Corinth was a major seaport and trade center, the capital of Achaia
(present day Greece). The city was very prosperous with great cultural
and religious diversity. It was ripe for corruption, filled with
immorality. Idolatry flourished with more than a dozen pagan temples
employing more than a thousand prostitutes. The temple of the love
goddess Aphrodite was there. Sex was a part of the worship ritual.
The
church at Corinth had been established by Paul on his second
missionary journey, made up largely of Gentiles. The Christians there
were struggling with the corruption all around them and felt the
pressure to adapt. Paul wrote this letter to offer solutions to the many
concerns and to answer the questions that had been raised.
“Therefore you do not lack any spiritual gift…”
The
body of Christ as a whole does not lack any spiritual gift. In any
body of Christ, truly seeking Him, there will be no lack of gifts. It
may be that one spiritual gift may be enhanced over another if there is
a need for that particular gift in that particular body.
Paul
didn’t seem all that too concerned about baptism. He said Christ
didn’t send him to baptize but to preach the gospel, and not with his
own words. Be baptized (immersed) in the Holy Spirit.
Paul
tells the Corinthian church that he did not come to them with
eloquence or superior wisdom, but with a personal testimony of the
Spirit’s power. He was demonstrating a characteristic of the gift of
evangelism. Paul was thoroughly educated in the scriptures and could
have spoken with superior wisdom, yet he spoke from personal
experience.
“No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love him…”
In our wildest imaginations, we can never imagine what God has prepared for us!
“I planted the seed, Apollos watered it, but God made it grow.”
Paul
told them of salvation through Jesus. Apollos nurtured, educated, and
encouraged them. But when all is said and done, it is up to God to
produce the growth. We can do what we have been gifted to do, then leave
it in the Lord’s very capable hands.
If we are “servants of Christ” then as servants we must do what the Master tells us to do. We are servants who have been “entrusted with the secret things of God”.
It is up to us to prove faithful and share those “secret” things with
others. As we learn more and more about Him, through Bible study,
prayer, devotions, we must witness for Him. We must be faithful to His
word and be open to the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
“Therefore I urge you to imitate me…”
This
appears on the surface and taken out of context to be arrogant on the
part of Paul. We must read the previous passages to understand what
Paul is referring to in this instance. He just told the Corinthians
that he and his companions in the gospel were hungry, thirsty, in rags,
brutally treated, homeless, cursed, persecuted, and slandered. And
that his response to this was to bless, endure, and answer kindly.
In
other words, Paul is saying that everything we do as Christians is
the opposite of human logic when it comes to dealing with the enemy.
“For the kingdom of God is not a matter of talk but of power.”
Talk is cheap! Do all of us as Christians walk the talk?
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