icon__search

Week Four: 1 Corinthians 6

February 2, 2022 • Jaime Carnaggio

• The Corinthians have an identity crisis. They've forgotten who we are and to whom they belong. Stephen Um says the Corinthians were suffering from "gospel amnesia." They were living their lives with the WORLD in view instead of the GOSPEL in view. Paul wants to change that.
• When we seek to resolve internal trivial disputes outside of the church walls, we imply that the gospel is insufficient to do so, and that we value and trust the world's wisdom and counsel more than the Lord's. Why would we seek to handle disputes to an unbelieving world "whose way of life is scorned by the church?"
• “The church is a place where radically broken individuals are restored, a place where the default position is forgiveness rather than rejection." (Stephen Um)
• The list of sins in verses 9-10 make us uncomfortable because Paul lumps them all together as if they all carry the same weight. We'd like to believe that certain sins are less severe than others. And although some sins do carry heavier consequences, God hates ALL sin. God judges ALL sin. ALL sin separates us from him. Thankfully, the story doesn't end there . . . we have the hope of verse 11, which reminds us that we've been washed clean, sanctified, justified by the Lord Jesus Christ. We still wrestle with sin, but we are no longer enslaved to it or defined by it; we've been given a new identity in Christ. Amen to that!
• The Corinthians (and our current culture today) have a very casual, cheap, devalued view of sex, believing "I have the right to anything" (vs. 12). But Paul reminds us, our bodies are not our own, they belong to God. More than that, our bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit. Think of the significance of this . . . how sacred the inner room of the temple, the Holy of Holies, was . . . it was the place where the very presence of God dwelt. And now, WE are the temple. We house the Holy of Holies! By the blood of Jesus, we've been washed clean so that we can be forever joined to our Triune God, we are ONE with him. Wow. How does this combat the worldview of our bodies and of sex?
• Reflection: How do we overcome our identity crisis and remember who we are? How do we resolve our "gospel amnesia?"