Sermon Tone Analysis
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TACKLING THE
Warning Against Walking According to the Flesh (10:1-2)
What is stunning is that the Corinthians have mistaken Paul’s lack of boldness and power as a lack of strength and ability.
Paul says in verse 2 that he does not want to have to come there and show them boldness.
But there are those who are walking according to the flesh.
The irony is that those who are charging Paul with “walking according to the flesh” are actually themselves the ones walking according to the flesh.
Listen to verse 1. “I, Paul, myself entreat you, by the meekness and gentleness of Christ….”
What Paul has done for them is not walk according to the flesh.
Rather, Paul is exhibiting the meekness and gentleness of Christ when he is with them.
Here is a church with all kinds of problems and yet when he is with them he shows the meekness and gentleness of Christ.
He does so to such a degree that he is actually criticized for his humility.
When it comes to understanding how we live our lives and deal with one another, these are the characteristics people should see in us.
So often what Christians think they are to do is be loud and cantankerous.
It is almost as if the louder we get and the more stubborn we get, then that shows how right we are.
We think that we can loud or rude or boisterous and in this way we can force others into yielding to our way.
Is this how Jesus acted when he was challenged?
Is this how Jesus acted when people resisted and rejected him?
Where do we ever see Jesus being loud, boisterous, cantankerous, rude, pushy, or bully people around?
The whole idea of the word “meekness” is a person who has power but that power remains constrained and under control.
Listen to this description of Jesus:
“Behold, my servant whom I have chosen, my beloved with whom my soul is well pleased.
I will put my Spirit upon him, and he will proclaim justice to the Gentiles.
He will not quarrel or cry aloud, nor will anyone hear his voice in the streets; a bruised reed he will not break, and a smoldering wick he will not quench, until he brings justice to victory; and in his name the Gentiles will hope.”
(Matthew 12:18–21 ESV)
It is worldly thinking and walking according to the flesh when we quarrel, cry aloud, make noise, draw attention to ourselves, be bold and loud, and run over others.
This is not what we see in Jesus.
This is not what we see in Paul who is having to defend the gospel and his own ministry.
We Do Not Wage War Like The World (10:3)
The apostle Paul drives this point further in verse 3. We live in the world but we do not wage the battle the way the world does.
We are human but we do not wage the war as humans do.
Just because we are human does not mean that we act like worldly people.
Think about this: how we handle disagreements and issues is not to be like how the world handles such things.
We are not to handle these things with anger, clamor, malice, egotism, withdrawal, and the like.
Friends, it is so easy to watch these behaviors on television and watch these behaviors in our work place and bring them into the assembly and handle each other that way.
We think that we need to be pushy and exert ourselves.
But Paul says that we do not wage war like the world does.
However, before we leave this verse we must consider something else.
We must acknowledge that the Christian life is described as a battle.
What Paul is not going to say is that we do not engage other people at all.
Paul is not going to say that we do nothing.
This is easy for us to do, isn’t it?
When someone who claims to be a Christian and draws attention to himself by being loud or pushy or intimidating, what do we so often do?
We are tempted to recoil and do nothing.
I have seen this when it comes to elders, preachers, leaders in the church, and Christians in general.
Someone makes a lot of noise so that they can try to look like they are right.
Someone intimidates another person by how they act, by using anger, egotism, malice, fear, and the like.
So what do we want to do?
We want to just avoid the person.
But friends, Paul does not leave the Corinthians in that condition though they have people who are acting this way.
We are in a war but we do not wage war like worldly people.
Fight Right (10:4-6)
Now it is easy to read verses 4-6 as how we fight the thinking of the world.
While we can make applications to this, this is not the context of what Paul is talking about.
The context is the worldly thinking of these Christians in Corinth.
Paul explains how we are to fight right.
Paul already told us that we are to maintain the meekness and gentleness of Christ as we have relationships with one another.
Look at verses 4-6 and notice what else Paul points out that we are doing.
Notice that the goal is to get us and others to change the way we think.
Paul says that we are destroying arguments and lofty opinions that are raised against the knowledge of God.
We are taking every thought captive to make it obey Christ.
The battle begins with the way we think, not what we do.
We should know this truth because of how often Jesus taught this very principle.
Our actions follow our hearts.
So bringing the war to our actions is going to fail.
Friends, this is why we fail in trying to conquer weaknesses, temptations, and sins.
What we do is we try to change the behavior.
But trying to change the behavior alone is never going to work because the behavior comes from the overflow of our minds and hearts.
Obedience to the Lord does not come by trying harder.
We have all tried to try harder and it does not work.
One of the purposes of the Law of Moses was to show that by trying harder is going to cause every person to fail.
So what has to happen?
We need to change the mind.
We need to transform the heart.
We need to change the way we think.
This is what Paul is describing here.
We need to change the way we think.
We need to take every thought captive.
Now what we like to do is believe that everyone else’s thinking is wrong and ours is right.
But we need to accept what the scriptures teach us.
The scriptures teach us that our thinking is broken.
Your mind and the way you think is just as broken as my mind and the way I think.
Look at Ephesians 4:17-24.
17 Now this I say and testify in the Lord, that you must no longer walk as the Gentiles do, in the futility of their minds.
18 They are darkened in their understanding, alienated from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them, due to their hardness of heart.
19 They have become callous and have given themselves up to sensuality, greedy to practice every kind of impurity.
20 But that is not the way you learned Christ!— 21 assuming that you have heard about him and were taught in him, as the truth is in Jesus, 22 to put off your old self, which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires, 23 and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, 24 and to put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness.
(Ephesians 4:17–24 ESV)
Paul tells us to not act like the world.
No longer walk as the Gentiles (people outside of the covenant of Christ) do.
What does that look like?
“In the futility of their minds,” “darkened in their understanding”, and alienated from the life of God “because of the ignorance that is in them, due to their hardness of heart” (4:17-18).
We must fight for our own minds and hearts, taking every thought captive.
We have to change the way we think.
What we learn from our culture is wrong.
The values that we have are wrong.
The only way to define what are right values and what are proper truths is not from the news or television shows or movies but from God’s word.
What people tell us is right and wrong are not going to be true unless they are grounded in the scriptures.
Our thinking is broken.
We must start with this truth.
Before we can defend the gospel and change the world we must first start with the acceptance that our thinking is completely broken.
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