Sunday, August 1, 2021

Sermon for the Ninth Sunday after Trinity - 1 Cor 10:6-13

 

Trinity 9

                                                                                       1 Cor 10:6-13

                                                                                       8/1/21

 

            Around 140 A.D. a man named Marcion arrived at the church in Rome.  He became part of the church there, and it wasn’t long before people took notice of Marcion.  Marcion taught that the god of the Old Testament was an evil, lesser god who was different from the true God of the New Testament.  The false god of the Old Testament was judgmental, wrathful and vengeful.  On the other hand, the true God of the New Testament was loving, gracious and merciful.

            Marcion made quite an impact, and it didn’t take long for the church at Rome to recognize that his ideas were a rejection of God’s revelation in the Old Testament.  Marcion was denying the very thing that the New Testament clearly taught – that God’s action in Jesus Christ was the fulfillment of everything that God had done in the Old Testament.  Marcion was excommunicated from the church in 144 A.D., but his ideas continued to be something the church had to reject and defend herself against.

            Marcion’s view of the God in the Old Testament probably sounds familiar, because it is an extreme form of a common view that we encounter today.  People often describe God in the Old Testament as judgmental, wrathful and vengeful.  On the other hand, they say that Jesus in the New Testament is loving, gracious and merciful. And of course, when they describe Jesus this way, it is often connected with the desire that people in our world have to do what they want to do.

            In our text today, Paul, the apostle of Jesus Christ, tells us that this view is completely wrong.  He points to some moments in Israel’s history when God acted in judgment and wrath, and tells us that these events are examples for us. In fact, they have been written down for our instruction. They show us that God’s people can’t choose to live in ways of sin and expect everything to turn out just fine.  They can’t because God has acted dramatically in his Son Jesus Christ to give us forgiveness and make us his people.  The love, grace, and mercy that we have received in Christ has set us apart as God’s people who now seek to live as what God has made us to be.

            The church at Corinth was a real challenge for the apostle Paul. They seemed to think that because they believed in Jesus Christ they were spiritual people who had already possessed everything that was necessary.  In its most extreme form this led to a denial of the resurrection of the body.  But it had a significant impact on how they lived in the world.

            Within First Corinthians we see two areas where their attitude had a great impact. The first was how they viewed idolatry and the meat that was sacrificed to idols.  The Corinthians said things like “We know that we all have knowledge.” They said, “We know that an idol is nothing in the world and that there is no God except one.”  Because they knew this, they thought they could continue to take part in various activities of paganism such as eating meat sacrificed to idols – even on pagan temple grounds.

            The other area was sex. In the Greco-Roman world the only person who was off limits for sex was the wife of another man.  It was just assumed that men had sex with their slaves.  Brothels were a normal part of life, and the Roman government even provided them for the poor. And in many parts of paganism, sex and religion were intertwined.  There were temple prostitutes, and having sex with them was part of the religious practice.

            In the verses just before our text, Paul reveals that the Corinthians believed that because they were baptized and were receiving the Sacrament of the Altar they were protected and immune from any harm as they engaged in these normal parts of life in the first century world.  However, the apostle warns them that this is not the case. And he uses the experience of God’s people in the Old Testament in order to do this.

            Paul has just talked about the miraculous experience that the Israelites had with water in the Red Sea, and the manna and water provided by God, because he is making a comparison with what the Corinthians now experience in Holy Baptism and the Sacrament of the Altar.  The apostle writes, “For I want you to know, brothers, that our fathers were all under the cloud, and all passed through the sea, and all were baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea, and all ate the same spiritual food, and all drank the same spiritual drink. For they drank from the spiritual Rock that followed them, and the Rock was Christ. 

Nevertheless, with most of them God was not pleased, for they were overthrown in the wilderness.”

            The Israelites had experienced this miraculous rescue and provision by God. But it hadn’t changed the fact that in the end most of them died in the wilderness and did not enter the promised land.  Then Paul says in our text: “Now these things took place as examples for us, that we might not desire evil as they did.”  Far from being random events in the ancient past that reveal a wrathful God who is no longer relevant, Paul wants the Corinthians, and us, to know that these are examples that teach us as we deal with God today. 

God has not changed.  In the Old Testament he revealed himself as the holy and just God. He is the God who judges sin and pours out judgment and wrath against sinners.  But he also revealed that he is the God who is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love.  God has not changed.  And so the experiences of Israel teach us about how we need live and act as God’s people today. 

Paul says in our text, “Do not be idolaters as some of them were; as it is written, "The people sat down to eat and drink and rose up to play.” The apostle refers to the incident when the Israelites worshipped the golden calf.  Naturally, in our day idolatry does not take the form of a pagan temple.  But there is no end of the things that we put before God: our personal autonomy to do and think as we please; wealth, and financial security; sports and hobbies.

The apostle adds: “We must not indulge in sexual immorality as some of them did, and twenty-three thousand fell in a single day.”  Paul refers to the time of which Moses tells us, “the people began to whore with the daughters of Moab.” Israelites fornicated with the Moabites and became involved with the false god Baal Peor, and the sexual immorality that was part the worship of this form of Baal.

When you read the letters of the New Testament you find that they address the subject of sexual immorality again, and again, and again.  This is not surprising.  The biblical understanding of sexuality and marriage that the New Testament church shared with the Greco-Roman world was completely foreign to what people had known.  It taught that sexual union between a man and woman only occurred in marriage between a husband and wife – no exceptions. It taught that the sex established a one flesh union between husband and wife that united that couple before God for life. And of course, Jesus taught that lustful thoughts break the Sixth Commandment, and not only the physical act.

We recognize that the world has become more like the first century than ever before.  Sex outside of marriage – whether just as part of “hooking up” or as part of dating – is considered normal.  Couples live together before marriage all the time.  Our culture is immersed in sexual messages and imagery.  And of course – an unlimited amount of pornography is available on your phone.  The apostle Paul’s word challenges us, just like they did the Corinthians, to see that we are to live our lives in relation to sex and marriage in ways that are God pleasing and according to his will.

The apostle goes on to mention two other times when Israel complained and grumbled against God, as he writes, “We must not put Christ to the test, as some of them did and were destroyed by serpents, nor grumble, as some of them did and were destroyed by the Destroyer.” Then after listing these various examples, Paul adds, “Now these things happened to them as an example, but they were written down for our instruction, on whom the end of the ages has come.”

The apostle says that they were written down for our instruction. And the reason they instruct us is because we are those upon whom the ends ages has come.  Paul is referring to the incarnation, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.  If it were not for Christ, these events in Israel’s past would be meaningless events of ancient history. They would have no relevance to us.  But now because of Jesus, the Scriptures of the Old Testament are the means by which God provides us with instruction about the importance of living as God’s people.

We have become God’s people, because Christ was the fulfillment of God’s promise to Abraham, “In you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.”  Jesus Christ is the fulfillment of all that God promised about Israel when he said through Isaiah, “I will make you as a light for the nations, that my salvation may reach to the end of the earth.”

We are sinners.  Almost all of us are not descendants of Israel.  But God acted to save us by sending his Son into the world as he was conceived by the Holy Spirit, and born of the virgin Mary.  The Son of God entered into this world to do the most shocking and unexpected thing – to be crucified for us.  As Paul says in chapter 15, Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures and was buried.  The message of a crucified Christ and Savior was absurd to the ancient world.  Paul himself pointed this fact out.  And yet this is how God act acted to take away our sins. As Paul wrote in chapter one, “For the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.”

A crucified Jew, dead and buried, would not be the source of power to save us from death.  But as Paul declares so vigorously in chapter fifteen, Jesus did not stay dead.  Instead, on the third day God raised him from the dead. In the Jesus the resurrection of the end times has started. He is the firstfruits of those who have died.  That is why the apostle says that we are those upon whom the end of the ages has come. The last days have already started in the death and resurrection of Jesus.

The crucified and risen Lord is the power of salvation. And you have received the benefits of this saving power in baptism. Earlier in this letter, Paul says, “Or do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who practice homosexuality, nor thieves, nor the greedy, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God.”  Yet then he adds: “And such were some of you. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God.”

Through baptism God has washed away your sins.  He has made you holy in his eyes.  He has justified you – declared you not guilty – the same verdict that he will speak on the Day of Judgment.  God has given you this new life and status.  And he calls us to live as what he has made us to be. This means that we view sin as something against which we must struggle, and not something we can just give in to or embrace. The examples from Israel’s history in the Old Testament serve as warnings about what happens to those who live in that way.

When we do fall in sin, we confess it.  We don’t view it as something that is no big deal, because after all, we are Christians. We certainly don’t take up regular patterns of sin in our lives. We don’t because through the work of the Spirit, God has made us a new creation in Christ.  We are those who have been washed, sanctified, and justified in baptism. We are those who have been blessed to receive the saving action of God in Christ.  We know that we live as those upon whom the end of the ages has come in the death and resurrection of Jesus.   

 

 

  

 

             

 

 

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