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THE CHURCH IN CORINTH
In the year 58 A.D., when Paul wrote this Epistle, Corinth was a
city
with a mixed population, and conspicuous for the turbulence and
immorality commonly found in seaports frequented by traders and
seamen from all parts of the world. Paul had received letters from
some of the Christians in Corinth which disclosed a state of matters
in the Church far from desirable. He had also more particular
accounts from some members of Chloe’s household who were visiting
Ephesus, and who told him how sadly disturbed the little community
of
Christians was by party spirit and scandals in life and worship.
In the letter itself the designation of the writer and of those
addressed first claims our attention.
The writer identifies himself as "Paul, an Apostle of Jesus Christ
by call, through the will of God." An Apostle is one sent, as Christ
was sent by the Father. "As the Father sent Me, even so send I
you." It was therefore an office no one could take to himself, nor
was it the promotion resulting from previous service. To the
apostleship the sole entrance was through the call of Christ; and in
virtue of this call Paul became, as he says, an Apostle. And it is
this which explains one of the most prominent of his
characteristics:
the singular combination of humility and authority, of
self-depreciation and self-assertion. He is filled with a sense of
his own unworthiness; he is "less than the least of the Apostles,"
"not worthy to be called an Apostle." On the other hand, he never
hesitates to command the Churches, to rebuke the foremost man in the
Church, to assert his claim to be listened to as the ambassador of
Christ.
This extraordinary humility and equally remarkable boldness and
authority had one common root in his perception that it was through
Christ’s call and by God’s will he was an Apostle. The work of going
to all the busiest parts of the world and proclaiming Christ was to
his mind far too great a work for him to aspire to at his own
instance. He could never have aspired to such a position as this
gave
him. But God called him to it; and, with this authority at his back,
he feared nothing, neither hardship nor defeat.
And this is for us all the true and eternal source of humility and
confidence. Let a man feel sure that he is called of God to do what
he is doing, let him be fully persuaded in his own mind that the
course he follows is God’s will for him, and he will press on
undauntedly, even though opposed. It is altogether a new strength
with which a man is inspired when he is made conscious that God
calls
him to do this or that. when behind conscience or the plain
requirements of human affairs and circumstances the presence of the
living God makes itself felt. Well may we exclaim with one who had
to
stand alone and follow a solitary path, conscious only of God’s
approval, and sustained by that consciousness against the
disapproval
of all, "Oh, that we could take that simple view of things as to
feel that the one thing which lies before us is to please God. What
gain is it, to please the world, to please the great, nay, even to
please those whom we love, compared with this? What gain is it to be
applauded, admired, courted, followed, compared with this one aim of
not being disobedient to a heavenly vision?"
In addressing the Church at Corinth Paul unites with himself a
Christian called Sosthenes. This was the name of the chief ruler of
the synagogue at Corinth who was beaten by the Greeks in Gallio’s
court, and it is not impossible that it was he who was now with Paul
in Ephesus. If so, this would account for his being associated with
Paul in writing to Corinth. What share in the letter Sosthenes
actually had it is impossible to say. He may have written it to
Paul’s dictation; he may have suggested here and there a point to be
touched upon. Certainly Paul’s easy assumption of a friend as joint
writer of the letter sufficiently shows that he had no such stiff
and
formal idea of inspiration as we have. Apparently he did not stay to
inquire whether Sosthenes was qualified to be the author of a
canonical book; but knowing the authoritative position he had held
among the Jews of Corinth, he naturally conjoins his name with his
own in addressing the new Christian community.
The persons to whom this letter is addressed are identified as "the
Church of God which is at Corinth." With them are joined in
character, if not as recipients of this letter, "all that in every
place call upon the name of Jesus Christ our Lord." And therefore we
should perhaps not be far wrong if we were to gather from this that
Paul would have defined the Church as the company of all those
persons who "call upon the name of Jesus Christ." Calling upon the
name of anyone implies trust in him; and those who call upon the
name
of Jesus Christ are those who look up to Christ as their supreme
Lord, able to supply all their need. It is this belief in one Lord
which brings men together as a Christian Church.
But at once we are confronted with the difficulty that many persons
who call upon the name of the Lord do so with no inward conviction
of
their need, and consequently with no real dependence upon Christ or
allegiance to Him. In other words, the apparent Church is not the
real Church. Hence the distinction between the Church visible, which
consists of all who nominally or outwardly belong to the Christian
community, and the Church invisible, which consists of those who
inwardly and really are the subjects and people of Christ. Much
confusion of thought is avoided by keeping in mind this obvious
distinction. In the Epistles of Paul it is sometimes the ideal,
invisible Church which is addressed or spoken of; sometimes it is
the
actual, visible Church, imperfect, stained with unsightly blots,
calling for rebuke and correction. Where the visible Church is, and
of whom composed, we can always say; its members can be counted, its
property estimated, its history written. But of the invisible Church
no man can fully write the history, or name the members, or appraise
its properties, gifts, and services.
From the earliest times it has been customary to say that the true
Church must be one, holy, catholic, and apostolic. That is true if
the Church invisible be meant. The true body of Christ, the company
of persons who in all countries and ages have called upon Christ and
served Him, do form one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church. But
it
is not true of the Church visible, and disastrous consequences have
at various times followed the attempt to ascertain by the
application
of these notes which actual visible Church has the best claim to be
considered the true Church.
Without concerning himself explicitly to describe the distinguishing
features of the true Church, Paul here gives us four notes which
must
always be found:—
1. Consecration. The Church is composed of "them that have
been sanctified in Christ Jesus."
2. Holiness: "called to be saints."
3. Universality: "all that in every place call on the
name," etc.
4. Unity: "both their Lord and ours."
1. The true Church is, first of all, composed of consecrated
people. The word "sanctify" bears here a somewhat different meaning
from that which we commonly attach to it. It means rather that which
is set apart or destined to holy uses than that which has been made
holy. It is in this meaning the word is used by our Lord when He says, "For
your sakes I sanctify"—or set apart—"Myself." The Church by its
very existence is a body of men and women set apart for a holy use.
The New Testament word for Church, ecclesia, means a society
"called out" from among other men. It exists not for common
purposes, but to witness for God and for Christ, to maintain before
the eyes and in all the common ways and works of men the ideal life realised in Christ and the presence and holiness of God. It becomes
those who form the Church to meet God’s purpose in calling them out
of the world and to consider themselves as devoted and set apart to
attain that purpose. Their destination is no longer that of the
world; and a spirit set upon the attainment of the joys and
advantages the world gives is wholly out of place in them.
2. More particularly those who compose the Church are called
to be "saints." Holiness is the unmistakable characteristic of the
true Church. The glory of God, inseparable from His essence, is His
holiness, His eternally willing and doing only what is the very
best.
To think of God as doing wrong is blasphemy. Were God even once to
do
other than the best and right, the loving and just thing, He would
cease to be God. It is the task of the Church to exhibit in human
life and character this holiness of God’s. Those whom God calls into
His Church, He calls to be, above all else, holy.
The Church of Corinth was in some danger of forgetting this. One of
its members in particular had been guilty of a scandalous breach
even
of the heathen code of morals; and of him Paul uncompromisingly
says,
"Put away from among yourselves that wicked person." Even with
sinners of a less flagrant sort, no communion was to be held. "If
any man that is called a brother" that is, claiming to be a
Christian—"be a fornicator, or covetous, or an idolater, or a
railer, or a drunkard, or an extortioner, with such a one you must
not even eat." No doubt there are risk and difficulty in
administering this law. The graver hidden sin may be overlooked, the
more obvious and venial transgression be punished. But the duty of
the Church to maintain its sanctity is undeniable, and those who act
for the Church must do their best in spite of all difficulty and
risk.
The prime duty, however, lies with the members, not with the rulers,
in the Church. Those whose function it is to watch over the purity
of
the Church would be saved from all doubtful action were the
individual members alive to the necessity of holy living. This, they
should bear in mind, is the very object of the Church’s existence
and
of their being in it.
3. Thirdly, it is ever to be borne in mind that the true
Church of Christ is to be found, not in one country nor in one age,
not in this or that Church, whether it assume the title of
"Catholic" or pride itself on being national, but is composed of
"all that in every place call upon the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ." Happily the time is gone by when with any show of reason
any one Church can claim to be catholic on the ground of its being
coextensive with Christendom. It is true that Cardinal Newman, one
of
the most striking figures and probably the greatest Churchman of our
own generation, attached himself to the Church of Rome on this very
ground: that it possessed this note of catholicity. To his eye,
accustomed to survey the fortunes and growth of Christ’s Church
during the early and mediaeval centuries, it seemed that the Church
of Rome alone had any reasonable claim to be considered the Church
catholic. But he was betrayed, as others have been, by confounding
the Church visible with the Church invisible. No one visible Church
can claim to be the Church catholic. Catholicity is not a matter of
more or less; it cannot be determined by a majority. No Church which
does not claim to contain the whole of Christ’s people without
exception can claim to be catholic. Probably there are some who
accept this alternative, and do not see it to be absurd to claim for
any one existing Church that it is coextensive with the Church of
Christ.
3. The fourth note of the Church here implied is its unity.
The Lord of all the Churches is one Lord; in this allegiance they
centre, and by it are held together in a true unity. Plainly this
note can belong only to the Church invisible, and not to that
multifarious collection of incoherent fragments known as the visible
Church. It is indeed doubtful whether a visible unity is desirable.
Considering what human nature is and how liable men are to be
overawed and imposed upon by what is large, it is probably quite as
conducive to the spiritual well being of the Church that she is
broken up into parts. Outward divisions into national Churches and
Churches under different forms of government and holding various
creeds would sink into insignificance, and be no more bewailed than
the division of an army into regiments, were there the real unity
which springs from true allegiance to the common Lord and zeal for
the common cause rather than for the interests of our own particular
Church. When the generous rivalry exhibited by some of our regiments
in battle passes into envy, unity is destroyed, and indeed the
attitude sometimes assumed towards sister Churches is rather that of
hostile armies than of rival regiments striving which can do most honour to the common flag. One of the hopeful signs of our times is
that this is generally understood. Christian people are beginning to
see how much more important are those points on which the
whole Church is agreed than those often obscure or trivial points
which split the Church into sects. Churches are beginning to own
with
some sincerity that there are Christian gifts and graces in all
Churches, and that no one Church comprises all the excellences of
Christendom. And the only outward unity that is worth having is that
which springs from inward unity, from a genuine respect and regard
for all who own the same Lord and spend themselves in His service.
Paul, with his usual courtesy and instinctive tact, introduces what
he has to say with a hearty acknowledgment of the distinctive
excellences of the Corinthian Church: "I thank my God always on your
behalf, for the grace of God which is given you in Christ Jesus,
that
in everything ye have been enriched in Him, in all utterance and in
all knowledge, even as the testimony of Christ was confirmed in
you." Paul was one of those large-natured men who rejoice more in
the prosperity of others than in any private good fortune. The
envious soul is glad when things go no better with others than with
himself, but the generous and unselfish are lifted out of their own
woes by their sympathy with the happy. Paul’s joy—and it was no mean
or shallow joy—was to see the testimony he had borne to Christ’s
goodness and power confirmed by the new energies and capacities
which
were developed in those who believed his testimony. The gifts which
the Christians in Corinth exhibited made it manifest that the Divine
presence and power proclaimed by Paul were real. His testimony
regarding the risen but unseen Lord was confirmed by the fact that
those who believed this testimony and called upon the name of the
Lord received gifts not previously enjoyed by them. Further argument
regarding the actual and present power of the unseen Lord was
needless in Corinth. And in our day it is the new life of believers
which most strongly confirms the testimony regarding the risen
Christ. Everyone who attaches himself to the Church either damages
or
aids the cause of Christ, propagates either belief or unbelief. In
the Corinthians Paul’s testimony regarding Christ was confirmed by
their reception of the rare gifts of utterance and knowledge. It is
indeed somewhat ominous that the incorruptible honesty of Paul can
only acknowledge their possession of "gifts," not of those fine
Christian graces which distinguished the Thessalonians and others of
his converts. But the grace of God must always adjust itself to the
nature of the recipient; it fulfils itself by means of the material
which nature furnishes. The Greek nature was at all times
lacking
in seriousness, and had attained little moral robustness; but for
many centuries it had been trained to admire and excel in
intellectual and oratorical displays. The natural gifts of the Greek
race were quickened and directed by grace. Their intellectual
inquisitiveness and apprehensiveness enabled them to throw light on
the grounds and results of the Christian facts; and their fluent and
flexible speech formed a new wealth and a more worthy employment in
their endeavours to formulate Christian truth and exhibit Christian
experience. Each race has its own contribution to make to complete
and full-grown Christian manhood. Each race has its own gifts; and
only when grace has developed all these gifts in a Christian
direction can we actually see the fitness of Christianity for all
men
and the wealth of the nature and work of Christ, which can appeal to
and best develop all.
Paul thanked God for their gift of utterance. Perhaps had he lived
now, within sound of an utterance dizzying and ceaseless as the roar
of Niagara. he might have had a word to say in the praise of
silence.
There is more than a risk nowadays that talk take the place of
thought on the one hand and of action on the other. But it could not
fail to occur to Paul that this Greek utterance, with the instrument
it had in the Greek language, was a great gift to the Church. In no
other language could he have found such adequate, intelligible, and
beautiful expression for the new ideas to which Christianity gave
birth. And in this new gift of utterance among the Corinthians he
may
have seen promise of a rapid and effective propagation of the
Gospel.
For indeed there are few more valuable gifts the Church can receive
than utterance. Legitimately may we hope for the Church when she so
apprehends her own wealth in Christ as to be stirred to invite all
the world to share with her, when through all her members she feels
the pressure of thoughts that demand utterance, or when there arise
in her even one or two persons with the rare faculty of swaying
large
audiences, and touching the common human heart, and lodging in the
public mind some germinant ideas. New epochs in the Church’s life
are
made by the men who speak, not to satisfy the expectation of an
audience, but because they are driven by an inward compelling force,
not because they are called upon to say something, but because they
have that in them which they must say.
But utterance is well backed by knowledge. Not always has it been
remembered that Paul recognises knowledge as a gift of God. Often,
on
the contrary, has the determination to satisfy the intellect with
Christian truth been reprehended as idle and even wicked. To the
Corinthians the Christian revelation was new, and inquiring minds
could not but endeavour to harmonise the various facts it conveyed.
This attempt to understand Christianity was approved. The exercise
of
the human reason upon Divine things was encouraged. The faith which
accepted testimony was a gift of God, but so also was the knowledge
which sought to recommend the contents of this testimony to the
human
mind.
But, however rich in endowments the Corinthians were, they could not
but feel, in common with all other men, that no endowment can lift
us
above the necessity of conflict with sin or put us beyond the hazard
which that conflict entails. In point of fact, richly endowed men
are
often most exposed to temptation, and feel more keenly than others
the real hazard of human life. Paul therefore concludes this brief
introduction by assigning the reason of his assurance that they will
be blameless in the day of Christ; and that reason is that God is in
the matter: "God is faithful, by whom ye were called to the
fellowship of His Son Jesus Christ our Lord." God calls us with a
purpose in view, and is faithful to that purpose. He calls us to the
fellowship of Christ that we may learn of Him and become suitable
agents to carry out the whole will of Christ. To fear that,
notwithstanding our hearty desire to become of Christ’s mind and
notwithstanding all our efforts to enter more deeply into His
fellowship, we shall yet fail, is to reflect upon God as either
insincere in His call or inconstant. The gifts and calling of God
are
without repentance. They are not revoked on further consideration.
God’s invitation comes to us, and is not withdrawn, even though it
is
not met with the hearty acceptance it deserves. All our obstinacy in
sin, all our blindness to our true advantage, all our lack of
anything like generous self-devotion, all our frivolity, and folly,
and worldliness, are understood before the call is given. By calling
us to the fellowship of His Son God guarantees to us the possibility
of our entering into that fellowship and of becoming fit for it.
Let us then revive our hopes and renew our belief in the worth of
life by remembering that we are called to the fellowship of Jesus
Christ. This is satisfying; all else that calls us in life is
defective and incomplete. Without this fellowship with what is holy
and eternal, all we find in life seems trivial or is embittered to
us
by the fear of loss. In worldly pursuits there is excitement; but
when the fire burns out, and the cold ashes remain, chill and blank
desolation is the portion of the man whose all has been the world.
We
cannot reasonably and deliberately choose the world; we may be
carried away by greed, or carnality, or earthliness to seek its
pleasures, but our reason and our better nature cannot approve the
choice. Still less does our reason approve that what we cannot
deliberately choose we should yet allow ourselves to be governed by
and actually join in fellowship of the closest kind. Believe in
God’s
call, listen to it, strive to maintain yourself in the fellowship of
Christ, and every year will tell you that God, who has called you,
is
faithful and is bringing you nearer and nearer to what is stable,
happy, and satisfying.
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