Saturday, March 22, 2014

1 Corinthians 1:4-18: Eternal Dividends Over Dividers

Presented to Swift Current Corps of The Salvation Army, 23 March 2014 by Captain Michael Ramsay
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Like Rick Mercer, today we are talking about divisions; so I have a little quiz for you:

  1. Who is the best football team?
  1. Who is the best hockey team?
  1. What is the best province in Canada?
  1. What is the second greatest province in Canada?
  1. Coke or Pepsi?
  1. Here’s a divisive one. Don’t answer this one: Conservative, NDP, Green, or Liberal?

My father often sums up any difficulties he had with his sister growing up with their weekly rivalry: Hockey Night in Canada or Lassie.

Divisions can cause serious problems and there are some divisions showing up in the Christian church at Corinth as Paul writes them this letter. Paul eases gently into this topic with the small church. He begins by telling them how much he appreciates them: he thanks God for the grace that has been given them through Jesus. He tells them how he has noticed that Jesus has enriched them in knowledge and in speech, in sharing the testimony of Christ, and in every spiritual gift such as these. He further encourages them that Jesus will continue to strengthen them, reminding them that God is faithful and that God will make all of them holy.

Paul says, in essence, ‘I love you; God is doing these great things in you and God will continue to do great things in and through you – so much so that you will actually be completely blameless by the time Jesus comes back.’ He says, ‘you folks are wonderful but there is one little problem that needs addressing.’[1] Actually it isn’t a little problem; this is more of a big problem so Paul invokes the name and title of Jesus Christ directly in his appeal to them. 1 Corinthians 1:10, “I appeal to you, brothers and sisters, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree with one another in what you say and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be perfectly united in mind and thought.”

This congregation is doing great but there are divisions in the church. The jar is still holding together but cracks are starting to show and unless those cracks are repaired soon the whole thing will burst, fragmenting the church, breaking it to pieces through the divisions so that nothing they say or do will hold any water, anymore. This is serious. And this is the actual language he is using. The Greek word for divisions in this passage literally means ‘tears’ or ‘cracks’.[2] Paul is warning if this continues the whole church will tear, crack and break apart.

We know how divisions can tear people apart. In the news these days is Ukraine. Ukraine has been in a political association with Russia for 350 years or so now. Ukraine has long been respected by Russia as the birthplace of the Russian people. Khrushchev, a Ukrainian was one of the Soviet Union’s most famous leaders. However, political intrigue, foreign meddling, and espionage in Ukraine have now led to division that a generation ago no one could have possibly foretold. And now some of the great economic and military powers of our world today: The US, Russia, Europe are throwing around rhetoric at such a feverish pitch that world has not heard in a long time. It is even being compared to the language used by the great powers in the build up to the First World War. Lest we forget. Lest we forget. Divisions can break nations apart. Divisions can tear people apart.

It is easy to divide people. Our political system is based on it. I don’t even have TV and I have already seen the Conservative attack ads targeting Justin Trudeau. Our politicians –like the earlier Rick Mercer clip showed- have become better and better with every generation at dividing Canadians. I still remember the attack ads against Ignateiff: ‘Michael Ignatieff: just visiting’, they said. The whole point of this is to divide Canadians and it does. You see those ads and automatically you are polarized. You either believe them, despising their target or you are revolted by the ads and the people that made them: instantly we are divided. Divisions can break nations apart. Divisions can tear people apart.

That is bad enough when it happens in politics; it is terrible when it happens to nations; it can be disastrous when it happens in the churches. As one denomination turns on another, people become angry, then people become apathetic and then people give up on going to church entirely and then people give up on God entirely – walking away from all the blessings of that eternal salvation that was bought for us at such a great price. It is one thing to argue about football. It is another to disagree about politics. It is unacceptable, Paul says, for there to be infighting in the Church. Christ is not divided. Divisions can break churches apart. Divisions can tear people apart.

In Bible study this week we paraphrased 1 Corinthians 1:12-13 like this: “What I mean is that each of you says, “I belong to The Salvation Army”, or “I belong to a Reformed Church (Calvinist, Alliance, Presbyterian)”, or “I belong to the Catholic Church.” Has Christ been divided? Was Martin Luther (John Wesley, John Knox, John Calvin, Ulrich Zwingli, William Booth, Menno Simons, etc.) or even your local pastor (Captain Michael Ramsay) crucified for you? Or were you baptised into the name of your minister (Captain Susan Ramsay) or the person who ‘led you to Christ’?

I think the sins of denominationalism have in no small way contributed to the lower worshipper turnout in the churches especially among the young and the marginalized. We need to be united in our message of hope to the young and we need to be united in our availability to the marginalized. We need to be united in our message. We need to be united in our hope.

But there is more than that. This passage isn’t actually explicitly addressing the sins associated with denominationalism.[3] There is only one Christian church that we know of in the city of Corinth at this time and that church isn’t probably very big. This passage is speaking about divisions in a church probably about the same size as ours. This passage is talking about cliques and this passage is talking about quarrels among its members (1 Corinthians 1:11).

There are many things that we can fight about in the church. I have heard of churches that have been divided over the colour of the choir robes or matters of equally eternal importance. The main thing that Paul is addressing here is that some people are claiming to follow one leader who has come through their local church and maybe saw a few of them baptized. Some claim that they prefer the message of another leader who has probably visited them. Still others claim that they prefer yet another. The leaders aren’t in conflict with each other but the people are.

We know that in the early church there were many people who would travel around preaching and teaching and sharing the gospel. Three really big names have either come to speak to this church in Corinth at different times or else some of its members have heard them speak somewhere else. I imagine then that when people in the church were having disagreements they could then start to say, ‘Well, I heard Cephas say something different than what you are telling me and we know that Cephas is Peter and we know that Peter is the one whom Jesus said he would build his whole church upon’ (Matthew 16:18); to this someone could reply, ‘well I heard the apostle Paul say something different and isn’t Paul the apostle for the Gentiles like us’ (Acts 15:17); and some could say, ‘Well, I knew Apollos personally and he even baptized me and my whole family so whatever I say comes out of a real relationship with a leader.’

People are using the names of the early church leaders in vain and this is making Paul quite angry. Paul says, ‘we are not divided so why are you?’ Paul says, ‘Christ didn’t give some truth for Peter to follow, some for Paul, and some for Apollos’. He asks rhetorically, Verse 13, “Is Christ divided? Was [I], Paul crucified for you? Were you baptized in [my name] the name of Paul?” No.

This is important. Paul then goes on to speak about baptism. Paul says, Verses 14-17:
I thank God that I did not baptize any of you except Crispus and Gaius, so no one can say that you were baptized in my name. (Yes, I also baptized the household of Stephanas; beyond that, I don’t remember if I baptized anyone else.)  For Christ did not send me to baptize, but to preach the gospel—not with wisdom and eloquence, lest the cross of Christ be emptied of its power.

We know what water baptism was used for in the first century, right? It was a common initiation rite (Cf. John 3:22; Acts 2:41, 8:36-38, 16:11-15; 1 Corinthians 15:28-30; see also John 4:1-2, Acts 10:48, and Mark 3, Matthew 3). Like today people will often make pledges or sign pieces of paper; in the eastern Mediterranean world of the first century, people would be baptized. In the Bible we have examples of them using baptism much the same way that evangelicals use the ‘Sinner’s Prayer’ today. You wouldn’t go through classes before you were baptized. Like with Phillip and the Ethiopian eunuch: the moment he accepted Christ he was baptized (Acts 8:26-40). Not only that but in 1 Corinthians here and elsewhere we have examples of people when they come to faith baptizing their entire household – their family, their staff, their live stalk – dedicating it all to the Lord (1 Corinthians 1:16; See also Acts 16:15,33 and 18:8). We even have examples of people being baptized on behalf of those who have already died (1 Corinthians 15:29). We don’t know what this is all about but I presume it relates to recognizing what the Lord has done through people who served God and passed on before they ever heard the Good News of Jesus Christ’s Salvation for the world. Baptism was used as a rite not unlike today’s ‘Sinners Prayer’ when people come to faith.

Now this, you can tell, would often create a bond between the persons who were baptized and the person who baptized them. We often have a bond with the person who ‘leads us to the Lord.’ I know I often think about and pray for those I prayed with as they dedicated their lives to God.

In Corinth, baptism may have been contributing somewhat to the divisions. The Bible says that Jesus, Peter, Paul, and others baptized. They did not make it a part of their regular practice though (Cf. John 3:22, 4:1-2, Acts 2:41, 8:36-38, 10:48), none of them. Paul says here that his main purpose is to share the Gospel rather than to baptize. As others hear it, it is their job to baptize others; it is our job to lead people to the Lord. The Great Commission that Jesus gives us after his return from the dead is for us to baptize people in the Name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost (Matthew 28:18-20) – Not to rally around different leaders who may have baptized one or another of us personally. Jesus doesn’t say to bring people to apostles or priests or pastors to be baptized, he tells us to go forth and baptize everyone in His name because there is only one Christ and there is only one baptism so it doesn’t matter who of us does the baptizing.[4] It doesn’t matter who of us leads people to Christ.

This is why Paul is thankful that he had not baptized many of the members of this church personally: he can honestly say that he hasn’t done something to contribute to their divisions. This is a good reason why Jesus and Peter may have had others baptizing those in the flock: so that people aren’t divided, so that the church is not divided. After all, there really is only one baptism for the Christian and that baptism – no matter who performs the rite – is into the Lord (Ephesians 4:5).

Baptism is good but the enemy used baptism to divide the Corinthians. Baptism contributed to their divisions; what contributes to ours?  What divisions are in our corps? What cracks and tears are threatening to break our congregation? Do some of us disagree about what preachers we have heard on the radio or TV? Do some of us argue about adiaphora, matters of spiritual indifference? Do some of us divide over making dinners or visiting others? Do some of us divide over who is leading a ministry or a night out? Do some of us divide over things like politics or sports or music or other such temporal divisions?

Today I invite us to ask ourselves, is there anything that divides us form our Saviour? Is there anything stopping me from worshipping alongside my neighbour? Is there anything stopping me from serving alongside my neighbour? Is there anything that the enemy can use to cause strife and division within our my own heart and soul, if so we need to hand it to the Lord so that indeed we can have the powerful unified ministry that Christ desires for us.

Let us pray.


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[1] Cf. Richard B. Hays, 1 Corinthians. Louisville, Kentucky: John Knox Press Press, 1985 (Interpretation: A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Perching), 20-21
[2] Cf. W. Harold Mare, The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Pradis CD-ROM:1 Corinthians/Exposition of 1 Corinthians/III. The Problem of Divisions in the Church (1:10-17), Book Version: 4.0.2
[3] Cf. Leon Morris, 1 Corinthians: An Introduction and Commentary. Downers Grove, IL : InterVarsity Press, 1985 (Tyndale New Testament Commentaries 7), S. 45
[4] Cf. J. Paul Sampley, The First Letter to the Corinthians. Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon Press, 2002 (NIB X), 807.

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Hebrews 13:1-2: Entertaining Angels

Presented to Swift Current Corps of The Salvation Army 02 March 2014 and the Rural Ministries Conference at Cypress Bible Camp 04 March 2014 by Captain Michael Ramsay

We men, as you know, can be fairly organized and very task-orientated and when I was in teacher-training many years ago we learned that while women are generally more skilled at the creative side of things, men have a much higher aptitude for math and all that side of things. So here is a math question for you that Ed here and I were faced with a few years ago driving back from Beaver Creek Bible Camp. Let’s see how you do. If you start off with 1 Officer bus driver and 5 other men from Maple Creek and you add 1 Officer and 4 other men from Swift Current, how many men do you have? (11).

Good. Now if you subtract 1 Alvin and later, after Saskatoon, you plan to add 1 David (David is Captain Ed’s son) how many men should you have on your bus as you leave men’s camp? (10) Do you think we could get that right? With nine men on the bus doing a head count we came up with anywhere from 6– 11 people present and we were quite content with that until someone eventually asked, ‘where’s Tim?’ Sure enough as soon as we pulled out of the camp, down came Tim to where the bus was supposed to be and we were already gone - leaving Tim standing at the path wondering what had happened and why we had left without him. (His pastor and another pastor and all of his friends from the church)

Now to be fair to all of us in the bus who did leave Tim behind, we did come back as soon as we realized our error. And when we were doing our head counts, just as we were pulling out without Tim, I did ask anyone who wasn’t there before we left to raise their hand and speak up now or we’d leave them behind and Tim – Tim didn’t speak up to let us know that we’d left him behind.

We did get Tim and were joking with him most of the way back – all the way through Saskatoon anyway, through Delisle. We were joking as we were talking about how we could be so ‘out of it’ that someone could be left behind when all of a sudden, Ed pulled the bus over to the side of the highway: “we forgot David”, he said. In all our excitement in mocking ourselves for forgetting Tim, Ed –who was driving – and we completely forgot to pick up Ed’s son, David, in Saskatoon. To make a much longer story short, we called two other people who were in Saskatoon and they kindly picked up David and brought him to Swift Current where they rendezvoused with Ed and then they continued on home.

I think often times we – if you are anything like me – can fail to see God in our local rural ministries, the way we failed to see who was or was not on this bus from camp. I know our scriptures say that there have been times when we have even entertained angels unaware. I have told a story of what I believe was just that from an urban setting.

When our children were just little, we sold our home and our businesses and moved into North America’s poorest postal code - Vancouver’s downtown eastside - as full-time urban missionaries with The Salvation Army.

We saw many miracles in that setting but our time there, as you can well imagine, wasn’t always rosy though. I remember one day – one morning, I was mugged. I knew better but I wasn’t paying attention. It was early in the morning and I was right on Main and Hastings – the most infamous intersection in this most infamous neighbourhood and I was on the pay phone with Susan who was out of town at the time.

Someone came running up behind me, grabbed my briefcase and tore down Main Street. In the briefcase was my laptop and all the information for the summer school program I was running for the kids in the area; so, like anyone mugged in the depths of skid row, I’m sure, I…well, I chased the mugger.

I followed him down Main Street through Chinatown across busy streets and around the myriad of mazes that are Vancouver’s back alleys. Scaring rats, jumping over sleeping street folk, I pursued my assailant. When I was within reach of him… I fell right in front of a bus and though I escaped from in front of the bus with my life, the mugger escaped with my briefcase, my laptop, and the program files for the kids.

It was when I was walking back, completely distraught and despondent from this incident, that I experienced the miracle that happened: I encountered an angel, a messenger of God, in the back alleys of Vancouver’s storied downtown eastside. I can still remember vividly; he looked like a ‘dumpster diver;’ he prayed with me and he offered me these words of encouragement from Romans 5:3,4 “...but let us also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.” Inside I sighed. I knew he was right. God gave me these words to encourage me because my life was about to get turned upside down in ways we haven’t got time to address here today. God gave me these words to encourage me.

Today, how many times does God come to us through angels, messengers, and or people in our communities? How many times do we run into the same people struggling with the same problems but today something is different, today they have a message from God for us but maybe we don’t see it; maybe we write it off and ignore it. There is a schizophrenic gentleman who comes into my office not as often as he used too but I now try to pay special attention to what he says because often hidden somewhere in the midst of his ramblings is a message from God. Many times we have helped people our in the courts or in the food banks or other ministries here and only really notice after the encounter that God was there. I think in rural ministries particularly we have the opportunity to see God and serve Him through our neighbours in ways that we do not have elsewhere. We all know the scriptures Matthew 25:34-40:

34 “Then the King will say to those on his right, ‘Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. 35 For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, 36 I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.’

37 “Then the righteous will answer him, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink? 38 When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? 39 When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?’

40 “The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’

And this is the same for us as we walk alongside our brothers and sisters in everyday life, in our churches, in our communities: even those people who can try to monopolize our time or our energy. Sometimes these people in real need in our neighbourhoods and communities may be the Lord himself or a messenger of His. I want to leave you with one more story that I read a couple of years ago in, the Expository Times.

James V, the King of Scotland used to go around the country dressed like everyone else: a common person. That is because he wanted to meet the everyday people of the country not just the rich and powerful. He wanted to see how the normal people lived.

One day he was dressed in very old clothes and was going by a place known as Cramond Brig, when he is attacked by robbers who don’t know who he is. There is a fierce struggle and he is nearly overcome when, at just the right moment, a poor farm worker - Jock Howieson - hears the commotion comes to the disguised king’s aid.

Now Jock, the poor labourer, who works on this portion of the King’s land, known as Cramond Brig, now Jock unawares takes the undercover king home and gives him a dinner of broth and Jock - as the king is recouping – naturally asks the man who he is.

The King responds – in a Scottish brogue that I am not even going to attempt – ‘Ach, I’m a good man of Edinburgh.’

‘And where do you live in that city and where do you work?’

‘Well,’ says James, ‘I live at the palace and I work there too.’

‘The palace, is it? I’d like to see the palace; if I could see the King, I’d tell him a thing or two…’

‘About what?’ asks the King in disguise.

‘I’d tell him that I should own this land that I am on. I work it every day and he never comes here and gets his hands dirty working this land’

‘You’re right enough’, says the man. You come tomorrow to the palace at Holly Rood and I’ll show you around. Come at two.’

So the next day at two o’clock, Jock Howieson, is washed, dressed and at the palace to meet his new friend at the back door. The good man, whom Jock had served and saved the day before, shows him around the kitchen, the dining room, the bedrooms – the whole place. Then, at last, the two of them come to the great rooms of the State.

‘Do you want to see the King?’ the man asks Jock.

‘Oh yes indeed’, says Jock, ‘I do. I do want to see the King.’

So they enter the great hall and as they come in, men bow and ladies curtsey. It is really quite a thing to see.

So Jock whispers to his friend, ‘How will I know who the king is?’

‘He’s the only one who keeps his hat on’…

Jock says, ‘But… there’s only us two with our hats…’ and Jock immediately takes off his hat as he realises that James is indeed the King of Scotland.

And so it is with us today. Jesus is King, what we do for the least of these through our local communities – just like Jock, just like the Matthew’s sheep in Jesus’ parable of the sheep and the goats, what ever we do for the least, the lost and the last, we are actually doing for Christ. Today, He is walking around with each of us showing us his domain here on earth and just waiting for us to take off our hats in service to Him. Let us do just that take off our hats and acknowledge His Lordship by looking out for our local neighbour – especially the least, the lost and the last.