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Intro: Humanism Manifesto:
The chief end of man is man!
Secular Humanist
Popular secular humanists: Karl Marx, John Dewey, BF Skinner
Humanist Manifesto written in 1933 summarizes the tenets of belief of humanist.
Notice with me how dominant these principles are in our culture.
Man is self-existing (deny existence of Creator)
Man come from nature (evolutionary)
Man is just matter (rejection of spirit or soul and life after death)
Rejection of supernatural events
Man’s fulfillment is the greatest purpose for man (the chief end of man is terrestrial, not celestial)
Joy and satisfaction in life rests upon creativity and human achievement alone
Science proves no existence of moral values passed down from supernatural means.
(morality is relative)
It is not hard to see how secular humanism is the predominant philosophy in much of our culture and it is completely against the teachings of the Bible.
1. Humble Yourself before Christ (v 18)
Do not be deceived by humanism and its tendencies in you.
Paul concludes his warnings to the Corinthians about the dangers of human wisdom which he started in chapter 1.
These are warnings for the Corinthians because he saw their hunger for man’s wisdom in them which manifested into divisions in the church.
He states in the first of two warnings of this passage:
DO NOT DECEIVE YOURSELF!
The sin that Paul is referring to is the self-deception of human merit, achievement and power.
It is a great deception because the blessings and grace of God are often twisted by human sinfulness whereby we begin to boast of our own accomplishments in receiving them, instead of giving God credit as the giver.
Paul already mentioned earlier in this chapter that while Paul planted and Apollos watered, God gave the growth.
He gave the life that was needed and therefore God receives the glory for the spiritual harvest that occured in Corinth and therefore deserves our praise.
Furthermore, Paul explains in chapter 2 how man is actually incapable of actually doing or understanding the things of God because they are foolishness to him unless the Spirit of God intervenes.
Our own spiritual awareness as sinners before a holy god and our need for a Savior is a gift that God gives when he grants faith in us.
The warning continues in the second half of v 18, “if you think you are wise (in this world), then you must become a fool (in the eyes of the world).
How do you become a fool in the eyes of the world, you humble yourself before Almighty God.
Consider the ways that God humbles human will and achievment when it comes to discover the doctrines of God.
Let’s look at Isiaah 6 as an example of the great revelation of God to man and its humbling effects of human achievement.
Sovereignty of God
This vision that Isaiah has as he stands before God depicts chiefly the soveriegnty of God as he rules on the throne.
The throne in the temple represents God’s complete rule and reign.
It is the same image of the Lord Jesus in Revelation sitting on the throne ruling over all and making all things new (Rev 20).To the Jew there was not a throne in the temple that they knew for no earthly king ruled from the temple, but this future look of a throne residing there was God dwelt speaks of his absolute rule as God over all.
What this means that is that God rules over all mankind as its king and this puts into perspective that your life and your freedom belongs to God.
He created you and he rules over you and therefore our greatest achievement is not making our own choices and living our own way.
Our greatest achievement is knowing God through Jesus Christ and worshipping him as He is meant to be worshipped.
Power of God
Isaiah’s vision teaches us about the power and strength of God.
God is revealed as strong and mighty in this vision as his power is manifested in the greatness of his robe filling the temple as he sits upon the throne.
Again, the massive size of the temple building as Jews would understand makes the robe of God filling it a spectacular image to consider.
How big is God?
He is not actually confined to the limits of human measurement, he is transcendent- having no limits to himself.
This image of his robe only speaks to us on human terms in the same way looking at the size of the ocean or considering the size of the universe helps us understand the unlimited power of the One who created these things.
If God is omnipotent, then that casts a large shadow on how finite the human is.
Humanity strives so desperately to do what only God can do with his power.
We want to create life and we want to sustain life so desperately so that we can shake our fists at God and say, see, we can do it too, we don’t need you.
But we cannot do it.
Humanity will NEVER be able to create something out of nothing because he fail to possess the power that God has.
This puts us into proper perspective.
Holiness of God
Thirdly, the power of God is also displayed here specifically in God’s holiness.
The angels cry out the great declaration about God, “
HOLY HOLY HOLY, THE WHOLE EARTH IS FULL OF HIS GLORY
What is being said about God here before Isaiah.
These angels are declaring the reality of the moral perfection of God, that He is unapproachable by man because our sin conflicts with his perfect purity.
This immanence of God’s glory radiates across the globe so that all humanity in the presence of God is humbled by the moral perfection of God in conflict with man’s rebellion against him.
Coming face to face with our sin and God’s holiness, we can only humbly bow before God, knowing that his wrath against sin is just response towards us.
This is why Isaiah, laments before God in his vision, because Isaiah’s own personal sin before God has been revealed in God’s presence and he is humbled by it.
He says he is cursed because of his sin and his lips were the perpetrator of his body.
How his lips sinned we are not told, but his posture is humility before a Holy God.
This is what humbles us as humans when we encounter the reality of God’s sovereignty, power and holiness,
Forgiveness from God
Finally we cannot forget God’s loving forgiveness towards our sin.
God is not obligated to offer us anything other than his swift and just punishment for our sin like he gave mankind at the flood and what he will give mankind again when Jesus returns.
Rebellious sinners deserve the full anger of God against their sin.
But God offers grace here in Is 6:6-7 so that we are further humbled that forgiveness is granted by the love of God to His people.
We read these verses and think of JEsus Christ who became the way of our escape from God’s wrath.
He personalized God’s love by coming and atoning for the sins of many so freedom from sin and guilt was granted to us.
That coal represents the death of Christ so guilt is removed and sins are paid for by his blood.
All of these doctrines focus on attention where humanity should be…reflecting on God’s greatness and being humbled by it.
When we are humbled by God, and we submit to him in faith, then world thinks of us as fools.
So the second command of this passage is become a fool for God by being humbled by him and submitting to him.
Remember chapter 1
Paul solidifies his argument of human boasting with two OT scriptures .
The first is Job 5 where Job is lamenting life because of turmoil, trying to find answers.
Eliphaz, one of Job’s friends, steps him for a dose of wisdom from God,
In context, Job is reminded that man’s attempts to be wise and find strength in oneself is a futile task that will result in God’s plans of frustration.
Ultimately, God will not allow man to receive glory.
Glory belongs to God and God alone.
Similarly, Paul quotes Psalm 94 where the Psalmist is crying out to God to vindicate him among the wicked who attack.
The declaration of the Psalm is that God is always present with his people and working for their cause.
No evil man get a one up on God.
God knows man who thinks he is wise may esteem himself greatly, but it has no effect.
“the Lord knows the thoughts of the wise, that they are futile.”
If we are to have a genuine and growing relationship with Christ, we must die to our self pride and our self glory as humanity.
We must realize that our total dependence and need is in God and God alone.
We need him in our sleeping to sustain us, in our day to strengthen us with faith, hope, blessings, grace.
We need him for food, shelter, clothing, careers, and family.
All that we have belongs to him and all we are is because of him.
2. Boasting in Christ as the source of all things
Paul then concludes with the obvious and yet needed reasoning in our spiritual journey.
When we die to self, and put our hope fully in Christ, then we become rich in him, blessed in him because of all that He has accomplished.
It is the work of Christ that is the source of accomplishment, because of his work of redemption that the Father has put all things under the feet of the Son.
eph 1:19-22
Therefore, all that we possess, all that makes us blessed, is because it has been given to the Son by the Father and we share it with him as His people.
This how Paul concludes our passage climbing the mountain of God’s glory when he states
We belong to Christ by faith, we are united with him as His body.
Therefore we are united to the Son and the Son is united to Father and Spirit in the Godhead.
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