37 - Tongues & Prophecy in the Church (Part 3)

1 Corinthians 14:26-40

February 6, 2022 • Pastor Ronald H. Gann • 1 Corinthians 14:26–40

In this section, the apostle Paul concludes his critical discussion on matters relating to spiritual gifts—specifically prophecy and tongues—and pulls together a few remaining exhortations to summarize what had been left unsaid in the previous correctives. And in doing so, after previously discussing the priority and purpose of tongue-talking, Paul now concludes chapter 14 by giving the biblical procedure for it, to include the role of women in the local church.

More from 1 Corinthians

01 - Introduction: Pitfalls Of An Imperfect Church

January 31, 2021 • Pastor Ronald H. Gann

The one theme that drives everything Paul writes in 1 CORINTHIANS is the gospel. One way to define the gospel is that Jesus lived, died, and rose again for sinners and that, through Jesus Christ, God saves those who come to Him in repentance and faith. That's the gospel. That's the good news. And it permeates the entire letter. Christ crucified. Christ risen. Sinners forgiven. The gospel solves every issue Paul addresses in 1 CORINTHIANS.

02 - The Sainthood Of Believers

February 7, 2021 • Pastor Ronald H. Gann

As Christians, we are no longer condemned by God as sinners but are declared holy by God as saints. And since our new nature in Christ is holy, Scripture teaches, our living should be also be holy. That Paul referred to the carnal believers at Corinth as saints gives us hope (since they were anything but saintly in their conduct). It tells us that the title saint has nothing whatsoever to do with one’s spiritual maturity or deeds. Paul called them saints because that’s who the Corinthians were (as well as all believers) by calling and position.

03 - A Church Divided

February 14, 2021 • Pastor Ronald H. Gann • 1 Corinthians 1:10–17

The apostle Paul longed to see the practical outworking of Christian unity and spiritual oneness in the Corinthian church--a church plagued by division and dissention. Short of the salvation of all men, unity among the saints was his chief desire for all churches in all ages. We are to be of the same opinion with regards to the fundamental doctrines of Christianity, our standards as a local church, and our principles for Christian living. Short of that, petty fights and various disagreements are bound to occur from time-to-time, even among those with whom we are most united.