1 Corinthians | Week Six | Chapters 8 & 9

1 Corinthians Series

February 21, 2021 • Pastor Matthew

This week, Pastor Matthew continued on with our 1 Corinthians series with Chapters 8 and 9.

In this section of the book, Paul talks about food sacrificed to idols.

In the city of Corinth, people worshiped pagan gods by sacrificing animals within their temples, and eating the meat afterwards as a meal. There were often leftovers, and these were sold to the general public within their markets. This is the reason that some Jews refused to eat meat at all, as they didn’t want to risk even getting close to pagan sacrifices. This is the primary issue that Paul is dealing with within these chapters.

Within them, he sketches out the principles of Christian living in a pagan world before coming back to the specific topic itself.

Pastor Matthew made three primary points:

1. The principles of Christian living spring from love, not knowledge.

Paul says “knowledge puffs up;” bringing with it pride and arrogance. Instead of knowledge therefore we need love; practiced and put into action. We must figure out what it means to love the one true God with everything we are, and everything we have. God is both the world’s creator and redeemer, and if there’s any knowledge that we need to know, it’s of this God.

Paul therefore warns the Corinthians to be careful, doing everything they can not to cause other people to stumble and sin.

In the context of Corinth this came back to food sacrificed to idols, as before they became Christians, many of the people in the church would have been involved in shrine worship and would have therefore found it difficult to separate any part of their prior practice from the whole thing. The very smell of meat may have taken them back to the temple, and therefore Paul is asking the other believes to take this into consideration and practically love their brothers and sisters in Christ; prioritizing their love for them over their personal rights, knowledge and freedoms.

Similarly, we must all hold up our rights up to the light of love.

2. Love relinquishes rights and freedoms.

As Christians there shouldn’t be one single part of our lives that is not given to loving God. Everything about our lives should be devoted to Him. This has implications on how we live and how we treat others. Essentially: it’s not about us.

Our entire lives should revolve around Jesus, and this has practical implications for us.

First and foremost, we must be aware of our brothers and sisters and their consciences. We must sacrifice and relinquish our rights for them, laying our lives down.

Our freedom is for something. It is a freedom from all the things that keep us from who God wants us to be, and a freedom for His service and the Gospel. This is why He set us free, and what true freedom looks like.

God has given everything for the sake of the Gospel, including His own son, and He wants a return on that investment in the form of lives won through the Gospel all over this world.

Paul asks and answers the question, who am I becoming for the sake of the Gospel? Paul’s rights and freedoms were nothing to Him. What mattered most was that people were being rescued from darkness and transformed by the Lord’s glorious light. This message has not changed.

3. Love requires hard work and discipline of our own lives.

As Christians there are things we have to do not for our salvation, but for our growth. Our relationship with Jesus takes work, and requires laying down our lives everyday.

Our entire lives need to be oriented around the Gospel, and laying down our rights and preferences for the love and service of other people. A big part of the Christian life is discipline and self-denial.

Paul had his sight on nothing less than the renewal of all creation and the abolition of death itself. We are called to join this purpose, and be a sign of what’s to come.

1 Corinthians | Week Thirteen | Chapter 16

April 11, 2021 • Tyler Schenzel

This week Tyler Schenzel finished up our 1 Corinthians series with Chapter 16. Paul talks about four distinct topics within this short chapter; money, his travel plans, standing firm in the faith and his final greetings. Tyler spoke about the various things that get in the way of living on mission such as our jobs, relationships, phones, hobbies and desire for comfort amongst others. We need to become people who live on mission; taking control of our schedules before they take control of us. Tyler encouraged us to hear from the Lord and walk through the wide door of effective work that is open for us. Just as Paul urges the Corinthians, we must stand firm in the faith, putting on the full armor of God and displaying the fruits of the Spirit in every area of our lives.

Easter Sunday | 1 Corinthians | Week Twelve | Chapter 15 pt 2

April 4, 2021 • Pastor Matthew

This Easter Sunday Pastor Matthew preached a message of resurrection out of 1 Corinthians 15. The resurrection is what changed everything, it is the anchor of our faith and the thing upon which everything hinges. It launched the church, Christianity and the Kingdom of God. When Jesus died everybody assumed that He would do what every dead person does – stay dead. Nobody expected no body, which is why the resurrection changed and changes everything. Pastor Matthew led us in three points: 1. How can I be sure? All scholars believe that Paul was a real person who lived in the 1st Century, and there are seven letters that all agrees He wrote between 50AD and 60AD. Likewise, all credible scholars believe that Jesus was a historical figure and that He was executed by Romans. Paul wrote about the resurrection just years after it happened. He met with eyewitnesses and used a creed to teach the people: Christ died for our sins and was buried; He rose from the dead and was seen. Paul’s letters prove two things; first - that the resurrection was not a product of decades of oral transmission, and secondly - belief in the resurrection was around when eyewitnesses were still alive. No scholars believe that Paul was lying, because His life validated it. 2. What does it matter for me personally? The resurrection proves everything Jesus said about Himself. That He is the Son of God. The exact image of the invisible God. He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. The light of the world. The forgiver of sins. The Word made flesh. He was there before the creation of the world. He was and is and is to come. He is the great I Am. The Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end. Apart from Him we are all destined for an eternity without Him in hell. The wages of sin is death and apart from Him that is our destiny. Jesus paid the price for our sins, and conquered death. If Christ truly was resurrected, we are no longer bound to sin. Jesus’s power is REAL and we can be set free. We do not have to live in our sin any longer. 3. What does it matter for our world? Jesus is King, and the Kingdom of God brings life to dead places. Jesus is making all things new and partnering with His children to bring it to pass. We are people of the resurrection and we can see graves turned into gardens.

1 Corinthians | Week Eleven | Chapter 15 pt 1

March 28, 2021 • Jermaine Stewart

This morning, Pastor Jermaine continued on with our 1 Corinthians series with Chapter 15:35 to end of Chapter 15. This section of 1 Corinthians is all about the resurrection. The Corinthians had let false teachings come into their churches and they were doubting the resurrection of Jesus and of the body. Paul passionately addresses these concerns, using the resurrection as the link between the present and the future. Just like Jesus we will be resurrected into a new body, into a present and heavenly existence. Pastor Jermaine made three major points: 1. There is a resurrection Paul calls out the Corinthians for not using common sense, and uses the image of a seed to demonstrate the continuity between our present body and our future body. 2. There is a resurrected body The body is both natural and spiritual. It is natural in its current age, but spiritual in the age to come. 3. The resurrected body/ state involves the body, and is a supernatural event performed by God. Adam was life receiving whereas Jesus is life giving.