1 Corinthians 2:1-16 This last month we have been
looking at Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians. We have talked about how the bible answers
the great questions of life: who am
I—what is my life’s purpose—and where am I going when this life is over.
We talked about how
the answer to those questions—Jesus Christ—has united us to one another and to
God.
And then last week
we talked about how this “word of the cross” that unites us as Christians, also
has the power to divide us from those who are not Christians.
The
assumption that lies behind what we have learned is that we believe what Paul has to say: that the great questions of life are answered by Jesus—that his atoning
sacrifice has united us to God and to
one another in the church—that there is
a division between those who have faith and those who don’t. These things we believe.
But what we
haven’t asked yet is this: Where did
this faith--come from? How I am able to believe God’s Word and trust
in Jesus Christ when so many in the world around me—do not? The answer to that question is the person and
work of the Holy Spirit in our lives--and that is what Paul talks about today. He says:
When I came to you,
brothers, I did not come proclaiming to you the testimony of God with lofty
speech or wisdom. For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ
and him crucified. And I was with you in weakness and in fear and much
trembling, and my speech and my message were not in plausible words of wisdom,
but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power, that your faith might not rest
in the wisdom of men but in the power of God.
The
Corinthians would have expected that anyone coming to them with some new, important
message would have been a persuasive speaker and a great debater like they were
used to hearing from the philosophers of their day. They would have expected what Paul calls: “lofty speech and plausible words of wisdom”.
But Paul made a
conscious decision NOT to do that. In
fact, he says that when he spoke to them he
was “weak and fearful and trembling”. But his
message was life-changing! I decided to know nothing among you except
Jesus Christ and him crucified. And
in their lives-that message- was a demonstration of the Spirit’s power.
The Corinthians
began their journey of faith where everyone begins their journey of faith--regarding
the word of the cross as foolishness and weakness—spiritually dead. But as Jesus Christ was preached to them, the
Holy Spirit worked through that message and their hearts were changed- and
their eyes were opened- and they were born again—and what was weakness and
foolishness to them become wisdom and strength.
This remarkable
change wasn’t accomplished because Paul was a great speaker—it wasn’t
accomplished because he won some argument—it was accomplished by the power of
the Holy Spirit working through the word of the cross.
So it is in our life
of faith. The pastors who baptized us
and taught us the faith and preached to us all these years didn’t save us. Rather, our salvation comes through the work
of the Spirit as the message of the cross is preached and given in the
sacraments.
The value of God’s way of bringing us to
faith, is that there can be no doubt that it is his work that we are saved—not
because we were caught up in some emotional event—not because we were taken in
by some smooth-talking preacher—but because the Holy Spirit has worked faith in
Jesus in our hearts.
That rock-solid foundation
for our faith is something that transcends the passing wisdom of this age. Paul writes:
Among the mature we
do impart wisdom, although it is not a wisdom of this age or of the rulers of
this age, who are doomed to pass away. But we impart a secret and hidden wisdom
of God, which God decreed before the ages for our glory. None of the rulers of
this age understood this, for if they had, they would not have crucified the
Lord of glory. But, as it is written, “What
no eye has seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart of man imagined, what God has
prepared for those who love him”— these
things God has revealed to us through the Spirit.
The wisdom of God
is not like the wisdom of this day that can be known through reason and
measured scientifically—nevertheless, it is real wisdom. In fact, it is a wisdom that never fades away,
unlike various scientific theories that have come and gone along with the
scientists who came up with them.
Instead, the
wisdom of God endures from everlasting to everlasting for its source is from before
the foundation of the world and will continue long after every lab and
university has crumbled into dust.
God’s
eternal purpose in creating the world and creating us is that we would live with
him forever in perfect fellowship—his glory reflected upon us- and in us -and
through us- to others.
This is what Paul
calls “the secret and hidden wisdom of
God”—secret and hidden only because our eyes cannot see it or our hearts
imagine it—secret and hidden because it musts be revealed to us.
This wisdom of God
(his desire that humans would have fellowship with him) is possible only
through his Son. Jesus is the bridge
that connects us to God. The greatest
minds of the ages could never have conceived such a thing—because if they
could, they never would have crucified the one and only God-given way back to
God.
But what sinful
man did in spiritual blindness--God designed and decreed for the eternal glory
of those who love him so that Jesus’ death would bring everlasting life with
God back to us.
Life in God’s
presence is why we were created and God’s eternal saving purpose cannot be reasoned out by us, it has to be revealed to us through the Spirit. Paul writes:
The Spirit searches
everything, even the depths of God. For who knows a person's thoughts except
the spirit of that person, which is in him? So also no one comprehends the
thoughts of God except the Spirit of God. Now we have received not the spirit
of the world, but the Spirit who is from God, that we might understand the
things freely given us by God.
What
God has planned from eternity for our salvation—what Jesus has accomplished in
his dying and rising for our salvation—has to be revealed to us- and made known
to us- and we have to understand it and believe in it and be saved.
Without the
Spirit’s work in us, the loving purpose of the Father and the saving works of
the Son will do us no good whatsoever. Those
who do not believe in Jesus are lost.
Yes God loves them—yes Jesus died for them—but each person must receive
that for themselves in faith to be saved.
We need the help of the Holy Spirit for this.
The Spirit knows the
wisdom of God for he IS God. Just as our
own spirit knows what is in our hearts and minds, so the Holy Spirit knows the
saving will of God towards us and conveys it to us through the preaching of the
cross of Christ. Paul writes:
We impart this in
words not taught by human wisdom but taught by the Spirit, interpreting
spiritual truths to those who are spiritual.
In Romans chapter
10 Paul carefully explains this necessary connection between “our believing”
and the “Spirit’s work” and the “preaching of the Gospel by men”.
He says that if we
confess with our mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in our heart that God
raised him from the dead—we will be saved.
But then he asks
the question that we began with: How can
we call on the Lord if we don’t believe in him?
How can we believe in him if we’ve never heard of him? How can we hear of him if no one
preaches?
The Holy Spirit is
the One who brings us to faith in Jesus --he is the One who reveals the saving
will of the Father—he is the One who stretches out our hand to receive the
gifts of God. But the Holy Spirit does
that enlightening, sanctifying work through the Gospel that is preached- and the
sacraments that are administered by
pastors.
Paul says: WE
IMPART THIS (THAT IS SALVATION) IN WORDS TAUGHT BY THE SPIRIT. When the pastor preaches the Good News of
Jesus-when he baptizes us into Christ’s death and resurrection-when he
administers the saving fruits of the cross in Holy Communion-when he tells us
that our sins are forgiven-we can be confident that the Holy Spirit is at work
in the Gospel to impart God’s gift of salvation to us. Paul says:
The natural person
does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and
he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned. The
spiritual person judges all things, but is himself to be judged by no one. “For
who has understood the mind of the Lord so as to instruct him?” But we have the
mind of Christ.
Jesus
once told Nicodemus: You must be born
again—flesh give birth to flesh—but the Spirit gives birth to spirit. Paul says the same thing here: the person that we are by nature-- cannot
accept the things of God—we must be born again spiritually.
This new birth is
not something that we can bring about in ourselves anymore than we were
responsible for giving birth to ourselves naturally—we must be born again by
God.
That
is exactly what the Holy Spirit has done in us by the Father’s will through
faith in Jesus. We no longer possess only
a sinful nature—but now we are a new person spiritually. We have been given the ability to know and
understand and believe the wisdom of God that is hidden from our senses and our
intellect. We have a spiritual knowledge
and insight and confidence that the world does not—and cannot—have.
The
judgment of the unbelieving world on those things that matter eternally—those
things that we have been talking about over this last month—are simply wrong.
They don’t know
the answer to life’s great questions.
They don’t believe that Jesus has reconciled them to God. They think everyone will be saved. Who God is- and what he is about in the world-
and what his attitude is towards us—is hidden to them—BUT—it has been revealed
to us in Jesus by the Holy Spirit.
Today
we give thanks for the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives. He has brought us to faith and he will work
in our lives to keep us in faith until that day that we are safely delivered
into the presence of the Lord. Amen.
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