Intro
Jazz music is awesome. Complicated, free flowing and soulful the Jazz musician must be the master of many facets of music. Beautiful complex solos, incredible feel and dynamics and interesting bending of melodic rules is all part of what makes some good Jazz great to listen to.
But sometimes, Jazz can be hard to listen to. It can get too “wordy” too complicated. As if the musician has learnt how to break the rules of the musical language too well and the result is un-coherent and un-melodic to the untrained ear. It might make perfect sense to the trained jazz musician but to your average Jo, it sounds like nonsense…
This is like the Corinthian’s picture of God that Paul is responding to in His letter. In chapter 1:18-31, Paul describes how what seems like God’s foolishness and weakness is actually Strength and wisdom. Like how the seemingly un-melodic nonsense of a Jazz virtuoso is actually an impressive grasp on musical theory and skill, Paul unpacks the truth behind what the world is reading into God and His plans.
First Corinthians is a letter from Paul to the young churches in Corinth. Mostly house churches, the early Corinthian Christians were in need of some correction and encouragement. In Chapter 1 after some greetings and housekeeping Paul launches into a marvellous and succinct description of what it means to be Christians following a powerful God in a world of unbelievers.
18 For the message about Christ’s death on the cross is nonsense to those who are being lost; but for us who are being saved it is God’s power. 19 (A)The scripture says,
“I will destroy the wisdom of the wise
and set aside the understanding of the scholars.”
20 (B)So then, where does that leave the wise? or the scholars? or the skilful debaters of this world? God has shown that this world’s wisdom is foolishness!
21 (C)For God in his wisdom made it impossible for people to know him by means of their own wisdom. Instead, by means of the so-called “foolish” message we preach, God decided to save those who believe. 22 Jews want miracles for proof, and Greeks look for wisdom. 23 As for us, we proclaim the crucified Christ, a message that is offensive to the Jews and nonsense to the Gentiles; 24 but for those whom God has called, both Jews and Gentiles, this message is Christ, who is the power of God and the wisdom of God. 25 For what seems to be God’s foolishness is wiser than human wisdom, and what seems to be God’s weakness is stronger than human strength.
26 Now remember what you were, my friends, when God called you. From the human point of view few of you were wise or powerful or of high social standing. 27 God purposely chose what the world considers nonsense in order to shame the wise, and he chose what the world considers weak in order to shame the powerful. 28 He chose what the world looks down on and despises and thinks is nothing, in order to destroy what the world thinks is important. 29 This means that no one can boast in God’s presence. 30 But God has brought you into union with Christ Jesus, and God has made Christ to be our wisdom. By him we are put right with God; we become God’s holy people and are set free. 31 (D)So then, as the scripture says, “Whoever wants to boast must boast of what the Lord has done.”
Through the wordy Greek to English translation of an excited Paul, we can glean some key messages about God and His people from this passage;
- The different responses that people have to the message of the cross
- The power and wisdom of God
- The upside down way that God achieves His purposes
Fight or flight.
Often When faced with a challenge, something scary or given a big fright; humans respond with either fight or flight. To fight is to stay and defend yourself, push back and try to stop or eliminate the threat. Flight is to run, to put distance between yourself and the threat.
Often it is not as clear as a fist fight with an adversary or a full-on sprint from a foe, but in one way or another we do these things.
I came home recently and when I walked through the door I could hear Charlotte (my flat mate) talking to a young girl from youth group. They were in the Kitchen baking and I overheard one say to the other “should we give him a fright??”.
Uh-oh
Big mistake, nobody gives ME a fright. Not in my own house!
So I crept slowly down the Hallway and burst around the corner to the kitchen yelling loudly. My flat mate jumped. And the young girl screamed… and fell over backwards and landed on the floor on her butt. An unsuccessful attempt at a flight response. She wouldn’t appreciate me showing the video that I have of it as it would be embarrassing for her to be identified. I wouldn’t do that to you, don’t worry.
In Verse 21-24, Paul talks about the two responses he sees when people are faced with the Gospel message – the truth of the cross. Like being faced with a threat and fighting or flying, the Gospel can produce two responses: in verses 21-24 Paul says…
21 For God in his wisdom made it impossible for people to know him by means of their own wisdom. Instead, by means of the so-called “foolish” message we preach, God decided to save those who believe. 22 Jews want miracles for proof, and Greeks look for wisdom. 23 As for us, we proclaim the crucified Christ, a message that is offensive to the Jews and nonsense to the Gentiles; 24 but for those whom God has called, both Jews and Gentiles, this message is Christ, who is the power of God and the wisdom of God.
Like either fighting or flying Humans either want to see proof, “show me powerful signs!” “If that really happened, and God is real then heal my sore leg!”
Or, some people demand a logical explanation for every aspect of the gospel.
The Bible is full of examples of the Jewish people asking for signs, for miracles to show that the claims of Jesus are real. In Matthew 12, the pharisees have been doing what they do best and are questioning Jesus, trying to trip Him up and interrogating Him. When none of the question-traps work, they outright demand a sign. Jesus refuses.
That wasn’t going to work. Countless times in the Old Testament, we see the nation of Israel following God as He performs amazing miracles and yet they still turn from Him. God splits the ocean, provides food from heaven, opens a rock and provides water, and leads Israel to Him on a mountain to offer them a covenant and they still decide that they will make a golden cow to worship.
How much more can God do for them? What sign would have to hit them on the face for them to be God’s and God’s alone? If there is a way to know God and understand His being, demanding signs and miracles doesn’t seem to work.
“Greeks look for wisdom” Is referring to the Greek population in Corinth asking for some proof, some logical explanation that confirmed Jesus was the Son of God. The Greeks thought they were smart. And they were. Countless smart Greeks came up with smart things that are still in use today. Ancient Greek mathematicians, philosophers and astronomers have influenced the world in big ways. Like I was taught in year 10 mathematics with Mr. Lucas, Pythagoras and his handy little theorem has been essential for me in studying to become an electrician. To demand a logical explanation makes sense and we do it every day in small ways.
I’ve met both types of these responses to Jesus in my life, I’ve even had both responses myself. They both seem to make sense, like a fight or flight, it seems logical to the human mind to take care in discerning the truth and testing someone’s claims. But when it comes to the gospel, when it comes to the gravity defying claims of Jesus ,“the son of God”, being crucified to save the world. There is no sign or logic that can quite explain it or contain it.
“we proclaim the crucified Christ, a message that is offensive to the Jews and nonsense to the Gentiles;”
A king that wears a crown of thorns, a Jew – crucified now kind of the world? You’re joking. The promised Messiah, killed by the Romans? Beside thieves? I wasn’t born yesterday!
“A stumbling block to the Jews and nonsense to the gentiles. But, to those who are saved, it is our saving power! “
How then are we to make sense of the good news of the cross?
“18 For the message about Christ’s death on the cross is nonsense to those who are being lost; but for us who are being saved it is God’s power.”
Paul is saying that the message about Christ’s death only makes sense when we are being saved. It is only in the action of being reconciled to God; and, feeling loved as we join His family – that we can begin to understand the cross. It is only through our experience that we can fully grasp the gravity of the cross. Like explaining being in love to someone, it’s hard to understand without feeling in, without experiencing it.
You can learn about the historical events of Jesus’ crucifixion all you want, but until it becomes real for you, until it becomes personal and relevant you will not understand it.
“…but for us who are being saved it is God’s power.”
When you have felt low and unworthy or not good enough and then felt the presence of Jesus, then the cross makes sense.
When you have been living life that feels empty or pointless and you feel the call of God to join Him in His mission, then, the cross makes sense. It becomes our lifeline and comfort, our protection and power.
While both responses, demanding signs or logical reason, are valid, it is not how someone gets to know God. It is through joining Christ that His sacrifice becomes our comfort and purpose, it becomes, as Paul puts it – God’s power.
God’s triumph of wisdom over the world’s wisdom
On the screen is a picture of some Formula 1 race cars. Formula 1 cars are fast they can go up to 290kms per hour… through a corner! The world’s top 20 drivers race for up to two hours at un-paralleled speeds. You’d be hard pressed to find a better car or a faster driver outside the formula 1.
Imagine, if you will, that it’s race day in a formula 1 grand prix…
The crowd is full of people, the cars are doing warm up laps, ripping around the race track. Multi-million dollar cars are burning thousands of dollars’ worth of fuel and rubber as they fight to be the best, the fastest on the track. All the stars are there, wearing expensive suits and fancy dresses. The cars are lined up, aero dynamic and spaceship looking, but there is a spare space at the back in the starting pack – and then the last car rolls in… a small 1994 Toyota starlet
The race begins and flying into first from last is the mystery driver in the small economic 1990’s hatchback with automatic windscreen wipers and optional air conditioning. After a few laps, the starlet is lapping the pack of cars and wins by a country mile. It would be unheard of! The world’s best drivers in the world’s fastest cars – beaten by a newcomer in a dinky little Toyota.
This is what Paul is saying God has done in verses 25-28…
“25 For what seems to be God’s foolishness is wiser than human wisdom, and what seems to be God’s weakness is stronger than human strength.
26 Now remember what you were, my friends, when God called you. From the human point of view few of you were wise or powerful or of high social standing. 27 God purposely chose what the world considers nonsense in order to shame the wise, and he chose what the world considers weak in order to shame the powerful. 28 He chose what the world looks down on and despises and thinks is nothing, in order to destroy what the world thinks is important.
25For what seems to be God’s “foolishness” is wiser than human wisdom, and what seems to be God’s “weakness” is stronger than human strength.
The choices that God makes, to our human brain, might seem odd or foolish. The people He chooses, His timing or His plans can appear illogical as we understand the world. Paul’s terms “God’s foolishness” and “God’s weakness” are not references to some hidden chink in God’s armour or a secret Achilles heel. This is Paul putting words to the views of the world, Paul is saying that even the things of God that the World views as foolish and weak are actually examples of God’s greater wisdom and power.
Paul uses this great mirroring set of attributes in verses 27-28 to highlight the way that God is wilfully “hamstrung” and still comes out on top.
- God chose what the world considers nonsense to – shame what the world considers wise
- God chose what the world considers weak to – shame the powerful
- God chose what the world looks down on and despises and thinks is nothing to – destroy what the world thinks is important.
Like a random driver showing up in a small, slow car and beating the world’s best and fastest, God is choosing the un-assuming option and winning anyway. God’s people are not called to be the best and brightest, the most handsome or the richest. God purposely chooses those who are marginalised and uses what the world considers nonsense, weak, low and despised. God doesn’t do this just to flex his muscles, it is not a brag like “I could beat you with one hand tied behind my back”.
The following verse spells out God’s reasoning –
so that, “no one might boast in the presence of God”.
God chose to use people that the world doesn’t hold in high esteem to prove that the things that humanity values are nothing compared to His power.
The wise, the powerful the high-born – these are the things that we often put on a pedestal and chase after. But God dismisses the things that we see as important and achieves His purposes with the marginalised, the poor, the un-loved and the broken.
Like winning the formula 1 grand prix in a Toyota starlet and silencing the fast cars, God makes sure that nobody can boast in their strength or wisdom as it simply pales in comparison to God.
This is not to say that the whole church is only full of low-born, weak and foolish people, quite the opposite. The church has the power of God, the power that triumphs over death. This is what God has done in His victory on the cross. He has disarmed what the world views as power by defeating it in the most bizarre way – crucifixion.
In another letter… to another church – the Colossians, Paul plays with this idea of Christ’s victory on the cross.
14 He [Jesus] cancelled the unfavourable record of our debts with its binding rules and did away with it completely by nailing it to the cross. 15 And on that cross Christ freed himself from the power of the spiritual rulers and authorities, he made a public spectacle of them by leading them as captives in his victory procession.”
Jesus’ walk from His trial to the hill where He was crucified was abusive and humiliating. Soldiers and the crowd alike spat on Him and yelled at Him. The crown of thorns on His head and a sign of Jest above Him, Paul realises that this is not a sad crawl to death, but a triumphant march to victory.
In the mess of what the world called most powerful, of what humanity fears most – death, God’s plan is fully realised as He defeats death in the person of Jesus, a humble Jewish carpenter from Nazareth.
The God we worship is powerful. The God we worship is supreme – these actions are not the actions of a foolish weak God, just the opposite! Who are we to ever doubt that He can use someone to do His work? Who are we to doubt that God can use someone we know or don’t like? Who are we to think that God can’t use us?
I have felt many times in my life like there must be someone out there that God could use that would do a better job than me, there must be someone who would stuff up less, complain less and wake up on time and be slightly more handsome. But that is not a concern for our God who triumphed on the cross. We do not limit God, there is no power in the world that comes close and no person or situation that God cannot use for His good purposes. Paul’s realisation that he is sharing with the church in Corinth is so relevant to today. Today our self-esteem is fragile as we navigate the waters of advertising, social media and our western competitive life. Reading this message, we can be assured that God is no stranger to the foolish standards that the world holds and God is no stranger to exposing them. If you are to know one key thing from this passage it should be that God can use whomever He chooses to achieve great things, whether you are a formula one car or a Toyota starlet or anywhere in between, please know that God can and will use you if you accept His offer to be part of His upside kingdom. The God we follow has defeated death on a wooden cross – He can use you to spread the good news of His kingdom and He can use us as His hands and feet to love the world.
While the world still judges the church and the work of God through their own lens, they still see the un-coherent cacophony of Jazz free style, but to us in the know we understand that this is the work of a master composer and he weaves together the melodies of our lives in unassuming but perfect ways.
The message of the cross is huge and, while confusing to others, it is our power and comfort through Jesus. As Paul reminds us – nobody has power or wisdom that even comes close to God and as such we don’t need to worry about being the best. Instead we must have confidence in the God we follow, we must trust that this (sometimes seemingly un-coherent) plan of God is actually more than we could ever do.
Whoever wants to boast, must boast of what the Lord has done.
Let’s pray:
Lord, thank you for your wisdom that surpasses understanding. Thank you that you invite us into your story to be a part of your kingdom.
Use us to bless your world. We pray that your will be done.
In the power name of Jesus,
Amine.