Sermons

Summary: A lawsuit can be a document telling the world I don’t trust God and his provision.

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This week we continue our series called Chronos. A term which means time. We have decided to study the scriptures this year in the order they were published. It gives us a very unique insight into the early church and the struggles of a growing movement. This review of history is important because The Center’s leadership believes we are on the cuspid of a great awakening in America. An awakening that will challenge the status quo of the current Christian industrial complex. An institution more concerned with Attendance, Buildings and Cash than the Gospel, Grace and Growth of the kingdom.

This week we also continue in the book of the first Corinthians. It’s another book written by Paul around 25 years after Jesus' earthly ministry. Corinth is the original sin city. It was a transitional city and as such there was a lot of anonymity. As a Coastal town people were always coming and going. Some for vacation, most for business. The community was know for their worship of the goddess of sex. They had one of the largest temples devoted to her and the idea of fertility. You can see why when you called somebody a corinthian back then, you were saying they were living without morality. After his 1 ½ years planting the church, Paul left behind Apollos who was an amazing preacher/teacher and yet, we can see from this book the people still had questions. The immorality of the culture was so rampant that Paul had to address everything from why church potlucks should not turn into drunken frat parties and worship to the one true God like kids first birthday party at chuck e cheese restaurant.

Last Sunday, we dove head first into the book. Last week Paul encouraged us to remember any amount of sin can become corrosive to the individual, the community of faith and the mission Jesus died for.

Paul continues this letter by emphasizing his love for and his hope for the early church in Corinth by addressing their unwillingness to address the tough issues. Before we jump into this week’s issue, let me tell you a personal story.

A little over 25 years ago, I was in a play it again sports store. It was Diane, our 3 or 4 year old son and I. We were there looking for some weightlifting equipment. As we looked around, our son was all over the store. As we were checking out, we heard a blood curdling scream. It was my son. He had been running through the store when he tripped and fell. He had hit the corner of one of the display racks and punctured his upper lip. It went clear through to the bone. I could see it. We

immediately picked him up and ran him to the hospital emergency room. They had me hold him as they put him in a small straight jacket and asked me to hold his head as they did the stitching. It really was awful. The next week we were at a party and I was telling the story again. When I finished the person I was telling the story to asked if I was going to sue the store after all, it sounded like a college education amount of money. I replied, I just can’t because life happens. The person shrugged and commented that I might want to rethink that. And I did for a little while. I may had a right but my sense of justice and love for small business owners wouldn't let me.

We all have rights in this life and sometimes our rights and our mission collide. Paul addresses this at the beginning of this chapter by letting the church know his view on their willingness to sue one another when life doesn’t go as planned. Take a listen…

If any of you has a dispute with another, do you dare to take it before the ungodly for judgment instead of before the Lord’s people? 2 Or do you not know that the Lord’s people will judge the world? And if you are to judge the world, are you not competent to judge trivial cases? 3 Do you not know that we will judge angels? How much more the things of this life!

Much like today people sue one another in the courts to get what they think they deserve. Their “rights” have been violated so sue them and grab some cash. Afterall, everyone is doing it.

A right according to the dictionary is:

1. That which is morally correct, just, or honorable.

2. A moral or legal entitlement to have or obtain something or to act in a certain way.

These rights are often categorized as both natural and legal rights. Legal rights are bestowed upon an individual or a society by the system that monitors justice for the society. The second type of right is called natural or human rights. They are the universal rights of human beings that can not be repealed or restrained because they are resident in each person.

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