with Bob Condly
Archive

August 2023

The Mind of Christ

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“We have the mind of Christ.” – 1 Corinthians 2:16b

What an amazing statement! The apostle Paul is either exaggerating or he’s onto something big. What does he mean by this?

Let’s start with “we.” Paul says “we” have Christ’s mind. So who’s he referring to?

1 Corinthians 1:1 identifies Paul and Sosthenes as the authors of this letter. And while there’s a ton of verses about Paul in the New Testament, Sosthenes is a relative unknown. He’s mentioned only twice. The other verse is Acts 18:17:

“Then the crowd there turned on Sosthenes the synagogue leader and beat him in front of the proconsul; and Gallio showed no concern whatever.”

This scene took place in Corinth where Paul had settled to preach the gospel. (Acts 18:1-18 covers Paul’s outreach in the city of Corinth.) Winning many people to Jesus Christ upset the Jewish authorities. We don’t know if Sosthenes the synagogue leader is the same fellow mentioned at the beginning of 1 Corinthians, but it seems likely. 

If so, Sosthenes was a Jew who became a Christian as a result of Paul’s evangelism and later traveled with him on some of his missionary trips.

But it’s too narrow to restrict the “we” to Paul and Sosthenes. Since they’re writing to the Corinthian church, it’s reasonable to assume that the congregation was on their minds. 

Now, there’s nothing special about the church in Corinth. In fact, Paul dedicates chapter after chapter to addressing their issues and solving their problems.

So the word “we” includes Paul and Sosthenes as leaders, and the church at Corinth.

But even this is too cramped. Scripture, although addressed to an original audience, has the wider body of Christ in view. 1 Corinthians, in an ultimate sense, was written to all Christians.

We who believe in Jesus Christ have His mind.

The second matter to consider is the verb. “Have” is in the present tense, so Paul is describing a current, in-the-moment reality. We, Christians of all eras and places, possess something special.

The mind of Christ.

The Greek word for “mind” is nous and Paul likes to use it in his letters. While this noun occurs 24 times in the Greek New Testament, 21 of them are in Paul’s writings. It’s a favorite of his!

But he doesn’t reduce the Christian life to the abstract. Following Jesus is an active, intelligent way of life. It involves the full investment of what we think, say, and do. When we yield ourselves to the Lord, He gives us every resource we need to stay true.

And one of those great blessings is His mind.

So what is Paul trying to tell us with this declaration? 

One, Christians should be united.

I’m not introducing a foreign notion unrelated to the verse. In 1 Corinthians 1:10, Paul says the following:

“I appeal to you, brothers and sisters, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree with one another in what you say and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be perfectly united in mind and thought.”

There are many Christians, but only one Christ. Our hope of unity is based on the mind of the Lord. If we don’t ourselves in that, the pressures in the church and in the world will fracture us into numerous groups centered on opinions, theologies, and experiences. None of these are worthless, but they can’t substitute for the mind of Christ.

Two, Christians should be spiritual.

The first two chapters of 1 Corinthians deal with spiritual wisdom. Many in the church at Corinth were distorting Christlike spirituality. They were evaluating spiritual gifts (and those who exercised them) according to the pagan religious standards they grew up with.

Paul counters this by stressing how true spirituality transcends such judgments.

 “But the one who is spiritual discerns all things, yet he himself is discerned by no one. 16For WHO HAS KNOWN THE MIND OF THE LORD, THAT HE WILL INSTRUCT HIM? But we have the mind of Christ.” – 1 Corinthians 2:15-16 (NASB20)

This point connects to the first one. When we judge our brothers and sisters in Christ, we inhibit the possibility of unity. We stop cooperating and begin to argue. Discussions get heated, and we end up magnifying minutiae. When that happens, the ministry of the gospel grinds to a halt.

This isn’t the mind of Christ!

God gave us the Holy Spirit so we could think and act like Jesus. In fact, we can say that the Spirit is the mind of Christ. And He won’t fracture the body of Christ; it’s not His way. The variety God gives His people has an underlying unity.

“There are different kinds of gifts, but the same Spirit distributes them. 5There are different kinds of service, but the same Lord. 6There are different kinds of working, but in all of them and in everyone it is the same God at work.” – 1 Corinthians 12:4-6

This is how the mind of Jesus operates! He delights in the differences because there are so many needs out there in the world. The only way to meet them is to equip every child of God with the power to make a difference. The circumstances will vary and the problems will range, so God calls His whole people to serve in the manner of Jesus. Everyone has a part to play; everyone can make a difference.

Let’s not dispute or challenge this; let’s support each other in the work of the gospel. God has given us the mind of His Son so we can appreciate one another and team up to carry out His will in our day and age.

This is the mind of Christ in the church.

Celebrating Salvation, Part 2

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Why did Jesus tell the three parables in Luke 15 that we looked at last week? He was responding to the grumbling of the Jewish religious leaders.

What was disturbing them?

“Now the tax collectors and sinners were all gathering around to hear Jesus. 2But the Pharisees and the teachers of the law muttered, ‘This man welcomes sinners and eats with them.’” – Luke 15:1-2

Okay, Jesus was interacting with sinners. And why was that a problem in their eyes?

It looked like approval. In the world of the Bible, to eat with people is to share life with them, relate to them, bond with them. Jesus eating with sinners implied that He agreed with how they were living. Or that He didn’t care. In the minds of the Pharisees, neither option was good!

“Then Jesus told them this parable” – Luke 15:3

So the Lord addressed their criticism.

Going through Luke 15, we find that one parable leads to another. First, Jesus tells them about a shepherd searching for a lost sheep. Then, He repeats the point by describing a woman looking for a misplaced coin.

In both parables, the finders call their friends to celebrate their retrievals.

Oh, and both parables mention the joy in heaven over a sinner who repents. So if these were the only two parables in the chapter, we’d conclude that God and His angels celebrate the salvation of sinners. The implication is the religious leaders should, too.

But Jesus doesn’t stop here. He continues with a third parable that’s longer and more detailed than the other two. The parables of the lost sheep and lost coin feature missing items, searchers, and celebrations.

The parable of the prodigal son adds another character, the older brother. He can’t stomach the idea of his father throwing a party to welcome back the errant younger brother. He doesn’t deserve it!

Jesus is casting His critics in the role of the older brother. Living at home, he should have the same mindset as his father. But he doesn’t. And neither do the Pharisees.

Yet Christ does! The Lord is suggesting that He’s doing what the older brother should have done. What the religious leaders should have done. He’s pursuing sinners.

In the parable, his sense of justice kept the older brother from going after his reckless sibling. Do the crime, do the time! Afterwards, if the sinner is truly repentant, we’ll see about restoration.

But Jesus was meeting sinners on their turf.

“Not long after that, the younger son got together all he had, set off for a distant country and there squandered his wealth in wild living.” – Luke 15:13

The prodigal frequented places and hung out with people who gave God little thought. How many parties he’d attended, the parable doesn’t say, but it was enough to empty his bank account.

The Pharisees and teachers faulted Jesus for eating with miscreants in unblessed places. This isn’t something the righteous do!

Again, if the prodigal son had repented, accepted a servant role in the estate, and worked hard, he might one day earn a spot at the family table. But it would take a lot of time and effort! 

I can see the religious leaders reasoning like this. They weren’t opposed to the possibility of repentance. If they could turn sinners to God, they’d feel like they accomplished something significant.

But hold off on celebrating!

By contrast, Jesus is telling them to rejoice at the salvation of sinners, to celebrate the recovery of the lost. This took effort. The shepherd looked for the sheep and the woman swept through the house to find the coin.

No one looked for the prodigal son.

He changed his mind on his own. The older brother could have gone after him, but didn’t. He could have chased down the confused young man and talked some sense into him, but he stayed put.

Jesus didn’t remain in heaven. He came down to our world “to seek and to save the lost” (Luke 19:10). 

If the religious leaders wouldn’t strive for the lost, they could at least approve of Christ’s efforts to do so.

But to them, Jesus had things backwards.

To eat with stubborn sinners is wrong. To eat with repentant sinners is okay, if certain conditions are met. Is their sorrow genuine? Have they made amends? Have they offered the right sacrifices? 

Jesus seemed to be ignoring all this and going straight to partying. To the Pharisees, that’s premature at best, and dishonoring to God at worst. Again, to them, Jesus either likes evil or doesn’t care about it.

The opening verses of Luke 15 don’t mention any sinners repenting. So was Jesus hasty? Was He jumping the gun?

This is our opportunity to reassess what repentance is all about. The fact that outcasts wanted to listen to Jesus means that God was doing something in their hearts. And they demonstrated it in the best way they knew: they invited Christ to lunch. Food and fellowship are among the greatest gifts one could give another. These people honored Jesus and He accepted their welcome as a sign of repentance. Their hearts were turning and by eating with them, and continuing their conversations, Jesus could finish the job. He could bring them back to the Father.

He was doing what the Pharisees should have been engaging in. But their beliefs wouldn’t let them. So Jesus told three parables to stress the importance of seeking and celebrating.

The joy of finding what’s been missing is a joy we can’t keep to ourselves. Through the gospel of Jesus Christ, we have the opportunity to see souls return to God. But we’ll never know that joy if we don’t look for them. And searching for the lost will take us to some unpleasant areas. But doing so gives them a chance to discover the reality of the kingdom of God. They learn that Jesus wants them back. And when they return, that’s worth celebrating!

with Bob Condly

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