Sermons
on 1 Corinthians:
The
Three R’s of Sexual Purity (1 Cor 6:18-20)
A.
Wilson and
several other students in this congregation and this community started
kindergarten a few weeks ago.
1.
Kindergarten
is much different than when I went years ago; I basically learned how
to stay in my seat, ride the bus, not cry for my Mommy, and the like.
2.
Now, however,
kindergarten emphasizes the three R’s—reading, writing, and arithmetic.
a.
Wil has been
able to write his first name legibly for some time, but now he’s
learning how to write that four letter, hard-to-pronounce surname.
b.
He brought
home a book on Tuesday evening that he read to his mother and me. Yeah,
he memorized it, but it’s boosting his confidence in reading.
c.
He brings
home work almost daily which is preparation for more detailed
arithmetic.
3.
You know the
importance of the three R’s—they are the fundamentals which are a
foundation for a productive life.
a.
It would be
impossible for me to stand here and preach this morning if I could not
read and write; that is something I do every single day in my life. I’m
not that good at arithmetic, and fortunately when I went to
International Bible College, they did not require math for a BA; I
would have been in trouble otherwise.
b.
There are
some of you that in your work you are as dependent on arithmetic as you
are reading and writing. Many of you could not do what you do were it
not for strong math skills.
B.
This morning,
we want to talk about fundamentals for another part of our lives, our
sexual lives.
1.
Paul has been
discussing in the last couple of chapters sexual immorality. The
Corinthians boasted about an adulterous relationship and in the last
paragraph Paul dealt with the Corinthians’ rationale for immorality.
2.
In this
paragraph, although it is rather short, Paul provides the fundamentals,
the three R’s, for keeping ourselves from immorality. Those three R’s?
RUN, RESIDENCE, & REDEMPTION.
II. RUN, v.
18.
A.
“Flee from
sexual immorality. All other sins a man commits are outside his body,
but he who sins sexually sins against his own body.”
B.
Paul tells
these Christians to flee from sexual immorality.
1.
In Greek, the
idea of fleeing is a continual action.
a.
The idea is
not just fleeing when we find ourselves in a compromising position—as
Joseph did with Potiphar’s wife—but of guarding ourselves against
temptation.
b.
You know that
there is good reason to guard ourselves against sexual temptation.
-
In warning
his son against adultery, Solomon wrote, “Can a man scoop fire into his
lap without his clothes being burned? Can a man walk on hot coals
without his feet being scorched?” (Prov 6:26-27).
·
In context,
the words about being burned do not have to do with sexual temptation
but actually committing adultery. Solomon is saying to his son, “Look,
if you go commit adultery with another man’s wife, you’re going to
suffer.”
·
But, do those
words not also have much to say about temptation? Can we not guard
ourselves and just allow temptation to be all around us and not end up
being burned?
·
A wealthy
couple desired to employ a chauffeur.
·
The lady of
the house advertised, the applicants were screened, and four suitable
candidates were brought before her for the final selection.
·
Then she
asked the men, “How close do you think you could come to that wall
without scratching my car?”
·
The first man
felt that he could drive within a foot of the wall without damaging the
car.
·
The second
felt sure that he could come within six inches.
·
The third
believe that he could get within three inches.
·
The fourth
candidate said, “I do not know how close I could come to the wall
without damaging your car. Instead, I would try to stay as far away
from that wall as I could.”
·
Is that not
precisely the attitude we need when it comes to sexual
immorality—staying as far away from it as possible?
2.
How well are
we doing in guarding ourselves against sexual immorality?
a.
Do we watch
television programs where we bring immorality into our homes? Do we
visit Internet sites where we bring immorality into our homes?
b.
Do we have
relationships where boundaries aren’t as tight as they need to be and
we could easily become entangled in immorality?
c.
If you’re
unmarried, what type of boundaries do you have with your boyfriend or
girlfriend?
C.
Paul says
that every sin a person commits is outside the body, but sexual
immorality is a sin against the body.
1.
If you’re
reading from the NIV, you’ll notice that Paul, according to that
translation, writes: “All other sins a man commits are outside his
body.” However, if you have the KJV, you notice that Paul writes:
“Every sin that a man does is outside the body.” The KJV gets it right;
the Greek does not have the word “other”—Paul is saying that every sin
a man commits is outside the body.”
2.
Why on earth
would Paul say that every sin a man commits is outside the body?
a.
If I swear,
do I not use my body to do that? If I use my eyes to lust after a
woman, I use my body that, don’t I?
b.
I don’t
believe for a moment that Paul believed what he wrote here, but I think
he’s doing the same thing he did in the previous paragraph, using
slogans prevalent in Corinth and then rebutting them.
-
I think Paul
is declaring, “People say, ‘Every sin that a man commits is outside the
body,’ but let me tell you what the truth is.”
-
There have
been a variety of Christians through the centuries who claimed that
what they did in the body did not affect who they were spiritually.
·
There was a
group contemporary with Paul who claimed that they were so spiritual
that they could do whatever they wanted and never sin; their reasoning
was that what the body did had not affect on their divine relationship.
·
The Apostle
John also seems to have dealt with such people: “If we claim to be
without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us” (1 Jn
1:8).
3.
Paul declares
that’s not the case, for “he who sins sexually sins against his own
body.”
a.
Sexual
immorality is unique among sin, for it does wrong against one’s own
body.
b.
Sexual
immorality sins against one’s body, for it involves a union with
another body in a way that other sins simply do not.
c.
Let us keep
ourselves from sexual immorality.
II.
RESIDENCE, v. 19.
A.
“Do you not
know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom
you have received from God?”
B.
Our bodies
are temples of the Holy Spirit.
1.
The
Corinthians were quite familiar with the idea of a temple, for the city
was full of pagan temples.
2.
In the
ancient world, a temple did not so much serve as a place for adherents
to come to worship as it functions as the dwelling place of the deity.
We also find that idea in Scripture.
a.
The true and
living God dwelt in Solomon’s temple in a special way: 1 Ki 8:10-13.
b.
Paul
understood that God dwells in temples; he said at the Areopagus, “The
God who made the world and everything in it is the Lord of heaven and
earth and does not live in temples built by hands” (Acts 17:24).
-
You might be
thinking, “Wait a minute, Justin. That text says that God does not live
in temples.
-
That text
says nothing of the sort! The text says that God does not live in
temples built by hands; it does not say that God does not dwell in
temples period. I submit that our bodies are not built by hands;
therefore what Paul told the philosophers at the Areopagus does not
apply in that case.
3.
We know that
the Spirit of God dwells within each of us in a very special way.
a.
We receive
the Holy Spirit in a special way when we are baptized: “Repent and be
baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the
forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy
Spirit” (Acts 2:38).
b.
If we do not
have the Holy Spirit within us, we simply are not Christians: Rm 8:9-11.
4.
Because our
bodies hosts the Holy Spirit, we cannot do whatever we please sexually.
a.
We can’t
misuse these bodies sexually, for the Holy Spirit lives within us. Our
bodies do not only house our spirits, but the Holy Spirit of God!
b.
Are you
honoring your body as a temple of the Holy Spirit?
III.
REDEMPTION, vv. 19b-20.
A.
“You are not
your own; you were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your
body.”
B.
We are not
our own, for we were bought at a price.
1.
One of the
most glorious doctrines of the NT is that we have been redeemed from
sin with the blood of Jesus himself.
a.
“The Son of
Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a
ransom for many” (Mt 20:28).
-
A ransom, of
course, is given as the price of someone being held captive.
-
For Jesus to
give his life as a ransom implies that many have been held captive; in
fact, everyone who has ever sinned is held captive: Jesus said, “I tell
you the truth, everyone who sins is a slave to sin” (Jn 8:34).
b.
“There is no
difference, for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and
are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by
Jesus Christ” (Rm 3:22b-24).
c.
We have not
been redeemed with a great amount of money, which sometimes occurs in
kidnaping or hostage situations, but with Jesus’ own blood.
-
“Keep watch
over yourselves and all the flock of which the Holy Spirit has made you
overseers. Be shepherds of the church of God, which he bought with his
own blood” (Acts 20:28).
-
“You know
that it was not with perishable things such as silver or gold that you
were redeemed from the empty way of life handed down to you from your
forefathers, but with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without
blemish or defect” (1 Pt 1:18-19).
d.
In an old
country village a cottage, which was home to a family of four, caught
fire.
-
The cottage
with its thatched roof was engulfed in flames, and the people of the
village stood watching helplessly as the flames ravaged this home.
There was no fire department in this community.
-
Finally, a
young man asked, “Can’t we do something?” No one answered him.
·
Exasperated,
the young man ran into the fire to see if he could rescue anyone.
·
A few moments
later, he came out with two small children under his coat; seconds
later, the roof collapsed, killing the children’s parents, if they
weren’t already dead.
·
The man was
severely burned, and an old lady in the village helped nurse him back
to health.
-
A few weeks
later, the village held a council to determine what they should do with
the two orphans.
·
Two men
offered to raise them.
·
One was a
rich man who had money, position, and a ready home.
·
The other was
the young man who had rescued the children from the fire.
·
When the
village elders asked the young man what right he had to raise these
children, he simply pulled out his hands scarred in the fire; the
elders had no choice but to award him custody of the children.
e.
So it is with
us: Jesus stepped forward and gave his blood to redeem us from sin. How
on earth can I use my body for immorality when he died to redeem my
body?
2.
Because Jesus
gave his blood for me, I need to honor him in my body. My brethren, let
us be ever so careful how we use our bodies, for Jesus died to redeem
us from sin! How are you using your body this morning?