Showing posts with label Carnal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carnal. Show all posts

Monday, June 14, 2021

An Introduction to 1 Corinthians

 


Introduction:                       “… the rude, the crude, and the lewd!”

The radio preacher's terminology was startling. He was describing the content of many modern films and forms of entertainment. He stressed how today's movies, TV programs, music videos, and records are negatively impacting children, families, and the moral fabric of this country.

“By the time the average youth reaches age sixteen,” the preacher said, “he or she will have seen more than 200,000 acts of violence and 33,000 murders. Movies are reviewed and rated by the degree of socially offensive language, excessive violence, and/or graphic nudity. TV ‘soap operas’—both in the daytime and evening prime time—are admittedly seeing ‘just how far we can push it.’ ”

The radio preacher repeated his startling comment: “We are living in a land of the rude, the crude, and the lewd!” (Source Unknown)

Bible Reading

Read: 1Corinthians 1:1-17.

QUOTE: “To begin with, the church at Corinth was a defiled church. Some of its members were guilty of sexual immorality, others got drunk; still others were using the grace of God to excuse worldly living. It was also a divided church, with at least four different groups competing for leadership (1 Cor 1:12). This meant it was a disgraced church. Instead of glorifying God, it was hindering the progress of the Gospel.

How did this happen? The members of the church permitted the sins of the city to get into the local assembly. Corinth was a polluted city, filled with every kind of vice and worldly pleasure. About the lowest accusation you could make against a man in that day would be to call him "a Corinthians." People would know what you were talking about.

Corinth was also a proud, philosophical city, with many itinerant teachers promoting their speculations. Unfortunately, this philosophical approach was applied to the Gospel by some members of the church, and this fostered division. The congregation was made up of different "schools of thought" instead of being united behind the Gospel message.

If you want to know what Corinth was like, read Rom 1:18-32. Paul wrote the Roman epistle while in Corinth, and he could have looked out the window and seen the very sins that he listed!

Of course, when you have proud people, depending on human wisdom, adopting the lifestyle of the world, you are going to have problems. In order to help them solve their problems, Paul opened his letter by reminding them of their calling in Christ.”   — (from The Bible Exposition Commentary). 

Discovery

Explore the Bible reading by discussing these questions.

I.  The Corinthian Context

In the third millennium since the birth of the Christian era, modern society is not unlike the sensual society and pagan culture the apostle Paul found in ancient Corinth. The practical need for spiritual purity and power to overcome “the world, the flesh, and the devil” is equally evident then and now. As a wealthy commercial center and port city on the southern tip of Greece, Corinth was known for its great temple of Aphrodite (the Greek goddess of love), with its 1,000 ritual priestess-prostitutes. The immoral conditions of Corinth are vividly seen in the fact that the Greek term Korinthiazomai (literally, “to act the Corinthian”) came to mean “to practice fornication.” Corinth was noted for its carnality.

1.  In that setting, the apostle Paul had planted a church during his second missionary journey (Acts 18:1–17). What were the names of the husband-and-wife team he met in Corinth? (v. 2) This would be Aquila & Priscilla.

2.  Why did he stay with them? (v. 3)

They were all tent makers–the “same craft.”

3.  What was the theme of his message to the Jews? (v. 5)

The theme of the message to the Jews was “that Jesus was Christ.”

4.  Was his witness successful in the synagogue? Why? (v. 6)

No, it was not well received among the Jews.

5.  What significant new strategy did Paul announce to the Jews? (v. 6)

He declared that he would preach the Gospel to the Gentiles.

II. The Corinthian Correspondence

It was probably about five years later, approximately a.d. 55, during Paul's three-year ministry in Ephesus on his third missionary journey, that he wrote the epistle known today as 1 Corinthians. In it Paul responded to disturbing reports and questions about life in this problematic congregation. He had received reports of sectarian divisions and moral disorders within the church. Additionally, a delegation had arrived from Corinth, and (or with) a letter seeking his advice on various difficulties and critical issues in the spiritually gifted but morally weak congregation.

This first correspondence consists of Paul's response to problems related to ten separate issues: a sectarian spirit, incest, lawsuits, fornication, marriage and divorce, eating food offered to idols, wearing of the veil, the Lord's Supper, spiritual gifts, and the resurrection of the human body. With each problem Paul pointed to spiritual solutions. He wanted the Corinthians to learn the calling of the saints, the fellowship of Jesus Christ, and the unity of a spiritual church (1Cor. 1:2, 9, 10).

III. Contemporary Conclusions

Corinth was a first-century church with many problems: sectarianism, spiritual immaturity, church discipline, immoral practices, the roles of the sexes, and the proper use of spiritual gifts. Where these same problems exist in the modern church, the remedies are the same. Studying the godly guidelines and applying the practical insights revealed in this epistle will establish devoted disciples and heal the problems of contemporary churches that may exist—as Corinth—in a “ … land of the rude, the crude, and the lewd.”

Study

Let’s probe the depths of the thoughts and terms of Paul's introduction in his first epistle to the Corinthians (1:1–17):

1.  How did Paul describe himself at the beginning of this Corinthian letter? (1Cor. 1:1)

   A.  Was this common in Paul's correspondence? (Check the opening verses of some of Paul's other epistles.) Why?

   B.  Give the primary meaning the word apostle:

1. Paul's claim of apostolic authority was based on two significant factors. Review the following scriptures and then list those factors: (Acts 9:1–6, 15; 26:15–18; 1 Cor. 15:3–8; 1 Tim. 2:7).

2. Paul was called to be an apostle of Jesus Christ on the Damascus road. This call did not come from or through men, but directly from the Lord Jesus. An apostle is literally “a sent one.” The first apostles were witnesses of Christ in resurrection. They also could perform miracles to confirm that the message they preached was divine.[a]

3. “Called,” Paul was given a special calling from God to preach about Jesus Christ. Each Christian has a job to do, a role to take, or a contribution to make. One assignment may seem more spectacular than another, but all are necessary to carry out God's greater plans for his church and for his world (1Cor. 12:12-27). Be available to God by placing your gifts at his service. Then as you discover what he calls you to do, be ready to do it.

   C.  How did Peter classify Paul's writings? (2 Pet. 3:14–16)

   D.  How did that validate Paul's claim of apostolic authority?

 


2.  What kind of people were in the church at Corinth? (1Cor. 1:2)

   A.  How did Paul describe them in his greeting? (1Cor. 1:2, 3)

The word church means “a called-out people or assembly.” Each church has two addresses: a geographic address ("at Corinth") and a spiritual address ("in Christ Jesus").

   B. FROM GOD TO US

As we read the opening words of Paul's letter, we may wonder: How do these ancient words apply today? We are distanced from the original readers by time, space, culture, and language. But we do share five striking similarities with the Corinthian Christians:

1.  We are people equally needing God's truthful instruction.

2.  We live in a similar aggressively pluralistic society that denies absolutes and makes personal rights absolute.

3.  This claim to personal rights challenges the lordship of Jesus Christ within the church today, even as it did then.

4.  The ancient philosophy that might and money make right continues to divide churches and destroy people's lives.

5.  The resurrection of Jesus Christ remains the solid fact upon which our faith rests. To some, it will always be a stumbling block. So, in spite of the obvious differences between ourselves and the Corinthians, the points of similarity make it crucial that we read this letter as God's Word for our day.

   C.  Define the words “sanctified” and “saints.” (1Cor. 1:2, 3)

The churches are made up of saints, that is, people who have been or "set apart" by God. A saint is not a dead person who has been honored by men because of his or her holy life. No, Paul wrote to living saints, people who, through faith in Jesus Christ had been set apart for God's special enjoyment and use.

In other words, every true believer is a saint because every true believer has been set apart by God and for God.

    D.  Does Paul's use of the term “saint” imply perfection or potential? (Rom. 1:17; 2 Thess. 1:10–12 and Jude 3.)

    E.  What qualities and characteristics of life should be seen in people who are “sanctified saints”? (Rom. 12:1, 2; 1 Thess. 4:1–8.)

A Christian photographer told about a lovely wedding that he "covered." The bride and groom came out of the church, heading for the limousine, when the bride suddenly left her husband and ran to a car parked across the street! The motor was running and a man was at the wheel, and off they drove, leaving the bridegroom speechless. The driver of the "get-away car" turned out to be an old boyfriend of the bride, a man who had boasted that "he could get her anytime he wanted her." Needless to say, the husband had the marriage annulled.

When a man and woman pledge their love to each other, they are set apart for each other; and any other relationship outside of marriage is sinful. Just so, the Christian belongs completely to Jesus Christ he is set apart for Him and Him alone. But he is also a part of his local fellowship, the church (1 Cor 1:2). A defiled and unfaithful believer not only sins against the Lord, but he also sins against his fellow Christians.

 

3.  What did Paul thank God for in the lives and experiences of the Corinthian believers? (1Cor. 1:4-7)

    A.  In this letter, Paul would include strong words to the Corinthians, but he began on a positive note of thanksgiving. Paul affirmed their privilege of belonging to the Lord. Paul gave thanks to . . . God for the Corinthian believers because only by the grace of God can anyone come to believe and be accepted into God's family. That grace has been made available only in Christ Jesus -- which is the essence of the gospel message. Paul usually would begin his letters with a word of thanks for the believers to whom he was writing (see, for example, Rom 1:8; Phil 1:3-7; Col 1:3-8).

THANKSGIVING

Paul thanked God for the Corinthian believers. During the Thanksgiving holiday, we focus on our blessings and express our gratitude to God for them. But thanks should be expressed every day. We can never say thank you enough to parents, friends, leaders, and especially to God. When thanksgiving becomes an integral part of your life, you will find that your attitude toward life will change. You will become more positive, gracious, loving, and humble. Whom do you need to thank today?

  B.  In what ways had they been “enriched?” (1Cor. 1:5–7)

Enriched by God's grace (vv. 4-6). Salvation is a gracious gift from God, but when you are saved, you are also given spiritual gifts. (Paul explained this in detail in 1 Cor. 12-14.) The word  "enriched" refers, "a very wealthy person." The Corinthians were especially rich in spiritual gifts (2 Cor. 8:7), but were not using these gifts in a spiritual manner. The fact that God has called us, set us apart, and enriched us ought to encourage us to live holy lives.

   C.  Expecting Jesus to return (v. 7). Paul will have a great deal to say about this truth in 1 Cor. 15. Christians who are looking for their Saviour will want to keep their lives above reproach (1 John 2:28-3:3).

 

4.  Paul's confidence that they would be declared “blameless in the day of our Lord Jesus Christ” was based on what? (1Cor. 1:1:8, 9)

   A.  It Depends on God's Faithfulness (1Cor. 1:8-9).

          1.  The work of God was confirmed in them (1 Cor 1:6), but it was also confirmed to them in the Word.             

          2.  This is a legal term that refers to the guarantee that settles a transaction.

          3.  We have the witness of the Spirit within us and the witness of the Word before us, guaranteeing that God will keep His "contract" with us and save us to the very end.

          4.  This guarantee is certainly not an excuse for sin! Rather, it is the basis for a growing relationship of love, trust, and obedience.

Now, in the light of these great truths, how could the people in the Corinthian assembly get involved in the sins of the world and the flesh? They were an elect people, an enriched people, and an established people. They were saints, set apart for the glory of God! Alas, their practice was not in accord with their position.

   B.  It Depends on the Finished Work of Christ.

Before tackling the problems, Paul described his hope for the Corinthians.

          1.  He guaranteed those believers that God would consider them "blameless" when Christ returns (1 Thess. 4:13-18; Heb 9:28).

          2.  This guarantee was not because of their great gifts or their shining performance, but because of what Jesus Christ accomplished for them through his death and resurrection.

          3.  All who believe in the Lord Jesus will be considered "blameless" when Jesus Christ returns (see also 1 Thess 3:13; 2 Thess. 1:6-10).

          4.  Today's struggles, difficulties, and failures don't tell the whole story. Keep the big picture in mind. If you have faith in Christ, even if it is weak, you are and will be saved.

   C.  We should thank God that He is faithful. 

He will “confirm [guarantee] you to the end” (1:8)! And thank His Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord, for His fellowship, grace, and peace. 

 

5.  What areas of fellowship did Paul emphasize to create unity in the church? (1Cor. 1:9-17)

When Paul mentioned the word “fellowship” in 1 Cor. 1:9, he introduced a second aspect of the Christian's calling.

   A.  Believers are Called into Fellowship (1 Cor. 1:10-25). Having mentioned the problem of defilement in the church, now Paul turned to the matter of division in the church.

         1.  Division has always been a problem among God's people, and almost every New Testament epistle deals with this topic or mentions it in one way or another.

         2.  Even the 12 Apostles did not always get along with each other.

   B.  In 1 Cor. 1:13, Paul asked his readers three important questions, and these three questions are the key to this long paragraph.

         1.  “Is Christ divided?” (vv. 10-13 a) The verb means, "Has Christ been divided and different parts handed out to different people?" The very idea is grotesque and must be rejected. Paul did not preach one Christ, Apollos another, and Peter another. There is but one Saviour and one Gospel (Gal 1:6-9).

                 A.  How, then, did the Corinthians create this four-way division? Why were there quarrels (“contentions”) among them?

                 B.  One answer is that they were looking at the Gospel from a philosophical point of view. Corinth was a city filled with teachers and philosophers, all of whom wanted to share their “wisdom.”

                 C.  Another answer is that human nature enjoys following human leaders.

                       — We tend to identify more with spiritual leaders who help us and whose ministry we understand and enjoy.

                       — Instead of emphasizing the message of the Word, the Corinthians emphasized the messenger. 

                       — They got their eyes off the Lord and on the Lord's servants, and this led to competition.

                 D.  Paul will point out in 1 Cor 3 that there can be no competition among true servants of God.

                       — It is sinful for church members to compare pastors, or for believers to follow human leaders as disciples of men and not disciples of Jesus Christ.

                       — The “personality cults” in the churches today are in direct disobedience to the Word of God.

                 E.  Only Jesus Christ should have the place of preeminence (Col 1:18).

                 F.  When such divisions grip a church it is time for a TIME-OUT!

                      1.  Like a frustrated coach watching his team bicker on the court, Paul called for a time-out. He saw the danger of divisions and arguments. The Corinthian believers' lack of unity was obvious.

                      2.  They may have been playing in the same "uniform," but they were doing as much as the opposition to bring about their own defeat.

                      3.  The problems weren't so much differences of opinion as divided allegiances. They were arguing over which position on the team was most important in a way that made them ineffective as a unit. They were on the field, but out of the game.

                      4.  Divisions between Christians work like brick walls and barbed-wire fences to undermine the effectiveness of the message that believers are to proclaim.

                      5.  Focus on your coach, Jesus Christ, and the purpose he has for you. Strive for harmony. Keep arguments about allegiances off the team.

 

         2.  Paul used several key words in this section to emphasize the unity of the saints in Christ.

                  A.  He called his readers “brethren,” reminding them that they belonged to one family.

                  B.  The phrase “perfectly joined together” is a medical term that describes the unity of the human body knit together. So, they had a loving union as members of the body.

                  C.  They were also identified by “the name of our Lord Jesus Christ”. This was probably a reference to the Person of Christ and all that He has done for believers.  The Corinthians were exalting the names of men instead of Christ which could only lead to division.

                  D.  We must avoid developing Christian FAN CLUBS.

Paul wondered whether the Corinthians' quarrels had "divided" Christ. This is a graphic picture of what happens when the local church (the body of Christ) is divided.

                        — With so many churches and styles of worship available today, believers can get caught up in the same game of "my preacher is better than yours!" They follow personalities and even change churches based on who is popular. To act this way is to divide Christ.

                        — But Christ is not divided, and his true followers should not allow anything to divide their church.

                  E.  Don't let your appreciation for any teacher, preacher, speaker, or writer lead you into intellectual pride. Believers' allegiance must be to Christ and to the unity that he desires.

 

           3.  We do not know who the people were who belonged to "the house of Chloe," but we commend them for their courage and devotion.

                 A.  They did not try to hide the problems. They were burdened about them; they went to the right person with them, and they were not afraid to be mentioned by Paul. This was not the kind of "cloak and dagger" affair that we often see in churches - activities that usually make the problem worse and not better.

                 B.  Paul was the minister who founded the church, so most of the members would have been converted through his ministry. Apollos followed Paul (Acts 18:24-28) and had an effective ministry. We have no record that Peter (Cephas) ever visited Corinth, unless 1 Cor 9:5 records it Each of these men had a different personality and a different approach to the ministry of the Word; yet they were one (1 Cor 3:3-8; 4:6).

 

           4.  Were you baptized in the name of Paul? (1Cor. 1:13b-17)

                  A.  Keep in mind that baptism was an important matter in the New Testament church. When a sinner trusted Christ and was baptized, he cut himself off from his old life and often was rejected by his family and friends. It cost something to be baptized in that day.

                  B.  Just as Jesus did not baptize people (John 4:1-2), so both Peter (Acts 10:48) and Paul allowed their associates to baptize the new converts. Until the church grew in Corinth, Paul did some of the baptizing, but that was not his main ministry. In this section, Paul was not minimizing baptism, but rather was putting it into its proper perspective, because the Corinthians were making too much of it "I was baptized by Apollos!" one would boast, while another would say, "Oh, but I was baptized by Paul!"

                  C.  It is wrong to identify any man's name with your baptism other than the name of Jesus Christ. To do so is to create division. I have read accounts about people who had to be baptized by a certain preacher, using special water (usually from the Jordan River), on a special day, as though these are the matters that are important! Instead of honoring the Lord Jesus Christ and promoting the unity of the church, these people exalt men and create disunity.

                  D.  Crispus had been the ruler of the synagogue in Corinth (Acts 18:8); and Gaius was probably the man Paul lived with when he wrote Romans (Rom 16:23). "The household of Stephanas" (1 Cor 1:16) is probably described in part in 1 Cor 16:15-18. Apparently Paul did not carry with him a record of the names of all the people he baptized. It was sufficient that they were written in God's book.

                  E.  The Christian servant should not have to choose between STYLE AND SUBSTANCE.

Some speakers use impressive words, but they are weak on content. Some preachers make the Bible marginal in their sermons in order to hold people's attention. Even Bible studies give less focus to the Bible than they do to fellowship. Paul stressed solid content and practical help for his listeners. He wanted them to be impressed with his message, not just his style (see 2:1-5). You don't need to be a great speaker with a large vocabulary to share the gospel effectively. The persuasive power is in the story, not the storyteller. Paul was not against those who carefully prepare what they say (see 2:6), but against those who try to impress others only with their own knowledge or speaking ability. Make Christ the center of your preaching, teaching and witnessing rather than trying to be impressive.

In the latter part of verse 17, Paul is making an easy transition to the verses that follow. He did not preach the gospel by using wisdom of words, lest the cross of Christ should be made of no effect. He knew that if men were impressed by his oratory or rhetoric, then to that extent he had defeated himself in his efforts to set forth the true meaning of the cross of Christ.

It will help us to understand the section that follows if we remember that the Corinthians, being Greeks, were great lovers of human wisdom. They regarded their philosophers as national heroes. Some of this spirit had apparently crept into the assembly at Corinth. There were those who desired to make the gospel more acceptable to the intelligentsia. They did not feel that it had status among scholars, and so they wanted to intellectualize the message. This worship of intellectualism was apparently one of the issues that was causing the people to form parties around human leaders. Efforts to make the gospel more acceptable are completely misguided. There is a vast difference between God’s wisdom and man’s, and there is no use trying to reconcile them.[b]

CONCLUSION:

An Indian was walking up a mountain when he heard a voice.

“Carry me with you,” it requested.

The Indian turned and saw a snake. He refused. “If I carry you up the mountain you will bite me.”

“I wouldn't do that,” the snake assured. “All I need is some help. I am slow and you are fast; please be kind and carry me to the top of the mountain.”

It was against his better judgment, but the Indian agreed. He picked up the snake, put him in his shirt, and resumed the journey. When they reached the top, he reached in his shirt to remove the snake and got bit.

He fell to the ground, and the snake slithered away.

“You lied!” the Indian cried. “You said you wouldn't bite me.”

The snake stopped and looked back, “I didn't lie. You knew who I was when you picked me up.”

We hear the legend and shake our heads. He should have known better, we bemoan. And we are right. He should have. And so should we. But don't we do the same? Don't we believe the lies of the snake? Don't we pick up what we should leave alone?

The Corinthian Christians did. One snake after another had hissed lies in their ears, and they had believed it. How many lies did they believe?

How much time do you have?

The list is long and ugly: sectarianism, disunity, sexual immorality. And that is only the first six chapters.

But First Corinthians is more than a list of sins, it is an epistle of patience. Paul initiates the letter by calling these Christians “brothers.” He could have called them heretics or hypocrites or skirt-chasers (and in so many words he does), but not before he calls them brothers.

He patiently teaches them about worship, unity, the role of women, and the Lord's Supper. He writes as if he can see them face to face. He is disturbed but not despondent. Angry but not desperate. His driving passion is love. And his treatise on love in chapter 13 remains the greatest essay ever penned.

The letter, however personal, is not just for Corinth. It is for all who have heard the whisper and felt the fangs. We, like the Indian, should have known better. We, like the Corinthians, sometimes need a second chance. (Max Lucado)



[a] MacDonald, W. (1995). Believer’s Bible Commentary: Old and New Testaments. (A. Farstad, Ed.) (pp. 1746–1747). Nashville: Thomas Nelson.

[b] MacDonald, W. (1995). Believer’s Bible Commentary: Old and New Testaments. (A. Farstad, Ed.) (p. 1749). Nashville: Thomas Nelson.



Friday, January 10, 2020

The Spirit's Purifying Fire



Galatians 5:16-26 (16, 18, 25); Titus 2:13-14

Subject: Power for Purity                                                                             
Theme: Walking in the Spirit results in purity, spiritual power, and growth in righteousness. Remember, “The price of spiritual power is purity of heart.”
Relevance: Beyond any doubt the Holy Spirit promotes spiritual freedom from sin’s enslavement and control. He advances maturity and responsible holy living even though our culture embraces moral corruption and the accompanying dishonorable behavior patterns. If you make corruption easy, normal (appear acceptable) and convenient it will go unchallenged in many hearts. In contrast, the Spirit's purifying influence supports or installs virtue, integrity and decency; He is the secret to victorious and fulfilling Christian experience. Really our culture can use a serious moral and spiritual upgrade! The Holy Spirit's purifying fire will purge the believer’s heart and habits...our minds and hands; He will lead us into sin-destroying triumphs freeing us from the control of our carnal nature. 
Introduction:
1. The Spirit Purifies Us Believer By Freeing Us From the Dominance, Slavery, and Mastery of Our Carnal Fleshly Human Nature. Galatians 5:16, says, “This I say then, Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh.” (Also See Gal. 5:25)
Through a faithful “walk in the Spirit” we realize the blessings of freedom from sinful practices even when sin seems unmovable and extremely stubborn! Additionally, the Spirit, like fire, will illuminate the darkest sins hiding in the deepest recesses of our souls and purge it so significantly that it no longer tortures us through our motivations and desires. The promise of Galatians 5:16 is the Spirit of the Living God grants the trusting believer power and grace to refuse the gratification of carnal and fleshly desires. 
Even those feelings and yearnings just under the surface of our carnality waiting for the precise occasion to spring into destructive activity cannot escape His Fire. The Spirit of God affords us the power to reject and deny these "lusts" and motives expression or satisfaction. This is a wonderful part of our victorious freedom as we continue walking in the Holy Spirit’s power and grace! This walk is a step by step constant dependence upon God to strengthen and enable liberty from fleshly self-gratifying desires. 
The Spirit’s Power Helps Us Realize the Promise of Victory Over Habitual Sins (Gal. 5:16-18).
“The answer to the abuses described in the previous verse is to live by the Spirit. The phrase literally means to, “keep on walking.” As a believer walks through life he should depend on the indwelling Holy Spirit for guidance and power. But the Spirit does not operate automatically in a believer’s heart. He waits to be depended on. When a Christian does yield to the Spirit’s control, the promise is that he will not in any wise gratify, “complete, fulfill” in outward action) the desires of the sinful nature. Thus, while no believer will ever be entirely free in this life from the evil desires that stem from his fallen human nature, he need not capitulate to them, but may experience victory by the Spirit’s help.”—John Walvoord
With these concepts in clear view, let us look at a purifying ministry of the Holy Spirit.
Lesson:
The Spirit’s Removing Fire—Cleansing (Gal. 5:18-21).
By this I mean the Holy Spirit’s Fire Actually Purifies by Removing Wrong Attitudes from the Heart and Sinful Actions from the Believers Life. Impurities are Filtered out of our Daily Experiences.

The sins identified in this list are sensual, seditious, and superstitious transgressions (Gal. 5:19-21). They are violations of God’s holy law rooted in the fallen fleshly nature of all humanity. They are actions and motivations that taint and soil the soul in the gravest ways. They warp the mind, poison the human spirit, and destroy any chance of healthy relationships. Many of these are obviously sinful practices, but there are some mentioned here that the average person would not even consider as sins. Strife, envy, witchcraft, adultery, drunkenness, and reveling would not appear on some lists of sins. These have been approved, renamed, glamorized, and sanctioned by modern society. These behaviors and desires are so commonly featured in entertainment venues that we scarcely regard them as moral failures. Yes, sin is entertaining to our modern society; other forms of transgression are actually celebrated and advocated by the general populous and special interests groups. 
Speaking of special interests...elected officials and politicians routinely use their offices for personal financial favors. Bribery is alive and well the world around. I wonder how many laws were passed to secure special favors, kickbacks, and implied promises.... It appears to me at least...that if you have the money to significantly support a political campaign then you can leverage this for favorable results/accommodations during that term in office. If a lobbying agency influences congressmen and judges then it can control the direction of the state or the entire country touching certain matters of special interest. How many financial gains, special gifts, and exotic vacations have shaped political policy? I am afraid "quid pro quo" is not dead…why it’s not even sick! When special favors and personal benefits influence official decisions, policy, and even legislation then it is corruption that is at play. Too many elected representatives promise one thing, but really take care of number one while in public office. Beloved, we are experiencing serious erosion of ethical standards all over our political landscape. 

Believe it or not the Spirit of God can help the individual believer live above such moral corruption. This is worldliness and carnality. The “works of the flesh” are identified by a holy God as gross moral failures and stark violations of God's requirements. God designed life for fellowship with us; his plan includes blessing and liberty from all that interferes with that healthy fellowship. Yes, he stands opposed to marital unfaithfulness, shacking up, playing the field, night clubbing, homosexual practices, pornography, wife beating, child abuse, rape, incest, lying, bribery, extortion, embezzlement, cheating, stealing, fraud, pride, and on the list goes! Again our culture views this perspective as outdated and antiquated, but there is a better way involving release and freedom from the control of sinful practices. The good news is that God actively engages us to give us victory over such enslaving habits and entrenched sin. The fire of God’s Spirit has a cleansing and life changing impact on the submissive and cooperative believer in Christ Jesus.

1. The Spirit’s Fire Penetrates into the Realm of Our Attitudes and Desires—the Heart.
The solution to sin's controlling enslavement through our fallen nature is the Holy Spirit who diametrically  opposes the flesh. Again he is portrayed in the Word of God as a purifying and sin purging fire. He convicts us and removes sin from our daily experiences. He not only burns sin from us, but cleanses the heart of the believer so that we no longer desire to practice those same sins (Gal. 5:16, 25, 26). The struggles with wicked thoughts, desires and strong yearnings of the carnal heart is ongoing, but a conscious “walk in the Spirit” by faith enables us to deny the fleshly desires any expression. We do not need to give our carnal nature the upper hand—we can say “no” to the flesh!
Once He has purified us, part of the purification process is a desire in us to remain pure. Wrong desires can largely be displaced by right desires and the believer will actually undertake specific efforts to cleanse himself and stay clean. The marvelous truth is the Spirit of grace is at work in our hearts and minds. We must ensure we look to him in utter dependence and faith in his power to grant victory.  

2. The Expressed Goal of Salvation is Redemptive and PurificationTitus 2:13-14, says, “Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ; [14] Who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works.” (Also see Eph. 5:25-28)
Accordingly, Christ’s incredible sacrifice was not to permit us to passively endure an existence dominated by slavery to our fallen fleshly nature. Christ certainly gave himself to pay our sin debt delivering us from blood-guiltiness and eternal punishment for sin in Hell.
He also willingly gave himself without any reservation to redeem, deliver, and set us free from daily enslavement to sinful habits, deeds and practices. His goal was to purify or cleanse us from all iniquities and impurities. “Iniquity” refer to living with complete disregard for the plan, purpose, will, and laws of God. Beloved, one purpose of Christ's cross is freedom from the power of the flesh. God grants the ability to live in righteousness and holiness from the inside out. God’s people have no excuse for living carelessly in sin, lawlessness, and carnally indulgent lives. That’s a contradiction!

3. Often in Scripture fire is used to convey the process of purification and refinement. Fire is also a symbol by which the Holy Spirit’s work in believers’ hearts can be understood. Taken together the result is spiritually purified hearts by the cleansing flame of the Spirit of Burning. Note the following passages:
Acts 2:3, says, “And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them.” You will recall that the Holy Spirit’s manifestation is described as divided tongues, “like as of fire.”  In another place God is described in His judgment role as a consuming fire (Deut 4:24; 9:3)!  Hebrews 12:29, says, “For our God is a consuming fire.”
In one other place God commands believers to stir up the flames of revival in the soul, and fan into a brilliant flame the gift of God.  2 Tim. 1:6, says, “Wherefore I put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the gift of God, which is in thee by the putting on of my hands.”
Then we are told that God labors to purge us like precious metals to remove impurities and refine us for greater usages—these are chastening and judgment acts of God upon His people. Isaiah 1:25, states, “And I will turn my hand upon thee, and purely purge away thy dross, and take away all thy tin:”
Isaiah 4:4, also says, “When the Lord shall have washed away the filth of the daughters of Zion, and shall have purged the blood of Jerusalem from the midst thereof by the spirit of judgment, and by the spirit of burning.”
“This cleansing is done by the blast of the Spirit’s burning. Here is the searching, illuminating, refining, dross-consuming character of the Spirit. He burns up the dross in our lives …” –Evans, W. 1998, c1974. The Great Doctrines of The Bible.

The Spirit of God's cleansing activity in our lives is like fire; he discovers the sin and with our cooperation he empowers us to utterly reject carnal practices. The result is purity of life.

4. Fire and Burning Are Not Necessarily Comfortable Images to Us. Fire sounds painful, and sometimes the fire of the Holy Spirit at work in our lives is painful. His chastisements and admonishments often go against what we desire in the fleshly, human nature. But the results of His purification process are glorious!
As the Lord purifies us, our motives, behavior and goals become acceptable in His sight and are effectively prepared for use in His kingdom. Purification is a necessary part of our being sanctified, which is to be cleansed and set aside as holy in God’s eyes.  Hebrews 12:10-11, states, “For they verily for a few days chastened us after their own pleasure; but he for our profit, that we might be partakers of his holiness. [11] Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous, but grievous: nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them which are exercised thereby.  (See also 1 Pet. 4:12-14)

The Lord is highly motivated to to purify his people because he loves and treasures each of us in ways difficult for us to understand. During the corrective measures he takes with us, it is very difficult to appreciate what he is doing or how he is going about it. Our part is to take such passages very seriously--trust him, takes some inventory, confess our personal failures and embrace holy and submissive attitudes towards him. God's goal is that we become fruitful and productive believers. We all must anticipate yielding the "peaceable fruit of righteousness" under his cultivating hand. I know I need this kind of care from the Father in my life. 

5. Purity of Heart Cannot Be Separated from the Fire of the Holy Spirit.
That’s a vital concept for us to understand. We are purified by the Holy Spirit, and we continue to walk in purity because of the Holy Spirit’s presence and power in us. There is no way we can clean up our lives apart from His enabling us to do so. While it is true a person can change their habits and behavior without the Holy Spirit, they never the less cannot alter the state of their hearts. Nor can they truly please the Lord through their independent self-efforts. The Spirit truly gets to the heart of the matter where real transformation transpires.

6. Many People Attempt to Clean up Their Lives by a Mere Change in Their Behavior. They start going to church, attending Bible study, giving some of their money to God, reading their Bibles, and saying their prayers. All of these are good things, but it is best to yield to the Spirit first! None of these actions drive sin from our lives effectively without Him. Only as we yield to the Holy Spirit can we truly be cleansed like God desires. Our attitude toward God’s disciplinary burning to remove sinful actions, activities, ambitions, and attitudes should be acceptance, appreciation and yielded-ness.
The Lord Jesus said in Revelation 3:19, “As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten: be zealous therefore, and repent.” Beloved, this is wise counsel from our Lord. There is no room for objections and debate; we all must submit to our Lord’s directive. Remember, such guidance proceeds from a great heart of love; he is the one who died for us to deliver us from the penalty and power of sin. Jesus would that we be free by the power of the Holy Ghost in our daily experiences. Repenting of sin is well within order. 
The Book of Job reminds us of the blessedness of God’s corrective love in our experiences. Job 5:17, says, “Behold, happy is the man whom God correcteth: therefore despise not thou the chastening of the Almighty”.  We should count ourselves happy or blessed to have such care from the Almighty Father.  Too many parents simply allow their children to do whatever they want. These young people live very insecure lives in a dangerous and hostile world. No one loves them enough to guide them away from the landmines and pitfalls. Not true of genuine believers! We have the security of the Father's love and the guidance He affords to lead us into freedom, liberty, and purity of habits and heart. Beloved, don’t reject God’s corrective and life changing initiatives; it is wise to submit and embrace his will. The happiest people on planet earth are cared for by Almighty God. They appreciate the Spirit of God's efforts to purge and purify their experiences. 

Conclusion:
Psalm 139:23, Search me, O God, and know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts:
Perhaps we all should pray with the Psalmist, “Search me, O God.” In every believer there should be a desire to be clean and an awareness of strategies to stay clean. Cooperating with the Holy Spirit is God's will for each of us. Find a place to get alone with the Lord and then do some house cleaning. 

Keep this truth uppermost in your thinking: “The price of spiritual power is purity of heart.” Ask God to reveal anything that might hinder His flow of power in your life.
·       Do I treasure deceptive and misleading goals, sinful-worldly pleasures, Christ-dishonoring habits, ugly pride, myself or my friends?
·       Have I fully submitted to the authority of my Lord expressed in the Bible by refusing conformity to this world while choosing the transforming power of a spiritually renewed mind (Romans 12:1, 2)?

 NOTHING BETWEEN
Words and music by Charles A. Tindley, 1851–1933
Nothing between my soul and the Savior, naught of this world’s delusive dream: I have renounced all sinful pleasure—Jesus is mine! There’s nothing between.
Nothing between, like worldly pleasure! Habits of life, tho harmless they seem, must not my heart from Him ever sever—He is my all! There’s nothing between.
Nothing between, like pride or station: Self or friends shall not intervene; tho it may cost me much tribulation, I am resolved! There’s nothing between.
Nothing between, e’en many hard trials, tho the whole world against me convene; watching with prayer and much self denial—Triumph at last, with nothing between!
Chorus: Nothing between my soul and the Savior, so that His blessed face may be seen. Nothing preventing the least of His favor: Keep the way clear! Let nothing between.


MaxEvangel's Promise

MaxEvangel's Promise
We will Always Honor Christ-centered Perspectives!