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ATTACKED, BUT UNBROKEN ...

10/29/2017

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2 Corinthians 4:5-9  (The Message)

Remember, our Message is not about ourselves; we’re proclaiming Jesus Christ, the Master.  All we are is messengers, errand runners from Jesus for you.  It started when God said, “Light up the darkness!” and our lives filled up with light as we saw and understood God in the face of Christ, all bright and beautiful.
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If you only look at us, you might well miss the brightness.  We carry this precious Message around in the unadorned clay pots of our ordinary lives.  That’s to prevent anyone from confusing God’s incomparable power with us.  As it is, there’s not much chance of that.  You know for yourselves that we’re not much to look at.  We’ve been surrounded and battered by troubles, but we’re not demoralized; we’re not sure what to do, but we know that God knows what to do; we’ve been spiritually terrorized, but God hasn’t left our side; we’ve been thrown down, but we haven’t broken.

Natural disasters have a way of messing up schedules, so it has been quite a while since we last spent any time on Paul’s letters.  In our original schedule, we would have finished with the seven “authentically” Pauline letters by now – but -- life happens -- fire happens -- and  here we are. 

In mid-June, we began with his first Letter to the Thessalonians – the first of his letters to be written (at least, first among the letters that remain to us).  This was followed by Galatians.  After Galatians we moved to Paul’s first letter to the community at Corinth, followed by a personal letter to Philemon, then Philippeans, which was followed by Paul’s second letter to the people of Corinth.  We were interrupted halfway through 2nd Corinthians, and so that’s where we are rejoining Paul today.

If you can remember back that far, this letter is actually a paste-up of at least three separate letters – maybe more – that were for some reason preserved as one.  In keeping with our mission to read these letters in the chronological order in which Paul would most likely have written them, we looked first into the last four chapters, which were, ironically, probably the first written.

The chapters we looked at showed us Paul dealing with the same old thing – the false teaching of the Judaizers who came around after Paul, convincing his converts that Paul had lied to them and they really had to become good Jews to be considered true followers of Jesus.  We were dealing with cranky Paul, here in these four chapters – and rightly so.

Today we’ll start with the middle two chapters, 8 and 9.  These really could have been written at any time in relation to the other chapters.  They have a different tone than either the first or the last chapters.  The subject of here is the collection that is being taken up for the churches of Jerusalem and the “holy lands.”  Paul is no longer cranky in these two chapters, but ministerial and encouraging.

At this point in time, the Jerusalem communities would have been suffering from more persecution than Paul’s converted Gentiles communities.  Early in the Christian years, the largely Gentile communities were somewhat ignored by the locals, as long as they did nothing to attract the attention of the Roman authorities.  This wouldn’t last, of course, but for a while there was relative peace for them.

In contrast, right from the first the Christian communities in Judea were harassed by Jewish zealots who attacked them constantly and were not above using the Roman state against them when they could – just as they had used the Romans to kill Jesus.  As a consequence, these communities struggled.

In this middle section, Paul is raising a collection from the Macedonian churches – among the very first of his converts – to help support the Jewish Jesus-followers.  The Greek people have been generous in the past, and Paul expects them to be generous again.  He is bringing Titus with him on these appeals, because apparently, Titus is a big favorite among the people.  Titus is a Greek name, so chances are he was a local convert, rather than a Hebrew missionary.  The people like him and trust him, so Paul offers them Titus, and praises them in advance for their generosity and general goodness.

And so, on to the opening chapters of this long letter which were the last to be written.   Here we meet, once again, a loving, patient Paul.  He begins by apologizing for not having come to see them sooner.  It was the deepest desire of his heart to do so, he declares, but he has avoided them to spare them trouble from those enemies who had been dogging his path for so long.  This abuse appears to have been in the past at this point and Paul is prepared now to forgive and forget and move on.  In chapter 5 we are told: If anyone is in Christ, there is a new creation: everything old has passed away; see, everything has become new! 

Earlier, in chapter 4, Paul had reminded the Corinthians – and, I suspect – himself, of just why he is here.  “Our Message is not about ourselves; we’re proclaiming Jesus Christ, the Master.  All we are is messengers, errand runners from Jesus for you.”
In these chapters, 1 through 9, Paul turns away from the problems that were constantly bedeviling his work, and back to the message and the truth that set him out on this task in the first place.  God called Paul, as it is translated in today’s reading, to “Light up the darkness!”   

This is the message, he says, that God called me to tell you.  This is why I came here to be among you.  This is what I was sent to teach you:  The old way – the way of fear and punishment and spiritual death -- was struck down by Jesus of Nazareth when, by his life and death, he conquered sin and despair in this world.  This is the new life we are promised.  This is the forgiveness that was yours when you first heard me speak and turned your lives to following the way of Jesus.  We are, all of us, a new people.

This has been a strange letter, at times, reading it back to front, pieces from here and there.  But these first chapters especially are Paul at his best -- this errand runner for Jesus – preaching the love which was always the driving force behind everything he tried to do.  Lighting the darkness.

Next week we will delve into Romans – the longest of the letters and the last of our seven – and the one that contains some of the best known writing in the New Testament.

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THREE, MAYBE FOUR, LETTERS IN ONE -- (2nd Corinthians)

10/1/2017

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2 Corinthians 10:1-6
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I myself, Paul, appeal to you by the meekness and gentleness of Christ—I who am humble when face to face with you, but bold toward you when I am away! —  I ask that when I am present I need not show boldness by daring to oppose those who think we are acting according to human standards.   Indeed, we live as human beings, but we do not wage war according to human standards;   for the weapons of our warfare are not merely human, but they have divine power to destroy strongholds.  We destroy arguments  and every proud obstacle raised up against the knowledge of God, and we take every thought captive to obey Christ.   We are ready to punish every disobedience when your obedience is complete.

​The next to the last of Paul’s letters that we are going to be looking into in this series is 2nd Corinthians.  We call this a letter, but it is actually a paste-up of at least three different letters written at different times.  Probably fragments of three letters.  The most commonly accepted divisions, according to most scholars today, are chapters 1-7 being one letter; 8-9 being another; and 10-13 being a third unit.

These three pieces were considered important enough by the early church that they were preserved – and – for whatever reason – they have been preserved as this one “letter.”

Paul founded the Corinthian community around the year 50 – one of the earliest of the communities.  He probably spent a year or so there at that time.  This is a community he is deeply invested in.  If you recall, his first letter to the Corinthians was, in large part, an angry letter because he was hearing things from there that went against everything he had taught them and he was frustrated at their drifting astray. 

This was the letter that lambasted them for the wealthy getting all the best stuff when they gathered for their agapes, while the poor got the leftovers.  It was, of course, also the letter where we have the beautiful ranking of love as the greatest of the spiritual gifts.

Two parts of this letter are also angry – not so much because of specific individual things that are being done but because the Corinthians have wandered off to follow false teachers, disregarding what Paul taught them.  The third part is a much kinder, gentler piece, in tone.

Now, when I say “first part,” or “third part’ those are only our modern conveniences again.  Those words tell us where the various parts fit into the order of things in any modern Bible, but they are most likely not chronologically accurate.  While there is not universal agreement, most modern bible scholars, Marcus Borg included, believe the third part, chapters 10-13, was actually the first written of the three parts.

Are you confused enough yet?

Since we are using Marc Borg as our source and guide for this series, we will go with his reasoning here, and start 2nd Corinthians by looking into the last 4 chapters – 10-13 – which may or may not be the first written.

In the time since Paul’s last visit here, other teachers have come to Corinth – ones who disagree with his message of inclusion – and undermined his teachings – the same old “you have to jump through all our hoops in order for us to allow you” in crowd.  An appreciable number of the Corinthians have, apparently, allowed themselves to be swayed by this teaching and gone along with them.
 
As we might expect, this does not make Paul happy.  He had to keep dealing with this same fight – over and over and over.  He must have been so tired of the same argument – the same tribalism -- so tired of the same ugly stupidity.  It’s not hard to understand how he could get so angry at times.

There’s been a good deal of studying going around just recently about people are suffering a sort of spiritual exhaustion from the political upheaval happening in our country right now.  The name calling, the many “isms,” the out-right hatred of anyone identified as “other” in this country – the shear ugliness of it all -- today has left many of us worn out in both spirit and body. 

Many of us know what it feels like to wake every morning and realize that we still have to fight the same fight -- again and again.  Imagine what it must have felt like for Paul – with only a handful of helpers – trying to change something that had been ingrained religious dogma for a thousand years.  Trying to expand beyond the tribalism that had been the core of the Jewish faith – and now, by extension, of the Christian faith as well -- for so long.  No wonder Paul occasionally got crabby.

In these 4 chapters Paul describes these false teachers – sarcastically, I’m sure - as “super apostles,” (NRSV) and goes on to proclaim that “such boasters are false apostles, deceitful workers, disguising themselves as apostles of Christ.”
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Paul then continues on through the rest of this section citing his own superior qualifications to be their teacher.  He also repeatedly apologizes for bragging about himself – (it is an uncomfortably boastful passage.)  He claims he is embarrassed to do so – but that it is necessary because it is so important that they turn back to his original teachings, which are the true teachings.  Later he says that he is not really embarrassed because he has always been prepared to look like a fool before them if that is what it takes for them to listen to him and believe him.  And he makes it clear that he doesn’t need defending – all that he is saying and doing is strictly for the Corinthian’s sake.
Have you been thinking all along that we have been defending ourselves before you?  We are speaking in Christ before God.  Everything we do, beloved, is for the sake of building you up.  For I fear that when I come, I may find you not as I wish, and that you may find me not as you wish; I fear that there may perhaps be quarreling, jealousy, anger, selfishness, slander, gossip, conceit, and disorder.   I fear that when I come again, my God may humble me before you, and that I may have to mourn over many who previously sinned and have not repented of the impurity, sexual immorality, and licentiousness that they have practiced.  (12:9-21)
In other words, ‘you people are screwing up and I do not want to be embarrassed before God because of your actions.  I am the one who is qualified to teach you.  I am the one God called and sent here to teach you.  These other wanna-be’s are all phonies, so straighten up.’  This is angry Paul at his most righteous.

Next week we will look briefly at chapters 8 and 9 which are more of the same, but then we’ll  finish up the Corinthians by digging into chapters 1 through 7 – the “nice Paul” chapters.
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    Rev. Cherie Marckx

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