Good Morning All!!
1
Cor. 4:1; “This is how one should regard us, as servants of Christ and stewards
of the mysteries of God.”
There are some types of people who really
can drive us nuts. One type of person is
the guy at work or on a board who thinks that he is the smartest guy
there. He thinks that he has all the
answers and his opinion is enough to settle any type of discussion. The
only thing worse than trying to work with that one guy; is trying to work with
2 or 3 of them. That is where Paul finds
himself when he writes this first letter to the Corinthians.
Paul spends the three chapters before this
condemning the divisions within the Church at Corinth. Some of the members thought that what they
said was what was to go. And the phrase
members (with an “s”) is important. There
was the equivalent of political parties lobbying for control within the
church. So Paul uses a different tactic
in chapter 4. He calls himself a servant
of Christ. That sounds pretty good. We should be regarded as servants of Christ. That sounds nice enough, even gives us a
little sense of pride in our place in life.
Unfortunately, if we read it that way, we miss the whole point that Paul
makes.
Here is a case where our English misses the
real point. Paul actually calls himself
an “under oarsman”. This was the galley
slave who rode on the big Roman warships.
There were three levels of oarsmen.
The bottom level was where the under oarsmen would be lashed to their
rowing stations. You can only imagine
the conditions here. No real good
ventilation, there were no bathroom breaks for the slaves and the food and
water would have been suspect. So all
the human waste, the vomit, etc. would have washed down from the top two decks
onto these “under oarsmen”. It is as low
on the power totem pole as you get and Paul calls himself one of these.
Here Paul is clearly pointing out to the
Corinthians that what they bring to the table when it comes to their salvation
is complete garbage. All our righteousness
is from God. The Good News of our
salvation through Christ is given to us and Christ, in his mercy and grace, has
raised us from this under oarsman to be a steward. A steward was the most trusted household
slave. He took care of the family
business while the owner was away. He
was entrusted with the power to make deals, to buy and to sell just like the
owner. We went from totally nothing to
being the most trusted servants of Christ given the mysteries of God, the
Gospel and the sacraments, which the world sees as foolish but we know to be
true.
So Paul tells us, “see that you do not
inflate your own worth but look to Christ Jesus as your only hope of salvation,
trusting in his promise and blessed with his mysteries to have, to hold and to
share with others in faith.
Father in heaven, keep us humble as we look at the blessings which
we receive from you. Lead us to see that
it is your great love that sustains us and not our knowledge. Lead us to share those great mysteries of
faith with all that we meet. In Jesus’
precious name we pray, Amen.
God’s
Peace,
Pastor
Bret
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