1 Corinthians 12:1-13
Ordinary Pentecost
James Sledge June
8, 2014, Pentecost
This
may come as a shock to some of you, but church congregations are not always
kind, loving, supportive communities where everyone gets along. While there is
much kindness, love, and support found in congregations, there is also
conflict, fighting, and even downright nastiness. Again, my apologies if I just
shattered your image of the Church.
Churches
find an amazing variety of things that provoke disagreement and division. Some
we import straight from the surrounding culture, dividing along lines of wealth,
race, political leaning, age, and so on. But we also divide over churchy
things: doctrine, worship style, who can be leaders, and so on.
The
Apostle Paul deals with most all these in his little congregation at Corinth.
At times these Corinthian Christians sound remarkably modern: individualistic,
relativistic, divided between haves and have nots, and intensively competitive
with one another. Of course we don’t actually hear from them, having only
Paul’s side of the conversation. He’s apparently received a letter from some of
the folks there along with some first-hand reports, and Paul is not at all
happy with what he’s read and heard.
So
Paul writes to the Corinthians, and the moment he concludes with introductory
niceties, he brings up the topic of division in the congregation. And almost
the entire letter features Paul exhorting, explaining, cajoling, correcting,
and flat out blasting these folks as he tries to set them straight.
Now
the Corinthians’ problems are a bit different from those afflicting many
present day churches. Their problem isn’t declining membership or loss of
influence in the culture. They are growing, but Christianity is new and never
had any cultural influence. Being new, this congregation is an exciting, exuberant
place. Most everyone is a new believer who has been caught up in the Jesus movement,
and there is a palpable sense of spiritual energy.
Corinth was a fairly cosmopolitan place,
and this church has lots of educated, diverse people in it. If we could have
visited there, we would probably have said it was a gifted, impressive
congregation. But Paul thinks that this giftedness has become a problem.