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1 Corinthians: “Be Imitators of Me”
Introduction: When we think of the letters to the Corinthians, often our first thought is the many ways Paul needed to correct the Corinthian Christians for worldly beliefs and practices. Sexual immorality, lawsuits, turning the Lord’s Supper into a feast, and a myriad of other faults needed correcting.
However, before Paul corrects these specific sins, he lays down a foundation of why all of these are a violation of the gospel, which is defined by preaching Christ crucified (2:2).
It is the message of Christ crucified that solves:
In all of this, Paul pursues a repeated theme of “there is a pattern of teaching and living that must be pursued as a Christian.”
We are not surprised that Paul commands these Christians to imitate is teaching. But it is shocking when Paul commands them to imitate is life. It is even more amazing when we realize that God gave Paul permission to use himself as a model for the life of a believer. That is not to say that we are all called to travel like Paul or expect to be beaten and imprisoned. But Paul’s life-example teaches us how to view our purpose in the world to make the life of Jesus “visible in our mortal bodies.” (2 Cor. 4:10).
Conclusion: Do we accept the gravity of what Paul taught the Corinthians about how they worship and how they live as Christians? We cannot fool ourselves. These patterns are certainly often violated either as a church or as individual Christians. This is what all the churches are to look like.
Berry Kercheville
The post 1 Corinthians: “Be Imitators of Me” appeared first on Woodland Hills Church of Christ.
By Woodland Hills Church of Christ4.7
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1 Corinthians: “Be Imitators of Me”
Introduction: When we think of the letters to the Corinthians, often our first thought is the many ways Paul needed to correct the Corinthian Christians for worldly beliefs and practices. Sexual immorality, lawsuits, turning the Lord’s Supper into a feast, and a myriad of other faults needed correcting.
However, before Paul corrects these specific sins, he lays down a foundation of why all of these are a violation of the gospel, which is defined by preaching Christ crucified (2:2).
It is the message of Christ crucified that solves:
In all of this, Paul pursues a repeated theme of “there is a pattern of teaching and living that must be pursued as a Christian.”
We are not surprised that Paul commands these Christians to imitate is teaching. But it is shocking when Paul commands them to imitate is life. It is even more amazing when we realize that God gave Paul permission to use himself as a model for the life of a believer. That is not to say that we are all called to travel like Paul or expect to be beaten and imprisoned. But Paul’s life-example teaches us how to view our purpose in the world to make the life of Jesus “visible in our mortal bodies.” (2 Cor. 4:10).
Conclusion: Do we accept the gravity of what Paul taught the Corinthians about how they worship and how they live as Christians? We cannot fool ourselves. These patterns are certainly often violated either as a church or as individual Christians. This is what all the churches are to look like.
Berry Kercheville
The post 1 Corinthians: “Be Imitators of Me” appeared first on Woodland Hills Church of Christ.

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