Showing posts with label 1 Corinthians 10. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1 Corinthians 10. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Why Live By A 2000-Year-Old Book?

Now these things happened to them as an example, and they were written for our instruction, upon whom the ends of the ages have come.  Therefore let him who thinks he stands take heed that he does not fall.  No temptation has overtaken you but such as is common to man; and God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you are able, but with the temptation will provide the way of escape also, so that you will be able to endure it. (1 Corinthians 10:11-13 NASB)
I don't know how many times I've been asked that question, "Why do you pay attention to a 2,000-year-old book?"  It has the ring of a 'modern' question, one asked by modern, scientific, enlightened, independent thinkers.  I think it's ironic that it appears that this question was also asked by the early church; at least in its basic concept.

A lot of what Paul wrote in letters to churches was written to correct issues in those churches.  Since we only are able to 'eves drop' on one side of the conversation, we typically have to deduce the other side from what he says in correction.  As Paul writes to Corinth, in his instruction about food sacrificed to idols (a big deal in that city), he gets to this point in his discussion where he relies on examples from Israel's history; specifically in their travels through the desert to the Promised Land.  Initially that sounds like it would be well received, but he throws in verse 11, 'Now these things happened to them as an example, and they were written for our instruction, upon whom the ends of the ages have come.'  He corrected something.

I believe that Paul defends his use of Israel's history to this church because they would not initially accept this a valid example.  They would take a 'that was them, this is us' sort of easy dismissal of such an example.  The people in Corinth were very different people, under very different circumstances, facing very different problems.  Or were they?

Paul sites some initial points of connection with the believers in Corinth: 'baptized', 'ate spiritual food and drink' (i.e. Communion).  The unifying things in the church were present in the 'people wandering in the desert'.  Yet God was not pleased with most of them, so it wasn't what unified them that made them acceptable to God; therefore neither was it baptism and Communion that made the Corinthian believers acceptable.

Paul goes on to site examples from their history, but begins it by saying that 'these things happened as examples for us...'  Why do that at the beginning, and then again at the end?  It's important; and I believe it's corrective of an assumption on the part of the Corinthian believers.  I suspect they thought that there was not much to be gained from studying stories that happened 2,000 years before.  Who cares? What does that have to do with me?  I'm not in the desert, I'm not traveling to some 'Promised Land', I haven't passed through the 'Red Sea', nor is there a cloud or pillar of fire traveling around with me.  Sound familiar?

Paul ties up this section of his argument (again, about food sacrificed to idols), with the statement above.  It's a verse that most modern believers pull right out of this chapter without looking before it, or after.  "No temptation has overtaken you but such as is common to man..."  Paul's point is that a 2,000-year-old book is relevant for their lives because we're still people living in a 'fallen' world subject to the same testing and temptation.  I believe that a 2,000+year-old book is relevant for me today as a modern believer because I'm still a person living in a fallen world subject to the same testing and temptation.

Think about it, 'smoking' isn't covered in Scripture, but healthy dietary laws are; healthy living matters to God.  Drinking is covered in Scripture, but it seems it's still vilified by those who have been wounded by its abuse.  Buying a man's daughter as a debt-slave is covered, yet people still feel the Bible doesn't empower and protect women (see this blog entry if that one confuses you). 

All sorts of modern problems are assumed to be 'new' and the Bible irrelevant to address them.  Why?  Haven't we learned that all these 'problems' stem from a human condition internal to the person?  Haven't we discovered in psychology that people tend to behave in patterns established by their histories?  What, was that new with our 'modern culture'?  Seriously?  Freud relies on categories and diagnoses labeled for Greek Mythology because why? Because the Greek plays illustrated the very condition he 'discovered'.  Hello! Greek plays?  Yes, you find descriptions of the 'human condition' in Greek plays; and Hebrew and Christian Scripture as well.  You find them in these ancient texts because people really haven't changed that much. 

So maybe the ancient texts inspired and protected by the Creator of all humanity might be worth a good read.  Could He have left some 'clues' as to what works best?  Do you think He might have included some really good insight, like the insight only the Maker would know about what He made?  What do you think?  Perhaps? 

We, as people, will study our behinds off for an exam, for a degree, for a certification, for approval of human standards.  Why not work that hard on the texts inspired and preserved by our Creator?  Sure it's hard, I know it's not a simple thing to bring ancient languages into clear application on modern issues.  But wouldn't it be worth it?  People don't like to read, but they did to get through school.  Why for that, but not to really know their Savior? 

I write this as one guilty.  I know that there are portions of Scripture I avoid.  That doesn't excuse anyone, because I don't stand excused.  It's not a matter of how much of Scripture we avoid or don't read, we're responsible for all of it.  I know that, and yet I have avoided some vast tracts of genealogies, legal instruction, and prophecies on ancient foreign cultures.  I've pushed through Job, but gave into the tediousness of the poetic ranting, and skipped pieces.  I've read Revelation several times, but each time got so confused, turned around, and lost, that I again 'grazed' right over stuff to get to the end.  Don't even get me started on genealogies and land apportionment; wow, talk about 'dry'.  No excuse, at least not valid ones.

So, we all, as followers of Jesus, are to study Scripture, learn from what has been preserved.  We are to seek what our Creator wants us to know about His perspective on our world and how we are to behave in it.  It's not enough to learn from others either.  We have a responsibility to read for ourselves to know these things, to learn from God.  And then we can better seek the wisdom of others.  School is still in session.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Holy Like God is Holy, or Holy as I Consider God to be Holy?


Jesus used illustrations from the mundane to explain the profound.  So truth about very important aspects of my life with my Master can be found in the mundane areas of life.  In 1 Corinthians 10:31 when Paul is wrapping up his argument about food sacrificed to idols, he uses this statement as a general admonition to bring the focus of the glory of God into common aspects of my life.  Since Jesus used common aspects as illustrations, it seems He finds wisdom in these elements of life.

So, I have very common things I do each day where I can focus on the glory of my Master.  In these I can find wisdom when I look; lessons about the deeper things of my relationship with my Master.  For instance, washing dishes brings to mind Jesus’ statement about washing the inside being more important than the outside.  Even building something is used by Jesus to illustrate how it is necessary to plan for the end before I even begin my relationship with my Master; I am to finish well.  There are dozens more, and probably more that didn’t even make it into the gospels.

If those places of my daily life are made holy, not just the “holy” ones, I become more holy.  I don’t become holy in the sense that God is holy, but I become holy in the same way I consider Him holy.  I see my Master as completely “other”; distinct from any other person.  He is capable of creation at vast levels of complexity and in miniscule levels of intricacy.  I am not, nor will I ever be.  I’m not holy in that way; rather I’m holy in the sort of way I set Him aside as distinct from this common world.  I need to be distinct as well.  I need to be obviously different from others in my character and my behavior.

I am to be holy as implements are holy, not in the way that standing in His presence as a profane man would destroy me.  Although, I do need to abstain from unholy things as He does.  Jesus has the ability to transform common things to holy things.  Some things defy this transformation.  I want to follow this pattern of transforming common things I do into holy activities, and stay far away from behaviors and thoughts which defy such transformation.  Washing dishes, answering the phone (i.e. my job), and listening to my daughter talk and talk and talk and talk (oh my gracious…) are all things that can be and should be transformed into holy activities.

My interior thought life often runs headlong into the profane patterns that cannot be transformed into holy things.  Those I need to put under the ban.  These are the thoughts I bring captive to my Master.  The thoughts of sinful pleasures of my selfish nature are those things that will pass away in the process of my Master transforming this common man into a holy man.  I wish they were gone already, but they aren’t.  I still wrestle with them, and they still have a power over me; power I gave them long ago and still leave with them.  These things refuse transformation, so they must be destroyed.  I’m not there yet.

I am a man in transition.  I am a person in between the common profane life of this world and the holy glorious life of my Master.  My standard needs to be higher.  On that scale of holiness, I want to be further along.  I can be.  It’s not like I’m just getting by with my sinful thoughts until my Master comes for me.  I don’t want Him coming to find me consumed by sinful thought patterns!  How embarrassing, for us both!  I believe that when my Master calls me to be holy as my Father in Heaven is holy, this is a call that can be answered in this life.  Leviticus is full of explanations that the people were to be holy as God is holy.  It’s not a new idea.

So, today I dedicate my work, my family, and my mind to my Master.  I do so now, and I will need to do so again in about an hour.  And then I will need to do so around lunch, and then again as I get off work.  I will probably need to do so again at various times through my work day as well.  And there will be family time after work when I will need to rededicate my mind, words, and attitudes back to my Master.  I will have a lot of this going on I suspect.  But if I don’t I will miss the Person more amazing than anything I’ve seen through either my telescope or microscope; the One making all of it and holding it all together.  I can’t have that.