Taught by
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Taught by
Stephen ArmstrongLast week I put to rest any concern that ours is a church of “feel good” preaching, as if there were any doubt
I was reminded after my last sermon on the foolish audience that believes the Gospel, that no one comes here expecting to be puffed up
I admit I like to feel good about myself too…who doesn’t?
The world loves it so much that many churches now preach messages of improving self-esteem and self-worth
We’re told that it’s healthy and important to maintain a positive view of ourself, and perhaps it’s true to a degree
But pandering to the flesh has eternal consequences
This new approach to preaching in the church has twisted the Gospel itself into a message of happiness and materialism
Today men and women are invited to join Christianity as a source for earthly happiness and fulfillment rather than for the opportunity to reconcile with a God Who judges sin
So with so much feel-good preaching ringing in our ears these days, I’m sure it’s a bit of a shock anytime we encounter a message that runs contrary to that stream of happiness
At the end of the day, Christians are supposed to ask what does the Bible teach us about ourselves and about God?
Does the word of God command God’s children to develop greater self-esteem?
Does it teach us we were called into faith and blessed with the Holy Spirit so that we might think better of ourselves?
Does it identify lack of self-esteem as the source of our problems?
What does the Bible say?
Simply put, the Bible says that we do not need more self-esteem
Mankind already has way too much self-esteem
Self-esteem is the psychologist’s term for an old Biblical word, “pride”
Pride is a bad word in scripture
Satan’s pride was the source of evil in the world
And man’s pride is the source of our sin and all its misery
Instead of more self-esteem, the Bible says we need more Christ-esteem
We need a greater appreciation of Who Christ is, what He’s done for us and who we become in Him
And at the same time, we need less self-esteem to make room in our hearts for more of Christ
As John the Baptist said, He must increase but I must decrease
For Christ to be properly magnified in our understanding and in our life, we must diminish our view of self
So don’t be surprised if you don’t feel affirmed as we study scripture together
In fact, if our study of scripture leaves you feeling better about yourself, then you’re not listening carefully
One of Paul’s key purposes for writing was to effect this change among the believers in Corinth
Paul wants to address their pride over how they entered the faith by instilling in them a new perspective on how they entered into the faith
In Chapter 1 and the beginning part of Chapter 2 Paul taught good communication theory
Communication theory says that communication always involves a sender, a receiver and a message
In Chapter 1, Paul explained that the Lord designed a foolish message
It proposed a foolish-sounding solution to the question of how man may find God and be reconciled
And then the Lord chose a foolish audience to receive the message
A group of people the world wouldn’t consider wise or strong or noble
But what about the messenger?
Paul now teaches in Chapter 2 that God also chose foolish messengers to deliver the message of the Gospel
Men the world also viewed as weak and unimpressive
Paul says he did not come to Corinth with any superiority of speech
In Greek, Paul literally said he didn’t come with prominent words
Apparently, to hear Paul wouldn’t have impressed you or me
When Paul wrote 2 Corinthians, he quoted his detractors as they described Paul’s speech
Paul’s speech was called contemptible or despised
Remember, Greece was ground zero for professional debaters and orators in the ancient world
And so here comes Paul, a man who lacked a stage presence
He was unimpressive, probably because his impressive letters cause you to expect better
I can almost hear the whispers in the crowd now: “He seemed so much taller in his letters.”
But it wasn’t just Paul’s speech that was unimpressive
Paul says he came without superior wisdom
There’s that word sophia again
Paul walked into a city filled with Greek wisdom and philosophy, yet by Corinthian standards he had little wisdom to offer
His arguments for the Gospel didn’t rest on powerful and intricate defenses or explanations
Instead, Paul says he simply proclaimed the testimony of God
The Greek word for proclaim is the word for announce or declare publicly
Paul went about the city proclaiming the truth of Jesus and then waited to see what kind of response he received
And the testimony was simple: Jesus and Him crucified
Jesus refers to the God-man, the incarnation of God in the form of Jesus Christ
A man who was God in the flesh, who lived a sinless life
And to Him crucified refers to Jesus’ atoning work on the cross, His death in our place and His resurrection to glory
That was the message Paul proclaimed
At the end of v.4 Paul notes that his presentation came with a demonstration of the Spirit and power
Paul’s referring to something unique in the ministry of the apostles
These special men of the early church played a unique role in establishing the church
They were commissioned to preach the Gospel and deliver Jesus’ teaching to early believers
In fact, their teaching became our scripture
In order to authenticate their message, God gave these men spiritual gifts of a different kind, gifts that were wholly unique to their station
We read in the New Testament of apostles raising men from the dead
Healing the sick merely by the casting of their shadow
The ability to cause men to fall dead merely at a word
The ability to handle dangerous snakes, to be bitten even, and not to die
Self-evidently, these are not gifts common to the believer today
These men combined the Gospel message the Lord gave them with the spiritual powers they received by the Spirit to establish faith where none before existed
Their powers were essential to validating their message and mission
Since the powers they demonstrated were clearly God-given powers, their audience realized that their message was approved by God
And when false apostles tried to deceive the church, their deception would become evident since they lacked these powers to validate their message
That’s how the early church knew to ignore false apostles
So Paul says the message of the Gospel was not without power
It came with power from God, in the form of Paul’s apostolic powers
The truth of this message was authenticated by the power of God
Therefore, it didn’t need to rely on human wisdom and human power
Knowing this, Paul said he did three things:
First, he showed up
He said he came to them
This is probably 95% of any ministry work
Having the courage and conviction to follow God’s call and go to people who most likely wouldn’t want to hear the message
Secondly, Paul proclaimed the message
Paul was active and purposeful
He didn’t just wander through Corinth looking for someone he could quietly approach and get to know over coffee
He didn’t just hope a spiritual conversation might come up on its own
Then maybe ease into a conversation about Jesus
He wasn’t content to simply sit in a public place
Wearing his WWJD t-shirt
Reading the Bible on his iPad
Listening to TobyMac
Hoping someone would look over his shoulder and ask him what he was reading
He proclaimed the Gospel boldly, publicly and frequently
He went into synagogues, homes, businesses
He declared the truth
And Paul expected – he depended upon – God’s power to show up on cue and cause a proper response, at least in some
Did you know that evangelism could be this easy?
Did you know it doesn’t require superiority of speech?
It doesn’t rest on superior wisdom?
It rests entirely on showing up, proclaiming the truth of the Gospel publicly, and then waiting for God’s power
We go, we proclaim, God changes hearts…it’s that simple
Could it be that our hesitation to evangelize is partly out of an ignorance of what’s truly required?
Perhaps we’ve imagined the process in exactly the wrong way
We’ve been so worried about having the right words, about making the arguments, answering the challenges
That we forgot that the point is simply to proclaim a foolish message
The joy of serving Christ in the Great Commission is in the simplicity of what we’re called to do
We proclaim Christ, and Him crucified
We tell the story of the Gospel to the world, and it doesn’t matter how many times they’ve already heard it or how likely they are to reject it
It only takes a second for the Spirit to bring faith to the heart and it comes by the power of God
Paul says in v.5 that God designed the process of salvation in this beautiful way so that our faith wouldn’t rest on the wisdom of men but on the power of God
The Greek word for rest is eimi, which means belongs
The message of the Gospel and the results it achieves belong to God alone
In other words, we can never declare that we are “of Paul” or “of Apollos” or even of ourselves
My salvation didn’t depend on human wisdom, nor does it depend on my own wisdom
It rests entirely on the grace and power of God
Now since the beginning of his letter, Paul has repeatedly emphasized the foolishness of the message
But when Paul uses the word foolish, he means in comparison to the world’s definition of wisdom
That doesn’t mean that the Gospel message is actually foolish
It is a truth the world in its ignorance rejects
And yet, Paul says for the one who has received the Gospel and come to faith, God will make available real spiritual wisdom
That wisdom doesn’t come all at once
And it doesn’t show up automatically
Paul says yet we do speak wisdom
When he says “we”, he’s referring to the apostles
Paul, Apollos, Peter, etc.
Through these men, God was at work bringing wisdom to the believer
It’s a wisdom very different from the kind the world seeks
This news must have piqued the interest of the Corinthian church
Finally, the wisdom loving Greek believers were hearing what they longed to hear
There was a heavenly wisdom they could come to know
But Paul says this wisdom is accessible only to the mature
Paul’s going to come back to this issue of individual maturity and its relationship to our experience in the body later in Chapter 3
But for now, it’s enough to know that the arrival of faith does include an opportunity to know mysteries and wonders of God
Paul says this wisdom is not something found either in this age or among the powerful members of society, both of which are passing away
Wisdom is a fancy word for truth
There is a truth of this world, of this age, and then there is the truth of God
There is a truth that worldly rulers understand and there is a truth that God makes known
Of course, the truth of this age is no truth at all
And the rulers of this age are proponents of myths and various self-deceptions
The myths our world hold to be true are as temporary as the world itself, Paul says
One day all men die and pass away
And when that happens, whatever lies they helped create or sustain will pass away with them
Eventually the world itself will pass away, burning up as Peter tells us
And when that happens, all the lies of Satan and men alike will be gone forever
The wisdom that comes from God outlasts creation itself because it predates Creation
Knowing that should encourage us to take little note of them or lose little sleep when the world scorns our contrary views
Even more surprising, Paul says God determined to obscure His wisdom in a mystery that was outside the reach of the world
A mystery is a truth hidden until an appointed time when it is revealed by God
What is this mystery, this truth that God prepared and then revealed?
It is none other than the Gospel message itself
The message that God would come as man and die for our sin
That a Church of believers would be established on earth
That Christ will return to earth to establish His Kingdom
And everything else the New Testament reveals to us by the Spirit
As Paul already taught, the Gospel message is a wisdom hidden from the world
When it was revealed, the world missed it
Jesus came and declared the kingdom, yet the world overlooked His message and His sinless life
It was as if Jesus talked a foreign language…they couldn’t understand the importance of what He taught
And Paul says the Lord wanted it this way, as Jesus Himself said
The rulers of this age missed God’s mystery of Jesus as Messiah
Paul says if they hadn’t missed it, they certainly wouldn’t have crucified the Lord
And then Paul quotes from Isaiah 64 & 65 to prove this was always to be God’s plan
Isaiah says the human eye, ear and intellect has not perceived the things God has prepared for His children
The common way this passage is interpreted goes something like this:
The heaven God has prepared for each of us is so marvelous that we can’t imagine what we will find there
It’s so wonderful, it’s unimaginable
Those statements are true statements
Heaven is an unimaginably wonderful place
But that’s not what Isaiah and Paul are telling us in this passage
Paul explains the full meaning of Isaiah’s statement in vs.10-11
Paul says the things that our eye and ear and intellect couldn’t imagine in advance are the very things we are now having revealed to us by the Spirit
We have come to understand God’s plan from the beginning of time
The plan of redemption in Jesus
And now we know our place in the plan, as men and women appointed to believe and be saved
And now we’re learning the next things God has prepared for us
Paul and Isaiah aren’t teaching that we have no hope to understand the things God has prepared
They were teaching that apart from the power of God, men could not appreciate all that God had prepared in Christ
Paul says these mysteries are the wisdom of God
And it is even now being revealed to us, beginning with the truth of the Gospel itself
God did not expect His children to stumble through this world in ignorance, waiting for a future day in Heaven when we finally understand God and His work and plan
Obviously, not everything can be known now; many things await until we reach the Throne room
But far more is available to us now by the Spirit, Paul says
Paul says the Spirit searches all things
This phrase means there is nothing of God that is too profound for the Spirit to reach and reveal to us if it be God’s will
So everything that is in God is available to us in the Spirit
Just as a man’s own spirit is intimately aware of everything that the man is and everything he knows, so it is with the Lord’s Spirit
No one knows the thoughts of God but the Spirit of God
Until the Spirit makes Himself known to us, we cannot know God
But once the Spirit indwells us by faith, circumstances flip and now we have access to all that God is and all He knows
That what Isaiah meant when he said no man could imagine what God has prepared for those who love Him
Without the Spirit of God, a man is locked out of what God has prepared for us
Notice the wisdom is prepared, which means it is necessary for us to take advantage of it
Coming to faith instantly grants us all of God’s wisdom at once
But as we work with the Spirit, He may reveal these things to us
It’s like having a library card
Obtaining that card doesn’t result in all the knowledge of the books on the library shelves automatically transferring into your brain
It grants you the opportunity to learn what has been prepared for you in all those books
If you devote yourself to learning what they hold
Similarly, we have the Spirit indwelling us expressly for that purpose, Paul says
The Lord’s intent was to grant us access to the mind of God
When Jesus told the disciples that a Helper was coming, He was referring to this teaching ministry of the Spirit
The Spirit is still working today in the same way, bringing to mind Christ’s teaching and explaining its meaning
We have all received a Spirit whose mission is to teach us what has already been freely given to us by God
Like the books in that library, everything is freely available
God is not asking for us to earn or deserve the wisdom that comes with a life lived in Christ
He has prepared great wonders and knowledge and power for His children
He gives us opportunity to seek that wisdom, and in His timing and will we receive the blessing of that wisdom
But if we live like the Corinthian church, we stand the chance of missing out on that blessing
The Corinthians were so busy resting in the world’s wisdom and their own understanding, that they never bothered to use their Heavenly library card
To seek the Spirit for understanding
To search the scriptures for truth
To check out a book
Let’s not trade the foolishness of God for the wisdom of men
Pray, read your Bible, listen to the Spirit
Go out, proclaim the message, rely on God’s power
Membership has its privileges…let’s use our library card