or whether to pay parish share? In the wider Church of England at
the moment we are publicly seen to argue over ordaining women, over inclusion
of LGBT people, over how we deal with historic sex abuse cases, over how we
invest our money. And the more we argue and rehearse our cases in the public
domain, the more we seem to show people that there is no God. And we need to
take care over this. I can assure you that the amount of argument reported in the
press that apparently happened before and during General Synod very much
exceeds what actually happened. If we air disagreements in public, even minor
ones, they will be blown out of proportion. But what the world will read in the
press will tell them that we are not a loving church. And if we are not loving,
how can we persuade them that our God of love is real?
We proclaim that God is
love.
We teach that we are the
body of Christ.
And thus, as the body
of Christ, we are as Christ, and we are love.
Or, as St John put it: ‘God
is love, and those who live in love live in God, and God lives in them’ (1 John
4.16).
Paul’s teaching is as
vital now as it was when he first wrote it down. We must prioritise unity based
on love, even when that means personal soul searching and stepping away from
our own personal priorities, away from defending what we feel we are in the right
about, in favour of a common loving way.
Because knowledge puffs
up, but love builds up (1 Cor 8.2).