Is Christ Divided? session 5

This week’s sheet….
Notes for the house groups on 1 Corinthians.

Week five, beginning Sunday 20 May: 1 Corinthians 4.6 – 4.21

Main theme: the nature of power
apostolic style and authority
grace

Questions to prompt discussion

1.What does ‘do not go beyond what is written’ mean?
2.How does this link with taking pride in ‘one man over another’? Can you think of examples in the contemporary church (in UK and worldwide) where there is such pride?
3.Is there anything that a Christian can boast about? If only the cross, does this mean that a Christian should never enjoy a sense of achievement? (or similar)
4.Would you like Paul as your church leader? Paul is engaging with what he perceives to be the arrogance of the church community, and a large part of his method is sarcasm (vv 8-13) – but is sarcasm a form of blessing or answering kindly?
5.What is the power of the Kingdom of God? What is the context of Paul’s statement – and therefore what is he suggesting specifically?

Some background thoughts
Paul is still struggling with ‘party spirit’ at Corinth. He has been talking about Apollos as an example, not because he is particularly angry with Apollos or disagrees with him, but because the Corinthians have distorted the faith through emphasising the importance of individual leaders. That is the ‘idiom’ of their culture, and against this Paul is emphasising the nature of apostolic leadership – humiliated and weak. There is a strong sense that the Corinthians have started to look down on Paul as a manual worker who doesn’t speak well.

Paul is here exercising an episcopal role, ie oversight of the church community which he founded, and is using parental language to try and exercise discipline. It would appear that his attempt goes wrong, and the divisions are not overcome (see 2 Cor 1.23 – 2.4).

There are strong echoes of the cross (1.18-25) in Paul’s description of apostolic ministry.

Notes on verses
v6 – “Few scholars claim to understand the allusion” to not go beyond what is written; yet I suspect that the point Paul was trying to make can be discerned. NB there was no New Testament at this time
v8 – almost certainly not economic riches or kingship, but figures of speech used by popular philosophers of the time
v9 – ‘end of the procession’ – captured prisoners dragged behind triumphant military leaders, usually to be executed as entertainment or sold into slavery
v14 – ‘guardians’ – literally childminders, babysitters
v14 – compare with 6.5

Is Christ Divided? session 4

Catching up…
Notes for the house groups on 1 Corinthians.

Week four, beginning Sunday 5 May: 1 Corinthians 3.1 – 4.5

Main theme: Divisions in the church
The nature of leadership
All things come from God
Party ‘faction’ is absurd – Christ is the sole foundation

Questions to prompt discussion

1.What is the nature of Paul’s distinction between milk and solid food?
2.Why is division seen as a sign of spiritual infancy?
3.What is leadership? What is specifically Christian leadership?
4.What place does obedience play in your understanding of discipleship?
5.How is leadership judged, and by whom?
6.What builds a church? What are the good materials to use? Are they present in Mersea?
7.What is God’s temple? How is this linked with the new temple of Christ’s body?

Some background thoughts

The first part of this section is springing the rhetorical trap laid in the last chapter (remember the shift from ‘I’ language to ‘we’ language). Paul is very opposed to the idea of being aligned with a human leader or authority, as opposed to Christ – it a) places leaders on a pedestal, where they don’t belong; b) causes faction and rivalry; and c) encourages them to consider human praise rather than divine judgement.

There are three metaphors here, discussing leadership: agriculture (v 3.5-9); building (v 3.9-17); and slavery (household servants) (4.1-5); in each of them Paul undercuts the importance of human leadership: The leader is a) the servant of the community, ‘belonging’ to the community (v 21-23); b) agents or instruments of Christ (no intrinsic merit – growth comes from God alone); and c) judged by God alone. In elevating human leadership the church is actually diminishing itself.

You might like to look at Hebrews 13.17!

Notes on verses
v 3.1 – infants in Christ are ‘fleshly’, vulnerable to sin; this isn’t flesh vs spirit, but flesh governed by sin rather than flesh governed by spirit
v 4&5 – there is no indication that Paul disagrees doctrinally with Apollos – he wouldn’t keep quiet about it if he did!
v 11 – the foundation in Christ, link with 1.23 (scandal)
v 13 – the day, cf 1.8
v 16 – the ‘you’ is plural, not singular (ie the congregation is the temple); possible parallel between Spirit dwelling in church and ‘shekinah’ presence in Jerusalem temple
v 4.1 – secret things of God = ‘sacred mysteries’ (link with Learning Church talk)

Is Christ Divided? session 3

I changed the format of these, due to complaints!! Click full post for text.
Notes for the house groups on 1 Corinthians.

Week three, beginning Sunday 29 April: 1 Corinthians 2.6 – 2.16

Main theme: spiritual wisdom;
not understood by the world, ‘secret’ and ‘hidden’;
requires being spiritual to be seen;
link with knowing Jesus (the ‘mind of Christ’).

Questions to prompt discussion

1.How do we know if someone is spiritual?
2.If you need to be spiritual to discern the truth – and therefore those who disagree must be unspiritual – how can we discern error in ourselves or in our community?
3.Can a Buddhist have ‘the mind of Christ’?
4.Where does Paul quote from in verse 9? What does this indicate about worthy texts? And isn’t it a wonderful text?!
5.What link is there between this passage (especially verses 11 and 15) and Jesus’ command that we are not to judge (ie condemn) one another?
6.(A difficult one) – what is the difference between Paul’s view and gnosticism (the view that it is by sharing secret knowledge – gnosis – that you are saved)?
7.Is Paul arguing that ‘only the holy can see truly’? (Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God) – how can we cultivate this holiness in our own lives?

Some background thoughts

In this passage Paul may be deliberately using vocabulary that the Corinthians would have used of themselves, ie a spiritual elite, in order to set them up for a painful fall in the beginning of chapter 3. He tends not to use much of this language elsewhere. Note in particular the shift to using ‘we’ language – a rhetorical device to lull the listeners and lower their guard!

Paul employs a distinction between ‘this age’ – when there are worldly rulers – and ‘the age to come’ – when Christ is revealed as the true Lord of heaven and earth. Christians live ‘in between’ these two ages – as if we are living in the dawn light, we have started to see what is coming, the sun has not yet fully risen, and some deny that it ever will.

Notes on verses

v 6 ‘mature’ could also be translated ‘perfect’ – cf Mt 5 43-48
v 6 ‘rulers of this age’ – cf Rom 8.38, Eph 6.12, Col 2.15
v 9 may be a pastiche of Isaiah 64.4 and 65.17 – or a quotation from the now lost text ‘The Apocalypse of Elijah’ (according to the Church Father Origen)
v 9 ‘those who love him’ – Old Testament way of describing the faithful community
v 13 is best translated: ‘…taught by the Spirit, interpreting spiritual things to spiritual people’

Jonathan


You are never given a dream

without also being given the power to make it true.

You may have to work for it, however.

Be the change you want to see

Challenging words, but beloved and I have been thinking a lot about them recently, and – with a bit of humming and hawing we’re probably going to sign up to the 90% reduction plan (see here).

Seems like every day there are things bringing it home.

The world is changing around us. Because we (ie western society) are so rich we can put off the day of reckoning for a little longer than most, but that just means that the reckoning will be all the harsher when it comes. Shifting to a different pattern of life is just battening down the hatches in preparation for a storm.

UPDATE: this is useful (there have been others, but this seems particularly readable).

Spiderman 3


I went into this with lowered expectations, because I had picked up a ‘vibe’ that it was too convoluted and confusing.

I loved it. Possibly I was less confused than a non-initiate(!) but even so… and I was most delighted by the fairly explicit Christian message in it. I’m not sure I’ve seen such a positive portrayal of faith in a blockbuster before. I think it will repay repeated viewings – which is surely part of the purpose?

Anyhow, recommended.
If you like that sort of thing.
I appreciate that many of you don’t 😉