Sorry to be so glum. Paul made me do it.


Sermon for the Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany

The Brother for Whom Christ Died

Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father and from our Lord Jesus 
Christ! Today’s Epistle from 1 Corinthians 8 rubs like sandpaper on the skin. 
Here God’s apostle Paul states, “Take care that this right of yours does not 
somehow become a stumbling block to the weak.” Paul also warns that, if you 
wound your brother’s conscience, “you sin against Christ.” Today’s Epistle 
might force you to conclude that offense is inevitable; that no Christian can 
guard himself so closely as to never offend someone else. Lord, have mercy!

Dear Christian friends,

For more than one reason, this is a difficult and unpleasant reading:

1. The first difficulty, and probably the easiest difficulty to overcome, is 
the distance between Paul’s specific topic in today’s Epistle and everyday life 
here in Missouri. On its surface, today’s Epistle concerns “food offered to 
idols.” The meat at the grocery store in Corinth was first sacrificed to false 
gods. Cows, goats and chickens were killed in the pagan temples, their blood 
was poured out upon idolatrous altars, and then their meat was taken to the 
market to be sold. What was a hungry Christian in Corinth supposed to do?

·       On one hand, the meat was not a problem, even though it had been 
sacrificed to an idol. “We know that an idol has no real existence,” Paul says. 
You have been forgiven all your sins in Jesus’ blood and death. Were that not 
enough of a gift, God has also set you free from every curse and from all fear. 
God’s Christians may live freely with regard to such questions as what they 
eat. Toss the meat on the grill and eat with a good conscience!

·       On the other hand, what will my Christian brother think, especially the 
one who has not yet fully comprehended the utter freedom that is ours in 
Christ? The Corinthian meat is free from condemnation. Still, by eating it you 
might “somehow become a stumbling block to the weak.” Someone—even someone you 
do not notice watching you—someone might be offended by you. So, as Paul so 
gallantly concludes here, “If food makes my brother stumble, I will never eat 
meat, lest I make my brother stumble.”

We Christians in Missouri simply do not face the same difficult question with 
our groceries. That is partly why today’s Epistle is difficult: the issue on 
its surface seems irrelevant and somewhat disconnected from our everyday lives.

But this first difficulty is relatively easy to overcome. Simply peel back a 
layer or two. Looking beyond the question of food and notice what lurks 
underneath. The second difficulty is not so easily beaten. Under the specific 
situation of food sacrificed to idols there is a much larger question: What 
impact will your personal behavior have on your fellow Christian?

2. Now the unpleasantness begins. The second difficulty with today’s Epistle is 
how this Epistle makes us Christians feel. If you have a pulse and a heartbeat, 
if you have an ounce of Christian faith within you, then this Epistle will 
likely make you wonder about the negative impact your own personal actions have 
had upon others—even actions you never could have dreamed were offensive to 
someone. This Epistle might even make you wince with chagrin and regret. There 
is NOT much here in 1 Corinthians 8 that brings us comfort and consolation in 
the name of Jesus.

·       Mostly, this Epistle gives us a reason to thank God for the weekly form 
of our worship. In the liturgy, we hear a clear proclamation of forgiveness and 
we receive the Body and Blood of Jesus, given and shed for you, no matter what 
Bible passages are assigned for the day.

·       Indeed, Paul lightly touches upon God’s grace when he describes Jesus 
as the one “through whom we exist.” Paul mentions in passing, “if anyone loves 
God, he is known by God,” but these are not necessarily comforting thoughts. It 
is really more broth than stew, so to speak.

Only those who plug their ears can escape the condemnation Paul speaks here. 
The basic demand of this chapter is completely impossible! It is well and good 
for Paul to say, “If food makes my brother stumble, I will never eat meat, lest 
I make my brother stumble,” but where will it end?

·       If the robe I wear in leading worship causes a visiting Christian to 
stumble, shall I no longer wear a robe?

·       Shall we change our godly and scriptural practice of closed communion, 
just because some of our Christian guests feel offended by it? As Paul says, 
“Not all possess this knowledge.”

·       If I attempt to laugh and joke with a fellow Christian, only to have my 
humor taken the wrong way, shall I never express happiness again?

·       Even with my best intentions and in my finest moments (which are few), 
how can I guard my speech and behavior so closely that no fellow Christian will 
ever misunderstand and take offense?

Paul is MORE than right and correct in what he says. APOSTLE Paul did not dream 
this up himself, but he writes under the authority and by the commission of 
Jesus Christ Himself. By all means, we Christians each must “take care that… 
[we not] somehow become a stumbling block to the weak.” 

For the life of me, and after what seems like plenty of experience, I still 
cannot identify who are the strong and who are the weak. The weak often 
disguise themselves and masquerade as the strong, only revealing themselves as 
weak after you have done your damage. The strongest often seem very weak. I 
might ask for all the strong Christians to move to one side of our sanctuary, 
and all the weak to the other, but I think the result will be biased. Both 
groups would be different next week, anyway. We all swing between episodes of 
strength and weakness, high and low, confidence and gloom, forbearance and 
nastiness. Short of wearing a “strength-o-meter” or some other sign, how is 
anyone supposed to know whether I am one of the weak or one of the strong today?

Much of our life together is like driving in a borrowed car that has an 
insulting bumper sticker you did not notice. You’re simply driving down the 
road and you have no idea the message people receive from you or the way you 
offend. Certainly we all have our own capacity for chosen evil, including those 
who hide behind white robes and wooden pulpits. Paul in today’s Epistle simply 
makes our guilt unavoidable, even when we have the best intentions. Paul leaves 
us no room for error. He assures us that there is no good use for personal 
confidence. “If anyone imagines that he knows something,” says Paul, “he does 
not yet know as he ought to know.” So much for self-improvement!

3. The first difficulty in today’s Epistle—Corinthian groceries versus life in 
Missouri—is relatively easy to overcome. We simply peeled back the specific 
context of the chapter to focus on the larger question, what impact does your 
behavior have on others? The honest answer to that question is not easy and it 
is not pleasant. Offense is unavoidable, even in the best of circumstances. I 
will inexorably cause my brother to stumble, no matter how hard I might try to 
prevent it! Then Paul pokes his finger into the self-inflicted wound when he 
says, “Thus, sinning against your brothers and wounding their conscience when 
it is weak, you sin against Christ.”

As far as I can see, there are only two solutions to this second difficulty of 
inevitable offense. The first solution is that I abandon my pulpit and my home; 
that I move out into a desert and live in isolation so that no one can ever 
take me the wrong way. While I in some sense continually find this idea 
appealing, I also think that such an escape somehow offend and scandalize more 
of my fellow Christians than my continued presence will. Hermits still wound 
the consciences of their distant brothers!

The second solution seems to be my only hope: that I cling to Jesus more 
tightly than before; that I eat of His body more seriously and drink of His 
blood more deeply, as He is the only source of my only good. Everything falls 
apart, except what Jesus holds together! Everything goes bad, except what Jesus 
makes good! Every brother gets scattered, one from another, except where Jesus 
holds us together. Every word and every action will wound, somewhere and 
somehow, except where Jesus heals with His life-giving Word and His 
compassionate hand. I need Jesus. You need Jesus. We together need Jesus. No 
matter how much we continually fail one another, Jesus shall never fail us.

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