The Upside Down Kingdom of God

Today’s reading is 1 Corinthians 4 where Paul writes about the ministry of the apostles.

Merriam-Webster defines the word apostle as “one sent on a mission: such as one of an authoritative New Testament group sent out to preach the gospel and made up especially of Christ’s 12 original disciples and Paul.”

These are God’s chosen people to deliver the truth of God and the gospel of Jesus to the world and what does Paul tell us about them. In 1 Corinthians 4:9 he says they are “last of all, like men sentenced to death.” He says in 1 Corinthians 4:10 they are “fools for Christ’s sake” and “weak,” as well as in “disrepute.” But it doesn’t stop there, he goes on in 1 Corinthians 4:11 to say they “hunger and thirst,” and they are “poorly dressed and buffeted and homeless.” Lastly, he says in 1 Corinthians 4:13 they are “like the scum of the worlds, the refuse of all things.”

Despite all of this in in 1 Corinthians 4:12-13, “When reviled, we bless: when persecuted, we endure, when slandered, we entreat.” Above all though he begins in 1 Corinthians 4:1 by saying..

  “This is how one should regard us, as servants of Christ and stewards of the mysteries of God.”

What an example these apostles, chosen by God, give us. One would typically think those chosen by God should be put on a pedestal and held in high regard, yet it is exactly the opposite. Remember, there was time where James and John ask Jesus in Mark 10:37 to sit on each side of Him in Heaven. But now, after seeing the pain, the agony, and the suffering that Jesus, the Son of God, did on their behalf on the cross to do what they could not do for themselves to make them right with God through the forgiveness of their sins, their priorities were different. Their perspective is different because they saw firsthand the sacrifice He made and now consider it an honor to suffer in a similar manner so long as they are being used by Him to spread the Gospel so others may be saved like them.

So, what does this mean for us and our everyday life here today? I’m not certain I know, but at a minimum we should respond by being more in tune with what God wants of us in our lives and in certain situations which may differ from what we want or what the world says we should want and get. And above all, we should strive to live in a way to be regarded like the apostles who are viewed as “servants of Christ and stewards of the mysteries of God” as he says in 1 Corinthians 4:1 which he also says in 1 Corinthians 4:2 is because “it is required of stewards that they be found faithful.”

Let us start by being faithful….one moment and one day at a time.

To Serve the LORD

Paul opens his first letter to Timothy by straight away identifying himself as a servant of the LORD. It seems to me as though this were the first thing he should like anyone to know about him. First things first as it were.

Imagine for a moment that you were asked to provide a short bio so as you could be introduced at an event. Say you were giving a talk or sitting on a panel, etc. What sort of bio would you submit? Would it lead with your being a servant of the LORD? Would it end there also? God grant us the courage to put you first on a list of one.

As a younger man I look for older and wiser God fearing men to learn from. Here are some simple statements of truth from a note that a local business man shared with some of his business partners:

“I  am a servant of Jesus Christ. I am just a servant, and that is really all I desire to be. Just to serve Him and to be His. I don’t want Him to be a servant to me, I want to be His servant.   

It gives me the greatest joy to be His servant.  It is the greatest joy I have ever had. I want to be His servant and I want to serve Him…

I am owned totally by Him. I belong to Him. The things I have in this world are owned 100% by Him and are not mine…

I am His servant and this is the very first thing I want everyone to know about me. It is the most important thing about me and the only thing that matters. I belong totally to Him. I am here for Him and to serve Him…

He can do with me what He wants, where He wants and when He wants for His glory and to exalt Himself.”

Suggestions for prayer: Ask the LORD to show you how His Word in Psalm 23:1 and Matthew 10:39 intersect in your life. 

For further study: Read Matthew 10:32-42 and reflect on what Christ has called us to do and how your actions and attitudes reflect or reject His calling.

Today’s reading: 2 Kings 15; Titus 1; Hosea 8; Psalms 123–125