Transforming Identity: Living as Temples of the Spirit

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All right. So before we jump into the sermon, I just want to let you guys know about an opportunity that we have as a church to meet a very specific need that one of our local missions partners and some of our local neighbors are experiencing. Many of you know, for the last few years, Suburban has been a place where we've had a lot of fun, and we've had a lot of fun, and we've had a lot of fun, and we've had a lot of fun, and we've had a lot of fun, and we've had a lot of fun. We've partnered with them in many ways. They're an organization that mobilizes churches and people of goodwill to welcome refugees who are being resettled in our area. [00:35:10] (27 seconds)


And I know there's a lot of debate and conversation today about immigration and the laws around that, but this is a different issue. These new neighbors are people who have entered the country legally under the very specific welcome of our government. Many of them became refugees because they were fleeing famine or war or violence. And so we've partnered with them in many ways. We've partnered with them in many ways. We've partnered with them in many ways. We've partnered with them in their own country, and almost all of them spent years in either resettlement camps or refugee camps while they went through a long vetting and interview process by the government. [00:35:37] (30 seconds)


So Paul spends 18 months in Corinth. He teaches them all these things. He puts these house churches together. And then he leaves, he moves on. He actually goes to Ephesus to start a church there. And after he leaves, the church just starts to implode. All sorts of problems come up. And he's like, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, you know, people have all these differences in their backgrounds. So they disagree about things. And, you know, there's all sorts of things happening. [00:41:31] (20 seconds)


So he actually pushes back on their slogan with a slogan of his own. He says, yeah, you say food for the stomach, stomach for the food, God will destroy them both. He says, no, no, the body, however, is not meant for sexual immorality, but for the Lord and the Lord for the body, right? They say food for the stomach, stomach for food. And they say, no, no, the Lord for the body, body for the Lord. And then instead of saying God will destroy them both, he corrects a misunderstanding. [00:46:52] (22 seconds)


And it has an impact on our relationship with God. Like, we're temples. Of the Holy Spirit. God's Spirit lives in us. And when you unite yourself with somebody sexually, you make this foster this intimate connection with them. So he's like, basically, you're uniting Christ with a prostitute. That doesn't seem like a good way to honor him. [00:48:49] (19 seconds)


So unlike the ideas that were kind of floating around in the Greek world of the day, Paul says, look, followers of Jesus, you cannot separate body and spirit. God created human beings in his image as whole beings who are designed to worship him. So you can't separate these things and assume that one part's more important than the other when it comes to following Jesus. Because anything a human being does with any part of their being is either an expression of honor or dishonor to God. [00:49:32] (27 seconds)


Instead, he tries to address it by getting at this larger question of Christian identity. Instead, he reminds us that following Jesus is never just a matter of believing the right thing, of thinking the right thing, of making sure you got your intellectual stuff lined out. Paul says, no, no, no. The grace that God gives us also transforms every aspect of our identity, our mind, our spirit, our soul, our minds, our behaviors, our relationships. [00:50:34] (23 seconds)


Paul realizes that Christians need to develop the ability to think theologically and biblically about the world that they live in and the issues that they face and allow God's truth to shape their lives. Because if they don't, the culture will inevitably shape them. Like that hasn't changed in the last 2,000 years. Unless we intentionally depend on the spirit of God to guide us and shape us, the culture absolutely will shape us. It is relentless in how it works to do that. [00:55:32] (29 seconds)


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