Yesterday I referred to a study in 1 Corinthians. We are in 15 (here @ BibleGateway) this week. 14 (here @ BibleGateway) Last week. 12 – 14 is a difficult passage. This time through I saw something that was tangential to the typical discussion that is usually started when one engages with 14.
Before we get into that, lets think about one of, if not the major, theme of 1 Corinthians. In each chapter Paul seems to deal with an issue that is causing division in the Corinthian church. For instance:
Chapter | Divisive Issue |
---|---|
1 | Competition of whose mentor is best |
2 | Lack of growth |
3 | Arrogance of conversion |
4 | Pride or Arrogance toward leaders |
5 | Misplaced tolerance |
6 | Mishandling of legal issues |
7 | male female relationships |
8 | Liberty misused |
9 | Rights demanded |
10 | Forgetting all in the same situation, choosing what one likes without regard for the choice’s impact on others |
11 | Misbehavior at the Lord’s table, differences about head coverings |
12 | Spiritual gifts |
13 | Lack of love |
Which brings us to 14. Most would probably suggest that it is a rehearsal or expansion of chapter 12, and at some level that is correct. But, I believe there is more going on under the surface of the arguments Paul is making. There are hints of this all through the chapter but 14:10 - 11 (here @ BibleGateway) is perhaps the clearest example. Paul remarks that there are many languages and if two people are not speaking the same language one will think the other is a barbarian, they are not communicating.
As I thought through the chapter, it began to dawn that that issues of not communicating was underlying all of what Paul is saying in this chapter. Whether it is tongues, either in the charismatic sense, or prophecy, if those hearing do not understand what is being said, there is no edification in the church.
Shortly after thinking this through, I was in several meetings that included both staff at churches and men in Bible studies, I observed miscommunication happening in each meeting. One person would say something and the person listening would hear something else and respond to what they thought they heard rather than what was said.
That happens between generations as well. I am a baby boomer. I have a different language, for the most part, than millennials. I must work to both understand what they are saying, and work to communicate what I am thinking to them in language that they understand.
This past weekend we had a speaker that used the DISC personality inventory to help those in our church understand the different ways that different personalities communicate and hear what is communicated to them. It was again a validation of what I saw in 14.
When I read articles on current events, I sometimes wonder from what planet the person writing the article recently arrived. They are viewing what I see through a completely different lens.
Interestingly When you consider Paul’s prayer request in Colossians 4:3– 4 (here @ BibleGateway), the main thing he is asking for is to be able to speak clearly, to make the mystery of the gospel clear to those to whom he speaks. Communication. James in 3:1 – 12 (here @ BibleGateway), you know the passage, the word translated tongue is the same word that is used in 1 Corinthians that is similarly translated tongue or tongues. Lastly, in Genesis 11:6 (here @ BibleGateway), the Lord looking at what the people were building in the plain in Shinar, acknowledged that they all spoke the same language, thus they could do anything they chose to do.
If we communicate, across generations, across theological differences, across cultural differences, as believers, think of what we can do in pursuing first the Kingdom, Matthew 6:33 (here @ BibleGateway).
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