I.
INTRODUCTION.
A.
Where I grew
up, there is each October a huge festival known as “Court Days.”
1.
“Court Days”
is something you would just have to see to believe—150,000 folks or so
in a town a little smaller than South Charleston buying everything from
food to knives to guns to sweatshirts to whatever else you’d want.
Anyway, growing up, my family would spend all day Saturday browsing the
selections, and we boys got so much money every year that we could
spend on whatever we wanted.
2.
For several
years when I was in elementary school one man would bring a dancing
monkey.
a.
He played
music on an accordian, and the monkey, if you would hold up some
change, would come and get the money out of you palm.
1)
My brother
Kyle, being about 4, absolutely loved that monkey. He never wanted to
do anything but watch that monkey dance.
2)
One day Kyle
was begging Mom & Dad to take him to see the monkey. They, like all
parents before and since, kept telling him, “Later.”
b.
We went in to
an old store, all three of us kids holding hands with either Mom or
Dad, and did some shopping and came out to go to another. Mom & Dad
were looking at something when they wanted to show Kyle what they had
found, but Kyle was nowhere to be found.
c.
Mom & Dad
were obviously terrifed.
1)
Dad sent Mom,
my other brother and me, to the headquarters the State Police had
established for such purposes.
2)
He went to
look for Kyle. Once Mom, Aaron, & I arrived at the State Police
posts, the officers obviously questioned Mom extensively about what
Kyle looked like and what he was wearing.
3)
They then, as
I recall, took us to a separate room where they kept us as comfortable
as possible. Dad was walking and found a lady holding Kyle not far from
the last place we had seen the monkey.
B.
There cannot
possibly be a more terrifying feeling in the world than not knowing
where your child is. I know as the oldest brother I was mortified when
we couldn’t find Kyle.
1.
Honestly,
because I was no more than 7 or 8 at the time, I can’t remember many of
the details of that time Kyle slipped away from Mom & Dad, but I do
recall the sick feeling I had in my gut.
a.
Can you
imagine the horror in New York after the terrorist attacks of 2001—not
knowing if a loved one was dead or alive and searching intently for any
hope of survival?
b.
Can you
imagine the terror in Southeast Asia after the devastating tsunami and
looking for loved ones who might have been washed out to sea?
c.
Can you think
of anything more terrifying than lacking someone you love so dearly?
2. This text is not about missing people, but it is about missing important qualities in Christianity. Both groups in Corinth—the weak and the strong—were missing/lacking important attributes. Paul even goes so far as to pledge to miss something important. What is lacking? A LACK OF COMPREHENSION, A LACK OF COMPASSION, & A LACK OF CUISINE.
II.
LACK OF
COMPREHENSION, vv. 8-9.
A.
One of the
problems in the Corinthian congregation was that not everyone
understood that eating meat originally offered to idols wasn’t really a
big deal.
1.
Paul writes:
“Not all possess this knowledge,” v. 8. The “this knowledge” refers
specifically to the comprehension that a Christian could eat meat
offered to idols.
2.
As far as I
can tell, the NT never condemns the eating of food offered to idols
PROVIDED that (a) I did not eat as part of idolatrous worship and (b) I
did not cause another brother to defile his conscience.
B.
Yet, not
everyone in Corinth understood that “but some, through former
association with idols, eat food as really offered to an idol.”
1.
The KJV
reads: “some with conscience of the idol unto this hour.”
a.
The word
trnaslated “former association” in the ESV and “conscience” in the KJV
refers to custom or acquaintance. It doesn’t refer to “conscience” in
the way we typically think of that term.
b.
What Paul is
saying is this: “Look, some of your fellow brethren are troubled by
your eating food offered to idols because that’s how they used to
worship.” These weak brethren were eating food as really offered to an
idol; in other words, they could not separate the act of eating with
friends in a pagan temple and the worship in which they used to
participate there.
2.
Because these
brethren could not enter the dining room of a pagan temple and eat a
slab of meat as nothing more than a slab of meat their conscience,
because it was weak, was defiled.
a.
These
brethren were sinning in defiling their conscience. We understand, do
we not, that we dare not defile our conscience?
b.
In another
passage concerning eating food offered to idols, Paul writes, “The
faith that you have, keep between yourself and God. Blessed is the one
who has no reason to pass judgment on himself for what he approves. But
whoever has doubts is condemned if he eats, because the eating is not
from faith. For whatever does not proceed from faith is sin” (Rm
14:22-23).
C.
Paul agrees
with the knowledge of the strong and writes: “Food will not commend us
to God. We are no worse off if we do not eat, and no better off if we
do.”
1.
What I eat is
not going to make me right before God. Perhaps the strong were saying,
“Folks, what I eat has nothing to do with how spiritual or unspiritual
I am. What I eat is a moot point.”
2.
They were
right—eating is totally irrelevant to my spiritual well-being—“It is
not what goes into the mouth that defiles a person, but what comes out
of the mouth; this defiles a person” (Mt 15:11).
3.
The
Corinthians were no better off if they did eat meat sacrificed to idols
and no worse off if they did not—Paul reemphasizes again that meat has
no bearing on our spirituality.
D.
What does
this have to do with us?
1.
We dare not
be content to be weak in the faith.
a.
The problem
of eating meat sacrificed to idols had two causes—(1) Some of the
brethren did not understand that eating meat sacrificed to idols made
no difference & (2) The brethren who did understand they could
properly eat meat offered to idols had a bad attitude about doing so.
b.
If all the
Corinthians understood that eating meat offered to idols had no bearing
on spirituality, we wouldn’t be reading this text.
2.
Are we weak
or strong in the faith?
a.
“Let us leave
the elementary doctrine of Christ and go on to maturity” (Heb 6:1-2).
The author says, “Don’t stay with the fundamentals of the faith, but go
on to maturity.
b.
Are we going
on to maturity? Do we have four or five favorite topics we continually
study or want preached about, or are we seeking to know all that God
has to say? Do we want to be challenged to grow in the faith, or are we
content to be the way we’ve always been?
E.
We can’t be
convinced something is wrong simply because we associate it with error.
1.
In other
words, simply because a denomination does something doesn’t necessarily
make it wrong.
2.
Now, don’t
get me wrong: if something is forbidden in the Scriptures, we cannot
adopt it—period!
a.
Let me give
an example: Sunday schools used to be a very divisive innovation among
churches of Christ. The Sunday school, as we know it, began among
denominational groups in the 1700’s, and expanded to America in the
1800’s. Notice what was written in the Gospel Advocate, one of the most
respected and solid publications in our brotherhood, in 1910: “Whenever
any man proves the Sunday school to be of divine authority, he can
prove missionary societies to be of divine authority. By all rules of
logic, he that ‘would the one retain, must to the other cling.’ I
emphatically deny that there is any divine authority for Sunday
schools, either by precept or precedent, hint or allusion . . . In all
the writings of the New Testmanet there is not one word that even
squints in that direction.”
b. Some of the Corinthians were saying, “We used to do this before we came to Christ; therefore, it must be wrong.” Let us not be in that number!
III.
A LACK OF
COMPASSION, vv. 9-12.
A.
The
Corinthians needed to make sure that their right of eating meat offered
to idols did not become a stumbling block to the weak.
1.
How odd those
words sound in our modern culture!
a. How many times do we hear someone say, “I have the right to do this
or the right to say that. I don’t care if you’re offended or not”?
b. We live in a society which values its “rights” and is not going to
give them up for anyone.
2.
Paul doesn’t
declare that these Christians did not have the right to eat meat
sacrificed to idols—they did. They needed to be cautious, however, that
their right did not become a stumbling block for the weak.
a. We often read this text to refer to offending someone. We think, “If
I do this and so-and-so is slightly offended, because so-and-so doesn’t
like it, I have to stop it.”
b. This text has nothing to do with offending someone’s sensabilities.
1)
If it did,
could we really do anything? How do I know if what I’m going to do is
offensive to you?
2)
The word
“stumbling block” in this text means to lead someone to sin.
B.
How can my
eating meat offered to idols lead someone to sin? If someone sees me
eating meat offered to an idol, if his conscience is weak, he will be
embolden to eat food offered to idols.
1.
Here’s what
Paul means: If you’re conscience dictates that it’s wrong to eat food
sacrificed to idols and you see me going into a temple to eat, you will
be encouraged to defile your conscience.
2.
In the
original context, Paul likely uses a very sarcastic pun.
a.
I can’t say
this with a 100% certainty, but it seems quite likely that strong in
Corinth were saying that the weak needed to be built up in the faith.
b.
Paul uses the
word for “build up” here, but he says that the weak are being built up
to sin.
C.
The strong
were using their knowledge and thus destroying the weak, the brother
for whom Christ had died.
1. Instead of just going to eat a nice meal in a pagan temple, the
strong were destroying their brethren.
2. Jesus had given his life to for these brethren to save them from
sin, and the strong were causing these precious children of God to sin.
D.
Sinning
against brethren when their conscience is weak is sin against Christ.
E.
What should
you and I do with this text?
1.
We need to be
careful how we use our freedom in Christ.
a.
There is no
doubt but that we have freedom in Christ.
1)
In the next
chapter, Paul expounds on his rights and how he is careful when using
them. To begin that section, the apostle asks the rhetorical question,
“Am I not free?” (1 Cor 9:1).
2)
When Paul was
in Jeruslaem, false brethren “slipped in to spy out our freedom that we
have in Christ Jesus” (Gal 2:4).
3)
When Thomas
Campbell arrived in the United States from Scotland, he was severely
chastised by the Presbyterian Church in Pennsylvania for not following
certain doctrines of that body.
a)
On August 17,
1809, he and other denominational clergy founded the Christiain
Association of Washington, Pennsylvania, in part, to determine what to
do when they disagreed with denominational doctrine.
b)
Campbell was
chosen to write a document which would help guide that organization.
c)
The document
became known as The Declaration and Address. While it is not at all
Gospel, Campbell well summarized Christian liberty when he wrote,
“Resume that precious, that dear bought liberty, wherewith Christ has
made his people free; a liberty from subjection to any authority but
his own, in matters of religion.”
b.
While no man
has a right to tell me what to do religiously, only the Lord has that
right, we need to be careful that we don’t cause others to sin in our
liberty. Let me give you a “real life” example.
1)
When I was
the youth minister at a church in KY, we decided to begin having a
longer worship period on Sunday morning & to have Bible classes on
Sunday night.
a)
The elders
decided that this would better meet the needs of the congregation: we
could have more time for praise, worship, & study when we assembled
on Sunday mornings & we could have more time for Sunday school on
Sunday night.
b)
At any rate,
the elders bumped into a family in a supermarket the week after we
started this, and the lady said, “We’re not coming back. We’re staying
away from the church because what you’re doing isn’t right.”
2)
The elders
wisely decided to discontinue our practice.
a)
I understand
that’s not a perfect parallel as to what was taking place in Corinth.
b)
But:
-
Not one word
of Scripture condemned what we were doing, but someone was going to sin
if we continued in that liberty.
-
Therefore, we
stopped the practice.
c.
We stopped
the practice, for causing one to sin is a serious offense against
Christ.
1)
“Whoever
causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be
better for him to have a great millstone fastened around his neck and
to be drowned in the depth of the sea” (Mt 18:6).
2)
In causing a
brother to sin, we sin against Christ, for Jesus identifies with his
people. To harm a child of God is to harm Christ.
a)
At the Great
Judgment scene of Mt 25, Jesus makes clear that he identifies with his
people. He praises those who care for the downtrodden by saying:
“Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my
brothers, you did it to me” (v. 40).
b)
In
persecuting the church, Saul of Tarsus was persecuting Jesus himself:
Jesus says to Saul, “I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting” (Acts 9:5).
2.
We need to
see all of our brethren, not just those who think and act like us, as
those for whom Christ died.
a.
Jesus died
for the sins of the whole world. Yet, there are texts which remind us
that he died in a special for the church.
1)
Paul told the
Ephesian elders: “Pay careful attention to yourselves and to all the
flock, in which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to care for the
church of God, which he obtained with his own blood” (Acts 20:28).
2)
In John’s
vision of heaven, he saw four living creatures and twenty-four elders
fall down before the Lamb and praise him, saying, “Worthy are you to
take the scroll and to open its seals, for you were slain, and by your
blood you ransomed people for God from every tribe and langague and
people and nation” (Rv 5:9).
b.
Jesus blood
is available for every person on this earth; however, for those of us
who have met that blood through baptism, that blood has done its work
and cleansed us from sin. Therefore, how can I treat my brethren
lightly?
1)
How can I do
something, knowing it’s likely to cause another brother to sin, and not
care?
2)
Why would I
want to cause my brethren for whom Jesus gave his precious blood to sin
by defiling their conscience?
F. The strong in Corinth had little or no compassion for the weak. How strong is our compassion toward our brothers?
IV.
A LACK OF
CUISINE, v. 13.
A.
Because food
offered to idols was causing a problem in Corinth, Paul declares, “If
food makes my brother stumble, I will never eat meat, lest I make my
brother stumble.”
B.
It seems so
odd to our ears to hear Paul declare that he will never eat meat.
1.
In fact, his
declaration is much stronger than either the ESV or NIV render it. Paul
writes, quite similar to how the KJV translates the phrase, that he
shall not eat meat forever if his brother sins because of it.
2.
Why not just
stay away from the temple and buy meat at the marketplace?
a.
Even meat
sold in the market was often leftovers from a pagan sacrifice.
b.
In some
cities with sizeable Jewish populations, the Jews had their own
separate market with meat which was both kosher and never used in
sacrifice. I am unaware, however, whether or not archeologists have
found any evidence of such a market in Corinth.
C.
Paul says
that he is willing to give up meat if it means keeping a brother from
stumbling.
1.
What I find
interesting about this text is that meat has always been a sign of
wealth.
a.
Economists
tell us that as people move up the socio-economic ladder, one of the
first things to change is their meat consumption.
b.
You probably
doubt that’s the case.
1)
But, which is
cheaper: vegetables or meat?
2)
If you have
to tighten your belt at the grocery story, which are you more likely to
buy: bacon or filet mignon?
2.
Even for us,
meat is a sign of wealth, and Paul says he’ll give up that right to
keep brethren from falling into sin.
a.
What will you
give up to keep your brethren from falling into sin?
b.
What will you
give up to come to Jesus? We know that we must give up ourselves to
come to him? Will you give yourself up to him this very day?