The Bible Recap - Day 339 (2 Corinthians 5-9) - Year 7
Episode Date: December 5, 2025FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - Article: How Can I Have Assurance of My Salvation? (GotQuestions.org) - Article: How Can I Have Assurance of My Salvation? (Christianity.com) - Article: The Agonizing Problem o...f the Assurance of Salvation - Article: How Can I Obtain Assurance of Salvation? - TBR Start Page - Invite your friends to join you next year! Note: We provide links to specific resources; this is not an endorsement of the entire website, author, organization, etc. Their views may not represent our own. SHOW NOTES: - Follow The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | TikTok | YouTube - Follow Tara-Leigh Cobble: Instagram - Read/listen on the Bible App or Dwell App - Learn more at our Start Page - Become a RECAPtain - Shop the TBR Store - Credits PARTNER MINISTRIES: D-Group International Israelux The God Shot TLC Writing & Speaking 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.
Yesterday, Paul compared our bodies to jars of clay, and today he continues his third letter to the Corinthians by comparing them to tents, which are not very sturdy.
What they need is for someone to build an eternal mansion around them, our resurrection bodies, because right now our tent bodies still suffer from the elements and for
attackers. God says that will happen someday. In fact, inside these tents lives the mansion
maker, the spirit, and he is preparing us for the mansion. Remember how Jesus said he is going
to prepare a place for us? God also says he's working to prepare us for it. God is the one who does
all the prep work, and part of that preparation is giving us his spirit, his guarantee. In the midst of all
Paul's trials, it's not death he's wishing for, it's eternal life. He says he'll either be alive here
or be alive with Christ? Because for anyone with the spirit, death is this thing we kind of step through
or pass over. It's not really clear in Scripture. But here's one thing Paul says is true of those who
died before Christ's return, which might also apply to us someday. In 5'4, he says they live in this
unclothed state, where their spirits are disembodied and they're with God, but they haven't yet been
given their resurrection bodies, which is what will happen when Christ returns to Earth someday. They are
away from the body and at home with the Lord, like Paul says in 5-8. That's where he is right now.
His body is no longer a tent, but he won't have his mansion body until after Christ returns to
earth. In the meantime, his spirit is with God in heaven. It's worth noting that there are a few
other viewpoints about all this that still fall within the realm of orthodoxy, but this is
what the prominent view looks like. Paul says will all appear before the judge, who in this instance
is actually Jesus himself. The father has handed over the judgment to him.
Some believe this judgment is to determine the person's relationship with God, if they knew him or not.
But the prominent view seems to be that this judgment is about the rewards that God will give to believers based on their time on earth.
Either way, here's what's worth noting.
First, since Christ is our judge, he knows if his spirit lives in you or not.
Nothing is up for a debate here.
He's not going to have a bad day and make the wrong call.
And if you're worried about things on your end, 1 John 513 tells us that we can have assurance of our salvation.
If this is something you're wrestling with, we've linked to four articles in the show notes that should help.
And second, if this is a judgment to determine what rewards will be granted to us,
there's no greater reward than Jesus himself.
So I have a feeling that any rewards we get are going to be Jesus feet adjacent pretty quickly.
Paul's words about this judgment should give us pause,
but that pause should always point us back to Jesus, not ourselves.
If we're too busy being fearful and self-preserving,
we'll lose sight of our calling to be ministers of reconciliation.
God reconciled us to himself through Christ.
He ended the hostility between us.
And it's our job to point others toward that same reconciliation.
This ministry is entrusted to each of us.
So regardless what your job is, if you're a believer, God calls you a minister.
So now you know you're both a saint and a minister.
Time to change your social media bio.
Paul urges them to receive the message and share it.
He explains all he has been through in order to share the gospel,
and he begs them not to let it be lost on them.
He loves them, and he implores them to receive his letter with open hearts.
When our hearts love the right things, we won't fall prey to loving the wrong things.
Thomas Chalmers calls this the expulsive power of a greater affection.
What we love most will push out the things that are lesser, the things that oppose it.
If you love peanut butter, but your child has a peanut allergy, you're not going to keep
Reese's cups in the cupboard.
It's not even a thought.
In fact, you're probably always actively thinking of ways to avoid peanut butter.
So, for instance, if we love Christ the most of all, then it will be easier to follow Paul's words in 614, where he says,
do not be unequally yoked with unbelievers. We've talked about the yoke before. It's a piece of wood that
goes over the shoulders of animals to help them pull the plow. If you have one strong animal and one
weak animal, the strong animal can move fast, but the weak animal moves slower, so they end up just
going in circles. If you're following Christ while yoked to someone who isn't, it will make it nearly
impossible to move forward. So Paul warns against this. He actually compares it to joining yourself
with the enemy. Yikes. Paul gives this as a warning for those who aren't yet married, not as a word for
those who are. He addressed that already in 1st Corinthians 7. These words are probably hard for many of
Paul's readers to hear, especially since they live in such a worldly climate. But Paul learned from his last
letter that when they read his words of rebuke, the grief they felt produced repentance in them.
It was a godly grief, like the kind Peter had when he denied Jesus.
And godly grief brings repentance and life, whereas worldly grief, like Judas had, leads to death.
In chapter 8, Paul addresses generosity.
Remember how he ended his last letter by telling them to collect money every Sunday, to store it up and send as a relief fund to the Christians in Jerusalem?
Apparently the Macedonian church hid it out of the park with that, but the church at Corinth seems to have either forgotten or just ignored that bit of instruction.
He acknowledges that they've done well in so many areas, but he urges them to be generous, too.
He says, God was generous toward them.
Jesus became poor so that they might gain spiritual wealth.
And now, by comparison, they have physical wealth, too, which Paul encourages them to share with the other believers who are in need.
In Chapter 9, he makes it clear that he's not forcing them to give, but he reminds them that those who give will be blessed in return,
and possibly even in ways that are better and longer lasting than money.
God will be sufficient for everything they need.
Whether it's financial or spiritual, God's got them covered.
In fact, God is interested in giving to people who give
because the whole point is for us to be a conduit of his blessings.
Verse 11 says,
You will be enriched in every way, to be generous in every way,
which through us will produce Thanksgiving to God.
We're blessed in order to bless, so that God might be praised.
We're not just conduits of his provision,
but were also conduits of his praise.
What was your God shot today?
Mine showed up three times.
It was this unique connection between affliction and joy.
In 610, Paul is listing out all their trials
and says they were sorrowful, yet always rejoicing.
In 7.4, he says,
In all our affliction, I am overflowing with joy.
And in 8.2, when he's talking about the churches in Macedonia,
he says,
in a severe test of affliction, their abundance of joy and their extreme poverty have overflowed
in a wealth of generosity on their part. It's safe to say that these early Christians were
experiencing trials far beyond what I've ever known. But do you know what they won't stop talking
about? They're persistent joy. Trials have a way of revealing what matters, and trials have a way of
revealing those things not only to us, but in us. The world and its trials may crack our jars of
clay, but that's how the light gets out. The light lives in us and we need to remember that
and the world needs to see that because he's where the joy is. The new year is upon us. So make
your plans now for how you're going to read through the Bible and who you're going to do it with.
You can read, listen to, or watch the recaps because we've got the TBR book, podcast, and
YouTube videos. And of course, the TBR Bible is a crowd favorite. It's the perfect. It's the
two-in-one way to read and recap the Bible. All the info on how to start is on the start
page of our website. Go to thebibylrecap.com forward slash start or click the link in the show notes.
