Reflection on 1 Corinthians 11:17-34

Scripture

For every time you eat the bread and drink the cup, you are announcing the Lord’s death until he comes again.

Observation

Paul now moves on to teach about the Lord’s Supper, where he has a rebuke for the Corinthians.

When they meet together, those who arrive first eat without waiting for the others who may be late. The result is that some have plenty to eat, but others go home hungry.

The point about the Lord’s Supper is not about eating and drinking for our stomach’s sake. It is a remembrance of the night when Jesus was betrayed prior to His crucifixion.

Every time we eat the bread and rink the cup, we proclaim the Lord’s death.

We must therefore examine ourselves before we take part in the Lord’s Supper. We must honour the Body of Christ (that is, the church) or we may bring God’s judgement on ourselves.

Application

The celebration of the Lord’s Supper is an evangelistic action, because it proclaims the Lord’s death – the body and blood of Christ bring salvation and the forgiveness of sins.

The sacrament proclaim the gospel to:

  • the believers who are gathered. We need to be reminded that we are saved and set apart for God’s purposes. We forget our calling so easily.
  • the unbelievers in the gathering. This is a concrete enactment of the gospel. Jesus Christ died for sinners,
  • the spirits and principalities. These demons are reminded that in Christ the war has been won.
  • the angels and saints watching and cheering us on from the heavenly realms

Because it is such a powerful proclamation, we must ensure that our hearts are in tune with the Holy Spirit whenever we celebrate Holy Communion.

Prayer

Thank you Father for the weekly celebration of the death of Jesus Christ on the cross. Thank you for redeeming me. Amen.

Ephesians 5:31

Here is my commentary on Ephesians 5:31. I am publishing these once or twice a week, but you can read all of the available articles at our web-site, http://www.new-life.org.au

Ephesians 5:31

“For this reason, a man will leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two will become one flesh.”

At last Paul quotes the scripture, Genesis 2:24, that he has been considering all through this discussion about husbands and wives.

This single verse is the most profound sentence describing the reality of God’s plan for marriage in all of the Bible. It is so all-encompassing that Jesus did not need to add to it in his teaching.

Genesis 2:24 comes at the completion of the creation story. The woman was created from a rib taken out of Adam. It is “for this reason” that a man and a woman are joined and become one flesh. Adam and Eve were created as “ one flesh”, and marriage is in a sense a consummation of this origin.

For Christians and Jews alike, marriage is an existential institution. It goes to the heart of what it means to be human.

Marriage, then, is more than a social construct or a convenient way of binding people together for the purpose of rearing children. It is far more than a contract between equal adults and something that can be left at will.

This verse underlies the reluctance of the church to embrace divorce.”Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate.” (Mark 10:9). If a man and a woman have been joined by God as one flesh, than any divorce is a judgement that God was wrong.

The same verse speaks against adultery and the plethora of sexual sins humans have imagined. To commit adultery is to sin against one’s own spouse and therefore one’s own flesh, as well as those of the other party. In Genesis 1, creation is described as separating things that should not be mixed, but adultery is seen as a destructive force that mixes together bonds and people that should not be mixed.

Marriage in the Scriptures is always about one man and one woman. Where polygamy is practised, it is seen as destructive because it runs against the “one flesh” narrative.

Similarly, same sex “marriage” is not just an abomination, but a contradiction. A man and a woman can become one flesh, but two men or two women cannot. Therefore, to call such a relationship a marriage runs against God’s intention.

To speak of a man and a woman as being “one flesh” is not linked only to the sexual relationship or even just to the wider sense of physical intimacy that couples enjoy. To be “ one flesh” means to share the same goals, vision, and mission in life. While they may have divergent interests and abilities, they will submit their life ambitions to the Lord and to one another, allowing the Holy Spirit to lead their joint enterprise. A husband and wife should see themselves as a team called into existence by God for a purpose that is greater than their individual purposes.

An example of this might be a nurse and engineer who see as a couple mission opportunities that complement and support one another. A wife with a strong prophetic ministry might empower a husband who is pastoral, and vice versa.

For a couple to be one flesh they must first leave their father and mother. While our relationships and obligations to parents remain after we marry, we must never allow allegiances to our parents get in the way of joining to our spouse. We must leave in order to cleave, to quote from an older translation of this verse.

Parents also must allow their children to leave, letting go of their emotional ties. There is no surer way to undermine a marriage then for parents to relentlessly intervene.

Key points in this verse:

  • Marriage is an expression of the original creation of Adam and eve
  • Divorce is a tearing apart of the single body formed in marriage
  • Adultery and other sexual sins betray our own bodies as well as those of others
  • Same sex “marriage” is a contradiction in terms
  • Children must leave her parents in order to be joined to their spouse

Quote for the Day

Drawing on His own perfect wisdom, He chose His “will” (Greek thelēma), the one divine decree for every event that comes to pass. This predetermined plan was so comprehensive that it included everything that would occur. Nothing lay outside this eternal purpose. It encompasses everything that will be. Steven Lawson