Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Growth.

Yesterday during my daily Bible reading I do with Gab, I discovered (discover - to become aware of a fact or situation) a wonderful chapter on growth that Paul wrote about. However, it isn't really headed up as a chapter on growth, so it was a revelation of something I wasn't even looking for. I love it when the Holy Spirit does that :)

1 Corinthians 3 has an overlying theme of growth and I will show you why. 
  1. Paul stresses to us that we are meant to grow. He refers to how the diet of the Corinthians was still one of milk, rather than the solid food that they should be on by now. Just like a diet for a child changes as they grow, our diet as Christians is meant to grow. He refers to them as being infants, and I kind of get the sense that he is saying, "Come one guys... I thought you would have been bigger than this by now!" Paul is stressing that growth is meant to happen. If it is not, there is something wrong. We are stinted somewhere.
  2. That we have a choice to how strong we grow. In verses 10-12, Paul wonderfully explains how the foundation of our faith is Jesus Christ. Think about this for a second, it's not the Church, it's not another leader in the church... it's completely, rock-solidly, never changing, forever will be, Jesus Christ. He is the foundation. It's then up to us as to what we build on that. In verse 12, he says that we have the building materials of gold, silver, jewels, wood, hay or straw. I had one massive thought at this point... "How many times do we build with straw, when we should actually be building with gold? Do we build with the effort and care required to build a golden temple with our faith, or do we just throw some sticks together and some straw over the top and call that our temple of our faith." In verse 16 and 17, Paul tells us that the Holy Spirit lives in us. Well, what kind of temple have you built for the Holy Spirit to dwell in? Is it a straw hut? Or is it a golden palace... 
  3. Paul clearly states that our growth is our responsibility. Not our pastor, not our favourite authors, not the podcasts we listen to, the blogs we read... it is not their responsibility for me to grow. It is mine. Throughout chapter 3, Paul is saying this to the people of Corinth, and I love how the chapter closes. "So don't take pride in following a particular leader. Everything belongs to you: Paul and Apollos and Peter; the whole world and life and death; the present and the future. Everything belongs to you, and you belong to Christ, and Christ belongs to God." It's like he is saying... "You have everything you need to change this world. Do it. Full charge ahead. Why? Because everyone is equal, we are all part of this incredible Creation of God, all on the same playing field. Jesus is our foundation, and God is our Father. No one is above or below in Christ, some of us just take the job at hand a bit more seriously than others..."
Those where my thoughts anyway :) Hope that blesses you in some way.

Oh! One last thought, the foundation which is Jesus is always there. You don't need to build it, because it already happened when He got on the cross and rose from the grave. That was his foundation for you, it's called grace. As Paul wrote in Romans, even before we deserved it, Christ died for us. 

All of our foundations need to be expanded however, and I don't mean that they need to grow, I mean through revelation of Christ, we need to uncover the overgrowth of sin and the Fall that is on that foundation, revealing to us more and more about Christ and thus increasing the area of useable foundation we can start to build on.

Man, what a write. I'm poofed. What do you guys think?

2 comments:

Esther Irwin said...

you are such a preacher, Dan! It's always great to get those revelations from God. Chew on it for awhile; it's good food.

Sam. said...

Indeed, some very incredible thoughts. So incredible that they've made me think. Which is a good thing, cuz it encourages me to grow. Which is kind of the point...