Good morning church! Hope you’re all doing well today. As a church we’ve been going through this series titled The Church: God’s Dwelling Place from 1st Corinthians. And a theme that we’ve repeatedly seen in this letter so far is this – that God’s dwelling place or His residence isn’t in a building or a temple or a religious place. God’s dwelling place is among His Redeemed People – His church!
Which means that God’s presence is no longer confined to a building or even limited to Sunday mornings between 10.30am to 1pm. If God’s people are present in the workplace or at school or in a home, then you can be sure that God’s presence is with them. That’s a huge paradigm shift!
And this understanding of “God’s dwelling place among His people” brings with it some key questions. If God dwells in us 24/7, then how do I relate with the world and the culture around me? How do I live in the midst of this culture? Do I accept everything or reject everything from the culture around me? Where do I draw the line between my Christian life and the culture around me? And these are some tough questions that every believer wrestles with daily.
But I want you to know that God hasn’t left us alone to figure this out and He’s graciously given us His Word to help us navigate through this. You’d be encouraged to know that the Corinthian church although in a different context also wrestled with these very same questions – hope and help is available in God’s Word! And so today we arrive at an important section of this letter which focuses on Christian liberty. But before we proceed, I’d love to pray for us.
If you look up the meaning of liberty in the dictionary, you’d see that it’s described as “independence, freedom from control, interference, obligation, restriction, hampering conditions, etc.; power or right of doing, thinking, speaking, etc., according to choice”. (Freedom to do or say as we want)
Now the question is – can we describe Christian liberty in the same manner? Can we describe our freedom in Christ in the same vein? Now that I’m a believer in Christ, am I free to do or say as I want? Am I free to do whatever I want to do without any consequences? I’m sure all of us from a biblical viewpoint would say no. Our liberty is under Christ’s rule. Christ’s rule gives us the framework of our liberty. What’s that framework? This passage tells us it is love! Christian liberty is all about love – loving God and loving people!
In last week’s passage, it spoke about loving God. But if anyone loves God, he is known by God. (v3) Loving God is on one side of the liberty framework & on the other side is Loving people which we will cover in today’s passage. They are two sides of the same coin. They go hand in hand. Christian liberty is all about love. Our Christian liberty needs to be filtered through the lens of love – loving God and loving people. How does this passage break it down for us, in three ways:
1. Our Christian liberty involves understanding others (v7-8)
7 However, not all possess this knowledge. But some, through former association with idols, eat food as really offered to an idol, and their conscience, being weak, is defiled. 8 Food will not commend us to God. We are no worse off if we do not eat, and no better off if we do.
I think it’s important for us to recap the context of this passage. The context is the issue of eating food offered to idols. Just to give you a picture of the city of Corinth – everything about the city revolved around its idols and temples. Its temples were not only a place of worship, but also functioned as butcher shops and dining halls.
Important trade conferences, weddings, funerals and private dinner parties were held there. This was the center of Corinth culture and life. And people who went to the temple for worship or to dine there were served portions of food offered to idols. And that was the main contentious issue for the church where they were asking Paul, “Is it okay for us to consume the food offered to idols?”
And there were some people in the church who thought of themselves as “mature Christians” who possessed “special knowledge” or “superior knowledge”. And they were saying “we know that these idols are not real. Hence the food offered to them is inconsequential. There should be no problem in consuming it”. And they were hoping that Paul would agree with them.
In fact Paul begins by agreeing with them saying “Yes, it’s true we worship the One True God & the Lord Jesus Christ – others gods are not real gods”… “But”, “However”, “Having said that”… “not all possess the same knowledge”.
Paul is saying “Everyone doesn’t have the same level of understanding as you do.” Everyone is not on the same page when it comes to food offered to idols. Especially those who might have a weak conscience because of their past baggage associated with idol worship.
They are probably newer Christians who’ve just come out of a lifestyle of idol worship or they may be Christians who have not yet attained the understanding that you have – and for them this food that you’re consuming is still considered as food offered to idols.
And Paul is telling that by doing this, those who consider themselves as “mature” are “defiling” or “soiling” the weak conscience of these other brothers or sisters.
And even as Paul is saying this, he’s making it clear that the food by itself isn’t inherently wrong or sinful. V8 which says “Food doesn’t commend us to God. We are no worse off if we do not eat, and no better off if we do.” We don’t win any extra brownie points by consuming or choosing not to consume this food. What we eat has no bearing on our standing with God. God doesn’t accept us or reject us simply on the basis of food.
So although food by itself isn’t inherently wrong, we still need to bear in mind that everyone doesn’t view it in the same way. Past associations of food with idols can hurt the weak conscience of our brothers and sisters. We can’t be blind to it. We need to understand that. We need to be mindful of that. Our Christian liberty involves understanding others.
But not only does our Christian liberty involve understanding others, it also
2. Our Christian liberty can’t be at the expense of others (v9-12)
9 But take care that this right of yours does not somehow become a stumbling block to the weak. 10 For if anyone sees you who have knowledge eating[c] in an idol’s temple, will he not be encouraged,[d] if his conscience is weak, to eat food offered to idols? 11 And so by your knowledge this weak person is destroyed, the brother for whom Christ died. 12 Thus, sinning against your brothers[e] and wounding their conscience when it is weak, you sin against Christ.
V9 gets to the heart of the matter. But take care (make sure, pay careful attention, see to it) that this right of yours (this freedom, this liberty) does not somehow become a stumbling block to the weak. That word “stumbling block” means “stubbing our foot”. It’s a word to describe stubbing your foot against an obstacle while walking.
In the context of this passage, this word is basically telling us that our christian liberty / freedom should not end up being an obstacle to another person’s faith. And the impact is far more than stubbing your foot, it could result in hurting and turning someone away from his faith! Our Christian liberty can’t be at the expense of others!
And then in V10, Paul goes on to elaborate. He says that if a weaker brother or sister sees you “who have knowledge” – “mature, knowledgeable and understanding” Christian go to a pagan temple and eat food offered to idols, would he not think that it’s okay to eat food offered to idols something he associates as sinful?
Even worse, wouldn’t he think that since eating food offered to idols is okay, it’s probably alright for him to also now go back to worshiping those idols alongside the Lord Jesus Christ? And you can see how Paul’s building the argument – that christian liberty can end up negatively influencing and hurting the faith of those around us. Have we ever considered this thought? That our actions and choices influence the people around us especially those in our family and in our church family. Take a minute to allow that to sink in.
The next couple of verses explain the gravity of the situation. V11 – When we use our Christian liberty / freedom in a way that isn’t understanding and loving toward those around us, then our so-called “freedom” or “maturity” can actually destroy another person’s faith. It can hurt and harm another brother or sister’s faith – a person for whom Christ died! For those in Christ, they are no longer so and so from this family, so and so from this state or city; they are people for whom Christ died for. They were purchased at the highest cost – at the cost of His own precious blood. They are now His. They belong to Him. And it’s that person’s faith you are hurting!
V12 is even more weightier and more convincing. Thus, by sinning against your brothers and wounding their conscience (pummelling with repeated blows), you against Christ! That’s the weight and gravity of the situation. When we become stumbling blocks to each other, we are not only offending our brother or sister, we are offending Christ himself.
My mind was blown when I read this. Since we belong to Jesus, now any offense to us is a direct offense to Jesus Christ himself. Which is why when Jesus met with Saul on the road to Damascus as he was enroute to persecute the people of God, Jesus didn’t ask him “Why are you doing this to my people?” Jesus asked him “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?” Being a stumbling block to another person is not only sinning against that person but sinning against Jesus Christ. Our Christian liberty can’t be at the expense of others.
But not just that
3. Our Christian liberty needs to be used to sacrificially serve others (v13)
13 Therefore, if food makes my brother stumble, I will never eat meat, lest I make my brother stumble.
V13 starts with “Therefore”. On account of the reasons given in the previous verses, Paul says that if by me eating food offered to idols, it will make my brother stumble and turn from the Lord, then I will resolve to never eat it. NIV puts it in this way “I will never eat meat again”.
In other words, Paul is saying that he will never eat food offered to idols again for the rest of his life if that is what is required to keep his brother from stumbling.
And for some of us that might seem like a stretch. Why is Paul doing this? It’s because loving His brother takes precedence over his liberties. Love over freedom. He’s saying “I’ll willingly give up my rights for the sake of another”. “I’d rather use my liberty to sacrificially serve others”.
Does that sound familiar? If there was one person in the whole universe who had every right to do what he wanted to do – that was Jesus because He is the Son of God.
And yet we see God’s Jesus Christ relinquish His glory and majesty and choose to step into our shoes in the form of man. I know the whole of India has been mesmerized by the Anant Ambani wedding. I’m sure all the things that Anant wanted to do for his wedding happened – and off-course he can do that because he’s the son of Mukesh Ambani. He is the heir!
But what wouldn’t have happened is Anant entering his home as a servant and that’s the willing choice that Jesus made when He chose to take on the form of man. As He walked on the earth, He lived the perfect, obedient life that we were all supposed to live. And then He died the death that we were supposed to die as our substitute. The wrath of God which was directed toward us because of our infinite sins (too many to count) was absorbed by God’s Son Jesus Christ.
He died and was buried and three days later he rose from the dead so that whoever may turn from their sins and their efforts to win God’s acceptance by themselves and solely put their faith in Jesus Christ and His work would be saved not just for this age but for ages to come. It’s a humbling thing to realize that our salvation was the result of our Savior choosing to use His liberty to sacrificially serve us!
What’s the take home for us?
- We need to start by taking out the time to understand the people in our church. Unless we understand each other’s stories, each other’s cultural and religious baggage, we will never be able to move toward them with sensitivity and compassion. It’s not going to happen overnight either, it’s going to take time for us to really begin understanding each other.
- I know that we can get touchy about subjects like alcohol, fashion, how we spend our money, movies we watch etc. but we need to be open to having honest conversations on what we believe, why we do certain things a certain way and also allow people to share their reservations about certain liberties which can be perceived as sinful or immoral by them because of their background.
- Once those reservations or issues are brought to us, our response matters. It could involve discipling them biblically through that issue but also we need to prayerfully ask God to help us discern how to use our liberty to be loving to one another. Pray and ask God to strengthen you to willingly give up your liberty if that helps in preserving your weaker brother’s faith.
- We need to show patience and grace to each other. Knowing that we’re all in different stages of maturity, we need to be patient and gracious to each other, trusting that the Spirit will ultimately help us gain maturity in due time. And this is not a one-time activity. This is a life-long activity.
The reason we are saying all this is not because the bible is trying to restrain our liberty and freedom. Christian liberty is all about love!
- It involves understanding others
- It can’t be at the expense of others
- It needs to be used to sacrificially serve others
Author / Preacher
Latest entries
- September 10, 2024SermonDiversity of Spiritual Gifts in the church – 1 Corinthians 12:8-11
- August 26, 2024SermonWhat’s the Lord’s Table all about? – 1 Corinthians 11:17-34
- August 12, 2024SermonChristian Freedom & Gospel Witness – 1 Corinthians 10:23-33
- July 29, 2024SermonThe High Gospel Calling for Parents – Deuteronomy 6