Sunday, September 23, 2012

Refocus

For the sake of Christ, then, I am content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities. For when I am weak, then I am strong. -- 2Co 12:10

In reading 2 Cor 12 this morning I was struck by two things. The first was Paul's undeniable deference to Christ and his mission. The second was that Paul's ultimate aim was not for right theology or right ecclesiology, but for right hearts. Verses 10 and 14 bring these two thoughts to the forefront.

In verse 10, Paul states that for the sake of Christ he will be content with hardships. It isn't some Spirit driven masochism that Paul is describing. It isn't some sort of spiritualized denial of reality. Instead, Paul is boldly claiming that weaknesses, hardships, calamities, persecutions and insults actually serve a bigger, better purpose. They serve the purpose of Jesus.

Is that purpose in our own lives? Perhaps. There is the ever present battle with pride. There is the continual learning that this world is not our home. There is the never ending fight against sin, in all is multifaceted effects on our hearts and minds and bodies.

But, perhaps there is also a bigger, broader purpose to the hardships, insults, weaknesses, persecutions and calamities that Jesus allows (dare I say ordains) into our lives. Perhaps these things come along to take our focus off of the god of ourselves and place our gaze back on the God who made us, who redeemed us, who called us, who is sustaining us, and who will one day deliver us unblemished before His glorious throne. Perhaps it is to use us as a signpost for others who are traveling this narrow road of faith. Remember Jn 9:3? Perhaps it is to give us a chance to say with Christ, not in despair or defeat, but with sorrowful joy, Father, not my will but yours be done.

Now, add to this Paul's thought in verse 14. He says to the Corinthian church, I came not for what is yours but for you. In that one statement is the essence of the Church. In the end, it is not about what I can contribute to the church or what you add to the body. It is about you and its about me; it is about the condition of our hearts. The church is a family and as the Spirit has knitted this family together, God's desire is for his children to be rightly related to Him and to each other.

Are there gifts? Absolutely. And they should be used for the glory of God. Is correct theology important? Without a doubt. Correct ecclesiology? Amen. But whatever ology you bring up, as important as they all are, they all serve the bigger, broader purpose of God calling a people to himself.

So, where does this leave us? For me, I am left in need of refocusing. Refocusing on the purpose of Bible study and prayer. Refocusing on the purpose of worship and sermons. Refocusing on the purpose of giving and of serving.

In the end, it means refocusing on Jesus and His blood-bought bride.

To God Alone be the Glory

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