Building God's Building
1 Corinthians 3:10-15
- INTRODUCTION.
- "As I watched them
tear a
building
down
/ A gang of men in a busy town / With a ho-heave-ho, and a lusty yell /
They swung a beam and the side wall fell. / I asked the foreman. "Are
these men skilled, /And the men you'd hire if you wanted to build?" /
He gave a laugh and said, "No. indeed, / Just common labor is all I
need." / "I can easily wreck in a day or two, / What builders have
taken years to do." / And I thought to myself, as I went my way / Which
of these roles have I tried to play? / Am I a builder who works with
care, / Measuring life by rule and square? / Am I shaping my work to a
well- made plan / Patiently doing the best I can? / Or am I a wrecker
who walks to town / Content with the Labor of tearing down? / "O Lord
let my life and my labors be / That which will build for eternity!"
- We
are all involved in building
for eternity,
aren't we?
- As we are
raising our children, is it ever that far from our consciousness that
the influence we have on our children will largely determine where they
spend eternity?
- Are we
cognizant that the influence we exercise in the workplace could very
well have an eternal consequence?
- Do we realize
the things we say to our friends could determine where exactly they
spend eternity?
- Do we
understand that the way we interact with our brothers and sisters in
the church could influence what the congregation becomes in the years
to come?
- Paul seems
accurately aware of such realities in the text before us this morning.
- Paul has made
it obvious in the previous paragraph that the Corinthians should follow
God and not the various preachers who might come their way.
- In this
paragraph. Paul expounds on that idea quite a bit and says the reasons
the Corinthians should not follow various preachers is that only the
judgment will bring about the true character of the — preachers.
- Have you
ever known a preacher whom you respected highly but later you found out
that he had some serious moral defect?
- Have you
ever had a preacher who taught you so much and brought you so far in
the truth but later he himself left the faith?
- In a very real
way. the apostle deals with such issues in our text this morning.
- He points
out that the judgment will bring to light how the preacher truly built
upon the foundation of Jesus Christ.
- In
speaking of the preacher's
building,
Paul discusses A CERTAIN FOUNDATION & A CERTAIN TEST.
- A
CERTAIN FOUNDATION, vv. 10-11.
- By the grace God has given me, I
laid a foundation as an expert builder, and someone else is building on it, v. 10.
- God
had given Paul grace to lay a foundation.
- We
typically think of grace as the unmerited favor of God specifically as
it relates to the forgiveness of sins.
- The word
can also refer to the favor or goodwill that God or someone else
bestows in any other way.
- Is it not
significant that Paul thinks of his ministry among the Corinthians as a
gift of God?
- He
didn't view his work among the Corinthians as something God made him
do, something where he had no choice but to go to Corinth and preach.
- Rather,
he viewed his work in Corinth as a privilege, as an opportunity to do
good, as God's goodwill of trusting him with the Gospel to go to
Corinth.
- How do we
view our service to others?
- Do we
view our service as an opportunity that God is graciously giving us? Do
we view service as something we just have to do?
- Do we
believe that God is being good to us in that he is trusting us to share
his good news, to minister in his name, and to show his love to others?
- Or, do
we get upset when we need to serve others? Do we feel it infringes on
our time? Do we feel that we just have to do these things without
realizing God's graciousness in allowing us to serve in his name?
- Paul laid a
foundation as an expert builder.
- The term
for "expert builder" (NIV) or "wise masterbuilder" (KJV) refers to much
more than we typically think of in builders.
- Today
a builder will take the blueprints someone else has developed and
follow them. The architect will visit the building
site often, say, "You need to use this material rather than that
material," and make any changes necessary in the design. But, he
doesn't actually do the building.
- In
the ancient world, the architect and the builder were one and the same;
the term "masterbuilder'" refers to one who was both architect and
builder.
- Paul
not only planned the church in Corinth, but he was the builder of that
congregation.
- His
work in building
the congregation is described in the clause "T laid a foundation."
- Although
Paul laid the foundation at Corinth, others were building
on it.
- The
verb tenses Paul uses here are quite telling.
- The
verb tense for "laid" refers to an event without any reference to the
length of time involved.
- The
verb tense for "is building"
refers to a repeated action in the present.
- Thus,
Paul had laid the foundation in the past—that event was over. Yet,
others were building on it—they were continually building
on that foundation.
- That has
great implications for the church, doesn't it?
- The
foundation for this church was laid years and years ago, long before
the church first met here in Alum Creek. The foundation was really laid
back at the Porter Fork and Council Gap congregations.
- We, in
the work we continue today, are building
on that foundation.
- Our
work here will not be done until Jesus burst through the sky in shouts
of glory, will it?
- Although
the foundation is sure and firm, we have much work to build on that
foundation and honor Jesus and bring others to know him.
- Because
others are building
on that foundation, each one should be careful how he
builds.
- Undoubtedly.
Paul does not reference Apollos and Peter here as those who need to be
careful how they build, for they were not in Corinth when he wrote.
- Paul does
seem to be referring to the Corinthian Christians who were carrying on
the work that he and Apollos began.
- Why should
individuals be careful how they build? For no one can lay any
foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ, v.
11.
- We often use
this text in referring to the foundation of the universal church.
- I have
used this text in that way before and 1 have no problem in doing so now
or in the future, for the principle fits.
- However,
we cannot ignore the context in which we find these words.
- In context.
Paul is discussing the foundation of the Corinthian church and in
particular he is refuting two misconceptions the Corinthians had.
- First,
this seems to have been directed at the Corinthians' love for the
philosophy of Athens—the point is that all that great philosophy is not
the foundation of the Corinthian church, Jesus Christ is.
- Second,
this seems to have been directed at the Corinthians' love for Paul and
Apollos—those preachers is not the foundation for the Corinthian
church, Jesus Christ is.
- You know how
important it is to have a sure foundation upon which to build.
- How many
of us would want to build a house with a sinking foundation, an unsure
foundation or a non-existent foundation?
- The
Empire State Building
soared above the sidewalks at "the world's most crowded crossroads,"
Fifth Avenue and Thirty-Fourth Street.
- Simple
and majestic, it rises one hundred and three stories, that is twelve
hundred and fifty feet, or nearly a quarter of a mile—straight up from
the street.
- The
building
has six thousand windows, seventy-five miles of main water pipes, fifty
miles of radiator pipe, seven hundred tons of aluminum and stainless
steel in the outer walls. There are two million feet of electric wires,
350,000 electric light sockets.
- The
Empire State Building
can house 25,000 workers. An additional 40,000 daily visitors car be
accommodated, and in an emergency 80,000 can find shelter there.
- Its
enormous weight—303.000 tons of steel, stone and other
material—demanded a sure foundation, and that it has.
- The
foundation reaches down thirty-three feet below the sidewalk, and rests
on stratum granite, the firmest foundation in the world, for it is the
basic rock which is the earth itself.
- As
sure as that foundation is, what a blessed thought to know that the
foundation upon which the church is built is firmer still—Jesus Christ
himself.
- A
CERTAIN TEST, vv. 12-15.
- If
any man builds on this foundation using gold, silver, costly stones,
wood, hay, or straw, his work will be shown for what it is, because the
Day will bring it to light, vv. 12-13.
- The
building
materials Paul mentions here are in descending order according to both
preciousness and cost in the ancient world. Obviously, if we're building
a house, we're going to want to use the most sturdy material available.
- The Day will
bring to light how sturdy the construction is.
- The fact
that Paul refers to the day, rather than just a day, makes clear that he has the
Judgment in mind.
- We
understand that at that Day, God will bring all things to light.
- "God
will bring every deed into judgment, including every hidden thing,
whether it is good or evil"(Eccl 12:14).
- "We
must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that each one may
receive what is due him for the things done while in the body, whether
good or bad" (2 Cor 5:10).
- At that
time, nothing will be hidden about how we have lived our lives or built
on the foundation of Jesus Christ.
- What
will that day reveal about you?
- Will
that day show that you taught Bible school and helped train a future
generation of workers in the kingdom?
- Will
that day demonstrate how you brought others to Jesus and constantly
sowed the seed of the kingdom?
- Will
that day reveal you to be one who constantly gossiped and brought
dissension to the church, tearing down the work built on that solid
foundation?
- Will
that day reveal that you seldom spoke to those who walked through the
doors for the first time and thus you helped turn them away from Jesus
and his church?
- Just
what will that day reveal about you?
- Each man's work
will be revealed with fire, and the fire will test the quality of each
man's work, v. 13.
- The testing by
fire was common in the ancient world.
- Scripture
also refers to such testing.
- "This is
the requirement of the law that the LORD gave Moses: Gold, silver,
bronze, iron, tin, lead, and anything else that can withstand fire must
be put through the fire, and then it will be clean" (Num 31:21-23).
- Another common
element in the Scriptures is that fire will accompany the day of the
Lord.
- "God is
just: He will pay back trouble to those who trouble you and give relief
to you who are troubled, and to us as well. This will happen when the
Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven in blazing fire with his powerful angels" (2
Thess 1:6-7).
- "The day
of the Lord will come like a thief. The heavens will disappear with a
roar; the elements will be destroyed by fire, and the each and
everything in it will be laid bare" (2 Pt 3:10).
- If what he has
built survives, he will receive his reward. If it is burned up, he will
suffer loss; he himself will be saved, but only as one escaping through
the flames, vv. 14-15.
- This is
admittedly a very difficult passage, and I'm not at all certain that I
have all the answers about it.
- Many
commentators among us assert that this means that the preacher might
see his work destroyed and he will be upset that the work collapsed
rather than flourished.
- The main
difficulty I have with that interpretation is that most of those
commentators see this as occurring before the Judgment, and as we've
mentioned Paul references "the Day," a clear reference to the final day.
- It is my
conviction that this refers to degrees of reward in heaven.
- We know
that there are degrees of punishment in hell.
- "That
servant who knows his master's will and does not get ready or does not
do what his master wants will be beaten with many blows. But the one
who does not know and does things deserving punishment will be beaten
with few blows" (Lk 12:47-48).
- 2
Pt2:20-21.
- Paul seems
to be speaking in our text this morning about the opposite, levels of
reward in heaven.
- Here's
what Paul seems to be saying:
- Those
servants of the cross—whether they be Bible class teachers, preachers,
elders, or other workers in the congregation—who built solidly on the
foundation of Jesus will be rewarded in a special way.
- Those
servants of the cross in whatever capacity they served who did not
build so well or the foundation will be saved, but they will not be
rewarded so richly in heaven.
- Jesus
hinted at degrees of reward in heaven, as well—"Blessed are you when
people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil
against you because of me. Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in
heaven, for
in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you" (Mt
5:11-12).
- The old
song asks the question: "Will there be any stars in my crown?"
- Paul
seems to be suggesting that some of us will get more stars than others.
- How
are you building
for eternity? Will there be any
stars in your crown?