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What do you actually bring to the table before a holy God?
Human nature deeply desires to negotiate. We want to believe that our intellect, our social status, or our hard-fought moral achievements give us a leg up in the kingdom. But when the Apostle Paul wrote to the church in Corinth, he didn't flatter their egos. Instead, he reminded them of an uncomfortable historical reality: before their calling, they weren't the elite. They weren't the powerful. In the eyes of first-century high society, they were the "nobodies."
In this archived sermon from 2024, Clayton dives into 1 Corinthians 1:26–31 to unpack what has historically been called the "nothing passage." We explore the staggering reality that God deliberately chooses the weak, the low, and the despised to completely flip the world's power structures on their head. Digging into the Greek context of autos (God's unchanging desire) and the literary device of metonymy, this episode untangles how Christ alone becomes our absolute wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and redemption. Join us for a humbling look at why the only true ground for boasting is a cross that strips us of our pride and clothes us in the perfection of the Son.
In this episode, we explore:
By ClaytonSend us Fan Mail
What do you actually bring to the table before a holy God?
Human nature deeply desires to negotiate. We want to believe that our intellect, our social status, or our hard-fought moral achievements give us a leg up in the kingdom. But when the Apostle Paul wrote to the church in Corinth, he didn't flatter their egos. Instead, he reminded them of an uncomfortable historical reality: before their calling, they weren't the elite. They weren't the powerful. In the eyes of first-century high society, they were the "nobodies."
In this archived sermon from 2024, Clayton dives into 1 Corinthians 1:26–31 to unpack what has historically been called the "nothing passage." We explore the staggering reality that God deliberately chooses the weak, the low, and the despised to completely flip the world's power structures on their head. Digging into the Greek context of autos (God's unchanging desire) and the literary device of metonymy, this episode untangles how Christ alone becomes our absolute wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and redemption. Join us for a humbling look at why the only true ground for boasting is a cross that strips us of our pride and clothes us in the perfection of the Son.
In this episode, we explore: