1 Corinthians 6:12-20, Called to Purity

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Theological Proposition/Focus: The Call of a Christian is a call to sexual purity.

Homiletical Proposition/Application: Christians need to be committed to God's standard for sexual purity.

Contents

Introduction:

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Need: Christians need to be committed to God's standard for sexual purity.

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Setting the Stage:

In the first four chapters of First Corinthians, the Apostle Paul dealt with the problem of disunity. Paul's focus in these chapters seems to be a contrast between the wisdom and ways of the world and the wisdom and ways of God. Paul's overall argument seems to be something like "Stop using the world's measures to form your own factions, commit yourself to simply following Christ and doing so in unity." In chapters 5 Paul switches gears slightly and begins addressing some specific problems that are occurring within the church. Paul doesn't hold and punches, he deals with incest, lawsuits and now sexual immorality. Remember, this is a church that taught itself wise. Paul demonstrates that the wisdom this church thought it possessed was a false wisdom, a wisdom of the world and that wisdom was leading them down a path of worldliness. for us today we can gain some immediate applications because we to live in a world that thinks itself wise. If you go around proclaiming God's standard for sexual purity you are going to be labeled at best unenlightened probably a lot worse. Just remember, this is not my knowledge it is not your knowledge, this is God's knowledge. Now let's read 1 Corinthians 6:12-20.

Body

What I want you to see in verses 12-14 is that

The rights of a Christian must always be viewed through a theological lens (12-14)

In verses 12 through the first half of verse 13 we have several pithy statements.

Formally a pithy statement is defined as a brief statement that is full of substance and meaning. You can think of these as short proverbs. Statements that taken at face value seem short, memorable, and generally true. The problem is that

Pithy statements, while powerful, may only tell half the story (12-13a).

In the real world, there is almost always some nuance which makes a pithy statement generally true but specifically problematic. That is exactly what is going on here. Let's look at the first statement.

I have the right to do anything - grace is certainly efficacious for salvation and gives us the promise of forgiveness, but ...

For the Christian freedom is not for the self but for others, the question is not can I do something, the question is will it be beneficial?

Beyond the question of is it beneficial is the question, "does my freedom actually result in my enslavement?"

In the second reciting Paul uses a word play. I have ἔξεστιν (the right) but I will not ἐξουσιασθήσομαι (give the right of control).
Our view of freedom can actually enslave us. Think about it, there are all sorts of terrible practices to which people are actually slaves.
If you cannot go without something for a period of time you are not free but rather enslaved!
Alcohol
Tabacco
Drugs
Food
Social Media
Don't be fooled into slavery to something that is masquerading as a freedom!

If I asked you to clear all the alcohol out of your house for a month could you do it? If I asked you to take a month off from Social Media could you do it? If I asked you to eliminate nudity or sexual content from your viewing could you do it? Maybe it is worth testing yourself and seeing if you are enslaved to something that is not beneficial!

You say food for the stomach and the stomach for food, and God will destroy them both. - yes, God created with purpose but don't over generalize.

Paul here is telling the people don't be stupid in your generalizations!
I have had someone argue with me "God created all the plants and so they must be good and so God wants me to enjoy them and so I do drugs.
Don't be stupid, you are over generalizing.
The Corinthian argument here is that God made food for the stomach to digest and the stomach to digest food, therefore it stands to reason that God made sex for the sexual organs and the sexual organs for sex.
Therefore, we should just have a lot of sex however and with whomever we please.
again, don't be stupid, don't over generalize.
Let me make it applicable to us, "since God made me to feel this way it must be okay right? Wrong! don't be stupid, don't over generalize.

What we need to realize is that

God, as creator and redeemer, has first right of claim over our bodies (13b).

The generalization that the Corinthians were making was that in eternity the body is irrelevant. However, this is not the case!

Paul argues that in eternity the body is relevant, it will be God's. Now you are going to get a resurrected body, but I think it is naive to think that this resurrected body has nothing to do with your current body. Your resurrected body will be redeemed, but remember, the nail prints were still present in Christ's resurrected body. What you do on earth does matter!

Moreover, stop thinking of your body as your body, you were created and redeemed

It is not your body it is the property of the Lord. In fact,

We must recognize the eternality of people (14).

We are not merely souls trapped in a physical body waiting for freedom, that is a form of gnosticism or dualism, reject it.

God created the physical universe and called it good! God raised Christ with a physical body! The physical body is not the problem, our sin nature is.

This is really important for us theologically. We need to be careful that as we look forward to eternity we never make it sound as if our problem is the physical world! We were created to inhabit the physical world. God is going to give us a new body.

The Corinthians seems to have fallen into a trap, since everything is spiritual I can do whatever I want physically God is going to destroy the physical.

This is a trap, God is going to give you a resurrected body but that doesn't mean that the here and now is irrelevant.

MTR: Never exercise your rights without first looking at them through the lens of theology.

The actions of a Christian must be considered through a theological lens (15-17)

As a Christian, you bring Christ with you in everything you do (15)!

Sex is more than just a physical act (16)!

As a Christian, your actions do affect your Savior (17)!

Image: WWJD only scratches the surface.

There was a trend a while back of asking the question What Would Jesus Do? The question is a good question but it only scratches the =surface because for the Christian it is more than just WWJD but how does my action make Jesus feel? What does my action do to Jesus given that he and I are united in Spirit?

MTR: Develop a habit of asking not just "What would Jesus do?" but "How does Jesus feel?"

The purity of a Christian must be made a priority (18-20).

Sexual sin is particularly destructive and the appropriate response is to flee (18).

The body of a Christian has been set-apart for a special purpose (19).

The Christian does not have rights of their own (20).

MTR: Ask God to help you pursue sexual purity!

Conclusion:

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