March 29th, 2008

Popelas/Widrup

Genesis 2:18-24; 1 Corinthians 12:31-13:13; Matthew 5:1-10

The first letter of Paul to the Corinthians is Paul reminding them of what it means to be a follower of Jesus.  People in Corinth had willingly and eagerly listened to Paul when he visited them.  They took his teaching seriously about Jesus, so serious that they began several small house churches throughout the city.  And on occasion, all these churches would come together for a meal and worship.

However, over time, something happened.  The Corinth Christians started bickering.  Apparently they started having control issues.  Their conduct with each other became more divisive than unified.  They lost their value for who they were: followers and disciples of Jesus in the love of God.  According to Paul’s letter that we read today, the Corinthian Christians were “nothing” anymore in relation to their being disciples of Jesus. Paul tells the Corinthian Christians that they sound like noisy gongs or clanging cymbals, rather than the mellow sounds of unity that God’s love brought to them through the death and resurrection of Jesus.

So, through this letter, Paul tells the Corinthian Christians how to get back on track, how to regain the value of their roots, how to reunite themselves as one in Christ. 

Throughout the letter, Paul tells the Corinthians to rejoin God’s love for them and when they do, God’s love will be the love that causes them to rejoin their love for one another.  Once the Corinthian Christians bring the love of God back into their lives then they will find that God’s love brings back into their lives love for one another.  God’s love will bring back into their lives the mellow sounds of unity: patience, kindness, hope and endurance, as opposed to noisy and clanging sounds of arrogance, selfishness and resistance.

Obviously, as we read this scripture, Paul’s instruction is good not just for members of churches, but for any who are in relationship.  Pastor Santoro and I have both commented that it seems that the 1 Corinthian’s chapter 13 is read more at weddings than any other lesson.  I think the first Corinthian reading of chapter 13 is chosen by the bride and groom because of the bride and groom’s wisdom about human nature.  I can hear any couple as they read these words of Paul, “Yes, yes, yes, that is what we want, but we know it’s not always that way, but that’s the way we want to be.”

It is important to listen to what Paul tells these Corinthians and what he does not tell them.  He does not tell them to shape up, that they’re better than this, or that they are mature, act like it.  Paul tells these new Christians to bring back into their relationship with each other God’s love, since it is God’s love that gives them their love for one another. 

So, as did the Corinthians, if Marshal and Nina with each other, ever bicker, or are rude or arrogant to one another or insist that it is “my” way or no way, Marshal and Nina know that regardless, they are loved by God through Jesus, but they also know those behaviors are not the behaviors of the disciples of Jesus, as we read so clearly in Paul’s letter to the Corinthians.  Marshall and Nina know as the baptized in Christ, that it is through God’s love for them that they can shed those behaviors that are not of discipleship and return to the loving relationship that they have for each other through the love of God. 

Regardless of our behaviors, God’s love never leaves us. And this is what Paul is telling the Corinthians, Nina and Marshall, and all of us today.  When we keep alive in our own lives the love that God has for us, then we keep alive in our own lives the love that we have for one another.

Amen,

Pastor Scales