“Pride was the Real Issue”
BIBLE READING: 1Corinthians 4-7
One of the main reasons Paul was writing to the church
at Corinth, a church he had personally founded about 5 years earlier, was
because there was open sin in the church that no one was doing anything about.
So, as the founding pastor, he took on the task of confronting it. An
incestuous relationship with a stepmother was a forbidden act by both Greek and
Roman law. It should have been enough that this was declared sin by the Bible,
but if not, then surely the fact that worldly culture itself considered it sin
would settle the matter. Paul made it clear that the man was a well-known
person in the church and that the woman was his stepmother, or father’s wife,
not his biological mother. Paul said it was an embarrassment on the church that
this thing was happening, but it was even worse that nothing was being done
about it. He then pointed to the underlying problem of pride, a problem that he
mentions 6 times in this letter. Paul’s point was that they were so arrogant
and carnal in their pride, that instead of mourning over the shocking sin, they
were openly tolerating it. It was a sin problem that would destroy the church
from within.
Radio host, Paul Harvey was quoted in Leadership
magazine as saying: The way an Eskimo kills a wolf is grizzly, yet it offers fresh
insight into the consuming, self-destructive nature of sin. First, the Eskimo
coats his knife blade with animal blood and allows it to freeze. Then he adds
another layer of blood, and another, until the blade is completely concealed by
frozen blood. Next, the hunter fixes his knife in the ground with the blade up.
When a wolf follows his sensitive nose to the source of the scent and discovers
the bait, he licks it, tasting the fresh frozen blood. He begins to lick
faster, more and more vigorously, lapping the blade until the keen edge is
bare. Feverishly now, harder and harder, the wolf licks the blade in the Arctic
night. So great becomes the craving for blood that the wolf does not notice the
razor sharp sting of the naked blade on his own tongue nor does he recognize
the instant at which his insatiable thirst is being satisfied by his own warm
blood. His carnivorous appetite just craves more—until the dawn finds him dead
in the snow!
This account is hard to read, but allowing sin to
destroy our lives is every bit as gruesome and heartbreaking. Sin is serious
and deadly; we cannot take it lightly.
-Ed Rea
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