1 Corinthians 1:10-18 Our congregation is 102 years
old. During those years we have been
served by 14 different pastors. Some of
these pastors spoke German—some English.
Some of these pastors were older men—some younger. Some of these men were fiery, “pound the
pulpit” kinds of preachers—others more soft-spoken. Each pastor was different from the man who
came before him—different than the man who came after him.
Now,
we all have our preferences from among these men who have served as pastor in
this place. For the children and young
people of the congregation I am the only pastor they have ever known—they don’t
have a lot to choose from. But for long-time
members, the differences between all the pastors you have known are vivid.
And
yet as different as these pastors were—one from another--what unites all them was
a shared faith—a shared pastoral practice when it comes to administering the
sacraments—and a shared commitment to provide spiritual care for the folks here.
For over 100 years
the people of God at St. Paul Lutheran Church in Kingsville, Texas have been
able to come to church on Sunday morning and be confident that you will hear
the Word of God faithfully preached and the sacraments administered according
to Christ’s institution. This is a
profound blessing from God!
But
what we see today in God’s Word is that this is a blessing that can be
undermined when individual preferences and personalities become more important
than the shared faith and practice that binds us together as a congregation. Paul writes:
I appeal to you,
brothers, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree,
and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be united in the same
mind and the same judgment.
Paul began this
letter to the Corinthians by reminding them of their identity—that by virtue of
Christ’s saving work—they were now children of the heavenly Father—members of
the same family—brothers and sisters in Christ.
And when he begins to address the troubles in their congregation, he
continues in the same way: I appeal to you, brothers, by the name of
our Lord Jesus Christ...
That appeal rings
out across the centuries to us sitting here today since we share in that same
apostolic faith that was believed and practiced in Corinth.
And so the admonition of Paul is spoken to us too—that there be no divisions among us—for divisiveness undermines the
identity that God bestows upon us.
When we were
baptized, we were baptized into the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. No matter what name we bear on earth—all of
us bear the name of Christ as his people—we have the same spiritual family name. When
there are divisions in the Christian congregation-- it is a denial of our
identity as Christ’s people.
On the other hand,
when we are united in the same mind and
the same judgment—that unity is a powerful affirmation of the truth of our
identity: that we are the heavenly Father’s
children and that Jesus is our brother.
It’s the living
out of this baptismal identity that is always the challenge—but we must never
become reconciled to anything or anyone that undermines and destroys our identity
and identity. That’s what was happening
in Corinth as they let their own personal preferences. Paul writes:
It has been
reported to me by Chloe's people that there is quarreling among you,
my brothers. What I mean is that each one of you says, “I follow Paul,” or “I
follow Apollos,” or “I follow Cephas,” or “I follow Christ.”
Like
our own congregation here in Kingsville, Corinth had been served
by a number of pastors and teachers. And
like our congregation’s pastors, Paul and Apollos and Cephas and the others, taught
and practiced the same Christian faith.
They were very
different men to be sure --with different gifts and abilities and
personalities—but they were perfectly united in the Christian faith that they
taught and practiced as pastors.
But their common faith and common witness was
being undermined by a “cult of personality” that the Corinthians had allowed to
grow up in their midst. The Corinthians
were identifying themselves with a particular pastor --and allowing their
personal preferences divide them from
one another.
Now, there is
nothing wrong with personal preferences—we all have them—and it is natural to
identify more strongly with one person more than another. This happens even with our pastors. We prefer this guy’s style- or we identify
with another guy because he’s in the same place in life as we are- or we prefer
another man’s personality.
And there is no
problem with that UNTIL those personal preferences take precedence over the
truth of God’s Word that unites us together.
Then those preferences begin to undermine who we are and what we are
called to be about as a congregation.
Such was the bitterness
and quarreling in the Corinthian congregation that it had gotten outside the
walls of the church into the greater Christian community.
All of us need
this reminder that when there is division and quarreling in a church—it is not
just that church that is wounded—but the mission of Christ is undermined. We need this timely reminder that what UNITES
us in this congregation is infinitely greater than what DIVIDES us. Paul writes:
Is Christ divided?
Was Paul crucified for you? Or were you baptized in the name of Paul? I thank
God that I baptized none of you except Crispus and Gaius, so that no one may
say that you were baptized in my name. (I did baptize also the household of
Stephanas. Beyond that, I do not know whether I baptized anyone else.)
Any
time we are tempted to let personality or preference, divide us as Christians
we need to remember these words. In the
strongest terms Paul points out the sinfulness of divisiveness in the Christian
congregation.
By virtue of our baptism into Christ, each of
us are members of his body. Is it
possible that Christ is divided? Of
course not!
Is Paul or Cephas
or Apollos or some individual pastor whom we prefer to another greater than our
Savior who shed his life’s blood for us?
Blasphemous!
Does one pastor’s
baptism make us more of a Christian than the Holy Trinity who adopted us in
Holy Baptism? It’s outrageous to even
suggest such a thing!
There is one Lord, one faith, one
baptism—one God and Father of us all and that God-given unity in the
congregation must not be torn asunder by some individual preference on our part.
So strongly does
Paul make this point that he goes on to say that he is glad that he only
baptized a few folks there in Corinth
so that he has as little part in this divisiveness as possible.
Now this is an
incredible thing for a pastor to say!
The greatest blessing for a pastor is to baptize—to see someone go from
being an enemy of God to a child of God—to bestow the gifts of forgiveness,
life, and salvation upon someone in the waters of Holy Baptism is a profound
joy!
But such was Paul’s
opposition to their divisiveness that he is glad that he only baptized a few so
that his name is not drawn into it. He
says:
For Christ did not
send me to baptize but to preach the gospel, and not with words of eloquent
wisdom, lest the cross of Christ be emptied of its power.
The
power of the cross unites. The cross
united God and man by the atoning sacrifice that was offered there. The cross united Jew and Gentile into one
family of faith. The cross of Christ is
the power that restores life for us as it was in the beginning.
To preach the Good
News of the cross: Jesus Christ
crucified and risen for the sins of the world-- was the great mission that
Jesus had called Paul to undertake.
Other men would
follow him who would baptize and commune and absolve and do the “day-to-day”
work of a pastor in a congregation and together they would work to see that the
apostolic message of God in Christ reconciling the world to himself went out
into the world.
Nothing could be
allowed to rob this message of its saving power—not fine-sounding philosophical
arguments that left people unsure of what was being preached—not personality
differences between pastors--and certainly not divided congregations that were
a denial of the very thing that they were proclaiming.
Over the last
nearly sixteen years that I have served St. Paul—Kingsville we have been blessed by God with
the spiritual gift of unity. With very
few exceptions, personal preferences and individual personalities have never
threatened to undermine our unity. I am
profoundly grateful to the saints in this place for your spiritual maturity and
respect for the pastoral office no matter who the incumbent of that office is.
But today’s lesson
applies to us too if for no other reason than as a timely reminder that
congregational unity is a blessing to be sought and carefully nurtured because
the consequences of division cuts to the heart of the Christian faith and
undermines the saving mission of Christ in this world. God grant that there be no divisions among
us! Amen.
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