Showing posts with label Kutless. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kutless. Show all posts

Friday, April 28, 2023

Onward to Corinth. . .

1 Corinthians 1:1-9 - From Paul, called by God’s will to be an apostle of Jesus Christ, and from Sosthenes our brother.

To God’s church that is in Corinth:

To those who have been made holy to God in Christ Jesus, who are called to be God’s people.

Together with all those who call upon the name of our Lord Jesus Christ in every place—he’s their Lord and ours!

Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.

I thank my God always for you, because of God’s grace that was given to you in Christ Jesus.  That is, you were made rich through him in everything: in all your communication and every kind of knowledge,  in the same way that the testimony about Christ was confirmed with you.  The result is that you aren’t missing any spiritual gift while you wait for our Lord Jesus Christ to be revealed.  He will also confirm your testimony about Christ until the end so that you will be blameless on the day of our Lord Jesus Christ.  God is faithful, and you were called by him to partnership with his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.

 

                We move now to 1 Corinthians which, according to most scholars is the next letter Paul wrote (54-55 AD) after Galatians.  The letters to the Corinthians were among the longest letters in the letters we have from Paul.  This may be because Paul knew this church well, for he spent over a year and a half in Corinth getting this church up and running.  After he had moved on to start other churches, Paul heard about a handful of problems the Corinthian church was having.  He wrote to them in hopes that he could offer them some help in addressing those specific problems. 

                Before we get to the problems Paul addresses, let’s notice a seemingly unimportant detail in the introduction to the letter:

From Paul, called by God’s will to be an apostle of Jesus Christ, and from Sosthenes our brother.”

Paul mentions a man named Sosthenes, who Paul calls a “brother.”  This means that Sosthenes was a fellow Christian now.  Sosthenes was not a stranger to Corinth, but at one time, he was an enemy of the church in Corinth.  We read in Acts 18 about a Sosthenes that was an appointed leader of the Jewish synagogue in Corinth.  When Paul shows up and starts converting some of the Jews in Corinth into Christians, Sosthenes has him brought up on charges in order stop the conversions.  The plan backfires, and through a stream of ambiguous details, Sosthenes ends up being beaten up. 

So it is rather significant that Paul writes to the church in Corinth and lists Sosthenes as a co-author and brother.  Through the transformative power of the gospel, a former opponent and persecutor has now become a present partner in ministry.  Sosthenes, like Paul himself, was once a enemy of Christ and now has become an ambassador for Christ with Paul, the very man Sosthenes intended to bring down. 

                This is an important detail to share as we begin our journey through this first letter to the people of Corinth, for it gives even greater power to Paul’s advice on how to address the problems in the Corinthian church. 

                But for today, we should note that possibility that people we have seen as an enemy should never be completely written off.  Today’s adversary, through the power of Christ, can become tomorrow’s partner. 

 

Question: Is there someone you have seen as an enemy in the past that, through the lens of the transforming power of Christ, might become an ally?

 

Prayer: Lord Jesus, help us to see people as you do.  Help us let go of our own biases of the past so that we may see what you are doing now.  Amen.

 

Prayer Focus:  Pray for some people today that you would ordinarily not choose to pray for.

 

Song:  That’s What Faith Can Do

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u1JBSQMkQEo

Wednesday, August 3, 2022

Faith AND Works

James 2:14-24, The Message

“Dear friends, do you think you’ll get anywhere in this if you learn all the right words but never do anything? Does merely talking about faith indicate that a person really has it? For instance, you come upon an old friend dressed in rags and half-starved and say, “Good morning, friend! Be clothed in Christ! Be filled with the Holy Spirit!” and walk off without providing so much as a coat or a cup of soup—where does that get you? Isn’t it obvious that God-talk without God-acts is outrageous nonsense?

I can already hear one of you agreeing by saying, “Sounds good. You take care of the faith department, I’ll handle the works department.”

Not so fast. You can no more show me your works apart from your faith than I can show you my faith apart from my works. Faith and works, works and faith, fit together hand in glove.

Do I hear you professing to believe in the one and only God, but then observe you complacently sitting back as if you had done something wonderful? That’s just great. Demons do that, but what good does it do them? Use your heads! Do you suppose for a minute that you can cut faith and works in two and not end up with a corpse on your hands?

Wasn’t our ancestor Abraham “made right with God by works” when he placed his son Isaac on the sacrificial altar? Isn’t it obvious that faith and works are yoked partners, that faith expresses itself in works? That the works are “works of faith”? The full meaning of “believe” in the Scripture sentence, “Abraham believed God and was set right with God,” includes his action. It’s that mesh of believing and acting that got Abraham named “God’s friend.” Is it not evident that a person is made right with God not by a barren faith but by faith fruitful in works?

The same with Rahab, the Jericho harlot. Wasn’t her action in hiding God’s spies and helping them escape—that seamless unity of believing and doing—what counted with God? The very moment you separate body and spirit, you end up with a corpse. Separate faith and works and you get the same thing: a corpse.”    

                                                                               

 

Continuing to talk about faith, we hear from James, who was Jesus’ earthly brother and one of the most prominent leaders of the early church.  Only Paul was more well-known.  Both were known for talking about the nature of faith, but they emphasized different aspects.  What Paul wanted everyone to know is there is nothing you can DO to please God.  This makes sense that an all-powerful God is not impressed with what we can do.  Paul emphasizes that only our abiding trust in God – our faith -pleases him.  But James sees the danger of emphasizing this to the extreme.  If only what I believe and trust in is what matters, than I don’t have to DO anything.  So James says, “wait a minute!”  What you trust in affects what you do. He pushes it further – if it doesn’t result in you doing something, is the trust really there in the first place. 

I think BOTH Paul and James are right.  Only faith pleases God, but the faith that pleases God can’t help but change what you do.  I believe God has called me to write.  In fact, I have believed that for close to twenty years.   However, I didn’t get serious about writing regularly until a couple of years ago.  And if I’m brutally honest, I didn’t faithfully start writing daily until this pandemic started.  What I believed twenty years ago took a very long time to translate itself into regular faithful action.  I’m not proud that the process took so long.  I have confessed my disobedience to God and I have been forgiven.  

But what if I was, twenty years later, not even writing anything I don’t have to write.  I could say that I believed the God has made me a writer, but I’d have an awful time convincing anyone that it was anything more than a pipedream.  I actually like the KJV version of Hebrews 11:1:

 

“Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.”

 

Faith, if it is faith, transforms belief into something substantive.  As it grows, you can actually see it.  It makes the unseen seen.  Faith is incarnational in this way.  God, who was unseen, incarnated (became flesh) into a human being that could be seen.  Belief becoming faith is the same process.  And just like with Jesus, God is the author and finisher of that faith.  God wants to incarnate something substantive in you.

Today, think about the things you do.  How are they a result of what you believe and trust in?  How are things you believe becoming substantive?  To the extent that you can see that process, you can see the very fingerprints of God on you.  So good faith-hunting!

I love you guys!

 

Prayer:  Grant, O Lord, that what has been said with our lips we may believe in our hearts,
and that what we believe in our hearts we may practice in our lives; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.                (prayer by John Hunter)

 

Prayer focus:  Pray for three people you really don’t want to pray for today.  Pray that God will bless them. 

 

Song:  That What’s Faith Can Do (Kutless)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u1JBSQMkQEo