This is the seventh lesson in a series on 1 Corinthians. You can read
all about the series in the Introduction. I’ve broken the post into sections with
journal prompts at the end of each part. These would be great stopping points.
I’ve also linked the Scripture references to biblegateway.com; click the blue
font references. I’d love to hear what you’re learning in the comments!
Peace When it Breaks
So from the last lesson we learned that the ideal is to recognize
God’s gifts in your situation and abide in Him there. Which is a great idea in
Ideal-land. But, what do you do when that ideal falls all to pieces? There is
zero doubt in my mind that you, precious one reading this, have
been touched by brokenness in a marriage or almost marriage that mattered to
you. It might be yours, it might be your parents’, it might be someone you
watched closely assuming they were abiding in the ideal…. it’s touched us all.
I think of people close to me who have tried so hard to obey Jesus in a hopeless marriage, begging Him for healing. I think of a sweet lady who
follows Jesus far away from here in a place full of spiritual
darkness. As she tried to learn Jesus’ ways and bring them to her marriage
she was further rejected. It’s so hurtful. Why? What then?
As you read this section of
verses, I pray that you see hope.
First let’s clear up an
interpretation question. When Paul says “Not
I but the Lord” in verse 10 and then “I,
not the Lord” in verse 12 what on earth is he talking about?
{Seriously…..anyone else get hung up here? I know
it’s not just me. When I was reading through 1 Corinthians considering teaching I almost quit right here…just didn’t get it. Did not.}
Remembering the context from
what we’ve studied so far and the reminders at the beginning of this post,
consider these little tidbits I uncovered:
First Corinthians was
written before the gospels (Prior, 123). Most scholars agree that when Paul
compares his words to Jesus’ words he is referring to the publicly spoken (or for us - written) words of Jesus.
When Paul instructs new believers he can’t reference Matthew 5:32 where Jesus
teaches on marriage and divorce because there isn’t such a reference yet. So when
he gets to verse 12, he wants to clarify that while his words jive with the
teaching from Jesus and all of Scripture, he isn’t directly quoting Jesus’ words
– he is following God’s leadership through the Holy Spirit and the experiences
and instruction he has received so far. Still inspired by God, but not Jesus
quotes. Here is what my Study Bible says about these verses, “Paul knows the oral tradition of Jesus’
sayings on divorce that were later written down in the Gospels…He carefully distinguishes
between the written words of Jesus as recorded in the Gospels and Paul’s own
understanding of how Jesus’ teachings would apply to this new situation. Paul
views his admonition here as authoritative and inspired, not merely as human
wisdom (See 1 Corinthians 7:40, 14:37-38)” (ESV, 2200).
I wonder, what was the original
question the Corinthians wrote to Paul? I wonder about the individuals who had
found this beautiful new life in Jesus only to turn around in their homes and
find discord and pain because of their new attachment. There were questions;
hard ones, about what to do when you are joined – glued together to someone who
doesn’t have the same beliefs. Add to this that some scholars think this might have been Paul’s own experience. It was extremely rare for a Jewish man to
remain single, and not allowed for a member of the San Hedrin; which was the Jewish
ruling council that old Paul’s career path would’ve been targeting. (Prior, 121; Morris, 104; Blomberg, 134) We
don’t know, Paul might’ve always been single, he might’ve been widowed. Maybe
he’d faced the exact situation in verses 15-16; left by an unbelieving spouse
when the Upside-Downness of following Jesus cost too much and seemed like
lunacy.
What we know for sure is that Paul is single and considers it a gift,
yet even here he gives compassionate and redemptive advice to a man or woman
who follows Jesus alone in their marriage. “Consents”
in verse 13 means “pleased to dwell.”
So, if you are married to someone who doesn’t share your faith, but still is
happy to be married to you then you shouldn’t divorce him or her. Unshared
belief on its own is not reason for divorce. Back to our lesson on abide, in that
situation you serve and share and abide in Jesus praying and hoping for His
Kingdom come in your marriage.
One of the troubling parts
of this passage is when it brings up the kiddos. This passage says that kids
and unsaved spouses are “made holy”
by the believing spouse. What? That sounds kinda weird….he goes on to say that
the unsaved spouse might be saved by the believing one. Whaaaat? Thought God alone is the One who makes us holy. Right? Right?!
Right. Remember hagiazo from Week 1? It was "sanctified" in chapter 1, here it’s "holy". It means to “withdraw from fellowship with the world by
first gaining fellowship with God.” (Zodhiates, 878). Read 1
Corinthians 7:14 below where I’ve added the definition for holy.
“For the unbelieving husband
is made holy {withdrawn from fellowship with the world by first gaining fellowship
with God} because of his wife…..”
Can you see how this might
work in a real everyday life? Can you see why it’s so important that we are
really, REALLY Inside Out Holy? If you are a Christian and your husband is not,
then he benefits from living with you because your home and your life, your
attitudes and responses are holy….withdrawn from fellowship with the world.
This protects your family and opens up an example for your unbelieving husband and kids to see
first hand the miracle that first gaining fellowship with God truly is. THIS is
what it means that they are made holy because of you. You cannot MAKE them
holy, but you can persevere in BEING holy so that they have a front row seat to
the miracles that come from genuine fellowship with God.
Just as a point of application; maybe we should spend less time changing and convincing an unbelieving spouse...friend...parent...child and spend more time investing in the cementing of our own Inside - Out Holiness as a powerful example and platform for Jesus to show Himself off!
When Paul refers to the
believing spouse saving the unbelieving spouse in verse 16, he’s not saying you
actually have the power to save them; he’s pointing out the “human agency in salvation” (Zodhiates,
959). You can read more about that
concept in Romans 11:14, 1 Corinthians 9:22. It’s not that we save, it’s that
our unity and holiness and willingness to share and serve bring people toward Him.
He does the saving and the growing in the church; but He chooses to use us in
the process.
Journal
Prompt: What connections to you see between Inside Out Holiness described in
these verses and the impact on everyday life in your home or work?
Let’s talk about when this
doesn’t work. A marriage is self-destructing because of sin or selfishness or
both. There is a Jesus-lover in the marriage, maybe even both of them love
Jesus, but lies and deceit and sin have wreaked havoc and everyone is broken.
There is no window to glimpse holiness because everyone is just barely crawling
out with their lives. Clearly Paul teaches that if the unbelieving spouse wants
to leave, let him – let her (15). Sometimes it’s not so easily defined.
When marriages turn into
warzones, it must break God’s heart much the same as when churches turn into
warzones. We are called to healing unity, remember? In the middle of this very
practical answer to a very specific question, there is a nugget of hope for
even the worst case scenarios.
“…in
such cases the brother or sister is not enslaved.
God
has called you to peace.”
1
Corinthians 7:15 ESV
I hope that this is a
comfort to the husband or wife who has tried everything to bring peace and
satisfaction to a spouse whose appetites and insecurity cannot be tamed.
You are called to peace.
I hope that this is a
comfort to the man or woman who has been wounded by well-meaning church folks trying
to make a painful situation fit a criteria list with loopholes. Hurts when you just
can’t check all the boxes.
You are called to peace.
I hope that this is a
comfort to the parent who wrestles with leaving a dangerous and unhealthy situation as they see their children are slowly melting into sadness and hopelessness.
You are called to peace.
I hope that you, as you read
this, know that peace is not just the absence of strife; it is the presence of
Jesus. And He is with you. Keep abiding and keep seeking peace. Make the hard
choices and do the hard things, then stick so tight to Him that you know when
He says to serve and stay and you know when He says to get up and go for a
season, purposing to allow discipline and healing and reconciliation to have a
chance.
“Peace in the widest sense…means that “all is well”
in one’s life and circumstances, which is the OT concept of shalom. Most
interpreters hold that God releases the believing spouse from the twin unending
distresses of a lifelong vain hope of reconciling with an unbeliever who has
abandoned the believing spouse, and a lifelong prohibition against enjoying the
blessings of marriage again.” (ESV, 2200)
One of the commentaries I
studied said this: the Christian should “take
the way of faith and expectation before the situation is given up.” (Prior,
128)
That’s exactly what we have
seen throughout these chapters. Choose faith and hopeful expectation in EVERY
situation – singleness, happy marriage, hopeless marriage – EVERY situation.
Abide always, make the hard choices for peace as God describes it, not seeking the easy answer that makes sense; whether it’s staying or leaving.
I took this picture while on a boat on the Sea of Galilee. This is where Jesus said, "Peace. Be Still." to the life-threatening waves that were terrifying the disciples. (Mark 4:39 ESV) |
And just as a final note; as
a church wouldn’t it be wonderful if we gathered up our brothers and sisters
broken by separation and divorce with less focus on loopholes and criteria
lists for innocence and more focus on peaceful wholeness as a body?
Journal
Prompt: Where is a place in your life today that feels broken? How does God’s
calling to peace cover this place?
Live as You’re Called
Read this whole passage and
then go back and read just verses 17 and 24. I’ve linked them together here. Read
them together over and over again in different translations, I've included my favs in the links, be sure and scroll down to see both verses. Read them keeping
in mind the lessons we’ve learned so far.
These two verses summarize
this section beautifully. Be content, live YOUR
life, abide with God without comparing or falling to the “someday when…” syndrome. The “someday
when….” is an absolute Killer to your contentment. Stop it right now.
Comparing your life and journey to another is also a Killer to your
contentment. I wrote about Comparison here…..
Verses 18-19 remind us not
to be religious, but to be obedient. God’s way doesn’t always make sense, but
there is the promise of His abundant grace there. Trying to do what seems right
only in our eyes or the opinions of others is a grace-void place that makes us
slaves to men (verse 23). No, Thank
you.
Journal
Prompt: Read this post about contentment and comparison. Where are some places
that you are comparing? What is God asking you to do in those places?
Live with Eternal Purpose in Mind
Paul is about to give some
more advice that we can assume answers specific questions written to him. As he
addresses questions regarding marriage and remarriage, I want you to
see a thread that runs through every bit of instruction he gives - eternal
purpose.
What does it look like to live
with eternal purpose in mind?
In verses 32-35 especially I
see this description. Living with eternal purpose in mind allows us to be free
from anxieties (32a), to have undivided
interests (34), and to have undivided
devotion to the Lord (35). As this
Corinthian church is growing, these baby Christians desperately need direction so that
they can weather the coming storms of persecution. God is calling them to a
life that is always mindful of the eternal. Marriage and family is wonderful and
beautiful as it illustrates God’s great love for His people. Marriage and
family is also demanding, and sometimes troublesome.
“Yet those who marry will have worldly troubles, and
I would spare you that.” (verse 28)
Here’s a day in the life of a husband I know:
He wakes up earlier than he
would like to so that he can drive one child to school early for cheer
practice. He rushes her out the door with a large amount of fussing, as she is
late and unhappy to be awake. Then he comes home to get himself ready before he
drives the second daughter to the same school an hour later. Next he goes to a
demanding job and tries to work creatively, weathering interruptions and
negotiations for a few hours before preparing for a lunch meeting only to be
interrupted by a text from his wife. His wife who has overscheduled her day and
needs help transporting kids. One of them is a child who drives, but has lost
his wallet and driver’s license and also has to be chauffeured to his various
activities…including lunch. So this husband leaves work and drives across town
to the child’s school where he waits for said child who never shows because he
went with a friend instead and didn’t let his dad know. Eventually he has to
leave and go back to a lunch meeting….and it’s not even noon yet.
Believe me, that day didn't get any less convoluted.
This story could be a blog post in itself.
Believe me, that day didn't get any less convoluted.
This story could be a blog post in itself.
I’ve shared a silly version of what this looks like; but sometimes it’s not so funny. A wife you
expected to share life with develops a physical or mental illness, a child has
a learning disability that costs more in time and money than you have, a job
evaporates leaving you unable to provide. There are worldly troubles. Yes,
these troubles offer beautiful opportunities to see God provide maturity. Yes,
they give us a chance to lead our family to follow God in faith that is
wondrous and the "result of grace" gift that we talked about earlier. For
most family is our calling. But for some, Paul included, singleness is the
calling so that a follower can effectively chase after a truly unique opportunity
to build God’s kingdom.
There is no contradiction here, one is not better than the other - they are both God-given gifts with different troubles that ALL point us to depending more and more on Jesus. In EITHER situation and in view of the present distress…remain…keep an eternal focus…the time is growing short.
There is no contradiction here, one is not better than the other - they are both God-given gifts with different troubles that ALL point us to depending more and more on Jesus. In EITHER situation and in view of the present distress…remain…keep an eternal focus…the time is growing short.
Journal
Prompt: The purpose of this section of instruction is to “promote good order
and to secure our undivided devotion to the Lord” (verse 35). How does your
perspective need to adjust to promote good order and secure undivided devotion
to the Lord?
I can't tell you how clear some of these troubling passages became once I'd spent the time to consider the history and setting of 1 Corinthians and the lessons in the first 6 chapters. It makes me so excited to get to some of the familiar passages still coming....
I love studying the Bible like this. How about you?
I love studying the Bible like this. How about you?
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