Sermons on 1
Corinthians:
Bodily
Functions (1 Cor 12:21-26)
A stinking
foot, a drippy nose and a rumbling intestine—are they gross body parts
or just part of the Body? In 2002, Sylvia Branzei published a
popular children’s book entitled: Grossology: The Impolite Science of
the Human Body. Now, there is a traveling exhibit going to children’s
museums around the country. Grossology combines humor, colorful
visual displays and hands-on-learning with various bodily
functions. The end result is that natural childhood curiosity and
humor are met with legitimate scientific education.
Visiting the Grossology exhibit
will give you quite an education. Turn the handle on the “Vomit
Center” machine and watch the process of stomach acid coming back up
the digestive track. Trust me when I say there are many other
“hands-on” learning experiences one can have at the Grossology exhibit.
But, the exhibit’s real aim is
not to gross people out, but advance interest in anatomy and science
among kids. Denver Museum of Science and Nature curator Bridget
Coughlin upholds the educational value of displaying these bodily
functions when she says: “I wanted to make sure that in the brightly
colored paint and gross factoids, there are real, deep scientific
lessons that we’re teaching our youngest visitors. I am wholly
satisfied that we are."
But, it isn’t just children who
are interested in bodily functions—the Apostle Paul is quite interested
in them himself. The problem in Corinth, as we have been
discussing, is that the brethren there were quite independent. In fact,
they were far too independent. There was no functioning as a
body, no common concern. On the other hand, they were boasting that
their functions were more important than the functions of others.
In this morning’s text, Paul
seems to write to two groups. Paul writes to those boasting in
their gifts, and he explains that in the body each part is dependent on
every other part. In order for the body to be whole, the parts of the
body must work in unison. Furthermore, Paul writes to those who
were being made to feel inferior. Can you imagine walking in here
this morning and being looked down upon simply because you could heal
rather than speak in tongues? What would it be like to assemble every
Sunday with folks who felt you weren’t worthy to be around them?
How would you like to hear me preach this morning and declare, “I am so
great and wonderful because God has blessed me so richly. But you folks
are nothing put a bunch of little losers because you can’t do all the
things I can do”? The brethren at Corinth did not need to imagine
such treatment, for that treatment was their reality.
Paul makes the point throughout
this paragraph that even those body parts that we don’t think are that
important are essential. Paul informs these brethren of A COMMON
DEPENDENCY, A COMMON DESIGNER, & A COMMON DEFERENCE.
A COMMON DEPENDENCY, v 21.
“The eye
cannot say to the hand, ‘I have no need of you,’ nor again the head to
the feet, ‘I have no need of you.”
What Paul says here isn’t exactly
true of the physical body, is it? How many people have we
known—whether through accident, illness, or defect—lacked a
non-essential part of the body—an appendix, an eye, a leg, or an
arm? Bonnie Consolo was born without arms. In the 1970’s, a film
crew followed her and developed a documentary, A Day in the Life of
Bonnie Consolo. In the documentary, Consolo is shown cooking, canning
fruit, driving, shopping, killing a fly, putting on a necklace, cutting
her son’s hair, and then hugging him—all with her feet.
Although our physical bodies can
function without certain parts, the body of Christ is not designed the
same way. Each part depends on every other part to make it
whole. Consistent with Paul’s use of the body metaphor elsewhere,
here he uses the metaphor to speak of the body’s wholeness. “We,
though many, are one body in Christ” (Rm 12:5). Concerning the
division between Jew & Gentile, Paul writes, Jesus abolished “the
law of commandments expressed in ordinances, that he might create in
himself one new man in place of the two, so making peace, and might
reconcile us both to God in one body through the cross” (Eph 2:15-16).
In that way, what Paul writes
here fits beautifully. Even though Bonnie Consolo learned to
compensate quite remarkably for the absence of her arms, the fact
remains that she was missing arms. No matter how well disabled
individuals compensate, no matter how much medical technology and
service animals allow them to live full lives, part of the body is
missing.
We mentioned last week the need
we have as a body to work in unison to accomplish the Lord’s
work. While that is so very true, as it was true in Corinth, is
on the interdependence of believers—We need one another. The eye cannot
say to the hand, nor can the head say to the feet that they do not need
each other. Because God, in his wisdom, knew that we would so
often need each other, his Word repeatedly encourages his children to
assist one another. “Love one another with brotherly affection.
Outdo one another in showing honor” (Rm 12:10). “Bear one
another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ” (Gal 6:2).
Is it not true that we often need
one another deeply? Does not even the greatest encourager at
times need to be encouraged himself? Does not even the most
learned teacher sometimes need to be taught? Does not even the
most devout lady who never fails to mention anyone in prayer sometimes
need prayer herself?
To that end, John Donne wrote,
“No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the
continent, a part of the main. If a clod be washed away by the sea,
Europe is the less.” Not only, as Donne argues throughout his
meditation, are all humans interconnected, but the body of Christ is
interdependent. Are we serving one another?
A COMMON DESIGNER, vv 22-24.
“The parts
of the body that seem to be weaker are indispensable, and on those
parts of the body that we think less honorable we bestow the greater
honor, and our unpresentable parts are treated with greater modesty,
which our more presentable parts do not require. But God has so
composed the body, giving greater honor to the part that lacked it.”
The parts appearing to be weaker
are indispensable. It only appears that these parts are
weaker. In reality, they aren’t weaker at all. It’s not
exactly clear what physical parts Paul references here; however, most
believe he references two sets of organs: delicate organs (such as the
eye) and internal organs (such as the heart). The eyes are in
some ways indispensable: while we could learn to compensate without
them, like so many have, there’s not a one of us who would have driven
here this morning without them. We all know how indispensable the
heart is: while artificial hearts and heart transplants have come a
long way, there’s no substitute for a healthy ticker.
Both the strong and weak in
Corinth needed this lesson. The strong needed to understand that
those members they despised were indispensable to them, and the weak
needed to know that they were indispensable to the strong. I pray
that we don’t need this lesson as much as the Corinthians did, but
sometimes I’m afraid we do. Maybe we think that if we have many
talents, we’re better than others: If I’m upfront during the service,
I’m better than those folks who get stage fright, if I teach Bible
class, the church needs me much more than someone who can’t do that, or
if I do this or that, the church can’t do without me. Maybe some
of us think the opposite: I’m not as good as those who stand up front,
teach Bible class, or do any other myriad of public, recognizable
service.
The following words appeared in a
Christian publication in 2004: “A young father became noticeably more
patient with people after a little girl came into their home who was
seriously mentally and physically handicapped. The doctors told the
father and mother that she would be with them for only a few years. she
lived to be 6 years old. In those brief years as he suffered with her,
she worked her way into his heart and life to an unusual degree. As he
reached out in tenderness to her, his heart became more and more tender
toward all and particularly toward those who suffered. He may not have
been conscious of the change that took place in his life, but his
friends were definitely aware of it.” That little girl was weak,
so weak, in fact, that some have called for euthanasia in such
cases. Yet, she played a very valuable role in her father’s
life. Likewise, in the body of Christ, apparently weak parts play
indispensable roles.
On those parts of the body that
we think less honorable we bestow the greater honor, and our
unpresentable parts are treated with greater modesty, which our more
presentable parts do not require. It is quite obvious that Paul
here speaks of those body parts that we euphemistically call “private
parts.” We give those parts great modesty, don’t we? Who
among us doesn’t wear more clothing over our “private parts”? Who
among us hasn’t taught our children from a very early age, “Those are
private. You keep it that way”? Paul’s point is quite obvious: If
we give more attention to our less honorable and unpresentable physical
body parts, how can we not give deference and concern to all of our
brothers and sisters regardless of spiritual gift?
Notice what Paul says God has
done: “God has so composed the body, giving greater honor to the part
that lacked it, that there may be no division in the body.” A
hallmark of Paul’s writings is that sometimes you don’t know where he
stops a metaphor and makes application. That is certainly the
case here. Is the body under discussion in this sentence the
church as the body of Christ or the human body? It really makes
no difference, for Paul is using one to explain the other. In the
human body, God has given greater honor to the part that lacked
it. The private parts of the human body have been given great
honor by God, for they are the parts that relate to the most beautiful
of all human experiences: reproduction. In fact, those parts
relate to the very first command God gave mankind: “God said to them
[Adam and Eve], ‘Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth’” (Gn
1:28). In the Body of Christ, God has given greater honor to the
part that lacked it. Has God not greatly blessed the humble in
his body? We know that he has: “He who is least among you
all is the one who is great” (Lk 9:48). “Humble yourselves before
the Lord, and he will exalt you” (Js 4:10).
The important point here is that God
has composed the body. God designed the body as he chose. It
wasn’t up to me or you to get the gifts God bestowed upon us; it was
God’s will that gave us our gifts. The design of a particular
human body is fundamentally encoded in DNA. Because of DNA, the
human body is much the same from person to person, but at the same time
there are a zillion individual variations that determine our height,
weight, skin color and aspects of our personality. The variations
within our DNA do not make us any less human than any other person.
We can’t choose the variations in
our DNA. We had no choice about the family into which we were
born or what color our eyes would be or how tall we would end up.
Likewise, we can’t choose our spiritual gifts. It’s another form of
DNA: Designed Not Asked. It’s his choice, not ours.
A COMMON DEFERENCE, vv 25-26.
God designed
the body as he did “that there may be no division in the body, but that
the members may have the same care for one another. If one member
suffers, all suffer together; if one member is honored, all rejoice
together.”
Instead of a divided body, the
members have the same care for one another. We know how true that
is in our physical bodies. Our kidneys drain toxins, our lungs
bring in needed oxygen, our hearts pump nutrient-rich blood to other
parts of the body, and our digestive system provides the body’s
energy. It’s not possible to survive if those organs quite
functioning altogether.
Likewise, God intends that same
deference to be in the spiritual body. If you have the gift of
encouragement and I have the gift of teaching, you can encourage me in
my teaching and I can teach you to use your gift more appropriately; if
you have the gift of leadership and I have the gift of mercy, you can
help me find the best ways to use my gift and I can minister to you in
your time of trial. In such cases, we would truly be showing the
same care for one another.
If one member suffers, all suffer
together. Again, we understand the physical truth here quite
well. If one part of your body is in pain or infected, you’re not going
to feel good from head to toe. The same is likewise true of the
spiritual body. The Corinthians needed this lesson desperately:
they could not, as true members of the body, make other members of the
body feel inferior without consequence. We need to live that way
as well, don’t we? “Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with
those who weep” (Rm 12:15). “Remember those who are in prison, as
though in prison with them, and those who are mistreated, since you
also are in the body (Heb 13:3).
During the reign of Queen
Victoria, she once heart that the wife of a common laborer had lost her
baby. Having experienced deep sorrow herself, she felt moved to
express her sympathy, so she called on the bereaved woman one day and
spent some time with her. After she left, the neighbors asked
what the Queen had said. “Nothing,” replied the grieving mother.
“She simply put her hands on mine, and we silently wept
together.” Do we as a body weep together?
Likewise, if one part is honored,
all rejoice together. To go back to the reproduction, you ladies
know this principle quite well. As you bear a baby, your whole
body is operating differently in order to help that child grow.
A woman’s body was designed much differently than man’s to allow for
reproduction: a woman has a longer trunk that does a man; women have
larger kidneys, liver, and stomach, but smaller lungs than men. It
makes perfect sense when you stop to think about it: a woman’s body was
designed for this honor.
Likewise, as a body of Christ,
when one part receives honor, we all rejoice together. The
Corinthians who lacked some spiritual gift didn’t need to feel
inferior, but they had every reason to rejoice with those who had those
gifts. As Paul and Barnabas were on their way to the Jerusalem
Conference, “they passed through both Phoenicia and Samaria, describing
in detail the conversion of the Gentiles, and brought great joy to all
the brothers” (Acts 15:3). These Jewish believes had never met these
Gentile converts, yet they rejoiced with their brethren in the body of
Christ. Do we rejoice with our brethren?
Our human bodies may have
functions that are gross, impolite to talk about, stuff that’s just
better left unsaid. But, the body of Christ, when functioning as
God designed it, is something to behold! This text reminds us
that who we are individually will determine what the church is becoming
collectively. It’s not gross. It’s beautiful. Are you part of
that body this morning?