Because He is a Prophet, I Will Believe

Introduction:

Hebrews 1:1-3 - Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed the heir of all things, through whom also he created the world. He is the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature, and he upholds the universe by the word of his power. After making purification for sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high...

The Prophet (Deuteronomy 18:14-22):

  • Will Speak God’s Words – But they did not all listen

    See: John 12:49-50 and John 14:10, 24

  • Will be Like Moses – But they did not all believe

    See: John 6:32-35 and John 6:51, 57b-58

  • Will Die if He Lies – But they killed Jesus for telling the truth

    See: John 8:26b-28 | Psalm 22:7-8, 16-18 | Psalm 22:22-25

Jesus is the Prophet – Will You:

  • Listen to Him?

  • Believe Him?

  • Speak His words?

Sermon Notes (PDF): BLANK
Hint: Highlight blanks above for answers!

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    Good morning, Harvest.

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    It's a joy to be with you this morning.

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    Open your Bibles, please, if you haven't already, to Deuteronomy chapter 18.

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    It's where we will be studying God's Word this morning.

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    And as is our usual, sometimes usual custom, I would ask, please, that you pray for me, that I would clearly, accurately preach God's Word, and I will pray for you that your hearts will be open to receive it.

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    Let's pray.

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    Gracious and holy Father, I pray, Father, you would open our hearts and minds to receive your word, that we would be absolutely convinced beyond all doubt that your word is true and that Jesus is your prophet who speaks your truth to us through your word, through your spirit at all times.

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    And I pray as we believe and trust in Him, you would transform our lives and make us more like Him every day.

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    We pray in Jesus' great name, Amen.

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    So in preparation for Resurrection Sunday, we are beginning a three-part series examining the three offices of Christ.

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    the office of prophet, priest, and king.

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    And we begin this morning with the first of these, which is prophet.

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    Now, we may listen to a lot of modern day prophets for advice on how to live.

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    The experts, the doctors, the internet influencers, the media talking heads, podcasters, entertainment celebrities, even astrologists and politicians.

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    The sources of information are endless.

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    And now we have AI at our fingertips to synthesize and summarize the sum and substance of human experience.

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    Now to be clear, I'm not talking about doctors who say eating this one food three times a day cures sleep apnea or the weird trick that cures tinnitus caused by eating this one food three times a day.

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    Now I'm talking about the major life information, answers to questions like, "Who am I?

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    What's my purpose?

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    What's the best way to live?" And when it comes to that kind of information, few to none of the infotainment talking heads can really help us, because they can only tell us what they know.

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    I'm not suggesting they aren't intelligent, but what they say may or may not be true.

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    But you say like, well, no, hold on, hold on Sprung.

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    I've heard it said that all truth is God's truth, wherever it's found.

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    Well, let's think about that for a minute.

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    God's word is perfect, pure and true according to Psalm 19.

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    So I have a metaphor this morning for us, For God's word, I think that everyone can relate to the delight over opening a brand new container of Play-Doh.

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    It's all one color.

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    Nobody's played with it yet.

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    It's not mixed up with other colors.

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    It's just fresh and clean, and it's ready for my artistic expression.

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    But you know, the inevitable happens, doesn't it?

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    Soon, what was once pure and clean, it's all mashed together with a lot of other colors and that original color becomes unidentifiable.

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    I think you get the point.

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    How do you discern God's truth in a mishmash of worldly ideas?

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    How do you extract the truth once it's all blended into futile human thoughts?

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    Well, this is the problem with the infotainment experts.

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    Their learning and experience and perspective is just a conglomeration of worldly thinking.

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    They can make educated guesses as to how to live and what's going to happen, but ultimately every single one of them is going to reach a point where they have to say, "I don't know." And some of them are speaking directly out of the pit of hell.

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    And those folks will drag you down to hell with them.

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    So you see, that's why when it comes to the astrologists and the mediums and perhaps the to celebrities and influencers.

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    Verse 14 of this morning's passage says that, "As for you, the Lord, your God, has not allowed you to do this." So to whom or what can we turn?

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    Where can we get truth for an accurate world view?

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    Because we need a perspective that is outside of ourselves.

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    Outside of this world, really, and that's what God's Word is.

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    It is the specific and special revelation of God about himself.

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    It comes from the throne of God.

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    The problem with the world is, people in the world, they look at the Bible and like, "Well, yeah, that's just one more system of thought like any other." In fact, it's probably even not as good as what AI can tell us now.

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    They have a low view of scripture.

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    We need to have a high view of scripture.

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    And as we learn from the word that was just read, we can get the truth from the prophet.

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    It is to him we must listen.

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    But what is a prophet anyway?

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    What does a prophet do?

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    We typically think of prophets as forecasting future events, often in a cryptic or mystical way, like that Nostradamus guy.

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    But biblically, that is only a partial description of what a prophet does.

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    Basically a biblical prophet speaks God's words to people.

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    The Old Testament prophets revealed three basic messages.

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    The first was that God sent many prophets to his people to rebuke them for breaking the covenant and worshiping idols.

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    This was perhaps the prophet's most important function, to remind the people of Israel that they, and only they, were in a covenantal relationship with the Lord God Most High.

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    and they were violating His covenant in a high-handed way.

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    Time and again He warned them to return to Him, or they would face the ultimate covenant punishment of being expelled from the Promised Land.

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    Not only did the prophets warn Israel and Judah that they would be punished by pagan nations for their idolatry, God also spoke to them about a future restoration, both near and at the end of the age.

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    And indeed, after the exile, they would return to the promised land.

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    And the nations that assaulted and tormented Israel in their exile, they would in turn be punished and overthrown by God.

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    And then finally, the Old Testament prophets spoke of the coming Messiah, a sometimes suffering, but ultimately victorious anointed servant.

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    The anointed one would bring salvation to his people.

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    He would inaugurate a new covenant between God and his people.

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    And the prophets gave many clues that would help the people identify the anointed one when he arrived.

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    Now, what did God expect his people to do in response to the prophets' messages?

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    expected, well no, he commanded them to repent and believe the messages to return to him and live in accordance with the covenant he made with them at Mount Sinai. And yet the Old Testament records a nearly continuous account of Israel's idolatry. They worship the idols of the nations around them. They And they sought out and listened to the words of false prophets, mediums, fortune tellers, and diviners.

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    They did not listen.

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    They did not believe.

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    They became futile in their thinking and their worship.

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    They mixed God's truth with the religions and lifestyles of the surrounding nations, and they ended up with the equivalent of this, gudo.

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    It's just a mash, a mishmash of ideas.

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    And when the prophets exposed their sin and their hypocrisy, they took offense and they put them to death.

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    So God, after bearing with his people for hundreds of years, he brought the covenantal curses down upon their heads and inflicted the ultimate punishment.

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    He exiled them from the promised land.

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    Now God of course kept his promises and he returned them to the land.

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    And roughly 400 years after that, the anointed one who was known before the foundation of the world, he was made manifest in the last times for the sake of all who would believe in and through him.

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    We of course know from the New Testament that Jesus is the promised Messiah.

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    He's the Son of God who fulfilled all that was spoken of Him by the Old Testament prophets.

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    As the writer of Hebrews says, "Long ago and at many times and in many ways, "God spoke to our fathers by the prophets.

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    "But in these last days, He has spoken to us by His Son, "whom He appointed the heir of all things, "through whom also He created the world.

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    "He's the radiance of the glory of God God in the exact imprint of His nature, and He upholds the universe by the word of His power.

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    After making purification for sins, He sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high." And this verse summarizes the three offices of Christ that we're going to be studying this week.

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    First is prophet.

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    "In these last days, He has spoken to us by His Son." And then priest, he has made purification for sins.

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    And then finally king, he sat down at the right hand of the majesty on high.

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    So how do we know Jesus is the prophet foretold by Moses?

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    What evidence is there to conclusively connect Jesus to the promise of a prophet just like Moses?

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    Well, first the prophet will speak God's words.

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    Look at verse 15 of chapter 18 in Deuteronomy.

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    Verse 15 says, "The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among you, from your brothers.

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    It is to him you shall listen." Thus the prophet would be raised up by God from among the Israelites.

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    And the gospels of Matthew and Luke establish that Jesus was conceived by the Holy Spirit in the Virgin Mary, and he was adopted by Joseph.

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    And both Mary and Joseph were descendants of David.

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    Jesus was born in Bethlehem.

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    His birth was attended by an angelic announcement.

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    And then when John baptized Jesus, God the Father announced that Jesus was his beloved son with whom he was well-pleased.

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    All of these events attest that Jesus was indeed raised up by God the Father from among the Israelites.

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    And these events disprove the idea that Jesus was merely a self-appointed and possibly deluded religious figure, as some people think he was.

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    And then verse 18 tells us that God's words would be in his mouth.

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    "I will put my words in his mouth and He shall speak to them all that I command Him." Now, we've already established that the prophets spoke God's words to the people.

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    But whereas they prefaced their statements with, "Thus saith the Lord," Jesus spoke as the Lord, out of the oneness that existed between Him and the Father.

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    For example, in John 12, verses 49 and 50, Jesus said, "For I have not spoken on my own authority, but the Father who sent me has himself given me a commandment, what to say and what to speak.

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    And I know that his commandment is eternal life.

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    What I say therefore, I say as the Father has told me." And then in John 14, verses 10 and 24, he said, "The words that I say to you, I do not speak on my own authority, but the Father who dwells in me does his works.

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    And the word that you hear is not mine, but the Father's who sent me." As further proof of his prophetic office, Jesus spoke God's words in the way that the Israelites requested.

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    What I mean is this, In Exodus chapters 19 and 20, God descended in a dark cloud on Mount Sinai with thunders and lightnings and the mountains shook.

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    And out of that cloud, God spoke the 10 commandments to the people.

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    And when all the people saw the thunder and the lightning and the sound of the trumpet that they heard and they were seeing the mountain shake and the ground shaking beneath their feet, They were terrified and they stood far off and they told Moses, they said, "You speak to us and we will listen, "but do not let God speak to us lest we die." Certainly Moses continued to speak to the people and gave them God's commands during their journey to the promised land and during their wandering for 40 years in the desert.

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    And then in his final address to them in the book of Deuteronomy.

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    But in chapter 18, verses 16 and 17, Moses told the people that God would send a prophet in direct response to their request at Mount Sinai, to let me not hear again the voice of the Lord my God, or see this great fire anymore, lest I die.

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    So how did Jesus, in his speaking, demonstrate that he was the prophet sent by the Lord?

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    Well, there's three events that directly identify Jesus as the prophet.

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    And all of them occurred, not coincidentally, on a mountainside.

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    First, he was on the mountain when he was transfigured before Peter, James, and John.

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    and while talking with Moses and Elijah, and a bright cloud appeared and God said, "This is my beloved son with whom I am well pleased.

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    Listen to him." And the three disciples were like the Israelites of old, terrified by the voice of God.

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    But when they looked up, they saw only Jesus.

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    Second, the most direct connection A connection between the prophet and God speaking in the 10 commandments out of a stormy cloud is found in Matthew 5-7, the Sermon on the Mount.

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    Jesus, seeing the crowds, went up on the mountain.

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    And when he sat down, his disciples came to him.

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    And he opened his mouth and taught them.

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    And what did he teach them?

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    Well, in the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus exegeted the law, including most of the 10 commandments.

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    The greatest commandment, to love the Lord your God with all your heart, mind, soul, and strength, and then to love your neighbor as yourself.

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    In that sermon, he showed the people that righteousness was not about outwardly keeping rules, but inward devotion to God that flowed from a broken and contrite heart.

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    a heart that revealed itself in confident dependence on God.

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    Instead of fire and terror, Jesus spoke to the people face to face on the mountain, just as they requested of Moses so long ago.

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    He revealed God to be merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness.

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    And when Jesus finished, the crowds were astonished at his teaching, for he was teaching them as one who had authority.

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    And yet, as so often happened in Israel's history, they did not all listen.

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    Yeah, there were those who did, but it seems for the most part, people were going out to Jesus for signs and wonders.

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    The crowds were fickle.

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    They were ambivalent about him.

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    and the religious leaders were so hostile, they wanted to kill him.

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    In Jesus, Israel got what she asked for hundreds of years earlier, a prophet speaking God's words to them face to face.

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    And even though his teaching astonished them, they eventually decided that Jesus really wasn't the prophet or Messiah they wanted after all.

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    They wanted a vending machine God.

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    They wanted a Messiah-o-matic and give them what they wanted.

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    You see, the divide between what the people craved and who Jesus is, is revealed in a third event that demonstrated the prophet would be like Moses.

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    The third thing Jesus did on a mountainside that proved He was the prophet like Moses is this.

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    He fed well over 5,000 people with bread and fish.

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    According to John 6, after everyone had eaten their fill and 12 baskets of leftovers were collected, the people said, "This is indeed the prophet who is to come into the world." And a day or two later, the people went looking for Jesus in Capernaum because they wanted more bread to eat.

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    Jesus knew what they wanted and he told them, "Do not work for the food that perishes, "but for the food that endures to eternal life, "which the Son of Man will give you.

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    "For on Him, God the Father has set His seal." And then the people said to him, "What must we do to be doing the works of God?" And Jesus answered them, "This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent." So the people said, "Jesus, what sign do you do that we might believe you?

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    What are you going to do for us, Jesus, that will persuade us to believe in you?" And then they said, "Our fathers ate manna in the wilderness.

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    Have you got more bread?" Jesus said to them, "Truly, truly I say to you, "it was not Moses who gave you the bread from heaven, "but my Father gives you the true bread from heaven.

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    "For the bread of God is he who comes down "from heaven and gives life to the world." They said to him, "Sir, give us this bread always." Jesus said to them, "I am the bread of life." The people responded to Jesus' assertion with grumbling.

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    First, because he said, "He's the bread that comes down from heaven." They're like, "We want food.

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    We want bread.

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    We don't want you." But their grumbling increased because of Jesus' next extraordinary statement.

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    He said, "I am the living bread that came down from heaven.

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    "If anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever.

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    "And the bread that I will give "for the life of the world is my flesh.

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    "Whoever feeds on me, he also will live because of me.

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    "This is the bread that came down from heaven, "not like the bread the fathers ate and died.

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    "Whoever feeds on this bread will live forever." Well, this was just all too much for the Jews.

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    This was just too bizarre.

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    Jesus was speaking of himself as eternal nourishment, and all they could think about was their temporary physical hunger.

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    Like the Jews in the wilderness who grumbled about God providing manna for 40 years, the crowds and even many of Jesus' disciples grumbled about Jesus being the true bread of God.

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    Like Moses, Jesus led and fed the people in ways that revealed His prophetic office.

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    But they did not all believe.

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    They took offense at Him.

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    Many turned back and no longer walked with Him.

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    So Jesus asked the 12 if they too wanted to leave Him.

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    But Peter said, "Lord, to whom shall we go?

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    You have the words of eternal life.

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    And we have believed and have come to know that you are the Holy One of God.

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    You see, Peter recognized Jesus is more than the prophet.

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    He declares Jesus is the anointed one, the Son of God, because Jesus spoke God's words of eternal life.

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    And what was the most important thing that Jesus said during his earthly ministry?

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    What did he explicitly prophesy at least three times?

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    And what did he emphasize in other ways multiple times to his disciples?

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    That he would be mocked and flogged and crucified and that he would be raised to life the third day.

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    It's a pretty extraordinary prophecy.

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    But you see, this was extremely perplexing to the disciples because they said, "Jesus, you're telling the truth." And along with the words that he spoke and the signs and wonders that he performed, all of this amply demonstrated that Jesus was in fact the Messiah.

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    There's no way he could be a false prophet because they knew that a false prophet will die if he lies.

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    Look at Deuteronomy 18.20.

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    "The prophet who presumes to speak a word in my name, that I have not commanded him to speak, or who speaks in the name of other gods, that prophet shall die." The religious leaders, particularly the Pharisees and their lawyers, they insisted that Jesus was a liar.

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    They claimed he was merely witnessing about himself and that his testimony wasn't true.

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    Well, Jesus countered that by saying that God the Father is also born witness about me and that he who sent me is true and I declare to the world what I have heard from him.

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    They did not understand that he'd been speaking to them about the Father.

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    So Jesus said to them, "When you have lifted up the Son of Man, then you will know that I am he and that I do nothing on my own authority but speak just as the Father taught me." In this passage from John chapter 8, Jesus hints at what the religious leaders are planning to do to him.

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    They want to kill him, and he knows that their murderous maneuverings will result in his crucifixion.

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    You see, this is the supreme irony.

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    A prophet will die if he lies.

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    But they killed Jesus for telling the truth, just like they did the prophets of old.

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    And when Jesus was lifted up on the cross, his opponents thought he got what he deserved.

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    They were certain he was a false prophet, because if he wasn't, he wouldn't be suffering a vicious and humiliating death at the hand of Gentiles.

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    He was on the cross, the chief priests and other religious leaders mocked Him, saying, "He saved others. He can't save Himself.

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    Let the Christ, the King of Israel, come down now from the cross that we may see and believe." And yet in the midst of His agony, Jesus cried out, "My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?" His enemies might have said, You're forsaken because you're a liar.

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    Everyone who gets hung on a tree is accursed.

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    The fact that we were able to get you crucified is proof that you, Jesus, are accursed by God.

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    You're no prophet.

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    But by crying out the first line of Psalm 22, my God, my God, why have you forsaken me?

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    Jesus continues to speak the word of God in a way that reveals that the cross is the culmination of his earthly mission.

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    Psalm 22 is a messianic psalm.

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    It summarizes the Messiah's humiliation and exaltation.

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    Let's look at a few passages.

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    Verses seven and eight.

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    All who see me mock me.

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    They make mouths at me.

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    "For they wag their heads.

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    "He trusts in the Lord.

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    "Let Him deliver him.

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    "Let Him rescue him, for He delights in him." Then verses 16 and 18, through 18.

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    "For dogs encompass me.

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    "A company of evil doers encircles me.

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    "They have pierced my hands and feet.

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    "I can count all my bones.

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    "They stare and gloat over me.

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    "They divide my garments among them.

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    "For My clothing they cast lots." And finally, verses 22-25, "Reflect the Father's care in the midst of Jesus' great suffering and His resurrection." He says, "I will tell of Your name to My brothers, and in the midst of the congregation, I will praise You." Stop there for a minute and think about that.

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    Christ is on the cross, and he's telling the name of God to his brothers.

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    In the midst of the congregation, he is praising God.

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    All you who fear the Lord, praise him.

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    All you offspring of Jacob, glorify him, and stand in awe of him.

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    All you offspring of Israel, for he is not despised or abhorred the affliction of the afflicted, "And He has not hidden His face from him, but He has heard when he cried to Him.

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    And from you comes my praise in the great congregation, my vows I will perform before those who fear Him." You see, even in the throes of death, Jesus preached to all who would listen and believe.

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    If those who heard Jesus cry began themselves to recite this Messianic Psalm, perhaps the realization began to take hold that what they were reciting was happening right before their eyes.

    30:41-31:00

    The psalmist's words are being fulfilled here and now, just as Jesus said, "When you have lifted up the Son of Man, "then you will know that I am He." And perhaps the horrible realization set in, we've killed the Messiah.

    31:01-31:12

    And perhaps that is why, as Luke records, all the crowds that had assembled for this spectacle, when they saw what had taken place, they returned home beating their breasts.

    31:13-31:15

    We have killed the Messiah.

    31:18-31:24

    But what looked like an accursed death to the crowd instead a triumph over death.

    31:25-31:34

    On the cross, Jesus put death to death, and in his resurrection, he offers eternal life to all who would believe in him.

    31:36-31:38

    All that Jesus said came to pass.

    31:39-31:41

    He said he would die, and he did.

    31:42-31:44

    He said he would return to life, and he did.

    31:45-31:48

    He is the reliable and trustworthy prophet.

    31:48-31:51

    Every word He spoke was true.

    31:53-31:55

    And He is still our prophet today.

    31:56-31:58

    We have His word.

    31:58-32:03

    We have God's word and His Spirit to lead us into all truth.

    32:05-32:17

    You know, everyone who preaches is obligated to faithfully and accurately speak in the name of the Lord Jesus and to preach His words, not our own.

    32:17-32:20

    In this way, Jesus is still our prophet.

    32:21-32:25

    He indwells his people to speak to his people from his word.

    32:28-32:35

    Therefore, now that you know that Jesus is the prophet, will you listen to him?

    32:38-32:45

    Will you daily cast off worldly thinking and unbiblical ideas and commit to reading and meditating on God's word?

    32:47-32:58

    Are you willing to jettison old patterns of negative thinking and replace them with what the Bible says about your worth and your purpose in Jesus Christ?

    32:58-33:05

    Will you conform your thinking to God's truth and Jesus' example and teaching?

    33:08-33:14

    Or will you continue to seek advice from the influencers and false prophets clamoring for your attention?

    33:16-33:17

    Will you look for guidance?

    33:18-33:26

    Will you look for guidance in the gudo that shapes and drives the lives of so many people?

    33:30-33:35

    The skeptic will say, "Ah, I don't believe anything in the Bible is true.

    33:36-33:37

    It offends my reason.

    33:38-33:39

    I'm an independent thinker.

    33:40-33:52

    I don't need a God or a religion to tell me what to do." But that same person has no problem with the collective hive mind telling them what to think.

    33:53-33:57

    And they'll employ artificial intelligence to do their thinking for them.

    34:00-34:03

    So much intelligence, so little wisdom.

    34:05-34:20

    The short of it is, if you refuse to listen to what Jesus says, If you take offense at him and his words, you're just like the Israelites and the religious leaders in past time.

    34:21-34:26

    You're essentially putting him to death in your heart and in your mind.

    34:28-34:31

    Now, there are probably very few people in this room that hate Jesus.

    34:34-34:44

    And if we took a survey of the people in this room, probably most of you would agree that, Yeah, we shouldn't be committing the kinds of sins which the world heartily approves.

    34:46-34:49

    We shouldn't be following all that chatter out there.

    34:51-35:05

    And yet how many of us choose to remain on friendly terms with the world and feel free to indulge in all its whims and entertainments and pleasures so long as we avoid open sin.

    35:08-35:22

    The most dangerous sin is the idea that we can listen to worldly prophets advocating for the lusts and pleasures of the world and follow along and yet still be devoted to Christ.

    35:23-35:30

    Beloved, you cannot listen to and serve multiple masters and still walk uprightly before Jesus Christ.

    35:31-35:35

    You must listen to Christ and serve Him only.

    35:38-36:14

    Jesus is the prophet. Will you believe in him? In some ways I have laid this sermon out like a closing argument in a court case. You've heard from the witnesses Moses, God the Father, Peter, and of course Jesus himself. And you have evidence to consider more than 5,000 people fed on a mountainside. Jesus transfigured on a mountain. And of course Jesus crucified on a cross just as he said he would be.

    36:17-36:36

    And then this singular fact. Jesus rose from the dead on the third day according to the Scriptures and according to his own prophetic words. He to pay the penalty for their sins and remove the penalty of death.

    36:37-36:43

    And rising again, he offers forgiveness of sin and eternal life for all who would believe in him.

    36:46-36:48

    So you've heard the evidence.

    36:49-36:51

    You must now render a verdict.

    36:52-36:59

    Will you believe that Jesus is everything he says he is, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world?

    37:00-37:03

    He's the one mediator between God the Father and humanity.

    37:04-37:07

    He is the only priest, prophet, and king.

    37:08-37:13

    And Jesus is the only name given among people under heaven by which we can be saved.

    37:15-37:22

    If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.

    37:23-37:26

    With the heart one believes and is justified.

    37:27-37:30

    and with the mouth one confesses and is saved.

    37:32-37:33

    Jesus is the prophet.

    37:35-37:37

    Will you speak His words?

    37:40-37:44

    As disciples of Christ, we are all prophets of His gospel.

    37:45-37:49

    We are to proclaim His life, death, and resurrection until He returns.

    37:50-37:52

    This is no mystery religion.

    37:53-37:56

    There is no hidden knowledge in the Scriptures.

    37:56-37:58

    There are no secret rites to perform.

    37:59-38:02

    The words of Christ are all out in the open.

    38:03-38:10

    And we have the awesome privilege of possessing the oracles of God, the word of God.

    38:10-38:13

    We have God's words in our hands.

    38:16-38:20

    It's not always been true, but it's true for us.

    38:22-38:28

    Do we have the ability to read it, to reason through it, to engage with it by the help of the Holy Spirit?

    38:31-38:38

    We can personally and intimately know God, the Creator and Sustainer of the universe.

    38:40-38:50

    Jesus reveals the truth so that we can repent of our sins, trust in His finished work on the cross and receive the gift of eternal life now and forever.

    38:55-39:16

    And we have the responsibility of repeating his words clearly to others so that they may hear and believe in him by faith too. God forgive us for shirking our responsibility to share the gospel and for being insensible to the the spiritual condition of the lost and the dying.

    39:18-39:19

    We must speak His words.

    39:19-39:22

    We must share the good news of what He has done.

    39:24-39:33

    We are like beggars dressed in fine linen telling other beggars where to find bread and new garments.

    39:34-39:37

    It is the most loving and kindest thing we can do.

    39:39-39:42

    as our worship team returns to the stage.

    39:45-39:46

    I will conclude with this.

    39:49-39:52

    Not everyone will listen to us.

    39:53-39:55

    But then they didn't all listen to Jesus either.

    39:57-39:58

    Not everyone will believe.

    40:00-40:02

    But then they did not all believe in Jesus either.

    40:04-40:08

    We are not responsible for the results of sharing the gospel.

    40:09-40:11

    The results are for God to work out.

    40:13-40:18

    Our responsibility is to faithfully speak the words of God from Scripture.

    40:19-40:24

    For faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ.

    40:25-40:25

    Let's pray.

    40:28-40:31

    The law of the Lord is perfect, reviving the soul.

    40:32-40:36

    The testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the simple.

    40:37-40:40

    The precepts of the Lord are right, rejoicing the heart.

    40:42-40:45

    The commandment of the Lord is pure, enlightening the eyes.

    40:47-40:49

    The fear of the Lord is clean, enduring forever.

    40:51-40:54

    The rules of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.

    40:56-41:04

    Let the words of our mouths and the meditation of our hearts be acceptable in your sight.

    41:04-41:08

    O Lord, our rock and our Redeemer.

    41:09-41:09

    Amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read
Deuteronomy 18:14-22

  1. What was your big take-away from this passage / message?

  2. Can you assess how deeply worldly ideas influence your thinking? What about how deeply they influence your view of Scripture? How about your walk with Christ?

  3. What expectations do you have of God? That is, what do you want from Him, and what do you want to hear from Him? How do these questions and your answers relate to Israel’s history with the LORD?

  4. It was said the sermon was constructed like a closing argument, requiring a verdict. Imagine you are a jury member – was enough evidence and testimony presented to render a judgment that Jesus is the Messiah? If not, what further evidence would you seek? Where would you look for that evidence?

  5. What are some reasons we don’t take seriously our responsibility share the Gospel of Christ with others? How valid are those reasons?

Breakout
Pray for one another.

Why Should I Deny Myself?

Introduction:

Are You Committed to Winning People with the Gospel? (1 Corinthians 9:15-23)

  1. SACRIFICE: Do You Give Up Your Rights in Order to WIN People?

  2. STEWARD: Do You See Yourself as ENTRUSTED with the Gospel?

    2 Corinthians 5:19 - that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation.

  3. SHARER: Do You Know the Joy of Sharing the Blessings of the Gospel?

Sermon Notes (PDF): BLANK
Hint: Highlight blanks above for answers!

  • 00:00-00:04

    Open up those Bibles to 1 Corinthians 9.

    00:07-00:10

    While you're turning there, let's just take a moment.

    00:10-00:18

    I'm going to ask that you would please pray for me to proclaim the Word of God as I should.

    00:19-00:26

    And I will pray for you to have a heart open to receive what it is the Lord wants to teach us today.

    00:27-00:28

    Let's pray.

    00:31-00:38

    Father, we understand that what is about to happen is supernatural.

    00:42-00:46

    This isn't giving some TED Talk.

    00:48-00:55

    This is the proclamation of your eternal word that somehow your Holy Spirit works with your word.

    00:59-01:01

    to conform us into the image of your Son.

    01:03-01:08

    Father, I pray that you would do a mighty work in all of us this morning.

    01:11-01:16

    Thank you, Father, in advance for the work that you're going to do.

    01:17-01:20

    We pray in Jesus' name, Amen.

    01:22-01:24

    1 Corinthians 9, are you there?

    01:24-01:29

    Before we start this, Doug, did Taylor get paid this week?

    01:31-01:31

    He did not.

    01:32-01:34

    We don't usually do this publicly, but would you pay Taylor?

    01:40-01:41

    (congregation laughing)

    01:45-01:49

    You gotta keep the pastor humble, thank you, Doug.

    01:50-01:51

    You gotta keep the pastor humble.

    01:54-01:56

    Don't expect anything else for like a month.

    01:58-01:59

    You're gonna have to stretch it.

    02:01-02:03

    You got him the king-size Kit Kat, right?

    02:03-02:06

    Okay, then I don't wanna hear nothing about no second service.

    02:07-02:09

    You got plenty.

    02:10-02:10

    Don't be a hog.

    02:14-02:33

    When Erin and I were first married, we lived in town and we had a neighbor up the street that would often walk his dog right by our house and he would often stop in our front yard and let his dog do what dogs do on walks.

    02:35-02:37

    And there was no cleanup, by the way.

    02:39-03:09

    But this went on for some time and one day he was walking the dog up the street on the sidewalk in front of our house and Erin was outside and she said, "Hey, I'm buying you a shovel for Christmas." He got a little smile on his face and he goes, "So, you think I'd look pretty good with a shovel?" I think he thought that Erin was flirting with him.

    03:10-03:15

    And if so, that is a really weird pickup line to use.

    03:17-03:19

    Hey baby, you look good with a shovel.

    03:22-03:23

    It's pretty easy to miss the point, isn't it?

    03:24-03:25

    At least it was for him.

    03:25-03:28

    It was easy to miss the point.

    03:29-03:40

    And as we get to this next section in 1 Corinthians, I think that's what's going on here is I think Paul wanted to make sure that none of the Corinthians missed his point.

    03:42-03:42

    All right?

    03:42-03:44

    This is the Q&A section.

    03:44-04:03

    In this section in particular, they had asked him about eating meat that was used in pagan worship and they're like, "Well, it's just meat, but it bothers some of the weaker Christians that are, you know, just kind of fresh coming out of paganism." So what do we do about that, Paul?

    04:04-04:21

    Paul says, "You are free." But love says, "I will lay down my rights so that I don't offend a weaker brother." And then Paul, led by example, that's what we saw last week.

    04:21-04:24

    Paul goes, "Look, I'm showing you an example from my own life.

    04:25-04:36

    I have every right to be paid to preach." And he went through all the reasons it is legitimate for the pastor to get paid.

    04:36-04:38

    He gave us five very compelling reasons.

    04:39-04:43

    "Yes, the pastor should be paid." He said, "That's a right that I have.

    04:44-05:48

    That's a freedom that I have, but I'm laying it down for the sake of the gospel." And I think when you get to this point in chapter 9, Paul knew that some of the Corinthians were going to miss the point, and Paul's talking about paying the pastor, paying the pastor, while you pay the past year's while and they're like, "Ah, um. Yeah, Paul, we asked about meat. That was what we asked about. It's a bigger issue. It's not about the meat." "Oh, not about the meat. Oh, oh, this is about getting paid to preach. No, no, no, it's not about the money. That's like saying the fall of man. That's like saying Adam's sin in the Garden of Eden is a story about fruit trees. You missed the point.

    05:50-05:59

    The bigger issue is this, examining how does what I do affect somebody else?

    05:59-06:00

    That is the issue.

    06:03-06:12

    It's about not letting anything be an obstacle to not only loving a weaker brother, but winning people to Christ.

    06:19-07:26

    people to Christ. How high of a priority is that for you? I mean, can we just take an honest assessment today? How often do you think about winning somebody to Christ. How committed are you to personal evangelism? I thought so much about this this past week. And I want you to hear what I'm saying here because this isn't pack your bags we're going on a guilt trip. This is deeply convicting to me. And I'm right here with you, church. Please hear me, corporately and individually, corporately and individually, church, we are distracted and we are insulated.

    07:29-07:36

    We are, first of all, distracted. We're distracted. We are so distracted. Winning people to Christ, What are you talking about?

    07:37-07:38

    Oh yeah, I guess that is a thing.

    07:38-07:43

    I've been so distracted, distracted with good things.

    07:44-07:48

    Work and sports and home projects.

    07:48-07:53

    There is so much that demands our attention.

    07:56-08:00

    I think especially in a church like ours, we're insulated.

    08:02-08:10

    How much of our lives revolve around going to church, going to small group, going to event at the church.

    08:11-08:20

    And then when we're not at Harvest Bible Chapel, we are sending our kids to Christian school, or we volunteer at a Christian school.

    08:20-08:25

    And all of that is great stuff, obviously.

    08:26-08:31

    But I have to ask, how often are we even interacting with lost people?

    08:33-08:35

    I think we're insulated.

    08:38-08:40

    Look, there's so much.

    08:42-08:48

    There's so much that this church does so well when it comes to discipleship.

    08:49-08:51

    We have an excellent small group ministry.

    08:55-09:02

    We just had two excellent conferences, one for the men last month, one for the women yesterday.

    09:03-09:04

    Excellent.

    09:08-09:12

    Our giving to missions, I've never seen a church like this one.

    09:13-09:22

    Whether it's the Vision Appalachia or Thailand or somebody taking a short-term trip, our Forgiving to missions is excellent.

    09:28-09:34

    But when we get to this passage, we have to ask ourselves, "When was the last time that you led somebody to Christ?

    09:37-09:39

    When was the last time that happened?

    09:41-09:45

    When was the last time that you even shared the gospel with someone?

    09:45-09:51

    When was the last time that you even invited somebody to come to church to hear the gospel here?

    09:56-09:58

    Are you committed to personal evangelism?

    10:02-10:06

    Not just talking about the church at large, obviously that is a concern for me.

    10:06-10:07

    I'm talking about you as an individual.

    10:08-10:09

    Are you committed to that?

    10:12-10:14

    Look down at verse 23 here in chapter 9.

    10:16-10:27

    Paul says, "I do it all for the sake of the gospel." Paul says, "Everything in my life revolves around the gospel.

    10:27-10:41

    Everything in my life revolves around winning people to Christ." And this verse has a very special place in my heart because our missionary in Thailand, This is His verse.

    10:42-10:46

    This is the verse that fuels everything that He does.

    10:46-10:55

    Several years ago, He was at our house and He was talking to Erin and I about how this verse fuels everything in His ministry.

    10:55-10:58

    "I do all things for the sake of the gospel." He kept going back to that.

    10:58-11:04

    "I do all things for the sake of the gospel." Twenty-three churches, four children's homes, a Bible institute.

    11:06-11:12

    I do all things for the sake of the gospel." That's how that mission started, by the way.

    11:12-11:13

    Do you know how that started?

    11:14-11:20

    It was Barnabas, this Burmese man going through the northern mountain jungles of Thailand looking for villages.

    11:22-11:30

    Looking, looking for lost people in the middle of the jungle and finding a village and walking in and just sharing the gospel of Jesus Christ with them.

    11:31-11:32

    That's how that started.

    11:36-11:38

    All things for the sake of the gospel.

    11:39-11:43

    He is like spiritually hilarious to talk to.

    11:43-11:50

    He was telling me recently about a telemarketer that was calling to try to sell him on some kind of goofy energy pills or something.

    11:50-11:52

    And do you know what he told her?

    11:54-11:54

    The gospel!

    11:55-11:56

    He told her the gospel.

    11:56-11:58

    He also told me, this was just a couple weeks ago.

    11:59-12:04

    He had a couple guys show up to pump their septic tank.

    12:04-12:05

    And do you know what he told them?

    12:06-12:08

    The gospel, yeah.

    12:10-12:13

    One of my favorite stories, he had to get some sound equipment.

    12:13-12:18

    They do this big outdoor Christmas program as an outreach.

    12:20-12:25

    It's kind of like open air preaching and the Lisu tribe, they're dancers and there's this whole thing, right?

    12:26-12:27

    But he had to get like this PA system.

    12:28-12:35

    So he goes into the store, the electronics store, where they sell these things, and he wants to buy one.

    12:35-12:37

    He goes, "I wanna try it out." Remember this, Justin?

    12:37-12:49

    He goes, "I wanna try this out." And they're like, "Okay, you can try it out." He's like, "I wanna make sure it works." So they fire up this PA system, and he gets on the microphone, and do you know what he says?

    12:51-13:06

    "He proclaimed the gospel to the whole store!" I'm gonna give you the short version of the story, I don't have time to get into all of it, but he told me about a village across the border that was guarded by four armies that needed fish.

    13:08-13:12

    And he took them fish, and I said, "How did you keep the fish from spoiling?" He's like, "What are you talking about?

    13:13-13:29

    "What do you mean spoil?" I'm like, "Well, he said it took him 10 days "to walk through the jungle with these fish." I'm like, "Fish is gonna get bad after a while." He goes, "No, no, no, no, no, no, live fish." I'm like, "How did you take live fish?" And then it hit me.

    13:30-13:31

    I said, "Hang on, hang on.

    13:33-13:53

    "Did you carry bags of water full of fish "through the jungle for 10 days "to take fish to a village?" And as a matter of fact, he just says, "Yeah, they needed fish." You carried an aquarium through the jungle for 10 days.

    13:54-14:00

    He's like, "They needed fish." Why would somebody do something like that?

    14:01-14:04

    What would possess a man to do something like that?

    14:04-14:06

    I'll tell you what possesses a man.

    14:07-14:09

    He does all things for the sake of the gospel.

    14:09-14:19

    He says, "The reason I'm taking these fish to them is it's going to open the door for me to share the gospel with them." Who does something like that?

    14:20-14:23

    A person who wants to win people to Christ, that's who.

    14:28-14:28

    So what about you?

    14:30-14:31

    Do you love lost people?

    14:38-14:53

    You're like, "Man, I guess I don't love lost people like that." Now, this section here in 1 Corinthians shows us what the heart of an evangelist looks like.

    14:55-14:56

    I think there's something here for all of us.

    14:56-15:09

    I just want to go through the text, and then I want to go back and pick up some of the key principles that motivated Paul here, but let's pick up in verse 15.

    15:13-15:21

    Paul says, "But I have made no use of any of these rights." He didn't use his right to get paid to preach.

    15:21-15:22

    That's what he's talking about.

    15:22-15:24

    Like, why didn't you do that?

    15:25-15:26

    Well we talked about that.

    15:27-15:32

    Paul didn't want anybody to think that he was using some new religion to try to get rich.

    15:36-15:38

    He didn't want people to assume that he had bad motives.

    15:39-15:40

    Time out here for a second.

    15:40-15:52

    They're like, "Well, if Paul had this conviction, why didn't the other apostles have this conviction?" I mean, it makes sense, but why didn't the others have this conviction?

    15:52-15:53

    And the answer is very simple.

    15:53-15:56

    Paul was the apostle to the Gentiles.

    15:58-15:59

    He was reaching pagan people.

    16:00-16:06

    That Peter and the rest that were going to the Jews, the Jews already had this system in place about paying the spiritual leaders.

    16:07-16:08

    That wasn't a weird concept to them.

    16:09-16:11

    Paul going to the Gentiles, it was a different ball game.

    16:14-16:15

    All right, look, keep going to verse 15.

    16:16-16:27

    He says, "Nor am I writing these things "to secure any such provision." Paul's like, "I'm not writing this to you "to secure provision." Like, what's he mean by that?

    16:27-16:34

    Paul's saying, "To be clear, "I'm not trying to use reverse psychology here "to make you pay me." All right?

    16:34-16:44

    Paul's like, "I'm not trying to be like, "Well, you know, I'm just out here preaching for free." And then you're like, "Oh, poor Paul, preaching for free.

    16:45-16:46

    "We should pay him.

    16:46-16:47

    "He shouldn't have to do that.

    16:47-16:51

    "We should pay him." Paul's like, "I'm not trying to reverse psychology you, okay?

    16:52-17:00

    "This isn't, I'm not throwing this out there "so that you're convicted to pay me." He goes, "That's not it at all." All right, go on.

    17:01-17:09

    He says, "For I would rather die than have anyone deprive me of my ground for boasting." Wow.

    17:10-17:24

    Paul says, "I would rather die than somebody accuse me of using the gospel to rip people off." But what's this boasting thing?

    17:25-17:26

    You see that?

    17:26-17:35

    He says, "Deprive me of my ground for boasting." So that word for boasting literally is rejoicing.

    17:35-17:38

    Usually when we hear boasting we have a bad connotation with that.

    17:38-17:40

    The word literally is rejoicing.

    17:41-17:41

    Okay?

    17:42-17:45

    And boasting is really not a bad thing, it just depends on what you're boasting in.

    17:46-17:48

    Because we're called to boast in the Lord, right?

    17:50-17:52

    But the question is, what is Paul's ground for boasting?

    17:52-17:53

    What is it?

    17:54-17:55

    What's he boasting about?

    17:55-17:58

    What about this is occasion for boasting?

    17:58-18:01

    Well, first he tells us what it's not.

    18:01-18:08

    Look at verse 16, he says, "For if I preach the gospel, that gives me no ground for boasting.

    18:09-18:11

    For necessity is laid upon me.

    18:11-18:14

    Woe to me if I do not preach the gospel.

    18:16-18:28

    If I do this of my own will, I have a reward, but if not of my own will, I am still entrusted with a stewardship." He says, first of all, the boasting is not about preaching the gospel.

    18:28-18:29

    Let's get that off the table.

    18:29-18:34

    That's not...because that's not in the actual preaching the gospel itself.

    18:34-18:47

    I'm not like boasting in the opportunity to preach, because you realize, church, the gospel leaves no room for boasting, right?

    18:49-19:00

    You can't earn your salvation not by what you do, not by who you are, not by who you You know, you cannot do a thing to earn your salvation.

    19:00-19:08

    You can't do a thing to make God happy with you because you are a guilty, rebellious sinner before the eyes of your holy creator.

    19:08-19:09

    That's reality.

    19:10-19:12

    There is not a thing that we can do.

    19:12-19:14

    We are guilty of sin.

    19:15-19:18

    But God, because of His great love, He's given us grace.

    19:18-19:30

    God says, "Because I love you, I am providing salvation, not through what you do, but through what my son did on your behalf." It is a gift, and when you receive a gift, there is no room for boasting.

    19:34-19:36

    So okay, so what is the reward?

    19:36-19:37

    What is it?

    19:38-19:40

    Well, he tells us, look at verse 18.

    19:41-19:43

    He says, "What then is my reward?

    19:44-19:59

    That in my preaching I may present the gospel free of charge, so as not to make full use of my right in the gospel." See, Paul says, "You know what thrills me?

    19:59-20:02

    Do you know what I'm really like fired up about?

    20:03-20:04

    It's this.

    20:05-20:19

    There's this one thing, this one thing that I can choose to do, and that is to preach the gospel for free." In other words, Paul is saying, "God's not making me do this.

    20:22-20:27

    God's not making me lay down my right to be paid." Paul goes, "I chose that.

    20:27-20:29

    That is my contribution.

    20:29-20:31

    That is Paul's contribution to the kingdom.

    20:32-20:38

    I choose to do it for free." He's so excited in this passage.

    20:39-20:45

    He's so excited to forfeit his rights so he can preach.

    20:45-20:52

    Paul's like, it is such a joy for me that I have the ability to love people in a unique way.

    20:52-20:56

    That I can give to them and not get a thing in return from them.

    20:56-20:58

    That is such a joy for me!

    21:01-21:05

    Right now, somebody's like, look good with a shovel.

    21:05-21:08

    I don't get it. I don't get it.

    21:10-21:19

    Who gets joy from denying themselves something that they are rightfully entitled to?

    21:23-21:24

    Who does that?

    21:26-21:29

    The person who wants to win people to Christ, that's who.

    21:33-21:48

    Verse 19, he goes on, "For though I am free from all, "I have made myself a servant to all "that I might win more of them." He's like, I'm free, I'm a child of God.

    21:49-21:55

    My salvation is not based on my performance, but I made myself a servant for the sake of winning people.

    21:57-22:00

    Paul is always about winning people.

    22:01-22:05

    And Paul would do anything to win someone to Christ.

    22:05-22:10

    He found so much joy that he could give up his rights to win people to Christ.

    22:12-22:21

    So what does that look like, to lay down your rights in order to share the gospel?

    22:21-22:25

    What does that look like, to lay down your rights for the sake of evangelism?

    22:26-22:27

    Well, he tells us what it looks like.

    22:27-22:28

    Look at verse 20.

    22:30-22:36

    He says, "To the Jews, I became as a Jew in order to win Jews.

    22:37-22:53

    To those under the law, I became as one under the law, though not being myself under the law, that I might win those under the law." So Paul says, let me tell you what that's like.

    22:53-22:57

    When I'm with the Jews, I'm not going to violate the law in front of them.

    22:59-23:04

    Paul saying, "I'm not going to walk into the synagogue eating a ham sandwich in front of them.

    23:04-23:06

    That would really offend them.

    23:06-23:08

    Like, "Look, I'm free in Christ.

    23:08-23:17

    I can eat a ham sandwich." Like, he goes, "I would never do something like that." I mean this is all through the book of Acts.

    23:20-23:24

    All throughout, you see in Acts chapter 15 with the Jerusalem council, that's what that whole thing was about.

    23:25-23:27

    You see it in Acts chapter 16, that was an interesting story.

    23:28-23:30

    Paul had Timothy circumcised.

    23:31-23:31

    Like why?

    23:31-23:32

    So Timothy can get saved?

    23:32-23:34

    No, no, no, that has nothing to do with that.

    23:36-23:42

    Paul had Timothy circumcised so that they didn't offend the Jews that they were trying to win.

    23:47-23:49

    Boy, that had to have been an awkward exchange, don't you think?

    23:53-23:53

    Did you imagine?

    23:53-24:28

    Paul's like, "I will do whatever it takes to win people!" And Timothy's like, "Yeah!" And Paul's like, "Make any sacrifice for the gospel!" And Timothy's like, "Yeah!" And Paul's like, "Circumcise Timothy!" And Timothy's like, "What?" Paul's like, "Are you committed or not?" That's the point, though.

    24:30-24:31

    Anything.

    24:31-24:32

    What's it going to take?

    24:32-24:33

    What's it going to take?

    24:36-25:05

    He goes on, verse 21, he says, "To those outside the law, I became as one outside the law," being outside the law of God, but under the law of Christ, clarifying. We'll talk about that more in a minute. He says that I might win those outside the law. You see, you also see that in Acts, right? When Paul was with the Gentiles, he acted like the Gentiles.

    25:05-25:11

    Not in a sinful way, but he assimilated with them. You see it in, what is it, Acts 17.

    25:12-25:14

    Paul quoted one of their poets.

    25:14-25:15

    It was a bridge.

    25:15-25:17

    He goes, "You know what one of your poets says?

    25:17-25:24

    Ah, he was on to something." And he uses that as a bridge, but he assimilated with them.

    25:24-25:25

    That's what he's talking about.

    25:25-25:33

    Verse 22, he says, "To the weak I became weak that I might win the weak.

    25:33-25:39

    I have become all things to all people that by all means I might save some." The weak.

    25:40-25:41

    We've been talking about the weak.

    25:41-25:42

    These are the baby Christians.

    25:43-25:45

    These are the people that are coming out of paganism.

    25:45-25:50

    It's just so hard to let go of things that we were so used to.

    25:50-25:54

    And that's what really the whole meat issue was about, right?

    25:54-26:06

    And Paul goes, "Oh, if eating meat is a problem for them, I will be a vegan." And then we land on verse 23.

    26:06-26:06

    Here it is.

    26:08-26:20

    I do it all for the sake of the gospel that I may share with them in its blessings." That's the thesis.

    26:21-26:24

    That's the thesis of the passage.

    26:25-26:30

    That's the thesis of Paul's whole life.

    26:31-26:33

    Everything I do is for the gospel.

    26:35-26:36

    Is that the thesis of your life?

    26:41-26:45

    You see the passion for winning lost people in the past?

    26:45-26:45

    Did you see it?

    26:49-26:50

    Don't miss it.

    26:51-26:53

    You think I'd look good with a shovel, don't miss it.

    26:58-26:59

    It's passion for the lost.

    27:01-27:03

    So on your outline, I just want you to draw some things down here.

    27:06-27:17

    You see, three big ingredients, three things that motivated Paul that I have to ask myself and you have to ask yourself.

    27:20-27:22

    Are you committed to winning people with the gospel?

    27:22-27:22

    Are you?

    27:23-27:24

    Are you?

    27:25-27:30

    Are you committed to winning people with the gospel?

    27:39-27:42

    The first ingredient, it's the most obvious one, right?

    27:42-27:43

    It's sacrifice.

    27:44-27:47

    Sacrifice, do you give up your rights in order to win people?

    27:49-27:51

    Do you give up your rights in order to win people?

    27:53-27:58

    Again, Paul found laying down a freedom for the sake of the gospel to be an absolute joy.

    27:58-28:00

    He goes, "I will go along with whoever I'm with.

    28:02-28:19

    Gray areas, I'll give up anything that might cause an offense." You're like, "Wait, wait, so you're saying that you win people by accommodating them?" No, that's not what we're saying at all.

    28:20-28:23

    You accommodate yourself so that you have the right to speak to people.

    28:24-28:25

    That's what he's saying.

    28:26-28:34

    If you offend somebody because you insist on your freedom, you lost the audience.

    28:35-28:36

    They're not going to hear you.

    28:37-28:41

    That's what he's talking about, removing anything that would offend.

    28:44-28:45

    What does that look like today?

    28:48-28:50

    Here's a few examples today of what that could look like.

    28:50-29:04

    Let's say you have some Catholic friends that you've been witnessing to, and you know that they're faithful Catholics, but you're not sure if they truly know Christ.

    29:04-29:10

    And it's Lent season, and you invite them over to your house for dinner on a Friday.

    29:12-29:13

    You're not serving hamburgers.

    29:16-29:16

    You see?

    29:18-29:20

    You're gonna offend them right out the gate, and they're not gonna hear you.

    29:24-29:30

    Let's say you have some Muslim neighbors, and it's summertime, and you're like, "I wanna reach them with the gospel.

    29:30-29:34

    "I wanna have an opportunity to share Jesus with them." You invite them over to your house for a barbecue.

    29:34-29:36

    You're not having pork at your barbecue.

    29:38-29:41

    You offend them, you've lost your audience.

    29:46-29:48

    Let's talk about the big one.

    29:49-29:56

    Is there any issue in our day that really quickly brings offense?

    29:57-29:58

    Can you think of anything?

    29:59-30:00

    Say anything at all.

    30:00-30:03

    Anything at all that you could mention that people would immediately get offended.

    30:05-30:07

    Politics, right?

    30:10-30:18

    Let's say that you have a neighbor that is a true blue Democrat and you are of the MAGA persuasion.

    30:18-30:20

    This isn't a political statement, okay?

    30:21-30:22

    This is an illustration.

    30:23-30:29

    But if you're inviting your hardcore Democrat friend to your house, you're putting away the MAGA stuff, okay?

    30:30-30:32

    You're not wearing your little red ball cap to the dinner table.

    30:40-30:44

    Why would you want to offend them over something you don't need to offend them over?

    30:44-30:45

    It works the other way too, by the way.

    30:47-30:54

    If you're a Democrat and you have a Republican friend over, take down your Bernie Sanders banner.

    30:57-30:59

    By the way, it's 2026.

    31:01-31:02

    You've needed to take that down anyways.

    31:07-31:13

    And I think one of the biggest places where we're so quick to offend people is in social media.

    31:15-31:20

    Look, if you're one of these social media people, yes, post your Bible verses, sure.

    31:20-31:23

    Post your excerpts from the devotional.

    31:24-31:26

    But can I tell you this just lovingly?

    31:27-31:31

    Stop posting all the political garbage, because you know what you're doing?

    31:32-31:34

    You're losing half your audience.

    31:35-31:38

    And someday you're going to want to tell them about the gospel.

    31:38-31:47

    Someday you're going to have an opportunity, and they're not going to want to hear it because they know that you're on the other side of the political aisle, and we know that automatically makes you a demon.

    31:50-31:56

    Either way, all things to all people.

    31:58-32:00

    Not compromising the gospel.

    32:00-32:01

    We have to be clear about that.

    32:01-32:03

    Not compromising the gospel.

    32:03-32:05

    Church, this is a call for discernment.

    32:05-32:08

    You have to discern what is optional and what is not.

    32:09-32:12

    Some things are not optional, right?

    32:12-32:26

    Some things are not optional, like the truth, like Jesus, like the gospel, like God's command to repent, God's command to believe, not optional.

    32:28-32:29

    Truth is not optional.

    32:29-32:30

    You know what else is not optional?

    32:35-32:48

    walk." Meaning, in no way is Paul saying, he made this very clear, that you should sin to fit in. Right? You think, "Oh, I'm gonna win them. I'm gonna be just like them.

    32:49-33:03

    We're gonna get into the crude anatomy jokes so he'll know I'm one of the boys." No. No. Gossip. Well, they're all gossiping. I jump in the gossip with them. No.

    33:07-33:33

    Getting drunk. No. We're not compromising our walk. That's not optional. But there are some things that are optional. Like we've said, food, music played. Maybe you know they have a big issue with tattoos, and you go to tattoo, you wear long sleeves and cover it up, so you don't offend them.

    33:38-35:08

    Nothing at the expense of the gospel, nothing at the expense of being an ambassador of Christ, but if it's a gray area that might offend, I'll always seek to take the high road, because committed to winning people means committed to giving up your rights. So that's the first S and these are all alliterated. I get paid more when that happens. The second S is steward. What are the ingredients? What are the ingredients of somebody that's committed to people with the gospel? The second one is steward. Do you see yourself as entrusted with the gospel? Do you see yourself as entrusted with the gospel. Look at verse 17 again. The very last phrase, he says, "I am still entrusted with a stewardship." God is trusting you to give this out. He's trusting you. You got a Bible on your lap? He's trusting you with that, to give it out. You're entrusted. Like, "Well, yeah, that's good for Paul. I mean, he obviously was. What about the rest of us? He ropes us all in." Look at 2 Corinthians 5.19. Look, that is, "In Christ, God was reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them, thanks to Jesus.

    35:09-35:21

    Look at this last phrase, "and entrusting to us, us, the message of reconciliation." Do you realize how awesome that is?

    35:22-35:32

    That the God of the universe, your Creator and your Savior said, "Here, here, here is the message that's going to forgive sin.

    35:32-35:35

    Here is the message that's going to transform people.

    35:36-35:39

    Here is the message that's going to save people from hell.

    35:40-35:40

    Here it is.

    35:40-35:41

    Here it is.

    35:41-35:42

    And I'm giving it to you.

    35:47-35:48

    Do you know the gospel?

    35:50-35:51

    You know it?

    35:53-35:56

    If you do, that means that God's entrusting you to make sure that people hear it.

    35:57-35:58

    He's trusting you with it.

    36:02-36:13

    You know, last week, Bob Brown and Jesse Boggs went down to deliver some boxes that were packed.

    36:13-36:22

    Our small groups donated boxes for the needy that were given out through the ministry Vision Appalachia.

    36:24-36:28

    And to nobody's surprise, they packed way more boxes than our target goal, right?

    36:29-36:31

    How many boxes were sent, Bob?

    36:32-36:33

    250.

    36:34-36:38

    How many were asked, like, we were shooting for like 25 or something from this church, right?

    36:39-36:41

    And didn't we get like, we got 30.

    36:41-36:42

    All right.

    36:43-36:44

    Nobody's shocked, Bob.

    36:44-36:45

    Nobody's shocked.

    36:46-36:48

    Again, you guys are so generous.

    36:50-36:53

    But Bob and Jesse took the boxes down.

    36:54-36:58

    Let me ask you, they had the U-Haul trailer right out here.

    36:59-37:08

    Bob, want you another van we had out here?" With all these boxes with the donations for Vision Appalachia, let me ask you this.

    37:09-37:11

    Did Bob and Jesse have a choice in what happened with those boxes?

    37:13-37:14

    Did they have a choice what would happen with them?

    37:16-37:16

    No.

    37:17-37:17

    No.

    37:20-37:21

    Not convinced of that?

    37:21-37:21

    Okay.

    37:22-37:27

    What if Bob would have drove that U-Haul back to his house and him and Jesse threw the mother of all block parties with those supplies.

    37:31-37:32

    Would you have been like, "Good for you, Bob.

    37:33-37:36

    Live it up." Is that what you would have said?

    37:38-37:39

    You would have been like, "What are you doing?

    37:40-37:43

    That was given to you to give to them.

    37:44-37:51

    What are you doing?" We trusted that stuff to them, and they are faithful stewards.

    37:51-37:53

    They got it where it needed to go.

    37:53-37:54

    principle here, church.

    37:55-37:57

    God is trusting you with His message.

    37:58-37:59

    You don't have a choice.

    38:01-38:03

    Like, I don't really feel like a steward.

    38:03-38:04

    You are a steward.

    38:09-38:12

    God did not give you the option to keep it to yourself.

    38:13-38:14

    He didn't give you that option.

    38:17-38:25

    And somehow we get saved and down the road we forget and we get all self-focused and all we care about is our walk with Christ.

    38:31-38:39

    I'm going to tell you, it's so convicting to me, you know, you plant a church because you want to win lost people for Christ.

    38:39-38:43

    You want to win lost people, and then you get down the road, you know what we end up doing?

    38:43-38:47

    We end up swapping complaining sheep with other churches.

    38:47-38:48

    That's what we end up doing.

    38:50-38:59

    The guy complaining about his last church is now here, and the person leaving this church complaining about this one is going there, and we call that doing gospel ministry.

    39:04-39:11

    You know, we're talking about putting up this new building, an opportunity to win more people to Christ, but are we winning people to Christ here and now?

    39:14-39:26

    If we're not passionate for the gospel and reaching lost people here and now, what makes us think that we're going to get this new building and all of a sudden we're going to be magically converted into evangelists.

    39:32-39:35

    Committed to winning people means you've got to see yourself as entrusted with the gospel.

    39:37-39:38

    You're a steward.

    39:41-39:45

    The third S, number three, is shareer.

    39:46-40:00

    a word. You know how I know it's a word? Is my computer didn't give me a red squiggly line underneath it when I typed it. And in my world, that's a word. Share.

    40:02-40:27

    Do you know the joy of sharing the blessings of the gospel? Look, there is there is nothing more exciting than leading someone to Christ. Have you ever done that? If you have, you know, right? If you have, you know. There is nothing more exciting than that, seeing them baptized and knowing that God used you to reach somebody for eternity. There is nothing in the world greater than that.

    40:30-40:45

    Look at verse 23 again. This is the verse, "I do it all for the sake of the gospel," look, "that I may share with them in its pleasures," in its blessings, excuse me, "share with them and its blessings.

    40:51-40:53

    Think of everything you've experienced as a follower of Jesus.

    40:55-40:57

    Everything you experienced, think of it.

    40:58-40:59

    If you're a Christian, you get it.

    41:00-41:01

    You know the forgiveness of sin.

    41:01-41:03

    God will never hold your sins against you.

    41:04-41:17

    You know the joy that comes, the peace that you have no matter how horrible things get, The comfort God gives you in the tragedies of life, the fellowship of the church, oh and the hope of heaven that our best days are ahead of us.

    41:18-41:25

    Everything you experience as a Christian, to go to somebody that doesn't have that and say you can have all of that too.

    41:31-41:36

    Sharing the blessings, that should be a natural inclination, you know?

    41:37-41:37

    You know?

    41:38-41:40

    It's like, imagine this scenario.

    41:40-41:47

    Imagine Erin and I are at a restaurant and we order different dishes, something neither of us have ever had before, but we got different things.

    41:47-41:52

    And I take a bite and I'm like, this is the best thing I've ever tasted.

    41:54-41:55

    I gotta be sure.

    41:55-41:56

    And I take another bite.

    41:57-41:58

    I'm like, yeah, verified.

    41:58-42:02

    This is the best thing I've ever tasted in my life.

    42:06-42:08

    What's the next part of that story?

    42:09-42:18

    Oh, oh, Erin goes, "Can I try it?" I'm like, "No, eat your own." That's not how the story goes, is it?

    42:18-42:19

    That's not how it goes.

    42:19-42:21

    The story goes like this.

    42:22-42:23

    This is the best thing I ever had in my life.

    42:24-42:25

    Erin, you have got to try this.

    42:26-42:27

    You have got to try this.

    42:27-42:29

    And she's like, "I don't want to try it." You're trying it.

    42:31-42:33

    That's actually happened, hasn't it?

    42:34-42:34

    Both ways.

    42:35-42:37

    I'm like, she's like, this is so, I don't wanna try that.

    42:37-42:41

    Erin's like, you know, next thing you know, she's like, the fork can go in your mouth or in your forehead, pick one.

    42:52-42:53

    You gotta try this.

    42:54-43:02

    See, when you have something, when you experience something so glorious, so beautiful, there's something in you that wants to share that.

    43:04-43:05

    God put that in us.

    43:06-43:08

    That's how it is with the gospel, by the way, to that lost person.

    43:09-43:11

    Like, bro, you have got to get in on this.

    43:12-43:33

    You have got to get in on all of the blessings that comes in the gospel, knowing Jesus, the fellowship of the church, serving Him locally and in international missions, worshiping Him together, oh, and heaven, we'll get to share that one for all of eternity.

    43:36-43:42

    One of your greatest joys in life should be winning people to Jesus and sharing in the blessings of knowing Him.

    43:44-43:49

    Because committed to winning people means sharing in the blessings of the gospel.

    43:50-43:55

    Our worship team would make their way back up front.

    43:58-44:02

    Next week, our Easter series begins.

    44:04-44:05

    I don't really like the word Easter.

    44:06-44:07

    It doesn't mean anything to me.

    44:07-44:11

    I call it Resurrection Day, but you know what I mean.

    44:15-44:47

    Our Easter series begins next week, and it's a season where talking about Jesus and inviting someone to church is going to be much more natural. God is entrusting you to share the blessings of the gospel. Will you do whatever it takes to win someone? Let's pray.

    44:50-45:58

    Father in heaven, I confess before you in front of my brothers and sisters here that this passage tears me up because we look at the life of Paul and we look at the life of like Barnabas today, we look at people like that and we see Father Such passion to win lost people and we look inwardly and don't see that in ourselves sometimes, a lot of times. Father we come to you because you're the God who changes us, you're the God who transforms us, and I pray Father, I just pray simply this, that you would stir in the hearts of all of your people here to have the same mindset of Paul, an attitude of sacrifice, an attitude of being a steward, and the joy that comes in sharing the blessings of Christ.

    45:58-46:15

    Stir that spirit in us, Father, so that evangelism isn't some mechanical, obligatory thing that we think we have to do, but it's just so natural for us to to share the glorious gospel of Jesus Christ.

    46:16-46:18

    It's in his name that we pray, amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read
1 Corinthians 9:15-23

  1. What was your big take-away from this passage / message?

  2. How would you respond to someone who says, “I don't really share the Gospel with anyone. I don't know what to say.”?

  3. Reread 1 Cor 9:17. What does Paul mean that he was “entrusted with a stewardship.”? Is that true of all Christians? See 2 Corinthians 5:19.

  4. What are the “blessings to be shared” when you win someone to Christ (1 Cor 9:23)?

Breakout

When was the last time you shared the Gospel with someone or invited them to church? What happened? 

Who has God put on your heart to win with the Gospel? What are you doing about it?

Pray for one another.

Should Pastors Be Paid?

Introduction:

5 Reasons Pastors Should Be Paid: (1 Corinthians 9:1-14)

  1. It's COMMON Sense. (1 Cor 9:7)

  2. It's a CONCERN in the Law. (1 Cor 9:8-11)

    1 Timothy 5:17-18 - Let the elders who rule well be considered worthy of double honor, especially those who labor in preaching and teaching. For the Scripture says, “You shall not muzzle an ox when it treads out the grain,” and, “The laborer deserves his wages.”

  3. It's CLAIMED By Others. (1 Cor 9:12)

  4. It's a CUSTOM from the Old Testament. (1 Cor 9:13)

  5. It's COMMANDED By Jesus. (1 Cor 9:14)

    Luke 10:7for the laborer deserves his wages.

    Matthew 10:10 - the laborer deserves his food.

Sermon Notes (PDF): BLANK
Hint: Highlight blanks above for answers!

  • 00:36-00:40

    Open up those Bibles to 1 Corinthians 9.

    00:44-00:52

    The title of today's message is, "Should Pastors Be Paid?" Yeah.

    00:54-00:57

    I'd like to invite the worship team to come back up as we close.

    00:58-01:00

    If you want to worship through giving, the offering.

    01:04-01:09

    You're like, "You better earn that pay." Fair, fair.

    01:09-01:12

    You know, I was associate pastor for 11 years.

    01:12-01:16

    And one of the things that I did was run the Wednesday night program.

    01:16-01:18

    It was pioneer clubs like Awana's.

    01:18-01:26

    But I'll never forget one girl who was lifelong member of the church from forever.

    01:26-01:27

    She the one little girl came up.

    01:28-01:39

    She goes, "Pastor Jeff, where do you work?" And I'm not gonna say her name 'cause she's an adult now and might be watching this, but I said, "Well, you know where I work.

    01:40-01:42

    "I'm one of the pastors here at the church." She just rolled her eyes.

    01:42-01:46

    She goes, "I know that, but I mean, where do you work?

    01:46-01:49

    "Like, what's your job?

    01:49-02:02

    "Like, what do you do to get paid?" I'm like, "You know, just when you start "to feel pretty good about yourself." Along comes some kid to bring you right back down to earth, right?

    02:03-02:03

    Where do you work?

    02:07-02:09

    Many people hold that opinion, right?

    02:10-02:12

    I mean, being a pastor isn't really work.

    02:15-02:19

    You know, my favorite, you only work for one hour a week.

    02:23-02:24

    And you know what?

    02:24-02:25

    I've heard that so many times.

    02:25-02:27

    I'm quick to correct people on that.

    02:28-02:28

    I'm like, "No.

    02:31-02:32

    I don't work the whole hour.

    02:34-02:36

    My part's only like 35 minutes.

    02:37-02:43

    I work 35 minutes a week." So should pastors be paid?

    02:44-02:47

    When you bring it up, people get weird.

    02:48-02:49

    People get weird.

    02:49-02:51

    Everybody's evaluating the pastor's car.

    02:53-02:55

    Everybody's evaluating the pastor's house.

    02:55-02:58

    Everybody's evaluating the pastor's clothes.

    02:59-03:00

    How much is he making?

    03:03-03:05

    You know nobody does that for other professions, right?

    03:08-03:18

    Like for example, if somebody here is a nurse and you pull up to church driving a Boxter, what are people gonna say?

    03:18-03:20

    "Good for her, good for her.

    03:21-03:23

    Wow, I am so happy for her.

    03:26-03:31

    If I drove up driving a Porsche, what are people gonna say?

    03:35-03:36

    How much is he making?

    03:40-03:49

    I've heard a lot of things over the years, statements people have made, their little evaluations on how pastors should be paid.

    03:49-03:51

    I just want to share a couple with you.

    03:51-03:53

    Just this is, these amuse me.

    03:54-03:57

    But one person told me this regarding how a pastor should be paid.

    03:58-04:10

    He said, "A pastor shouldn't make more "than the lowest paid congregant." So we should find out who in the church makes the least and that should determine the pastor's salary.

    04:13-04:17

    Because after all, the pastor shouldn't make more than anybody else in the church.

    04:19-04:20

    I had one guy tell me this.

    04:21-04:31

    He goes, "I have a real problem "with preachers getting paid by the church." And I said, "What's the issue with that?" He goes, "Think about it this way.

    04:33-04:35

    "You teach tithing, right?

    04:35-04:55

    "10%." I'm like, "I'm following you." He goes, "Okay, so if 10 people give 10%, "now automatically the pastor's making "more than everybody in the church." And I'm like, you're gonna have to back up here 'cause you lost me somewhere on that math.

    04:57-04:58

    I mean, does that math work out?

    05:01-05:02

    Should pastors be paid?

    05:04-05:05

    Awkward.

    05:05-05:07

    Right, it's an awkward subject.

    05:07-05:10

    Can we just get that under, it's an awkward subject to stand up and preach about.

    05:10-05:11

    You're like, well then why are you?

    05:12-05:17

    Because we're going through the book of 1 Corinthians and guess what the subject is of this next section that we are going in?

    05:18-05:24

    "Should pastors be paid?" Yeah, it's going to be awkward to talk about, but you don't be more awkward than that, skipping it.

    05:26-05:26

    Right?

    05:26-05:29

    Because didn't God put it in His Word for a reason?

    05:30-05:31

    And we don't skip anything here.

    05:32-05:33

    So we're going after it.

    05:34-05:35

    We're just going to go after it.

    05:35-05:36

    Should pastors be paid?

    05:37-05:39

    The Bible is clear, yes.

    05:41-05:50

    But some ministers, you know, they live lavishly, and they demand that the church pay for the their extravagant lifestyle, and that is wrong.

    05:52-05:59

    But we can't just disregard what the Bible says just because some people have abused the privilege.

    06:02-06:06

    This section here, we're in 1 Corinthians, it's about liberty.

    06:08-06:21

    You're like, "Well, what is liberty?" It's this, you know, to be saved means that you have to turn from your sin and receive Jesus Christ.

    06:21-06:34

    And when you receive Him, you believe that Jesus died for your sin, when you believe that Jesus resurrected from the dead, when you believe that, the Bible says you are adopted as a child of God.

    06:34-06:36

    And nothing can change that.

    06:37-06:40

    Nothing can separate you from the love of God in Jesus Christ.

    06:41-06:41

    Nothing.

    06:42-06:46

    When you are saved, you are saved as a gift of God's grace.

    06:47-06:48

    Nothing can change that.

    06:51-06:54

    So understand your salvation is not performance-based.

    06:56-06:58

    So that means there's nothing you can do.

    06:58-07:01

    If you're saved, there's nothing you can do that would disqualify you from being a child of God.

    07:01-07:02

    It's not performance-based.

    07:04-07:12

    So the extreme view of that is, well, if it's not performance-based, I'm free to do whatever I want.

    07:15-07:16

    And that's what we're looking at in this section.

    07:17-07:19

    Am I free to do whatever I want?

    07:19-07:38

    Their particular issue, we talked about this last week, was they were, some of the more mature Christians were eating meat that was sacrificed to idols, and they were like, "A burger's a burger." But it bothered some of the weaker Christians who came out of the pagan background and said, You don't want to touch meat that was used in pagan worship.

    07:39-07:46

    And Paul says, "Love says, 'I will give up my rights if it keeps a brother from stumbling.'" I'll give up my rights.

    07:49-08:02

    So understand here in this section that we're looking at today, Paul is saying, "Corinthians, I'm not asking you to do anything that I'm not willing to do.

    08:05-08:10

    Paul is saying here in this section we're looking at, I am laying down a freedom that I have.

    08:10-08:13

    I have the freedom to get paid by the church.

    08:13-08:15

    And Paul says, I laid that freedom down.

    08:17-08:23

    We're going to talk more about that part of it next week, but why would Paul lay that freedom down?

    08:23-08:25

    He knew it would bring offense.

    08:27-08:31

    You see, he knew that there were going to be some people that thought, "Oh, look at this guy.

    08:31-08:35

    There's this new religion and he's using it to cash in.

    08:35-08:36

    He's using it just to make money.

    08:37-08:40

    He's trying to rip you off." So Paul got a job making tents.

    08:40-09:03

    So he's like, "I'm not going to be a financial burden to anybody because I don't want anybody to think that I have an ulterior motive in preaching the gospel." So chapter 9, the section we're looking at today illustrates this whole giving up my liberty issue. I have the freedom to not use my freedom.

    09:05-09:18

    All right, let's bow. I'm going to ask you to pray for me to be faithful to communicate God's Word, and I will pray for you to have a heart open to receive it, and then we'll go right after it. Let's just take a moment and pray.

    09:22-09:23

    by your name and your word, Father.

    09:26-09:30

    We ask you in the mighty name of Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior forever.

    09:31-09:35

    And all of God's people said, amen.

    09:36-09:42

    All right, so the Corinthians are like, hey, we are free in Christ to do what we want.

    09:42-09:44

    Look at chapter nine, verse one.

    09:45-09:46

    Paul says, am I not free?

    09:48-09:49

    Am I not an apostle?

    09:51-09:52

    Paul's like, "I'm free.

    09:53-09:55

    "I'm free to, you know about your freedom?

    09:55-10:08

    "I'm free too." And Paul says, "By the way, I'm not just a pew sitter." Okay, he's like, "I'm an apostle." And as always, when the issue comes up, you're going to have a group of people that were like, "Are you, Paul?

    10:08-10:09

    "Are you really an apostle?

    10:09-10:13

    "Are you really?" Oh, look at what he says.

    10:15-10:18

    "Have I not seen Jesus our Lord?

    10:18-10:25

    "Are not you my workmanship in the Lord?" Paul was always defending himself.

    10:25-10:27

    And right here he goes, "Yeah, I am an apostle.

    10:27-10:28

    "I'll give you two proofs.

    10:28-10:30

    "One is the big one.

    10:30-10:37

    "To be an apostle, you had to have seen "the resurrected Jesus Christ." And Paul's like, "I've seen him." Like, did Paul see Jesus?

    10:37-10:39

    Yeah, at least three times.

    10:39-10:42

    Oh, by the way, one of those times was actually in Corinth.

    10:42-10:43

    What's that, Acts chapter 18?

    10:46-10:56

    Paul says, "I have another proof." He goes, "You want another proof of my apostleship?" He goes, "You, you are my proof." What do you mean by that?

    10:56-10:57

    Look at verses two and three.

    10:58-11:07

    He says, "If to others I am not an apostle, "at least I am to you, "for you are the seal of my apostleship in the Lord.

    11:08-11:30

    "This is my defense to those who would examine me." Paul says, "Some might not believe that I'm apostle, but you cannot deny the way that the Lord has worked through me to you." He says, "You're my seal." See, in those days, if somebody wanted to authenticate a letter, they would put a wax seal with the signet ring.

    11:31-11:32

    That was to say, "This is genuine.

    11:32-11:35

    This is real." Paul goes, "You want to know that I'm real?

    11:35-11:48

    Do you want to know that I'm authentic?" He goes, "You're my proof, because God has ministered the gospel through me to you." These are the evidences that I'm an apostle.

    11:48-11:53

    So, verse 4, do we not have the right to eat and drink?

    11:55-11:57

    That's obviously sarcasm.

    11:58-12:03

    I was like, "Yeah, I'm an apostle and God has used me, so I'm not allowed to eat?" Is that what you're saying?

    12:06-12:10

    I've been faithful to your souls, I've been faithful to the Lord, but I don't get to eat?

    12:11-12:20

    He's saying, "I don't get to… are you saying that I don't get to earn a living from the work that I do in the Lord?" Look at verse 5.

    12:24-12:32

    He says, "Do we not have the right to take along a believing wife, as do the other apostles and the brothers of the Lord and Cephas?

    12:34-12:39

    Or is it only Barnabas and I who have no right to refrain from working for a living?

    12:41-12:49

    Paul's like, "Other ministers are supported." So much so that other ministers actually take their wives along with them.

    12:50-12:52

    So you support them.

    12:56-12:57

    What about me?

    12:57-13:00

    Do I have the right to be supported by the church?

    13:01-13:03

    See what Paul's doing here.

    13:03-13:06

    in this little introduction, he's setting this all up.

    13:07-13:19

    He goes, "This freedom that I am laying down, is it actually a freedom that I have?" As we look at verses 7-14, Paul here is establishing that this is a right.

    13:19-13:21

    This is legitimate.

    13:21-13:25

    Ministers have the right to be supported by the church.

    13:25-13:26

    He's proving that in this section.

    13:29-13:35

    And in Paul's day, as in ours, there are people that are going to doubt the premise.

    13:36-13:38

    Like, really, should ministers be paid?

    13:38-13:38

    Really?

    13:39-13:40

    Not sure about that.

    13:40-13:41

    Should they, is it really work?

    13:42-13:46

    35 minutes, rather, 35 minutes a week, is that really work?

    13:47-13:48

    Should we be paying you for that?

    13:52-13:56

    Well, Paul gives five reasons why you should pay the pastor.

    13:57-13:57

    All right?

    13:59-14:00

    "Jot these down.

    14:00-14:08

    By the way, you're paying me overtime this week 'cause I spent some extra time making sure these were alliterated.

    14:09-14:12

    I don't always do that, but when I do, I charge extra.

    14:13-14:23

    And I charge by the word, that's why the sermons are so long." So five reasons a pastor should be paid.

    14:23-14:24

    Number one, I love this.

    14:24-14:26

    He just knocks this one right out.

    14:26-14:26

    It's common sense.

    14:27-14:28

    It's common sense.

    14:28-14:30

    Look at verse 7.

    14:32-14:36

    Paul says, "Who serves as a soldier at his own expense?

    14:38-14:40

    Who plants a vineyard without eating any of its fruit?

    14:41-14:48

    Or who tends a flock without getting some of the milk?" Obvious point, right?

    14:49-14:52

    A man earns his living by his work.

    14:53-14:55

    And he gives three examples.

    14:56-15:00

    A soldier, a farmer, and a shepherd.

    15:03-15:09

    Imagine as Paul calls us to here, imagine doing those jobs at your own expense.

    15:10-15:11

    Imagine that.

    15:11-15:13

    That's ludicrous, right?

    15:14-15:14

    Like what do you do?

    15:14-15:15

    I work at Target.

    15:17-15:17

    Why do you work at Target?

    15:18-15:25

    "Well, just trying to pay the bills so in my free time I can be in the army." Like what?

    15:26-15:27

    Paul's like, "Who does that?

    15:28-15:36

    That's called a hobby if you're doing it without being compensated.

    15:36-15:41

    Their families are fed from the work that they do." So it should be true for pastors.

    15:41-15:42

    It's common sense.

    15:43-15:47

    should earn from the work that they do.

    15:50-15:55

    And I have to add, church, that this is also extremely practical when you think about it.

    15:55-15:57

    The church benefits from a focused pastor.

    16:00-16:05

    You're going to get your best work from the pastor if he's not distracted.

    16:06-16:07

    I mean, think about it.

    16:07-16:43

    If the pastor has to provide for his family by working another job, how much gas is left tank to be a pastor. And you're like, "Eh, doesn't look that hard." Well, I want you to think about your job, whatever you do. You're nine to five, whether you work in a bank, work in HVAC, community, you know, some kind of like social service function, think Think of what you do.

    16:44-16:52

    When your shift ends, do you feel like you would be able to effectively pastor a church on top of that?

    16:55-16:59

    Again, I don't care if you're with the police, a computer programmer.

    17:00-17:05

    Imagine working all day doing that, and then you get home and now you've got to write a sermon.

    17:06-17:07

    Oh, and you have two counseling appointments.

    17:07-17:09

    And make sure you squeeze time in.

    17:09-17:17

    you've got to follow up with these new people at church, oh, and then you have a ministry team meeting on top of that.

    17:17-17:21

    Are you really going to do all of that on top of your nine to five?

    17:24-17:25

    It's common sense.

    17:26-17:33

    You see, if a pastor has to work another job, it's easy for him to phone it in when it comes to the church work, right?

    17:33-17:37

    Well, I've got to work at Target so that I can pay my bills.

    17:38-17:39

    the church stuff is just going to have to wait.

    17:39-17:42

    I sure hope they're not expecting a decent sermon this week.

    17:44-17:45

    It's just common sense.

    17:45-17:47

    People should get wages.

    17:49-17:52

    People should benefit from their workplace.

    17:52-17:53

    That's where he starts.

    17:54-17:55

    It's common sense.

    17:55-17:58

    Number two, five reasons pastors should be paid.

    17:58-18:02

    Five reasons Paul says this is a right for pastors to be paid.

    18:02-18:05

    Number two is it's a concern in the law.

    18:05-18:06

    It's a concern in the law.

    18:09-18:10

    Like, what do you mean?

    18:10-18:11

    Well, look at verse eight.

    18:12-18:17

    Paul says, "Do I say these things on human authority?" Like, you think I'm making this up?

    18:19-18:22

    He says, "Does not the law say the same?

    18:23-18:37

    "For it is written in the law of Moses, "you shall not muzzle an ox when it treads out the grain." That's Deuteronomy 25 verse 4.

    18:38-18:43

    Like, what do you mean an ox treading out the grain?

    18:43-18:47

    It was actually an Egyptian trick that Israel adopted.

    18:49-19:01

    They would tie a big round flat stone to an ox, and they would have the ox drag the stone over the wheat to crush it to remove the husk.

    19:03-19:13

    Okay, so you have this ox helping you prepare food, doing this hard work of dragging a stone.

    19:13-19:19

    Now how cruel would it be to put a muzzle on the ox while he's doing that?

    19:19-19:22

    Like you have to drag the stone, but you're not allowed to eat.

    19:23-19:27

    Oh, you're going to stand on top of food all day, but you're not allowed to take a bite.

    19:28-19:28

    That's inhumane.

    19:36-19:37

    That's the point.

    19:39-19:41

    Look at verse 9, second part.

    19:44-19:56

    He says, "Is it for oxen that God is concerned?" Does He not speak entirely for our sake?

    19:57-20:15

    It was written for our sake, because the plowman should plow in hope, and the thresher thresh in hope of sharing in the crop." See Paul's point, you know, the whole don't muzzle an ox while it's treading out the grain.

    20:15-20:27

    Paul's like, "You think God's concerned about the ox?" Look, I don't think God has anything against ox, oxen, oxes, oxen, oxen.

    20:27-20:28

    Thank you, Randy.

    20:28-20:28

    Oxen.

    20:28-20:31

    I don't think God's against oxen.

    20:31-20:32

    He created them.

    20:32-20:33

    I think God loves oxen.

    20:34-20:42

    Paul's like, "Do you think he wrote that in the law for the oxen who are going to be reading the law?" Like, "Hey, wait a second.

    20:43-20:48

    You're not supposed to muzzle me while I'm working." I think he didn't write that for the oxen.

    20:50-20:51

    But don't do it now.

    20:51-20:52

    You can do it later.

    20:53-20:56

    You get some time, turn back to that reference in Deuteronomy.

    20:56-21:01

    And you're going to see that section of Deuteronomy has nothing to do with animals.

    21:02-21:05

    Nothing to do with how to treat the livestock.

    21:05-21:06

    It has nothing to do with that.

    21:07-21:12

    It has everything to do with people.

    21:12-21:13

    And how you treat people.

    21:15-21:17

    You see, it's a figure of speech.

    21:17-21:21

    We use animals in figures of speech all the time, don't we?

    21:22-21:25

    Don't look a gift horse in the mouth, two birds with one stone, all of that.

    21:25-21:26

    It was a figure of speech.

    21:28-21:36

    And Paul reminds us here, look, when God wrote that through Moses, He wasn't really concerned about the oxen, He was concerned about man.

    21:38-21:44

    And the point of that expression is the worker deserves to benefit from his work, obviously, right?

    21:45-22:02

    Luke 11, he says, "If we have sown spiritual things among you, is it too much if we reap material things from you?" Sown spiritual things.

    22:05-22:09

    That's all I'm trying to do for this church.

    22:10-22:13

    There are many people in this church that I have led to Christ.

    22:16-22:23

    There's many people in this church that I've not only taught the Bible, but I've taught how to teach the Bible.

    22:25-22:35

    There are people in this church that I have counseled out of disaster, comforted you and your family at funerals.

    22:36-22:37

    I married a lot of people here.

    22:39-22:45

    I've come along leaders to try to encourage them in their particular ministries.

    22:46-22:57

    None of this is meant to be boastful or "Hey, look at me." I'm just saying objectively, this is what I'm striving to do among you.

    22:59-23:01

    So is it out of line to support me in doing those things?

    23:03-23:05

    Am I asking too much?

    23:07-23:10

    Or do you see no value in anything that I do?

    23:12-23:16

    Now look, I am so thankful.

    23:16-23:18

    This church has always supported me and my family.

    23:20-23:24

    And I am so thankful to God for you and your support.

    23:27-23:34

    It would absolutely grieve me though if you thought that I wasn't worth it.

    23:35-23:43

    Like, yeah, we'll support him, but I mean, does he really bring something to the table?

    23:48-23:57

    Some churches, well, they do justify no pay or meager pay for the pastors.

    23:58-23:59

    Some churches justify that.

    23:59-24:01

    You can't pay the pastor very much.

    24:01-24:01

    Why?

    24:02-24:04

    Gotta keep 'em humble, right Pastor Taylor?

    24:06-24:07

    Gotta keep 'em humble.

    24:07-24:11

    Pastor Taylor gets paid two Kit Kats a week, that's all he gets from the church.

    24:12-24:14

    Because we're gonna keep 'em humble.

    24:16-24:18

    We don't want 'em to get swollen head.

    24:19-24:21

    So we gotta keep 'em humble.

    24:21-24:30

    Listen, that is an unbiblical mindset, completely backwards to what the Bible says about the way you treat your pastor.

    24:31-24:32

    Right?

    24:34-24:37

    1 Timothy 5, look what Paul told Timothy.

    24:38-24:50

    He says, "Let the elders who rule well be considered worthy of double honor, especially those who labor in preaching and teaching." You know what he means by double honor?

    24:51-24:55

    He doesn't mean like, thank you, thank you.

    24:58-24:58

    Great job, great job.

    24:58-24:59

    That's not what he means at all.

    25:00-25:02

    You look at the context, he's talking about pay.

    25:04-25:07

    He's saying you should double my pay.

    25:09-25:11

    You get the point there, right?

    25:12-25:14

    Not keep them humble.

    25:14-25:17

    He's like, those who preach the word of God deserve double honor.

    25:18-25:24

    He says, for the scripture says, you shall not muzzle an ox when it treads out the grain.

    25:25-25:29

    and the laborer deserves his wages.

    25:33-25:37

    And right now some Bible scholar is like, oh, okay, don't muzzle the ox.

    25:38-25:40

    Okay, Pastor Jeff, that's Old Testament.

    25:40-25:42

    We don't live under the Old Testament.

    25:45-25:52

    Well, we abide under the principles of the law, especially when they're repeated in the New Testament.

    25:53-25:53

    All right?

    25:54-25:55

    The five reasons pastors should be paid.

    25:56-25:58

    Paul says it's common sense.

    25:58-25:59

    It's a concern in the law.

    25:59-26:01

    Number three, write this down, it's claimed by others.

    26:02-26:04

    It's claimed by others.

    26:07-26:21

    Verse 12, he says, "If others share this rightful claim on you, do not we even more?" Paul's like, "Oh, by the way, it's not weird or unusual.

    26:23-26:25

    In fact, there's precedent for it.

    26:27-26:27

    Right?

    26:28-26:30

    Many of you do support others.

    26:31-26:39

    And you should, but there's many people here that you're like, I support certain missionaries or I support world vision, or I support Samaritan's Purse.

    26:39-26:41

    I support all these people.

    26:41-26:46

    And Paul here is just simply saying, hey, what about the shepherd who has devoted his life to caring for you?

    26:47-26:47

    What about that guy?

    26:48-26:49

    Should he be paid?

    26:49-26:50

    Should he be supported?

    26:53-27:03

    And my whole life revolves around caring for you, praying for you, discipling you.

    27:06-27:15

    And some people are like, "Well, you know, I listen to such and such preacher on the Facebooks or the YouTubes or whatever.

    27:15-27:22

    I listen to Jack Hibbs, so my tithe goes to Jack Hibbs." Okay.

    27:28-27:32

    But when you need counseling, do you think Jack Hibbs is going to come and counsel you?

    27:34-27:39

    You know, if you have a tragedy, do you think Jack Hibbs is going to be at your house to pray for you, pray with you?

    27:42-27:43

    Does Jack Hibbs even know who you are?

    27:46-27:46

    That's Paul's point here.

    27:47-27:49

    Paul's like, "Others share the rightful claim.

    27:49-28:12

    "You support others." Paul's like, "How can you not support the one who loves you?" He goes on in verse 12, he goes, "Nevertheless, we have not made use of this right, "but we endure anything rather than put an obstacle "in the way of the gospel of Christ." That's the whole point of broaching the subject.

    28:13-28:25

    We have the freedom to get paid, but Paul says, "I laid that freedom down." Just as I'm telling you to do about eating the meat sacrifice to the idols, it's okay.

    28:25-28:28

    It's okay to lay your freedom down sometimes.

    28:30-28:32

    We're going to get into that more next week.

    28:33-28:36

    This week though, he's giving us five reasons a preacher should be paid.

    28:36-28:39

    And here's number four, it's a custom from the Old Testament.

    28:40-28:46

    It's common sense, it's a concern in the law, it's claimed by others, and it's a custom from the Old Testament.

    28:47-28:48

    Look at verse 13.

    28:49-29:03

    He says, "Do you not know that those who are employed in the temple service get their food from the temple, and those who serve at the altar share in the sacrificial offerings.

    29:06-29:09

    Do a little study sometime, Old Testament law.

    29:09-29:16

    In the Old Testament, priests were supported for their work by their work.

    29:18-29:26

    All of the sacrifices that were given under Old Testament law realized the priest received a portion of what was offered in some way, shape, or form.

    29:26-29:27

    That's what Paul's talking about here.

    29:31-29:41

    And I was studying this this week, and I'm like, why did he sort of, he kind of said that in verse seven, right?

    29:42-29:43

    The same thing.

    29:43-29:46

    So why did he bring this up again?

    29:46-29:47

    And then it hit me.

    29:50-29:54

    Verse seven, he gave secular examples.

    29:56-29:57

    You know, the soldier, the farmer, the shepherd.

    29:57-29:59

    He gave secular examples.

    29:59-30:23

    And there are some in the church that would say, "Okay, Paul, you're using secular reasoning and you're trying to apply it to the spiritual realm." And I think what Paul's doing here is saying, "Look, yes, this principle, you should be supported for the work that you do, by your work." It's true in the secular world and it's true in the sacred world too.

    30:23-30:25

    So Paul's like, "Don't act like this is a new thing.

    30:26-30:31

    supporting the spiritual leaders, because it's a custom that goes way back to the Old Testament.

    30:35-30:40

    Number five, five reasons pastors should be paid.

    30:41-30:45

    It's common sense, it's a concern in the law, it's claimed by others, it's a custom from the Old Testament.

    30:46-30:57

    Last and probably most important, I would say, I think that's why it's last, it's commanded by Jesus.

    31:00-31:01

    It's commanded by Jesus.

    31:02-31:17

    Look at verse 14, "In the same way, the Lord commanded that those who proclaim the gospel should get their living by the gospel." Wait a minute, when did Jesus say that?

    31:18-31:20

    Well, He said that a couple of times.

    31:21-31:34

    In Luke chapter 10, Jesus was sending out the 72 and He was talking about, you can look this up later, the people that believe you should be the ones that feed you.

    31:34-31:41

    So Jesus in sending them out said, "For the laborer deserves his wages." What's the context of that?

    31:42-32:06

    And again in Matthew 10, verse 10, Jesus was sending out the twelve, and He says, "The people that believe you should be the people who support you." And that's why He said, "The laborer deserves his food." In both cases, Jesus was saying those who preach the gospel must be supported by those who believe the gospel.

    32:07-32:14

    In other words, believers, we could say church members, should financially support their leaders.

    32:17-32:23

    If you're a guest here today, I want you to understand you're under no obligation to give.

    32:24-32:29

    Don't feel guilty or like, "Well, I probably should." If you're a guest, be our guest.

    32:31-32:32

    There's zero obligation.

    32:35-32:37

    is something that we are to share as a church family.

    32:39-32:39

    All right?

    32:43-32:45

    But nevertheless, the Lord commanded it.

    32:46-32:48

    Those who proclaim the gospel should get their living by the gospel.

    32:50-33:01

    So Paul, in this whole section, is saying as a minister of the gospel, I have every right to expect you to support me, but I laid that right down.

    33:03-33:19

    I thought it might be an obstacle to the work, so because I love you, I didn't take financial support from you." Paul's like, "I'm trying to show you something, that when you love, you're willing to lay down your rights.

    33:21-33:56

    When you love, you're willing to lay down your freedoms." Paul is just simply saying, as we'll see next week, "Follow my example." Right now you're like, "Okay, pay the pastor, fine." Well my hope is not that you reluctantly get on board with giving, but I want you to see the bigger picture of why you give.

    33:57-34:00

    Yes, giving primarily is an act of worship.

    34:00-34:01

    We've had a whole sermon series about that.

    34:02-34:03

    Giving is an act of worship.

    34:04-34:08

    But also I want you to think about the tangible effects of giving.

    34:11-34:14

    When you give, my family is supported.

    34:16-34:22

    And that frees me from trying to do ministry on top of a nine to five job.

    34:22-34:25

    It lets me stay focused on caring for you.

    34:25-34:35

    Understand that when you give, look at the big picture, you're freeing me up so that I can care for everybody in this church to the best of my ability.

    34:39-34:39

    Everyone benefits.

    34:41-34:44

    When you give, other staff are paid.

    34:44-34:47

    That allows us to worship in excellent music.

    34:48-35:07

    It helps us disciple your children and young adults to minister on a personal level through the oversight of our entire small group ministry and so many more things that are able to happen that couldn't happen if you weren't financially supporting the leadership of the church.

    35:09-35:15

    Oh, oh, oh, and when you give, understand that you're supporting a whole network of ministers in Thailand.

    35:17-35:30

    Do you know in northern Thailand and beyond, we have 23 churches, we have four children's homes, we have a Bible institute, and do you know how many people stateside support them?

    35:33-35:34

    Just this church.

    35:35-35:49

    You, when you give, you are allowing the work of evangelism happen all over that area of the world through our network of churches.

    35:52-35:55

    Disciples are made all over Northern Thailand and beyond.

    35:57-36:08

    When you give, that is your way of actively partnering with me in advancing the kingdom of Jesus Christ.

    36:10-36:12

    I'd like you to bow your heads as the worship team makes their way up.

    36:16-36:29

    Father in heaven, it felt awkward to have to give a message like this, but God, it's your word.

    36:29-36:30

    We don't skip anything.

    36:32-36:34

    We just want to go after what you said.

    36:35-36:46

    Father, I thank you for the way that this church has always sought to support me and my family.

    36:48-36:53

    Financially sure, but so many other ways this church has sought to bless and protect my family.

    36:54-36:55

    God, I thank you so much for these people.

    36:56-36:58

    This is from you, God, and I thank you for that.

    36:59-37:11

    I just pray, Father, that looking at a passage like this, you would give us sort of a bigger picture of the way your economy works and why you have called us to certain things that you've called us to.

    37:15-37:24

    God, we believe that all things are yours, and we believe, God, that you have called us to be faithful stewards with everything that you give us.

    37:27-37:32

    We thank you for the privilege and all the ways that you've called us to partner with you in the work of the ministry.

    37:33-37:38

    Thank You, Father, for the spirit of generosity that You have stirred among Your people here.

    37:39-37:47

    And as King David prayed in preparation for the temple, might that spirit always be found in Your people.

    37:48-37:50

    We pray in Jesus' name, amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read
1 Corinthians 9:1-14

  1. What was your big take-away from this passage / message?

  2. Explain why Paul broaches the subject of paying the pastor in the first place. What does that have to do with their question about Christian liberty?

  3. What are some practical benefits that come when a pastor doesn't have to work outside the church?

  4. How would you respond to someone who says, “Pastors should have a job like everyone else! It's not fair that the pastor has money when some people in the congregation are struggling financially.”

Breakout

Pray for one another.

Am I Free to Do Whatever I Want?

Introduction:

Three Valid Reasons for Liberty (that Don't Work When You Have a Weaker Brother). (1 Corinthians 8:1-13)

  1. I Have KNOWLEDGE. (1 Cor 8:1-3)

    Philippians 1:9And it is my prayer that your love may abound more and more, with knowledge and all discernment

  2. I Have WISDOM. (1 Cor 8:4-7)

  3. I Have GOOD THEOLOGY. (1 Cor 8:8-13)

    Matthew 18:6 - whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a great millstone fastened around his neck and to be drowned in the depth of the sea.

    Matthew 25:40 - Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me.

Sermon Notes (PDF): BLANK
Hint: Highlight blanks above for answers!

  • 00:36-00:39

    Open up those Bibles to 1 Corinthians 8.

    00:41-00:49

    Oh, that sweet, sweet, quiet lull of early service on Daylight Saving Sunday.

    00:51-00:52

    So tranquil.

    00:54-00:55

    Let's kick that up, shall we?

    00:55-00:56

    Let's have a fight.

    00:58-01:01

    Amen, somebody came ready to rumble.

    01:04-01:06

    Not like a fist fight.

    01:07-01:09

    Let's just have a good old fashioned argument.

    01:10-01:12

    All right, that'll get the blood boiling.

    01:13-01:15

    All in favor of having an argument?

    01:16-01:16

    Some of you.

    01:17-01:18

    (congregation laughing)

    01:19-01:20

    Little too eager.

    01:21-01:22

    All right, here we go.

    01:23-01:24

    Is a hot dog a sandwich?

    01:27-01:29

    Oh, did you hear that Pastor Taylor?

    01:30-01:31

    Apparently we struck a nerve.

    01:32-01:34

    Show of hands, how many people say that a hot dog is a sandwich?

    01:35-01:36

    Okay.

    01:37-01:39

    Some of you, okay, how many people insist that it's not?

    01:41-01:41

    Whoa.

    01:43-01:46

    Whoa, you might wanna pump the brakes on that.

    01:46-01:49

    I mean, what, it's like meat and condiments in bread, right?

    01:51-01:53

    Isn't that the very definition of a sandwich?

    01:54-01:57

    And you're like, well, but it's shaped different.

    01:58-01:59

    Well, I'm shaped different.

    01:59-02:00

    Does that mean I'm not a human?

    02:00-02:01

    Like, come on, what's that?

    02:05-02:07

    Some of you are a little too emotional about that.

    02:09-02:10

    It's silly though, right?

    02:10-02:14

    We're not really going to fight about that.

    02:16-02:24

    But when we get to this next section in 1 Corinthians, believe it or not, and you will, it was a food controversy.

    02:25-02:26

    That's what's going on.

    02:26-02:31

    They had a food controversy, but it wasn't about hot dogs.

    02:33-02:40

    It was about something that was much bigger problem for the church.

    02:41-02:44

    All right, let's just stop for a minute.

    02:44-02:51

    This is a challenging text, but we are going to get through it together.

    02:52-02:55

    I'm gonna ask you to pray for me, and I will pray for you.

    02:56-02:58

    Let's see what the Lord has to teach us today in His Word.

    02:58-03:01

    All right, let's just take a moment and pray.

    03:09-03:11

    Father, fire us up to receive your Word.

    03:13-03:17

    We don't wanna go into a lull because we lost an hour of sleep or whatever.

    03:17-03:23

    God, this is your Word, and we should be excited to see what it is that you have told us in your Word.

    03:26-03:30

    and we should be looking to see how we can reflect the truth of your word in our lives.

    03:30-03:46

    So God, give us the faith to really believe what you said to the point that it takes root, to the point that it's manifest in our hearts, in our minds, in our attitudes, and ultimately in our conduct.

    03:47-03:57

    We pray all of this in the name of Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior, and all of God's people said, Amen, amen.

    03:57-04:03

    In this section in 1 Corinthians, it's kind of like a big Q&A session, right?

    04:03-04:05

    And look at chapter eight, verse one.

    04:06-04:07

    Do you see the first two words in your Bible?

    04:08-04:13

    He says, in this chapter, he says, "Now concerning." We talked about that, right?

    04:13-04:17

    It seems to be like, okay, next subject, right?

    04:17-04:20

    That's his clue that we're moving on to a new subject.

    04:21-04:46

    And the next topic that again is going to span next three chapters is Christian liberty. Just in case we didn't offend anybody with the last part of it, let's talk about liberty, shall we? Am I free to do whatever I want? I'm free in Christ! I can do whatever I want to do, right? Right?

    04:46-04:46

    Right?

    04:46-04:46

    Right?

    04:50-04:53

    Oh, legalism versus liberty.

    04:54-04:58

    It's the issue literally as old as the church herself.

    05:01-05:02

    Legalism.

    05:04-05:05

    That's one side.

    05:05-05:06

    Legalism.

    05:06-05:11

    The people that are legalists say to be accepted by God, here's some things you can't do.

    05:11-05:13

    Here's your list of things that you cannot do.

    05:14-05:16

    And if you keep the list, you're accepted by God.

    05:17-05:19

    That's the legalist likes the rules.

    05:19-05:24

    But on the other hand, you have the liberty people.

    05:26-05:28

    The liberty people say, "Hey, I'm saved by grace.

    05:28-05:30

    My performance doesn't matter.

    05:30-05:35

    Nothing can change the fact that I'm saved by grace and I can do whatever I want to do.

    05:36-05:38

    Nothing will separate me from the love of Christ.

    05:38-05:55

    I am free to do whatever I want to do." Well their particular liberty issue that became a problem for the church is what Paul is addressing in chapter 8, 9, and through 10.

    05:57-05:57

    Here's their issue.

    05:59-06:01

    Look again, chapter 8, verse 1.

    06:01-06:15

    He said, "Now concerning food offered to idols." That's meat that was sacrificed to a pagan God.

    06:17-06:19

    Like what in the world is going on here?

    06:21-06:24

    Understand in the Greek culture, they had gods for everything.

    06:25-06:29

    It was part of every aspect of life.

    06:30-06:33

    There was a God for literally everything.

    06:37-06:48

    And when a pagan worshiper would offer a sacrifice to a God, that sacrifice was divided into three parts.

    06:49-06:59

    Part was burned for the pagan God, part went home with the worshiper, but then the third part went with the priest.

    07:00-07:02

    The pagan priest, right?

    07:04-07:05

    How much pot roast can you eat?

    07:06-07:11

    Okay, so you can imagine, these priests, they had an abundance.

    07:11-07:14

    So they would take the extra down and sell it at the market.

    07:17-07:29

    There was other pagan meat at the market as well, because in the Greek culture, they believed that an evil spirit could enter you through what you ate.

    07:29-07:31

    So they believed that an evil spirit could get in the meat.

    07:31-07:34

    And when you ate the meat, now you had the evil spirit inside you.

    07:35-07:41

    So they would sacrifice to a God who would make sure that there were no evil spirits in the meat.

    07:41-07:53

    And on top of that, because it was such a pagan culture, the temple was sort of the community center, meaning weddings and parties were commonly held at the temple.

    07:53-07:55

    You're gonna see that come up here in this text.

    07:55-08:04

    And here's the point, my friends, Almost all the meat in this culture was used for pagan worship somehow.

    08:05-08:06

    Almost all of it.

    08:10-08:11

    So maybe you begin to see the problem.

    08:13-08:19

    For the church, for the Christians, for the Jesus followers, there was division.

    08:20-08:27

    For some, they were like, "Should we eat the pagan meat?" Absolutely not.

    08:27-08:28

    I'm not touching that.

    08:29-08:32

    They use that meat in pagan worship.

    08:32-08:34

    I'm not touching that with a 10 foot pole.

    08:35-08:37

    No way am I touching that.

    08:39-08:46

    And then there were more mature believers that were like, a hamburger is a hamburger, bro.

    08:48-08:50

    The boogeyman doesn't live in the hamburger.

    08:51-08:52

    Just eat it.

    08:52-08:52

    Come on.

    08:55-08:57

    Can you see why that would be a problem in the church?

    09:00-09:16

    People saying, "Eat the meat." People saying, "Absolutely, you shouldn't go near it." So in chapter eight here, and we're gonna be looking at the whole chapter, Paul is addressing the mature Christians who insisted on their liberty.

    09:19-09:26

    These mature Christians who said, "Hey, it bothers some of the weaker Christians that we eat the meat, but look, I'm free in Christ.

    09:27-09:28

    It's not haunted meat.

    09:28-09:31

    Am I not free to eat the meat if I want to eat the meat?

    09:38-09:44

    I'm gonna go way out on a limb here and guess that this probably isn't an issue for this church.

    09:45-09:46

    Right?

    09:48-09:58

    I don't imagine you've had to sit down at the table debate whether or not the boogeyman was in the steak, if you should eat it or not.

    10:02-10:06

    But you know there's always been issues of legalism and liberty in the church.

    10:07-10:25

    Always. Always. Okay so we're not arguing about the pagan meat, but I mean look at look at church history. We have this, even very recently, we are constantly At odds trying to figure out some things.

    10:26-10:28

    Issues of legalism versus liberty.

    10:30-10:32

    Like things like playing cards.

    10:34-10:39

    I know young people that might be hard to believe, but there was a time that that was a big issue in the church.

    10:39-10:41

    Should you be allowed to play cards?

    10:43-10:50

    Things like dancing, movies, hairstyle, dress.

    10:50-10:50

    Yes.

    10:53-10:55

    Things you can do on Sunday.

    10:57-10:59

    You can't go to a restaurant 'cause you're making people work.

    10:59-11:00

    You can't wash your car on Sunday.

    11:00-11:01

    That's considered work.

    11:02-11:05

    And you're breaking the Sabbath and there's so much wrong with that thinking.

    11:05-11:06

    But it's an issue.

    11:07-11:08

    It's an issue.

    11:09-11:11

    Things like yoga.

    11:16-11:20

    Last and certainly my favorite, Trick or treat.

    11:26-11:27

    I hate Halloween.

    11:29-11:32

    Not because you dress up like Spider-Man and get a Kit Kat.

    11:32-11:33

    I think that's kind of cool.

    11:34-11:42

    But just what it does in the church, because you have people that are like, it's fun, let's let them dress up and get candy and see the neighbors.

    11:42-11:45

    And then you have people that are like, it's demonic.

    11:46-11:49

    And like, I don't know what to do.

    11:51-11:53

    That's kind of the flavor of what we're getting here.

    11:55-11:56

    See, all these things are gray areas.

    11:56-12:04

    There's nothing explicit in the Bible that we can point to where the Bible says, do not do this, do not go trick or treating, do not dance.

    12:05-12:09

    Yet we can't find verses in the Bible that explicitly say.

    12:09-12:12

    So what do we do with these gray areas?

    12:12-12:18

    And the liberty person would say, I'm free to do whatever I want to do.

    12:19-12:20

    'Cause I'm free in Christ.

    12:20-12:22

    I'm free in Christ, man.

    12:22-12:24

    I can do whatever I want, right?

    12:27-12:28

    No.

    12:29-12:37

    No, not if doing one of these gray area things could cause a brother to sin.

    12:40-13:34

    So Paul addressing their issue with the meat gives us principles that apply for all times even until today. I want you to think about this scenario as we go through this passage because here's a real-life scenario that could happen to you where you need to apply these principles, this could happen to you this week. Just imagine the issue of alcohol. First of all, are you free to drink alcohol? Well, the Bible warns about drunkenness, but yes, the Bible does not say, "Thou shalt not ever touch alcohol." Okay? So yes, technically you are free, you are free to drink alcohol.

    13:37-13:42

    If you're of age and avoid drunkenness and all that, sure, sure, sure.

    13:43-13:50

    Okay, but imagine this scenario, a man who recently comes to harvest decides he wants to go to your small group.

    13:52-13:55

    But this man is coming out of an addicted background.

    13:57-14:00

    He had a really bad problem with alcohol, he went to rehab.

    14:02-14:05

    And this man ends up coming to know Christ.

    14:05-14:06

    He's born again.

    14:06-14:08

    He received Jesus as his Lord and Savior.

    14:08-14:10

    He's been transformed.

    14:10-14:14

    And now this man hates how alcohol has wrecked his life.

    14:16-14:21

    And this man sees alcohol a whole lot different than you or I might look at alcohol.

    14:23-14:34

    All right, so that guy says, "Pastor Taylor, I want to get involved in one of your small groups." And Pastor Taylor gets the guy coming to your small group.

    14:35-14:43

    And this week, you're having a barbecue at your small group because the weather is oh so great as it has been.

    14:45-14:53

    And as a small group leader, you're wondering, "Well, can I have beer at our small group barbecue?

    14:58-14:58

    Can I?

    15:01-15:46

    We have alcohol at a church event?" And you're like, "Okay, well this guy's coming and Pastor Taylor sort of told me this man's background and I know that if we have alcohol at our barbecue, it's going to bother that guy. I know that, but I'm free. I'm free to drink it. Why is his problem my problem? Should I still have it even though this guy's coming? I mean, I can have it, so let's just go ahead and have it and he can figure that out, right? Well, that was the Corinthian dilemma. Some mature believers were eating the meat regardless of how it affected the weaker believers.

    15:47-15:53

    And I'm glad you're sitting down because you're going to be shocked that this resulted in more disunity problems for Corinth.

    15:55-15:57

    Those people fought about everything.

    15:59-16:00

    And here's another issue.

    16:03-16:12

    So on your outline, listen very closely to this next sentence because you have to understand the angle at which Paul's going after them.

    16:13-16:26

    Paul, in 1 Corinthians 8, is going after the three reasons that the mature believers were using to justify eating the pagan meat.

    16:29-16:33

    It's okay for us to eat it, and here's why it's okay for us to eat it.

    16:33-16:39

    Paul goes after those reasons, and they're the same reasons we use today.

    16:41-16:55

    And interestingly enough, Paul agrees with them, but he shows them why their reasons for eating the meat, their reasons for liberty, do not apply in light of how it's going to affect a weaker believer.

    16:57-16:58

    All right?

    16:59-17:03

    That's why the heading on your outline, it's a big one.

    17:04-17:10

    Three valid reasons for liberty that don't work when you have a weaker brother.

    17:12-17:17

    All of these are legit reasons for liberty, but they do not work when you have a weaker brother.

    17:18-17:18

    Y'all with me?

    17:19-17:20

    I can start over.

    17:21-17:22

    It's a hot dog and sandwich.

    17:25-17:28

    Three valid reasons for liberty that do not work when you have a weaker brother.

    17:29-17:31

    Here's the first one, number one, write this down.

    17:31-17:32

    I have knowledge.

    17:33-17:34

    I have knowledge.

    17:34-17:36

    I know some stuff.

    17:37-17:38

    I know, okay.

    17:40-17:40

    Back to verse one.

    17:40-17:50

    "Now concerning food offered to idols, we know that all of us possess knowledge." Stop there.

    17:52-17:57

    You see, they were saying, Look, I know I can eat the meat sacrificed to the...

    17:57-17:58

    I can do that because I know, I know.

    17:59-18:01

    I know what the Bible says about food, okay?

    18:01-18:05

    And Peter had that vision, Acts 10, the sheath, everything's clean.

    18:06-18:09

    I know about that, I know, I know, I know.

    18:09-18:11

    And look, meat is meat, I know.

    18:14-18:16

    We do the same thing, by the way, with alcohol, right?

    18:17-18:18

    We know, we know some stuff.

    18:19-18:22

    Okay, small group leader thinking about having beer at your barbecue.

    18:22-18:26

    I know, I know, I know what the Bible says, okay?

    18:26-18:31

    And in fact, you know, back in biblical times, they didn't have refrigerators.

    18:32-18:37

    So their grape juice fermented, and it was really only like a 3% alcohol on some things.

    18:37-18:40

    And it was, but some of the drinks was only 1% alcohol.

    18:41-18:48

    And (mimics barking) Look, knowledge is great.

    18:49-18:56

    Actually, God's word exalts knowledge, knowing God's truth.

    18:57-19:01

    But here's the thing, knowledge isn't everything.

    19:02-19:02

    Okay?

    19:04-19:06

    Knowledge isn't everything because look at the rest of verse one.

    19:07-19:18

    He says, "This knowledge puffs up, but love builds up." Just having knowledge puffs up.

    19:18-19:20

    Knowledge makes people proud.

    19:21-19:22

    That's what he's saying.

    19:22-19:23

    Knowledge makes people proud.

    19:24-19:25

    Have you ever been around that guy?

    19:26-19:27

    You know that guy?

    19:28-19:30

    The actually guy?

    19:31-19:32

    You know that guy?

    19:32-19:33

    That's like actually.

    19:33-19:34

    You know, you've been around that guy?

    19:36-19:37

    If you are that guy, I hope you repent.

    19:38-19:39

    But you know that guy.

    19:39-19:43

    You're like, man, it was like 80 degrees today.

    19:43-19:47

    Actually, it was 77 degrees.

    19:48-19:49

    (sniffling)

    19:50-19:51

    You got me.

    19:52-19:53

    I'm a big fat liar.

    19:54-20:00

    Or you're like, strawberries are my favorite fruit.

    20:01-20:04

    Actually, a strawberry is not a fruit.

    20:04-20:05

    It is a member of the rose family.

    20:06-20:08

    Actually, a banana actually is a berry.

    20:09-20:09

    Actually.

    20:14-20:15

    Knowledge puffs up.

    20:15-20:19

    The guy that's just knowledge, obnoxious.

    20:23-20:29

    He says, "But love, love builds up." You see, knowledge is about me, but love is about you.

    20:30-20:32

    Love is about building you up.

    20:32-20:37

    And that's why you gotta have love with your knowledge.

    20:37-20:38

    That's Paul's point here.

    20:39-20:41

    Actually, he said the same thing, Philippians 1:9.

    20:42-20:51

    "And it is my prayer that your love may abound and more with knowledge. You see that? Love with knowledge and all discernment.

    20:53-20:59

    All your Bible knowledge does you no good if you aren't operating from a position of love.

    21:01-21:16

    So look at verse 2. He says, "If anyone imagines that he knows something, he does not yet know as he ought to know." Knowledge is a funny thing, isn't it?

    21:16-21:20

    You think you know something, and you don't.

    21:21-21:30

    The guy that's walking around thinking he's the expert and he knows everything, usually doesn't really know near as much as he thinks he knows.

    21:34-21:38

    You mature people, Paul says, you mature people insisting on your liberty.

    21:38-21:43

    You think you're so smart, but you don't know as much as you think you do.

    21:44-22:04

    because you're missing what the Christian life is all about and it is love. Biblical knowledge should move you to love. You're like, "Wait, wait, hang on.

    22:04-22:12

    How does that work? How does knowledge and love, how does that How does that work together exactly?

    22:12-22:17

    And Paul's like, "Like your relationship with God Himself." Look at verse 3.

    22:18-22:26

    He says, "But if anyone loves God, he is known by God." There it is.

    22:26-22:31

    Knowledge and love working together in your relationship with God.

    22:31-22:33

    Both of them have to be present.

    22:34-22:36

    So you can know about God without loving Him.

    22:38-22:45

    But you don't really know God without loving Him.

    22:48-22:49

    So what's he saying?

    22:49-22:50

    Here's the bottom line, alright?

    22:51-22:53

    Here's the CliffsNotes version of this chunk.

    22:53-22:58

    He says, "Your knowledge means nothing without love." That's what he's saying.

    22:58-22:59

    Your knowledge means nothing without love.

    22:59-23:06

    God doesn't care that you know stuff if you don't love your weaker brother.

    23:06-23:07

    That's the point.

    23:09-23:13

    So again, you're thinking about having beer at your small group barbecue.

    23:15-23:20

    Listen, and that guy's coming that's had the struggle in the past.

    23:20-23:26

    Look, that guy that's coming, he doesn't need your list of alcohol facts.

    23:26-23:27

    Okay?

    23:27-23:35

    What he needs is you to love him enough that you care more about him growing in Christ then you do you having your beer.

    23:39-23:48

    So if you're insisting on your liberty on the basis of, I know some Bible verses, you missed the big picture.

    23:50-23:52

    All right, I have knowledge.

    23:54-23:55

    Great, great.

    23:57-24:01

    Doesn't matter in the face of a weaker brother, you gotta love him.

    24:02-24:03

    I love 'em.

    24:03-24:06

    Number two, jot this one down.

    24:06-24:06

    I have wisdom.

    24:08-24:09

    I have wisdom.

    24:10-24:11

    There's a difference, right?

    24:12-24:13

    Knowledge, you know the facts.

    24:14-24:19

    Wisdom is like knowing how to apply the facts, knowing how knowledge works together.

    24:21-24:23

    Look at verses four through six with me.

    24:24-24:39

    He says, "Therefore, as to the eating of food offered to idols, we know that an idol has no real existence, and that there is no God but One.

    24:41-25:14

    For although there may be so-called gods in heaven or on earth, as indeed there are many gods and many lords. Yet for us, there is one God the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist, and one Lord Jesus Christ, through whom are all things and through whom we exist." Wow. I could do like a whole series just on like the end of verse 6 there.

    25:15-25:16

    That is such an awesome verse.

    25:16-25:17

    You should highlight that in your Bible.

    25:21-25:23

    That's the gospel right there in verse 6.

    25:23-25:24

    This is the gospel.

    25:24-25:39

    God came to us in Christ, and we go to God in Christ.

    25:43-25:44

    That's awesome.

    25:47-25:50

    Regarding the issue at hand, Paul's here saying, "Look, right on, right on.

    25:51-25:52

    Hey, I'm with you.

    25:52-25:54

    The idol is just a trinket.

    25:54-25:55

    There's no boogeyman in the meat.

    25:56-25:57

    You have wisdom.

    25:57-26:03

    You understand the world in light of the truth of God's Word." Awesome.

    26:04-26:12

    Verse 7, "However, not all possess this knowledge." See that?

    26:13-26:14

    Paul's agreeing with him.

    26:14-26:15

    Yeah, yeah, yeah, I get it.

    26:16-26:16

    I get it.

    26:17-26:18

    The idol's a trinket.

    26:19-26:19

    Right.

    26:21-26:22

    The meat's not haunted, I get it.

    26:23-26:23

    You're right.

    26:24-26:34

    However, however, look, God in his word has told us everything he wants us to know about him.

    26:38-26:42

    But we are all at different levels of understanding.

    26:43-26:50

    Some of us are just a little further down the road on our journey than others in maturing with Christ.

    26:50-26:51

    That's just the way things work.

    26:52-26:54

    We learn, we grow, we mature.

    26:54-26:56

    Some of us are more mature than others.

    26:56-26:57

    That's just reality.

    26:59-27:00

    And that's what Paul's saying here.

    27:00-27:01

    He's, "Look, good for you.

    27:01-27:02

    You know some things.

    27:02-27:04

    You know some things about the idols.

    27:04-27:05

    Guess what?

    27:05-27:07

    Not everyone understands.

    27:08-27:09

    Not everyone's where you are.

    27:12-27:13

    Not everyone gets it.

    27:15-27:42

    Look at the rest of verse 7, he goes, "But some," talking about the weaker brothers here, "but some, through former association with idols, eat food as really offered to an idol, and their conscience being weak is defiled." Your conscience, he says, "These weaker brothers having a problem with their..." What is the conscience?

    27:42-27:44

    We talked about this way and through the book of Hebrews.

    27:45-27:46

    Your conscience, what is your conscience?

    27:46-27:57

    The conscience is the part of your mind that approves or condemns what you do, based on how you understand right and wrong.

    27:59-28:00

    That's your conscience.

    28:00-28:04

    And some, Paul says, have a weak conscience, meaning it's immature.

    28:06-28:28

    not fully understanding yet. And if a weaker brother eats the pagan meat, they go against their conscience and Paul says, "They are defiled." That word "defiled" actually means "guilty." They feel guilty for doing it. They went against their conscience.

    28:35-28:49

    Have you ever believed something for so long that even when you learn the truth, it's hard to let go of that old belief that you held onto for so long?

    28:51-28:52

    I think we've all been guilty of that.

    28:53-28:54

    You know, here's one for me.

    28:56-29:01

    When I was a kid, I've always been an excellent singer.

    29:04-29:06

    (congregation laughing)

    29:14-29:14

    What is going on here?

    29:21-29:23

    Learning to have grace with the weaker brothers.

    29:24-29:25

    (congregation laughing)

    29:28-29:30

    Pastor Taylor, you are absolutely right.

    29:30-29:32

    That statement was sarcastic, you are right.

    29:33-29:34

    He is absolutely right.

    29:34-29:36

    He's not the weaker brother, he's right.

    29:36-29:38

    But I have always been a great singer.

    29:38-29:49

    But anyways, when I was little, I would sing at the dinner table, 'cause I'm always singing, I'm singing, doing everything, but I'd come to the dinner table and I'd sing.

    29:50-29:51

    And do you know what my mom told me?

    29:52-29:57

    She says, "You can't sing at the table because it," anybody know?

    29:59-30:00

    She made this up.

    30:01-30:05

    My mom said, she says, "You can't sing at the table "because it makes the angels cry."

    30:07-30:08

    (congregation laughing)

    30:12-30:13

    I am dead serious.

    30:14-30:18

    Now I found, I just this minute realized she just made that up.

    30:20-30:21

    'Cause I was expecting somebody to shout that out.

    30:22-30:23

    Nope.

    30:25-30:29

    So I grew up like, don't sing, when I get to the table, I'm like, don't sing, why?

    30:29-30:38

    because all the angels in heaven are like, "Oh, please." At first I thought it was just like anybody singing, but I think mom meant my singing.

    30:39-30:41

    My singing offended the holy angels.

    30:41-30:56

    But so I was like, "Don't sing at the table "because the angels, it just made the angels cry." And you're like, "That's silly." It is, admittedly.

    30:57-31:05

    But I gotta tell you, to this day, if I'm eating somewhere and I hear somebody singing, do you know what the first thing is that I think of?

    31:08-31:09

    You're making the angels cry.

    31:10-31:11

    Way to go.

    31:13-31:14

    Do you know what I mean?

    31:14-31:22

    I know that's not true, but I do cringe when I hear somebody sing at the table because it was just so ingrained in me my whole life growing up.

    31:22-31:23

    Don't sing at the table, don't sing at the table.

    31:24-31:24

    Angels are weeping.

    31:27-31:27

    Like...

    31:30-31:34

    And it was true in this culture that Paul's dealing with here.

    31:35-31:40

    Imagine the person that got saved out of idolatry.

    31:41-31:42

    That's a huge change.

    31:44-31:57

    You know, all this time, for all these years, the evil spirits live in the meat, got to sacrifice to the gods, you get the spirits out of the meat, the evil spirits live in the meat, and then they come to Christ, They get the truth of the gospel, and they're like, "That's not true.

    31:58-31:59

    There's no evil spirits in the meat.

    32:00-32:07

    It's not true at all." It's totally safe to eat, right?

    32:08-32:12

    I mean, it is safe, right?

    32:17-32:23

    But, I mean, it is pagan meat.

    32:23-32:41

    eat. I mean, I guess it's okay to eat it. I mean, gosh, I just don't feel right about eating it. You see the dilemma? I know, but I...

    32:46-32:55

    See, mature believers, mature believers, maybe you understand the real truth about the idols and the mate.

    32:55-33:05

    Paul's like, "But your weaker brother, he's not there yet." And love says, "I will forego something that might bother the weaker brother." That's what love says.

    33:06-33:13

    Look, spiritual maturity is deeper than right and wrong.

    33:16-33:30

    The mature believer says, "How does what I do affect the baby Christians?" And you see with the whole alcohol, with the small group barbecue thing, it's the same principle in play.

    33:31-33:38

    If the weaker brother is coming to the barbecue, the loving choice is to not have any alcohol there at all.

    33:40-33:42

    Not being legalistic, being loving.

    33:44-33:48

    I don't want this to be a problem for you, so we're just going to take it off the table.

    33:49-33:51

    We'll have a Dr. Pepper.

    33:55-34:05

    Look, if you're insisting on your liberty on the basis of, "I have wisdom, I know the ways of the world and how it works," you've just missed the whole picture.

    34:08-34:08

    One more.

    34:11-34:15

    Three valid reasons for liberty that don't work when you have a weaker brother.

    34:17-34:19

    "I have knowledge." That doesn't work when there's a weaker brother.

    34:19-34:22

    "I have wisdom." That doesn't work.

    34:22-34:26

    When you have a weaker brother, number three, here's one that we often use, I have good theology.

    34:28-34:30

    And see, these all do kind of bleed together, obviously.

    34:32-34:33

    But I have good theology.

    34:36-34:37

    Look at verse eight.

    34:38-34:41

    He says, "Food will not commend us to God.

    34:42-34:55

    "We are no worse off if we do not eat "and no better off if we do." Interestingly, that word commend is literally draw us near to.

    34:58-35:01

    What you eat is not going to draw you closer to God.

    35:04-35:04

    And that's what he's saying.

    35:05-35:11

    Eating doesn't make you holy, nor does eating make you a sinner.

    35:13-35:15

    That's good theology, right?

    35:16-35:16

    It's good theology.

    35:18-35:20

    What you eat will not draw you near to God.

    35:21-35:24

    There's only one way to draw near to God, and that's Jesus Christ.

    35:25-35:29

    He provided access to God through his death, through his resurrection.

    35:29-35:32

    That's the only basis you have of coming to God.

    35:33-35:35

    The only way you can draw near is through Jesus Christ.

    35:36-35:38

    But it certainly isn't in what you eat.

    35:41-35:43

    That's great theology, right?

    35:45-35:53

    So God doesn't care what we eat, But, but God does care about his weaker children and the way we love them.

    35:54-35:55

    He cares about that.

    35:55-35:57

    Look at verses nine and 10.

    35:58-36:05

    He says, "But take care that this right of yours "does not somehow become a stumbling block to the weak.

    36:07-36:23

    "For if anyone sees you who have knowledge "eating in an idol's temple, Will he not be encouraged, if his conscience is weak, to eat food offered to idols?

    36:27-36:30

    Stumbling block, stumbling block.

    36:30-36:33

    That's something that makes you sin, right?

    36:33-36:34

    That's a stumbling block.

    36:35-36:41

    And Paul here says, you're insisting on your freedom can make the weaker brother sin.

    36:45-36:45

    What do you mean?

    36:46-37:03

    Just simply this, if their conscience says, don't eat the pagan meat, and they see you eating, they're going to feel pressured to go against their conscience and eat, and that will make them miserable.

    37:06-37:11

    They're gonna feel the pressure, they're gonna eat, and then they're gonna immediately, I shouldn't have eaten that.

    37:13-37:20

    But you know, he makes me feel guilty if I don't join in and eat, but then I do eat, and now I feel guilty that I did.

    37:23-37:24

    You see an obvious application, right?

    37:26-37:33

    You decide you're gonna go ahead and have alcohol with your little small group barbecue, volleyball extravaganza thing.

    37:33-37:35

    And you're like, I'm still gonna have alcohol there.

    37:36-37:39

    And that recovering addict shows up.

    37:40-37:43

    And he's like, yeah, I don't drink anymore.

    37:44-37:45

    It ruined my life.

    37:48-37:50

    But everybody else is drinking.

    37:51-37:54

    Man, I kind of feel like the odd man out here.

    37:55-38:01

    Maybe I should, I mean, these are new friends and I should try to fit in, right?

    38:01-38:06

    So, I don't want to look like a weirdo.

    38:08-38:08

    And then he drinks.

    38:10-38:11

    How does he feel about himself afterwards?

    38:14-38:15

    I can't believe I did that.

    38:22-38:26

    Listen, never ever violate your conscience.

    38:28-38:36

    I have people come to me for counseling all the time and it can be a gray area matter and they'll say, "I just have this conviction about this.

    38:36-38:39

    "Is that right?" I tell them the same thing, ask anybody that's come.

    38:40-38:42

    I'm like, I will never tell you to violate your conscience.

    38:43-38:50

    If you have a conviction and it's different than mine, and it's a non-biblical issue, I am not going to tell you to violate your conscience on that.

    38:51-38:56

    And at the same time, do not ever ask someone else to violate theirs.

    39:01-39:06

    With your conscience, yes, understand, seek to understand why you feel how you do.

    39:07-39:11

    Evaluate if it is from God, but never violate your conscience.

    39:11-39:13

    Look, you're going to mature in Christ.

    39:13-39:19

    Your understanding of God's word is going to mature, but don't force it.

    39:23-39:27

    Let the growth happen naturally for you and for the weaker brother.

    39:31-39:48

    And I know at this point in the message, there's still somebody, somebody's inwardly protesting all this, saying, "Why should I care what my choices "have to do with somebody else's conscience?

    39:48-39:55

    "Like, why is that any of their business?" Well, look at verse 11.

    39:57-40:07

    Paul says, "And so by your knowledge, this weak person is destroyed, the brother for whom Christ died.

    40:13-40:13

    Why should you care?

    40:16-40:18

    Because Jesus does.

    40:20-40:23

    How much does Jesus care about this weaker brother, really?

    40:23-40:25

    How much does Jesus care?

    40:26-40:27

    Jesus died for him.

    40:28-40:30

    That is how Jesus regards this man.

    40:30-40:35

    That is how Jesus so loves this man that Jesus was willing to die for him.

    40:36-40:38

    And that's why you should love him too.

    40:41-40:57

    Verse 12, he says, "Thus, sitting against your brothers and wounding their conscience when it is weak, you sin against Christ." Wow.

    40:59-41:00

    Paul ratchets it up.

    41:01-41:03

    This is the top of the mountain here.

    41:04-41:10

    He goes, "Do you need a reason to not offend the weaker brother?

    41:10-41:13

    Do you need a reason for that?" He goes, "Here's your reason.

    41:13-41:15

    Here's number one.

    41:17-41:21

    Jesus takes any mistreatment of his people very seriously.

    41:22-41:29

    You sit against that weaker brother, you're sitting against Jesus himself." And Jesus takes this very seriously.

    41:32-41:41

    Look, if you pressure my son into doing something he doesn't wanna do, we are having words.

    41:45-41:51

    Jesus has a much stronger stance on this than I do, actually.

    41:54-42:14

    Matthew 18.6, "Whoever causes," these are the words of Jesus, "Whoever causes one of these little ones "who believe in me to sin, "it would be better for him to have a great millstone "fastened around his neck "and be drowned in the depths of the sea." You sin against a weaker brother, you're sinning against Jesus.

    42:15-42:16

    He takes that pretty seriously.

    42:17-42:32

    And again, Matthew 25, verse 40, Jesus said, "Truly I say to you, "As you did it to one of the least of these, my brothers, "you did it to me." Serious business.

    42:34-42:36

    And finally, verse 13.

    42:39-42:58

    Paul says, "Therefore, if food makes my brother stumble, "I will never eat meat, lest I make my brother stumble." Paul's like, "Look, run the risk of sinning against Jesus?

    42:58-42:59

    Nuh-uh, uh-uh.

    43:00-43:18

    I'm not going to insist on my liberty, my rights." Paul says, "I will become a vegan before I cause a brother to stumble, because loving Loving my weaker brother is more important than having a burger.

    43:20-43:24

    And loving my weaker brother is more important than having a beer.

    43:28-43:35

    So if you're insisting on your liberty on the basis of, "Well, I have good theology," you missed the big picture.

    43:37-43:37

    All right.

    43:38-43:39

    That was the introduction.

    43:41-43:42

    Here's the sermon.

    43:44-43:47

    Your liberty goes only as far as love.

    43:50-43:56

    Like the Corinthians, you can say, "Well, I know the Bible and I understand spiritual truths.

    43:57-43:59

    My theology is on point.

    43:59-44:06

    I am free in Christ to do whatever I want!" No, you aren't.

    44:09-44:14

    You must be willing to lay down your rights if it means protecting your weaker brother.

    44:17-44:19

    For communion servers would come up, our worship team.

    44:23-44:32

    I'll give you one more reason why we should lay down our rights out of love.

    44:35-44:37

    And it's because we have a great example.

    44:37-44:45

    You know, the Bible says Jesus did not consider equality with God a thing to be grasped.

    44:45-44:46

    Wrap your head around that.

    44:47-44:55

    Jesus had the right to insist on all of the privileges that come with being God.

    44:58-45:02

    And he humbled himself to give them up.

    45:05-45:11

    The question I have for you this morning is, will you follow Jesus in that?

    45:13-45:19

    Are you willing to lay down your rights, your freedoms, out of love?

    45:21-45:22

    I want you to stand.

    45:25-45:31

    And when you're ready to receive the Lord's Supper, by the way, if you're a born again believer in Christ, this is for you.

    45:32-45:37

    You don't have to be a member of Harvest Bible Chapel, but you do have to be a born again believer in Christ.

    45:38-45:39

    And if you are, he invites you.

    45:40-45:49

    Come down the center aisle, receive the elements, and I'm gonna ask that you take them back to your seat by going to the outside aisle.

    45:49-45:56

    And when everyone has the elements, we will receive the Lord's Supper together as an act of church unity.

    45:56-45:57

    All right, please come.

    46:01-46:03

    Why should I choose to lay down my rights?

    46:07-46:11

    because I have a great example in my Lord.

    46:13-46:20

    The Bible tells us the night Jesus was betrayed, He took bread and He broke it.

    46:20-46:43

    He gave thanks and He said, "This is my body which is given for you. Eat this in remembrance of me." After the meal, Jesus took the cup He said, "This cup is the blood of the new covenant, which is poured out for the forgiveness of sin.

    46:45-46:47

    Drink this in remembrance of Me."

Small Group Discussion
Read
1 Corinthians 8:1-13

  1. What was your big take-away from this passage / message?

  2. Do you tend to lean more on the side of “legalism” or “libertine”? Why?

  3. What exactly is meant by “stumbling block” (1 Cor 8:9)? How could you be responsible for someone else sinning (1 Cor 8:12)?

  4. Besides alcohol, what are some examples of gray areas today that we need to be careful to “not make a weaker brother stumble”?

Breakout

Pray for one another.

What About Us Single People?

Introduction:

Three Advantages of Being Single: (1 Corinthians 7:25-40)

  1. You're Saved from CERTAIN TROUBLES. (1 Cor 7:26-28)

  2. You're Saved from DISTRACTION. (1 Cor 7:29-38)

    Matthew 22:30For in the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are like angels in heaven.

    Colossians 3:2Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth.

  3. You’re Saved from OBLIGATION. (1 Cor 7:39-40)

    Matthew 19:10The disciples said to him, “If such is the case of a man with his wife, it is better not to marry.”

Sermon Notes (PDF): BLANK
Hint: Highlight blanks above for answers!

  • 00:37-00:41

    Open up those Bibles to 1 Corinthians and chapter 7.

    00:44-00:49

    And while we do, I'm just going to ask that you would just pause with me here.

    00:49-00:58

    You pray for me, that I will communicate God's word as I should, clearly and accurately and straightforwardly.

    00:58-01:03

    I will pray for you, that your heart would be open to receive what God wants to teach us today.

    01:03-01:06

    All right, so let's just take a moment and pray.

    01:10-01:19

    Father, be glorified through the proclamation of Your Word, through receiving Your Word and being doers of Your Word.

    01:20-01:23

    Be glorified in all things, we pray in Jesus' name.

    01:24-01:41

    And all of God's people said, "Amen." Several years ago, a friend of mine told me about this single friend that he has who was sitting home one day and got a phone call.

    01:42-02:10

    The phone rang, he picked it up, and he's like, "Hello?" And the voice on the other end said, "Hi, would you be interested in meeting a lot of exciting available singles in your area?" And the man said, "I got enough problems." It's funny, but that's really the heart of this passage that we're looking at today.

    02:14-02:23

    See, in 1 Corinthians 7, we've seen that marriage is a gift, and God has given married people a wedding present that they are to use appropriately.

    02:25-02:29

    And we've seen that for some people, being single is a gift.

    02:32-02:37

    But each one brings their own set of issues.

    02:38-02:47

    And the Corinthians were writing to Paul, asking for counsel, and Paul was writing this letter back to them, giving them counsel.

    02:48-02:50

    Look at verse 25.

    02:52-03:15

    Paul says, "Now concerning the betrothed, I have no command from the Lord, but I give my judgment as one who by the Lord's mercy is trustworthy." You see, he says, "Now concerning." We saw that again back in chapter 7 verse 1.

    03:15-03:20

    It seems that Paul was going through a list of things that they brought up.

    03:20-03:21

    He goes, "Okay, let me tell you about this.

    03:22-03:32

    Okay, now let me tell you about this issue you brought up." It's kind of a Q&A format, and he says the next subject here is the betrothed.

    03:32-03:35

    Some translations say virgins.

    03:35-03:38

    He's talking to the singles.

    03:41-03:42

    All the single ladies.

    03:44-04:08

    that song? Get your hand up. I studied that dance this week and I was going to do it for you, but I looked at myself in the mirror and I do not dance like Beyonce. So maybe Maybe some other time.

    04:12-04:17

    But last week we saw Pastor Taylor talked about commitment.

    04:17-04:19

    That was in the previous passage, commitment.

    04:20-04:22

    Trust God where He has you, right?

    04:22-04:24

    Bloom where you are planted.

    04:27-04:30

    And I was thinking about that through the context of the whole passage.

    04:31-05:08

    Paul's talking about marriage and sexuality and singles issues, and then he talks about contentment, and then in this passage he's addressing the singles. Like why that flow? Why did he insert contentment right in the middle of that? And I think it's because there are certain aspects of being single that make it hard to be content. And here's what I mean by that. I think especially in the church there difficulties in being single.

    05:09-05:13

    Because I mean, think about it, in church, marriage is exalted.

    05:15-05:19

    In church, you see many godly marriages.

    05:20-05:28

    You sit and you watch infant dedications, and I think for singles there's a real sense of FOMO, right?

    05:30-05:35

    So this passage we're looking at today, mostly, is for the single people.

    05:37-05:53

    And if you're tempted to be like, "Oh, this ain't for me, I'm tuning out." I would say, "You are forbidden to tune out of this message." We expect our single people to sit through series on marriage, series on parenting.

    05:54-06:00

    We're like, "You need to listen to this, you need to listen to this, you know married people, so you should listen to this." You know single people, all right?

    06:01-06:05

    And maybe the Lord will open a door for you to be able to encourage them with some things in here.

    06:05-06:06

    All right?

    06:07-06:09

    So if I see you tuning out, I'm gonna throw a Bible at you.

    06:12-06:12

    All right?

    06:12-06:18

    So Paul says here, don't worry, it'll be a soft cover, not like a MacArthur study Bible or anything.

    06:19-06:28

    But Paul says here, I have no command for the Lord, but I give my judgment as one who by the Lord's mercy is trustworthy.

    06:28-06:29

    We talked about this before.

    06:30-06:38

    All Paul is saying here is the Lord, Jesus Christ, did not specifically address these singles issues during His earthly ministry.

    06:38-06:41

    It wasn't...being single is not a moral issue.

    06:42-06:45

    Jesus didn't really go into depth in addressing this.

    06:46-06:46

    Right?

    06:48-07:03

    He says, "I don't have a quote for you from Jesus." When it comes to divorce, Paul said, "I got quotes for you from Jesus about divorce." Jesus was crystal on that, but I don't have a quote from Jesus really about these aspects of being single.

    07:03-07:08

    But Paul's like, "Hey, you can trust me." Right?

    07:09-07:24

    And he goes on in this passage to say, "It's good to be single." Actually, he says it's in many ways better to be single.

    07:24-07:27

    It's wiser to be single.

    07:29-07:37

    Right now the singles among us might have heard that last statement and thought, "What's so great about being single?

    07:39-07:40

    What's so great about it?

    07:42-07:44

    What is it, the loneliness?

    07:46-07:47

    Is that what's so great about it?

    07:49-07:54

    Is it the stigma that people put on you, like, "Oh, you're single.

    07:54-07:58

    What's wrong with you?" Is that the great part of being single, Pastor Jeff?

    08:00-08:05

    Is it going to the soda shop, Pastor Jeff, and eating the wet walnut sundae by yourself?

    08:12-08:14

    Is it all the people that try to play Cupid?

    08:15-08:16

    Is that the great part?

    08:17-08:21

    You know, I got this co-worker, it'd be great for you.

    08:22-08:24

    Both of his teeth are really clean," and whatever.

    08:28-08:30

    I can't wait to meet him.

    08:32-08:33

    Is that the great part, Pastor Jeff?

    08:34-08:35

    Is it the FOMO, Pastor Jeff?

    08:36-08:36

    Is it?

    08:36-08:38

    What's the great part, Pastor Jeff?

    08:39-08:40

    What's the great part?

    08:41-08:46

    Well, this is what the Lord said, okay?

    08:46-08:49

    This isn't Jeff's opinion, this is God's opinion.

    08:49-08:52

    So on your outline, I want you to jot some things down.

    08:53-08:55

    Here's three advantages of being single.

    08:55-08:57

    All right, three advantages of being single.

    09:01-09:03

    Oh, right, sorry.

    09:10-09:11

    I beg your pardon.

    09:12-09:13

    I have a disclaimer.

    09:17-09:20

    I have been happily married since 2002.

    09:27-09:32

    Despite what Paul says about singleness, I am very thankful for my beautiful, talented, and intelligent wife.

    09:33-09:35

    I acknowledge that I married up.

    09:36-09:40

    Her presence daily enhances my life in every way.

    09:41-09:46

    And then it says at the bottom, you better read this and sound convincing, love Aaron.

    09:47-09:48

    (congregation laughing)

    09:57-09:58

    I am thankful to be married.

    10:01-10:05

    That was what God had for me, but God might not have that for you.

    10:06-10:07

    All right, he gives different gifts to different people.

    10:08-10:11

    So if you're single, here's three advantages of being single.

    10:11-10:15

    Number one, write this down, you're saved from certain troubles.

    10:16-10:19

    You're saved from certain troubles.

    10:22-10:25

    And here's the point, I'm gonna give you the heads up and we're gonna see it in the text.

    10:25-10:34

    What Paul's saying here is there are troubles married people have that single people do not have, okay?

    10:34-10:36

    That's why the word certain is in there.

    10:37-10:40

    Not, save from all troubles, everybody's got troubles, okay?

    10:40-10:41

    Everybody's got troubles.

    10:41-10:47

    But there are certain troubles that married people have that single people have the luxury of not having, all right?

    10:48-10:53

    And he gives them in two categories, and the first one is present distress.

    10:53-10:57

    You can write that down on your outline underneath number one, distress.

    10:57-10:58

    Look at verse 26.

    11:00-11:13

    Paul says, "I think that in view of the present distress, It is good for a person to remain as he is, obviously, or as she is.

    11:14-11:15

    Okay, what's the distress?

    11:15-11:16

    What's the distress?

    11:16-11:21

    Well, some translations translate that violence.

    11:22-11:23

    Violence.

    11:24-11:28

    It's just simply hardships of living in a violent world.

    11:29-11:37

    And Paul's like, "Hey, hey, the world's a violent place, so it's probably better, single that you're not married for that reason.

    11:38-11:49

    See for the Corinthians, about 15 years after they would have received this letter, they endured horrible persecution that lasted for 200 years.

    11:51-11:52

    And I think Paul knew that.

    11:53-11:55

    Like, the world's a violent place.

    11:58-12:00

    But see, this principle isn't just for them.

    12:01-12:05

    I mean, isn't the world a violent and evil place today?

    12:06-12:08

    I mean, do I really have to sell you on that?

    12:09-12:14

    I mean, look at all the school shootings and sex trafficking, all the wars.

    12:15-12:20

    I wrote this before the events of yesterday, the events of yesterday happened.

    12:21-12:21

    The wars.

    12:23-12:33

    The war for your kids, all the gay and transgender stuff pushed in schools, the persecution for simply believing the Bible, Charlie Kirk, remember him?

    12:36-12:44

    So I would ask you, church, when Paul talks about violence to the Corinthians in our day, are we getting better or are we getting worse?

    12:45-12:46

    Which is it?

    12:48-12:54

    Can you really turn on the news and be like, oh yeah, there was violence back in that day, but I think things are pretty safe now, right?

    12:54-12:55

    Could you say that?

    12:56-12:57

    Of course not.

    12:59-13:01

    And I was thinking about this a lot this past week.

    13:02-13:05

    What era of human history was perfectly safe?

    13:06-13:07

    To have a wife and kids.

    13:08-13:09

    Is there any?

    13:09-13:27

    Can you point to an era and be like, "Yeah, this was the sweet spot right here in human history that it was…everything was safe." You see, such violence has extra implications if you have a spouse.

    13:28-13:32

    If you have a spouse, many times you also eventually have children.

    13:35-13:38

    Such violence has implications for spouse and kids, right?

    13:39-13:43

    What I mean is, look, I'm not afraid of being attacked personally.

    13:43-13:43

    I'm not.

    13:44-13:44

    Like, whatever.

    13:46-13:52

    I mean, somebody doesn't like the sermon and they slip past security and come up and shoot me or whatever.

    13:52-13:53

    Okay, whatever.

    13:53-13:54

    See you in heaven.

    13:56-14:03

    But I've got a wife and kids, and the thought of them being in danger is terrifying to me.

    14:04-14:08

    To think that they're in danger and I can't protect them and I can't be there.

    14:11-14:12

    That's what Paul's talking about here.

    14:13-14:20

    You see, if I suffer, whatever, but if they suffer, that is way more painful than any suffering that I can endure.

    14:22-14:30

    That's why Paul says there in verse 26, he says, "Remain as he is." That's better.

    14:30-14:32

    "Remain as he is." He clarifies that though.

    14:32-14:33

    Look, he clarifies.

    14:33-14:34

    Look at verse 27.

    14:36-14:39

    He says, "Are you bound to a wife?

    14:40-14:41

    Do not seek to be free.

    14:41-14:42

    Are you free from a wife?

    14:44-14:50

    Do not seek a wife." He says, "Married, stay married.

    14:50-14:51

    Single stay single.

    14:52-14:53

    Did you get a divorce?

    14:53-14:55

    Stay as you are.

    14:58-15:06

    He's saying singles might be wise to pump the brakes on getting married in view of just how violent the world is.

    15:08-15:08

    You see that?

    15:09-15:11

    There's a second category of trouble.

    15:11-15:12

    We saw the presence of stress.

    15:13-15:14

    The next one is that worldly troubles.

    15:15-15:16

    Look at verse 28.

    15:16-15:17

    This is a little different though.

    15:18-15:26

    Verse 28, he says, "But if you do marry, you have not sinned.

    15:27-15:31

    And if a betrothed woman marries, she has not sinned.

    15:32-15:39

    Yet those who marry will have worldly troubles, and I would spare you that." Stop there.

    15:40-15:41

    There's worldly troubles.

    15:42-15:53

    I mean, he says, "A marriage isn't sin, obviously." He goes, "But it brings trouble." There's conflict within marriage, right?

    15:54-16:00

    He already addressed there's conflict that comes from outside, but there's also conflict that comes from the inside.

    16:01-16:07

    What I mean is, you know, I have to deal with my own sin issues.

    16:08-16:09

    I am incredibly selfish.

    16:15-16:21

    I can be incredibly prideful, and I can be horribly irritable.

    16:25-16:27

    I got those issues going on.

    16:28-16:36

    Now, I get married and I got to deal with my wife's sin issues.

    16:36-16:38

    I mean, not my wife.

    16:38-16:43

    I mean, but you see the point.

    16:45-16:47

    You got your sin issues, whoever you marry is going to have sin issues.

    16:48-16:52

    The potential for misery in marriage is worse than for singles.

    16:53-16:58

    Like yeah, singles are going to deal with their own sin, married people, the amount of sin just doubled in the home.

    17:03-17:07

    people get married thinking it's going to fix everything, right?

    17:08-17:22

    People get married thinking, you know, "I have these physical urges, and if I just get married, all those urges are going to be fixed." It's not always true, right?

    17:23-17:25

    Or people are like, "I'm incredibly lonely.

    17:26-17:32

    I'm just so lonely, and if I get married, I won't be lonely." That's not always true either.

    17:37-17:40

    Sometimes these things just get worse, right?

    17:41-17:48

    Desire for intimacy gets worse when you have a spouse you want to be with but is unresponsive.

    17:50-17:53

    Loneliness gets worse when you live with someone who resents you.

    17:57-18:02

    So if you're single and you're on the fence, "Should I get married?

    18:03-18:05

    Maybe I'll wait till the end of the sermon to decide.

    18:05-18:11

    What should I do?" If you're single, "Oh, I wish I had a string.

    18:11-18:43

    My previous church, I had a string of marriage counseling sessions I was going through, and I so wish, single people, that I could take you into these marriage counseling sessions and have you sit in the corner and just watch." That would make up your mind for you because you would walk out of there going, "I am so thankful that I don't got to deal with that." Potential for misery in marriage is worse than the potential for misery in singles.

    18:43-18:44

    That's what Paul's saying.

    18:46-18:53

    I mean even if conflict isn't the big issue, I mean there's plenty of other worldly troubles, right?

    18:56-18:58

    like sickness, for example.

    19:00-19:04

    I mean, I remember back when I was single, and that was a difficult season in my life.

    19:06-19:08

    But do you know what's harder than being single?

    19:10-19:12

    You know what's harder is watching a sick wife suffer.

    19:13-19:13

    That's harder.

    19:14-19:20

    You know what's harder than being single is watching a sick child that you've prayed for for decades not get better.

    19:21-19:22

    That's harder than being single.

    19:24-19:26

    Now this is Paul's whole point here.

    19:26-19:27

    Look, life is hard.

    19:27-19:28

    Life is hard for everyone.

    19:29-19:31

    I mean, the Bible is crystal on that.

    19:31-19:38

    Life is hard for everyone, but getting married invites other elements of trouble.

    19:40-19:42

    The world is violent, my wife is violent.

    19:42-19:45

    Single people are saved from that.

    19:47-19:49

    I guess that's number one.

    19:49-19:53

    Number two, three advantages of being single, you're safe from certain troubles.

    19:53-19:55

    Number two, you're safe from distraction.

    19:57-19:58

    You're safe from distraction.

    20:01-20:07

    Marriage brings distraction, and he gives two ways that it does.

    20:07-20:15

    First of all, you lose your perspective on priorities, and second of all, you get distracted by the duty of taking care of a family, right?

    20:15-20:16

    So let's talk about these.

    20:17-20:17

    Let's break them down.

    20:19-20:21

    One distraction, losing perspective on priorities.

    20:21-20:25

    Look at verse 29, he says, "This is what I mean, brothers.

    20:27-20:29

    The appointed time has grown very short.

    20:30-20:41

    From now on, let those who have wives live as though they had none." You've got to read it in its context.

    20:42-20:47

    If you pull that verse out of its context, you're thinking it says something way different than it does, okay?

    20:48-20:50

    So you've got to listen to the rest of us.

    20:50-21:00

    He is not saying…He is not saying…everybody say, "Not saying." He is not saying, "Detach from your wife." He's not saying that at all.

    21:00-21:02

    The context makes it clear what He is saying.

    21:02-21:20

    Look, verse 30, He goes, "And those who mourn as though they were not mourning, and those who rejoice as though they were not rejoicing, and those who buy as though they had no goods, those who deal with the world as though they had no dealings with it.

    21:21-21:28

    For the present form of this world is passing away." See, what's he saying?

    21:28-21:29

    Look at the context.

    21:30-21:37

    Mourning, rejoicing, stuff, doing business, that's all earth stuff.

    21:39-21:39

    Right?

    21:39-21:43

    That is all stuff for here and now.

    21:45-21:57

    Paul's saying, "Don't live as if this is all there is." You realize so many people live as if they are going to be here forever, and you're not.

    21:58-21:59

    None of us are.

    22:03-22:05

    That's what Paul's talking about here.

    22:05-22:09

    You're mourning, you're going through a hard time, it's temporary.

    22:10-22:12

    You're not going to be mourning in heaven over that.

    22:12-22:14

    Oh, and you're rejoicing, you had the greatest day of your life?

    22:14-22:17

    Okay, that's not going to mean anything in heaven.

    22:18-22:18

    Right?

    22:19-22:20

    Oh, you're worried about your stuff?

    22:20-22:21

    He ain't taking it with you.

    22:22-22:24

    Earthly dealings, you're not going to be doing that in heaven.

    22:26-22:27

    It's all earth stuff.

    22:30-22:43

    And then he says, "Life as we know it on earth, it's all passing away, including marriage." I mean, all of these things in his list, he's saying these things all look different in light of eternity.

    22:44-22:48

    And don't let these things distract you from the big picture.

    22:49-22:50

    Do you know what the big picture is?

    22:52-22:59

    The big picture is you were created by God to spend a certain amount of time on this earth.

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    But you were born with a sinful nature we inherited from the first man.

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    You were born with a nature to rebel against your Creator.

    23:17-23:20

    Not to do what He wants you to do, but to do whatever you want to do.

    23:20-23:23

    You're selfish too, just like me.

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    And someday you're going to stand before that God who created you.

    23:29-23:32

    That God that you've rebelled against, someday you're going to stand before Him.

    23:33-23:37

    He just sang about what kind of God He is.

    23:37-23:38

    Holy forever.

    23:39-23:46

    You rebellious sinner are going to stand before the holy God that you rebelled against.

    23:49-23:58

    You deserve the worst that He could give you, which is hell, eternal separation from Him.

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    But because He loves you so much, He sent His Son to die on the cross on your behalf, to take your sin penalty on Himself.

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    When Jesus was on the cross, God was pouring out His wrath on Jesus, the wrath that I deserve and the wrath that you deserve.

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    Then Jesus rose from the dead so that we too can have the promise of eternal life.

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    That is the big picture.

    24:25-24:28

    So whether you buy or sell, you had a great day, a horrible day.

    24:28-24:34

    you get married or not, you're going to stand before a God who is going to judge you.

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    But if you are in Christ, there is no condemnation.

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    You are not guilty.

    24:40-24:41

    You are forgiven.

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    No sin will ever be held against you.

    24:44-24:45

    That is the big picture.

    24:45-24:55

    And Paul is saying, "Do not let the stuff of the earth, including marriage, distract you from that." He's just simply putting things into perspective.

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    Right?

    24:59-25:02

    Even marriage is not eternal.

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    Jesus said this in Matthew 22.

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    He says, "For in the resurrection, they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are like angels in heaven." Marriage is a "for now on earth" thing.

    25:20-25:20

    Right?

    25:20-25:21

    not for heaven.

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    We have it for now on earth.

    25:25-25:25

    Why?

    25:25-25:27

    For partnership, right?

    25:28-25:31

    For pleasure, for procreation.

    25:34-25:39

    All the purposes that marriage fulfill, those purposes aren't going to exist in heaven.

    25:40-25:44

    We're not going to need them fulfilled the way that they're fulfilled on earth.

    25:46-25:52

    I was thinking about this this week and I thought back to my days in elementary school.

    25:55-26:05

    I remember there were kids that would go skiing over the weekend and then they'd come to school on Monday.

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    Some of you remember this?

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    They'd come to school on Monday with their winter jacket on.

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    Remember what they still had hanging on their winter jacket?

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    Your lift pass, remember that?

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    They'd walk in.

    26:21-26:22

    (groans)

    26:27-26:29

    What'd you do over the weekend, Joey?

    26:33-26:35

    It was such a badge of honor.

    26:37-26:38

    You're like, why are you making fun of him?

    26:38-26:39

    Because I was so jealous.

    26:40-26:41

    That's why.

    26:43-26:46

    It was such a badge of honor, wasn't it, to walk into school.

    26:48-26:50

    You're not laughing because you were those kids, weren't you?

    26:52-26:54

    You were those ski lift tag kids.

    26:59-27:01

    I kind of laugh because you know what?

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    That lift tag was very useful for a time, wasn't it?

    27:06-27:09

    I mean, when you're skiing, that thing is super useful.

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    It has great purpose.

    27:11-27:16

    "Oh, you're skiing, it has great purpose." But then when you show up at school, what is it?

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    It's just a piece of garbage hanging from your coat.

    27:20-27:21

    It doesn't mean anything.

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    Like, dude, you don't need that.

    27:24-27:26

    You don't need to ride the lift to the cafeteria.

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    You don't need the ski tag.

    27:32-27:34

    And that's really, same thing with marriage.

    27:35-27:38

    Like, hey, married, I got a beautiful wife, she's awesome.

    27:38-27:45

    It's like, yes, but you're not going to need a wife in heaven, because every relationship is going to be perfect.

    27:50-27:53

    Paul's saying what he says in Colossians 3 too, right?

    27:53-27:57

    Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth.

    27:59-28:02

    Don't let marriage distract you from your spiritual life.

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    Don't let marriage make you lose perspective on your priorities? Because it does. There are people, there are some people here that work more on their marriage than they do on their personal walk with Jesus Christ. That's a problem. That's backwards. If you worked more on your personal walk with Jesus Christ, things in your marriage would get a whole lot better. But marriage distracts us from focusing on eternity because marriage, as God's Word tells us, divides our interests.

    28:44-28:45

    Look at verse 32.

    28:49-28:52

    Paul says, "I want you to be free from anxieties.

    28:55-29:00

    The unmarried man is anxious about the things of the Lord." How to please the Lord.

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    But the married man is anxious about worldly things, how to please his wife.

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    And his interests are divided.

    29:11-29:20

    And the unmarried or betrothed woman is anxious about the things of the Lord, how to be holy in body and spirit.

    29:20-29:27

    But the married woman is anxious about worldly things, how to please her husband.

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    Any single people can serve Jesus undistracted because the single person only has one set of cares.

    29:37-29:39

    The married person is divided.

    29:40-29:41

    That's what he's saying.

    29:41-29:47

    The married person says, "I really do want to serve Christ.

    29:47-29:58

    I really do want to give everything to Jesus, but I also have this God-given responsibility to take care of my family.

    30:00-30:07

    My interests are divided." So, singles better.

    30:09-30:11

    You're like, "Man, that sounds legalistic." Look at verse 35.

    30:13-30:38

    Paul says, "I say this for your own benefit, not to lay any restraint upon you, but to promote good order and to secure your undivided devotion to the Lord." See that's exactly what Paul is saying here, he says, "I'm not being legalistic." He says, "This is for your benefit." But don't think that married people are second-class citizens.

    30:41-30:41

    Right?

    30:42-30:55

    Verse 36, he says, "If anyone thinks he is not behaving properly toward his betrothed, if his passions are strong, and it has to be, let him do as he wishes.

    30:55-30:57

    Let them marry, it is no sin.

    30:58-32:31

    But whoever is firmly established in his heart, being under no necessity, but having his desires under control and has determined this in his heart, to keep her as his betrothed, he will do well. So then he who marries his betrothed does well, and he who refrains from marriage will do even better." You're like, "What is he talking about here?" This would have made way more sense to the original audience of this letter. Understand here, Paul is talking specifically here to fathers of unmarried daughters. The fathers had decision-making power in the matter of marriage for their daughters. Like, well that sounds very weird. Not really. Even today, I mean, isn't there the custom of when you want to get married to a woman, don't you go to her father and ask for her hand in marriage? Where do you think that comes from. Right? Same principle. But understand, Paul's just, once again, even in that, he's laying out the same thing he's been saying through this whole chapter, specifically through this whole passage. He goes, "If they get married, great. And if they remain single," He's like, "That's even better.

    32:32-32:39

    It's even better." Paul says here in this section that when it comes to serving Jesus, single people have an advantage.

    32:42-32:54

    Now, understand, single people, single people understand before you go out and get your ski tag, understand he's not saying single people are more spiritual than married people.

    32:54-32:55

    He is not saying that.

    32:56-33:02

    Single people are not automatically more devoted to Jesus than married people.

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    He is not saying that.

    33:04-33:11

    You're like, "Well, what is he saying?" He's saying single people have the greater potential in their service to Jesus Christ.

    33:16-33:17

    All right?

    33:17-33:46

    people, consider how much of your resources goes to just taking care of your family, right? How much time does your family require? How much money do you spend on your family? How much energy does your family get? And the answer is Because they get all of all the above, right?

    33:49-34:04

    And Paul here is simply saying, "Single people, you have tremendous opportunity, capacity, and potential to serve Christ because you're saved from the distractions that come from having to take care of a family." Right?

    34:04-34:05

    Single people?

    34:07-34:07

    Single people?

    34:08-34:12

    You want to spend extra time in prayer and the Word today?

    34:13-34:30

    You can do that without a bunch of little people running up to you going...and you're like, "I fed you yesterday." Well, you've got to feed them today too.

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    Single people don't got to worry about that.

    34:34-34:36

    Single people, you want to go on a mission trip?

    34:37-34:42

    You know what, this Vision Appalachia thing, I'm about that, I'm gone.

    34:42-34:44

    I'm going to talk to Bob Brown, I'm gone.

    34:44-34:46

    Single people can do that, like at the drop of a hat.

    34:47-34:51

    Or hey, next trip to Thailand, I am there.

    34:52-34:53

    No problem.

    34:53-35:00

    Single people can do that because you don't have to factor in the schedules of several other people.

    35:02-35:02

    Right?

    35:04-35:17

    Single people, you're like, "Oh, it's a prayer service tonight at church." You don't have to worry if you're going to miss it because your spouse is working late or Joey has yet another lacrosse tournament.

    35:20-35:21

    That's like the fifth one today.

    35:24-35:26

    Single people don't got to worry about that.

    35:26-35:27

    That's all Paul's saying here.

    35:29-35:35

    Oh, and P.S., history is full of single people that God has used mightily.

    35:37-35:39

    I read about a whole bunch of them this past week.

    35:40-35:44

    I don't have time to get into all of them, but I will mention one.

    35:44-35:47

    How about Paul, right?

    35:48-36:12

    Paul himself being single allowed Paul the opportunity to evangelize the Roman world and write holy Spirit-inspired letters that guide, encourage, and bless the churches even until today." So I guess Paul being single adds quite a bit of credibility to this Spirit-inspired truth that he wrote.

    36:12-36:14

    He says, "Hey, are you single?

    36:15-36:21

    You're saved from a lot of distractions." All right, three advantages of being single.

    36:21-36:22

    You're saved from certain troubles.

    36:23-36:24

    You're safe from distraction.

    36:24-36:26

    Number three, you're safe from obligation.

    36:28-36:31

    One more, you're safe from obligation.

    36:33-36:36

    Paul says a wife is bound to her husband as long as he lives.

    36:38-36:46

    But if her husband dies, she is free to be married to whom she wishes, only in the Lord.

    36:48-36:52

    Yet in my judgment, she is happier if she remains as she is.

    36:55-36:57

    And I think that I too have the Spirit of God.

    36:59-37:00

    I love that last statement.

    37:01-37:16

    Paul's like, 'cause you know that people are gonna be reading this and hearing this like, "Oh, come on, Paul, that's just your opinion." And he's like, "Yeah, I think I have the Holy Spirit too." So you're saved from obligation.

    37:16-37:22

    Paul says, "If your spouse dies, You can marry another believer.

    37:24-37:38

    Paul says, "Yet you'll be happier to stay single." But, Paul says, "Once you marry, you are bound as long as your spouse lives." He's talking about the obligation to the marriage.

    37:41-37:57

    The most important choice you will ever make for however long you have on the earth, the The most important choice is whether or not you are going to turn from your sin and turn to Jesus Christ and receive Him as your Lord and Savior.

    37:57-37:59

    That is the most important choice you will ever make.

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    Do you know what the second most important choice is that you will ever make?

    38:04-38:06

    Is the person that you decide to marry.

    38:11-38:12

    Because there's no going back.

    38:14-38:15

    At least not in God's eyes.

    38:16-38:17

    There's no going back.

    38:18-38:20

    It's more important than choosing a college major.

    38:20-38:23

    It's more important than choosing a career.

    38:24-38:26

    It's more important than choosing a tattoo.

    38:29-38:33

    More important than all these, who you marry, because it's a covenant before God.

    38:33-38:36

    It's a sacred thing in the eyes of God.

    38:36-38:47

    In the eyes of God, you're bound for life, and Paul's reminding, hey, when you're bound to a spouse, there is no more liberty that comes with being single.

    38:51-38:58

    You know, in Matthew chapter 19, Jesus was talking about marriage and divorce and adultery.

    38:58-39:03

    He was being challenged, and we've talked about that passage even very recently.

    39:04-39:12

    And Jesus gave his teaching on what it means to be married and defining divorce and adultery and all of that.

    39:12-39:18

    Well, the disciples heard all this, and this was their response to Jesus.

    39:18-39:24

    After hearing the Lord teach about marriage, this is what the disciples said in response to Jesus.

    39:25-39:41

    The disciples said to Him, "If such is the case of a man with his wife, it's better not to marry." Go back and read that whole passage, and you'll see they got it.

    39:42-39:44

    They were not rebuked for this statement.

    39:45-40:03

    Jesus is like, "Yeah, but not everybody can receive that, but yeah, they got it." Marriage is not for everyone, but there is a special wisdom and dedication that single people are gifted, right?

    40:04-40:06

    Our worship team would make their way back up front.

    40:13-40:22

    Single people, do you have the gift of being single?

    40:23-40:24

    Do you have that gift?

    40:28-40:32

    You're like, "You know, I really think this might be God's gift for me, being single." Is that you?

    40:32-40:34

    Well, I want to say something to you.

    40:34-40:38

    On the authority of the Word of God, it is not inferior to being married.

    40:39-40:46

    In fact, God says very clearly, in a lot of ways, it is better.

    40:49-40:55

    But for those of you who are single and you're struggling to know, "Do I have the gift?

    40:55-40:57

    I'm not sure if I have the gift.

    40:57-41:12

    What does God have for me?" Today I just want you to consider the benefits that the Word of God laid out, that there are troubles, distractions, and obligations that you're going to be saved from.

    41:13-41:14

    Let's pray.

    41:15-41:48

    in heaven, we thank you for your Word. And I know this can be a touchy and emotional subject, but I thank you. I thank you for the tone in which you inspired Paul to communicate this, that it wasn't some hard-nosed, snarky, legalistic thing at all, but just an objective look at reality.

    41:51-41:52

    God, You give gifts.

    41:52-41:53

    Your Word is so clear.

    41:53-42:10

    You give gifts to each one of us, and for some, Father, You've given the gift of singleness, and I pray a special blessing on those that You have so set aside for specific types of ministry that married people are unable to do.

    42:11-42:28

    Father, for the single people here maybe who are struggling, not sure if it's their gift, I just ask, Father, that you would maybe use this message to give them direction on what it is exactly you do have for them.

    42:30-42:47

    For the rest of us, Father, show us how we can love and encourage our single brothers and sisters without making them feel like they're on a second tier path because according to your word, it's kind of the opposite.

    42:49-42:53

    Give us wisdom, Father, in all these things we ask in Jesus' name, amen.

Small Group Discussion
Read
1 Corinthians 7:25-40

  1. What was your big take-away from this passage / message?

  2. Give some examples of “troubles” that come in marriage (internal and external) that single people are spared.

  3. How exactly are single people able to serve Jesus without “divided interests” (1 Cor 7:33)?

  4. What are some ways the church can reach single people for discipleship (without allowing it to become just a “match-making ministry”)?

Breakout

Pray for one another.