The Bible Recap - Day 337 (1 Corinthians 15-16) - Year 5
Episode Date: December 3, 2023SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits - To listen to Scrooge: A Christmas Carol podcast, click here. FROM T...ODAY’S RECAP: - Mark 4:1-20 - Leviticus 23:10 - Video: 2 Corinthians Overview - Have your CHURCH read through the Bible with TBR! - TBR Start Page SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: D-Group is brought to you by the same team that brings you The Bible Recap. TBR is where we read the Bible, and D-Group is where we study the Bible. D-Group is an international network of Bible study groups that meet weekly in homes, churches, and online. Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
It's International Challenge Week!
If you don't know anyone who lives in a different country, how about a different state
or province?
Or better yet, see if your church supports any missionaries and send them our info as
an encouragement.
Missionary life can feel lonely and can lack support and resources, so we'd love to be
one of the ways they can feel more connected.
Now on to the podcast.
Today we wrapped up 1 Corinthians, which is Paul's second letter to the Corinthians,
at least, because there's also the book we're calling Zero Corinthians.
If you're doing our New Testament plan, you just finished your ninth book,
and if you're doing the whole Bible, you just finished your 48th book.
Congratulations!
Paul spends most of chapter 15 driving home the importance of the resurrection,
which was a point of debate in the church at Corinth.
Some even seem to be on the same train of thought as the Sadducees,
who don't believe in the resurrection of anyone.
So Paul lists a bunch of evidence proving that Jesus rose from the dead,
including the
500 witnesses, many of whom are still alive at this time.
In other words, Paul is saying, you can go ask them.
He calls Christ's resurrection the most important thing about our faith.
If Jesus didn't have victory over death, we would be hopeless.
But because he did, that hope permeates every area of our lives.
But Paul knows it's easy to forget this with everything that happens in life,
so he reminds them that time is the test of what we truly believe.
If God has given us new hearts, then He's given us His Spirit,
and His Spirit reminds us of the truth,
and His Spirit seals us for the day of redemption.
So if we truly belong to God, we will persevere in the faith.
He will finish what He started in us.
But those who only affirmed the truth without it taking root, like the rocky soil and the
thorny soil we read about in Mark 4, those are the ones who believed in vain.
If Jesus wasn't raised from the dead, Paul says, then much of what he has been doing
is lying about God.
If Jesus wasn't raised from the dead, then everyone is still in bondage to sin.
If Jesus wasn't raised from the dead, then everyone is still in bondage to sin. If Jesus wasn't raised from the dead, there is no afterlife and there is no hope.
He points to the hope that Christ's resurrection demonstrates.
He calls it the firstfruits. This is a nod to Leviticus 23 and the feast of firstfruits.
This is where the priests and the people praised God for the first harvest of the season because
it represented a greater harvest still ahead. They trusted there was more coming.
The resurrection of Jesus foreshadows the resurrection of all God's kids into eternal
life.
While Adam brought death, Jesus, who is referred to as the second Adam or the last Adam, brings
life.
He will put all his enemies under his feet.
He will destroy death itself.
And he will reign forever.
Then Paul says something that isn't referenced anywhere else in scripture.
So our rule of thumb here is we don't scream where scripture whispers.
We don't build a doctrine or practice around something unclear.
This idea in particular refers to being baptized for the dead.
Paul never endorses what they're doing, he just addresses it.
Some people say they were washing the bodies of the dead as a kind of baptism,
and others say they were personally being baptism stand-ins for people who were already dead and
buried. But either way, Paul uses their actions to make his point, which is, if you don't believe
in the resurrection, then why are you doing that? If there's no afterlife, then those people are
ended. Because some of the Corinthians don't believe in the afterlife, they're living it up
in the meantime, doing whatever they want. One of the wicked side effects of
disbelieving the resurrection is that people often feel like whatever they do
doesn't matter. So Paul says, knock it off, don't deceive yourselves, this life
isn't all there is. He knows they'll want him to explain what these resurrected
bodies look like, so he uses descriptive words but without really painting a full
picture. It's powerful, glorified, imperishable, distinct.
Our resurrection bodies are more glorious than our earthly bodies because the image
of God isn't tainted by our sin nature.
And here's a Paul-adjacent comparison that might be semi-accurate or helpful.
If our earthly bodies are like acorns, our resurrection bodies are like oaks.
Except oaks that can't die.
All the material needed to grow the oak exists in the acorn,
like us with the spirit.
But what grows is a completely bigger, better thing altogether,
like our resurrection bodies.
Paul wraps up in chapter 16
with some greetings and final instructions.
He's been instructing the churches to collect money
to help support the believers in need in Jerusalem,
kind of like a reverse missionary fund, because they all share with whoever is in need and they each give according to their means.
Lots of scholars point out that Paul's instructions for them to collect this money on the first day of each week
indicates that the church is meeting on Sundays in honor of the day Jesus rose from the dead as opposed to the
traditional Jewish meeting day of the Sabbath aka Saturday.
Paul says he'll come visit them as soon as he finishes his time in Ephesus.
But he wants to stay in Ephesus for a while because there are lots of enemies of the gospel there,
which Paul considers a great opportunity to share the gospel.
Probably not my perspective, but that's why I'm not Paul.
He tells them he's sending Timothy to see them first, though.
Timothy has two strikes against him.
First, he's Paul's mentee, and there's all this obvious tension between Paul and Corinth
in this letter, so there's a chance they may treat him as guilty by association.
And second, he's a bit of a spring chicken.
He's a young guy.
So Paul tells them to treat him with honor and help him.
Paul wants Apollos to come visit them, but the fact that Apollos is resistant to it gives
us even more of an indication of the tension going on in this church.
They're kind of a mess, but Paul loves them and says he hopes to stay with them for a
while if the Lord permits.
What was your God shot today?
Mine was in 159-10, where Paul talks about his role as an apostle.
He acknowledges that he doesn't deserve to serve God as an apostle because of his past.
He has a right view of himself and of God, and this shows us God's great mercy that
he doesn't punish Paul like he deserves, but instead gives Paul a high calling and
a huge role in building up the early church.
Paul knows his unworthiness doesn't call the shots.
His God calls the shots, and he jumps at the chance to serve the kingdom.
Through all he's done, he has seen God working through him. He says, I worked harder than any of them,
though it was not I, but the grace of God that is with me.
He gives all the credit to God for the works he has done.
He knows it's grace-driven effort, not Paul-driven effort.
God not only appoints us and equips us,
but he sustains us as we work for his glory.
He is the source, supply, and goal,
and He's where the joy is.
Tomorrow we'll be starting 2 Corinthians.
It's 13 chapters long.
We're linking to a short video overview
in the show notes that will set you up for success,
so check that out if you've got eight minutes to spare.
We want your church, or your small group,
or your home group, or your CG, or whatever you call it,
to join us in reading the Bible next year.
It's still not too late to get everyone set up and ready to join us on January 1st.
So whether you're on staff at a church or you're a group leader or you know someone
who is, we'd love for you to mention the Bible Recap and suggest us as a way to help
you read through the Bible next year together.
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we'd love to have you fill out the form
on the church page of our website
so we can stay connected with you
and know how to serve you well.
So go to the church page for churches
or go to the start page to get information
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Or for both, you can just click the link in the show notes.
Hey Bible readers, have you listened to Hope Nation's brand new Christmas podcast? both, you can just click the link in the show notes.