27 Now you are the body of Christ and individually members of it. 28 And God
has appointed in the church first apostles, second prophets, third teachers;
then deeds of power, then gifts of healing, forms of assistance, forms of
leadership, various kinds of tongues. 29 Are all apostles? Are all prophets?
Are all teachers? Do all work miracles? 30 Do all possess gifts of healing?
Do all speak in tongues? Do all interpret? 31 But strive for the greater
gifts.
Step 1: Initial Diagnosis (External Problem) - Striving for Power (cf. v. 31); Self-Acclaimed Leaders (cf. v. 28)
One of the dreams of the modern age has been the creation of a utopian (which
means literally "no place") society or organization in which the diversity of
the membership (the parts) and the unity of the community (the whole) find a
perfect coexistence. Indeed, such a "no place" or organization is often how
the Church of the Jesus Christ is envisioned—and not just for the church in
Corinth back then, but for the church everywhere even now. How do we create this
"no place," this organization? That was vision of church that the Christians
in Corinth sought to actualize. But that assumption was precisely their
problem. For soon they began to ask, "Which member or part in the church
possesses the Spirit of the whole (the Holy Spirit) so as to give leadership (order
and structure) to the other members/parts?" In Corinth, the answer they gave to
that question set the church into an uproar. There congregation became a "no
place" alright, not the "no place" of their dreams, but the "no place" of a
nightmare. Diversity manifested itself as division, variety exhibited itself
as competition, the discernment of gifts degenerated into a striving for power,
and the unity of the whole translated into "my way" (1:10-13). True, in this
uproar someone did/does seemingly come out on top—claiming to be more equal
and more spiritual than others. In Corinth it was the "tongue speakers," the
pneumatic people, who claimed that role. They claimed both to possess the
Spirit and to know the Spirit: They claimed power! Ironically, they became
self-acclaimed leaders of the community only at the cost of community; they did it
by dismemberment, by disposing of those in the body they regarded as "no body,"
of "no value" (cf. vv. 22-23). Who are the self-acclaimed leaders in your
community? Who claims to possess the Spirit? Is it the biggest givers, the
most consistent attenders, the best singers, the most recent seekers, the longest
stayers, the hardest workers, the most outgoing personalities?—to suggest but
a few possibilities.
Step 2: Advanced Diagnosis (Internal Problem) - Self-Possessed: Trusting in Their Gifts, and Not the One to Whom They Belong.
No one would deny for a moment the God-given giftedness of the self-appointed
leaders in Corinth, least of all Paul, and neither would we today deny the
many gifts that exist in our congregations. The presence of certain gifts (or
lack of them) is not in itself what is at issue here. The issue or problem
here has to do with how the Corinthians then (and we today) regard these gifts
and how, on the basis of them, they/we regard one another. In a word, the
problem in Corinth was that people were placing their faith in their gifts. Faith
in their gifts had replaced faith in Christ as the substance or basis of their
spiritual identity, health and value. The so-called "higher" gifts (in this
case, tongues) had now become the measure of spiritual progress, the mark of
true spiritual achievement, and ultimately the envy of all would be spiritual
people. The gifts, in other words, were given, so they presumed, for the sake
of self-acclaim--as a sign of superiority over the lesser gifted, and were,
thus, the gifts defined a spiritual hierarchy within the church: the higher
gifts, like tongues, identified the more worthy, and the lesser gifts identified
the less worthy, even the unworthy (cf. 12:22-26). By placing their faith in
the measure of the gifts they possess, they became self-possessed and
self-absorbed. They created not the egalitarian community rooted in Christ "where
there is no [spiritual] distinction" (cf. Gal. 3:26-28), but a worldly place of
division, envy, and scorn.
Step 3: Final Diagnosis (Eternal Problem) - Dispirited: Dismembered from Christ
By placing their faith in their gifts, the spiritual elitists in Corinth were
really looking to themselves as the source of spiritual wholeness, as the
defining unity of the community, and unwittingly cutting themselves off from
Christ himself, the head of the church, and the Spirit of Christ, which is love.
In other words, the body that was the community became dismembered from
Christ. It became headless, Christless, and, hence, spiritually dead in spite of
all its gifts. It was like taking an arm and putting it in the place of the
head. True, although a body can live without some members like the arm or the
eye or the leg—though that is no reason for dispensing with them—the body
cannot live without its head. Without the head it has no identity, its just a mass
of dead parts. The same is true of the church as the body of Christ. It
cannot live without Christ. To be bereft of Christ is to lose love and to gain
wrath and death. To be beheaded is to be dispirited, lifeless, and devoid of
identity. When the members of Corinth (or churches today) strive for power in
the community because of a misplaced faith in their gifts, the end result is a
headless, mangled dead body, no matter how well organized they think they are.
Step 4: Initial Prognosis (Eternal Solution) - The Body of Christ, Crucified—and Raised
To this headless, mangled body (the church in Corinth) Paul brings the memory
of another mangled body, Jesus Christ crucified: the wounded—once dead now
living—head of the church. Indeed, the way of the cross is the "more excellent
way"; it is the way of love as Paul expounds in Chapter 13. As bad as the
situation was with the members of the Corinthian church—and it was bad—it
certainly was no worse than what it was before they were baptized into Christ.
Then, too, they were astray, dismembered, cut off from God, cut off from Christ,
cut off from the body (community) of Christ (12:2). It is precisely through
his crucifixion that Christ identifies with all cut-off people, and it is
precisely through his resurrection that he creates a Body unlike any other. His
Body is the utopian "no place," par excellence. He came to meet us in death that
we may rise with him as one Body, his new resurrected body, which is the
church. Note: The church therefore, is not an organization, the achievement of
the members, but an organism, the body of Christ himself, crucified (gathering
the dead) and raised (bringing them to life in him). Paul's latter-day mission
here in 1 Corinthians, therefore, is no different from his initial mission
when he first encountered the gifted-but-dismembered Corinthians. Then, too, it
took an apostle, a Sent One by God, to bring the memory of Christ crucified
to them and, so now, it also takes an apostle to do the same. It made no
difference initially if it was Apollos or Cephas or Paul, or any one else (like
Bartholomew, whose saintly work we commemorate this day) who brought the Word of
Christ, and it makes no difference now either. Therefore, for that reason
Paul "decided to know nothing among [them] except Jesus Christ and him crucified"
(2:2). They initially became the Body of Christ by virtue of their baptism
(member-ment, connection) into Christ—and not because of the various gifts they
possess—and it is on that same basis that they will be "re-membered" to that
Body and remain in that Body.
Step 5: Advanced Prognosis (Internal Solution) - Spirit-Possessed: Faith Binds Us to Christ Crucified
The Corinthians had always possessed many gifts; their giftedness was never
an issue. The problem was that they (gifts and all) where dismembered from
Christ and hence, became dead and useless to the Body. So how would they become
re-membered to this Christ? The answer is by faith—or, to use Paul's image
here, by being possessed as a whole by the SPIRIT who works faith. The identity
and life of the Christian community as the Body of Christ does not depend on
their giftedness—and certainly not on their striving to possess what they
thought of as the "higher gifts," the more spiritually unusual gifts, like
tongues. The identity and life of the Christian Community consists in faith alone,
that is, in being possessed by the Spirit who unites us to Christ, making us
part of his body, the body that was crucified and raised. Faith is the great
equalizer in this community. Faith is what makes it an organism, one body,
consisting as one reality in Christ. Faith [in Christ] is the one thing that all
hold in common and faith [in Christ] is the one thing that holds all together
in common. Faith is the common work of the Spirit. The unity of the church is
not located in some single superior gift but in the bond of the one faith
that connects it to the one Body of Christ. By faith the church is an organism,
many members enlivened by the one Spirit and united as the one Body of Christ.
Step 6: Final Prognosis (External Solution) - Striving for Love; God Appointed Leaders
By being part of an organism--the Body of Christ, and not an
organization--the members of the church think of themselves differently and relate to one
another differently from any other kind of human corporate reality. In an
organism the diversity of members is a source of joy that serves the whole. In an
organism there is no longer a striving for power, but a striving for the common
good, a striving for the love of one another. How foolish, Paul reasons, for
one part of the Body to despise and reject another. That is like cutting off
your nose to spite your face. In an organism, if one member suffers, the
whole organism suffers; if one member rejoices all rejoice together (12:26). In
the church there is no hierarchical appraisal of the one part over against
another. There is only the appraisal of what serves the common good. And what
serves the common good is that which promotes the unity of the Body of
Christ--the world being saved in Christ. At different times, that could very well mean
that different members, according to their specific gift, would be more or
less active, depending on the need of the Body. In the Church, Paul explains,
there are no self-appointed leaders. God does the appointing (v. 28). However,
as Paul also makes clear, there are nevertheless leaders in the church. He
even specifies them as he sees the need of the Corinthian Church in its present
time and place: There are "first apostles, second, prophets, third teachers;
then deeds of power, etc." But these are not positions of privilege or the
identification of a hierarchical structure or organization. This is a list of
the gifted members that the Corinthian community values by virtue of its
connection to the Body of Christ, and that exists in every community as they have
need. In every community there will be apostles like Paul, Sent Ones to keep the
community rooted in Christ its head, when that becomes especially needful.
And in every community their will be prophets, teachers, miracle workers,
healers, leaders of various types, and yes, probably even tongue speakers, when
they are needed. If the Body needs a gift, a member with that gift will rise to
meet the need for the sake of the Body. Oh, how wonderful it is when we as
members of the Body of Christ, enlivened by the same Spirit (cf. 12:4) have
opportunity to offer—in love (chapter 13)—our gifts for the sake of the Body as
it has need! Strive to use your gifts for the sake of the Body! O how
wonderful it is when we as members of the Body of Christ have opportunity to welcome
and honor—love—those gifted members who rise to fulfill a need in the Body!
Who are those gifted members in your community? Truly, there is truly "no
place" like the Body of Christ.
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