Gifted for His Glory
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Text: 1 Corinthians 12
Text: 1 Corinthians 12
Lesson 1 – The Corinthian Problem and the Priority of Spiritual Gifts
Lesson 1 – The Corinthian Problem and the Priority of Spiritual Gifts
Theme: Spiritual gifts are critical to the life and ministry of the Church, but they can be misused when misunderstood.
Goal: To understand the background of spiritual gifts in the Corinthian church and the dangers of misuse.
Introduction
Introduction
If you went to the back of your Bible and found a short spiritual gifts survey, filled it out, and mailed it to Jerusalem, would you really get a perfect answer on how you should serve in the church? Of course not. But it’s amazing how many people wish God would work that way.
Instead of giving us a mailed survey, God gave us His Spirit and His Word. But for some, this topic is controversial—especially when it comes to cessationism, the belief that certain “sign gifts” ended with the death of the apostles.
Sometimes, it feels like we lost doctrines in a theological divorce. And when that happens, Christians tend to avoid certain truths just because they’re associated with someone on “the other side.”
I remember being at a John MacArthur conference. He said, “How do we know these gifts are not in existence today? Because you do not see them among us.” I respect his ministry deeply, but that’s an argument from absence, and absence of evidence isn’t the same as evidence of absence.
Spiritual Gifts Are Essential
Spiritual Gifts Are Essential
1 Corinthians 12:1 — “Now concerning spiritual gifts, brethren, I would not have you ignorant.”
Paul uses “now concerning” to transition into another problem in the Corinthian church—the misuse of spiritual gifts.
These gifts are not optional. God endowed His church with supernatural gifts for edification and evangelism. If we misunderstand or misuse them, we lose something God intended for our growth and His glory.
Questions to Guide This Series
Questions to Guide This Series
What are spiritual gifts?
How many are there?
Are they important?
How many do I have?
How do I get them?
How do I know what they are?
Can I seek certain gifts?
What about miraculous gifts—are they still for today?
What is the baptism of the Holy Spirit?
Does every Christian possess the fullness of the Spirit?
Can gifts be counterfeited?
What’s the most important gift?
The City of Corinth
The City of Corinth
Acts 18 tells us Paul planted this church during his second missionary journey. He stayed eighteen months—long enough to disciple believers and teach the Word.
Corinth was a wealthy trade hub with rampant immorality, idol worship, and intellectual pride. Pagan temples dotted the city. Worship often involved sexual immorality. Many believers came out of that background, which helps explain the church’s struggles.
The Problems in Corinth
The Problems in Corinth
From “the house of Chloe” (1 Cor. 1:11), Paul learned the church was plagued with:
Divisions and cliques (1:10–17)
Worldly wisdom replacing God’s (1:18–25)
Carnality (3:1–9)
Sexual immorality, even incest (5:1–8)
Lawsuits among believers (6:1–8)
Idolatry (8:1–13; 10:1–22)
Pride (8:1–3; 10:12)
Abuses of the Lord’s Supper (11:17–34)
Abuses of spiritual gifts (12:1–14:40)
Ironically, they were “behind in no gift” (1:7) but ahead in every sin. Spurgeon put it well:
“Should it not show us that gifts are nothing, unless they are laid on the altar of God; that it is nothing to have the gift of oratory… unless they all be dedicated to God, and consecrated to His service?”
Paul’s Warning Against Ignorance
Paul’s Warning Against Ignorance
Three times Paul says “I would not have you ignorant”:
God’s plan for Israel (Rom. 11:25)
Spiritual gifts (1 Cor. 12:1)
The Second Coming (1 Thess. 4:13)
Ignorance about gifts leads to abuse. The Corinthians needed to know the Spirit’s purpose wasn’t self-promotion—it was to glorify Christ.
The First Test of Any Gift
The First Test of Any Gift
1 Corinthians 12:3 — “…no man speaking by the Spirit of God calleth Jesus accursed: and… no man can say that Jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost.”
The Spirit never works to dishonor Jesus. Any so-called gift that distracts from or distorts His glory is counterfeit.
Quote:
“It is nothing to have the power of eloquence; it is nothing to have learning; it is nothing to have influence, unless they all be dedicated to God, and consecrated to His service.” – C.H. Spurgeon
Conclusion:
The Corinthians had gifts but lacked godliness. Gifts without maturity divide rather than unite. The right question is not “What is my gift?” but “Does my gift draw attention to Christ?”
Discussion Questions:
Why is ignorance about spiritual gifts dangerous?
How can we test whether a gift is from the Spirit?
What warning does Corinth give about giftedness without holiness?
Lesson 2 – The Nature, Categories, and Biblical Purpose of Spiritual Gifts
Lesson 2 – The Nature, Categories, and Biblical Purpose of Spiritual Gifts
Text: 1 Corinthians 12:4–7
Theme: The Holy Spirit sovereignly gives gifts to every believer to serve the body of Christ.
Goal: To identify and understand the gifts God gives and their purpose.
Introduction
Introduction
In our last lesson, we saw the Corinthian church had an abundance of spiritual gifts—but also an abundance of problems. They were not lacking in ability; they were lacking in maturity.
Paul now turns from correcting abuses to explaining the nature of these gifts, their diversity, and their God-given purpose.
Let’s start with 1 Corinthians 12:4–7:
“Now there are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit. And there are differences of administrations, but the same Lord. And there are diversities of operations, but it is the same God which worketh all in all. But the manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal.”
1. The Source of All Gifts (v. 4–6)
1. The Source of All Gifts (v. 4–6)
Paul shows the Trinity’s involvement:
“Same Spirit” – The Holy Spirit distributes gifts.
“Same Lord” – The Lord Jesus directs their use.
“Same God” – God the Father empowers their effect.
The Corinthians were treating gifts like personal possessions, as if they could pick them off a spiritual buffet. Paul reminds them—all gifts are God’s gifts.
This also means there is no room for pride. If your gift is more visible, it doesn’t mean you are more spiritual. The source of every gift is the same God.
2. The Stewardship of All Believers (v. 7)
2. The Stewardship of All Believers (v. 7)
Paul says, “The manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal.”
Every believer has at least one gift. No Christian is ungifted.
The purpose is profit—not self-promotion. Gifts are for the common good, the building up of the church.
Warren Wiersbe put it well:
“Gifts are not toys to play with. They are tools to build with, and if they are not used in love, they become weapons to fight with.”
The Corinthians had turned tools into toys—and toys into weapons.
3. The Categories of Spiritual Gifts
3. The Categories of Spiritual Gifts
When we compare 1 Corinthians 12, Romans 12, Ephesians 4, and 1 Peter 4, we can group gifts into three broad categories:
A. Speaking Gifts
A. Speaking Gifts
These communicate God’s truth:
Prophecy – Speaking God’s truth with boldness.
Teaching – Explaining God’s Word clearly.
Exhortation – Encouraging obedience and perseverance.
Wisdom – Applying truth to life’s situations.
Knowledge – Understanding God’s truth in depth.
Speaking gifts build up the mind and will. They are often public but always for the purpose of edifying.
B. Serving Gifts
B. Serving Gifts
These demonstrate God’s love in action:
Helps – Meeting practical needs.
Mercy – Showing compassion to the hurting.
Giving – Generously supplying needs.
Administration – Leading with order and vision.
Serving gifts often operate behind the scenes. They are as essential as speaking gifts—just less visible.
C. Sign Gifts
C. Sign Gifts
These authenticated God’s message in certain periods of history:
Miracles – Acts demonstrating God’s power over nature.
Healing – Restoring health supernaturally.
Tongues – Speaking unlearned human languages.
Interpretation of tongues – Translating those languages.
4. The Purpose of Sign Gifts
4. The Purpose of Sign Gifts
Scripture shows three main eras of concentrated miracles:
Moses & Joshua – To confirm the Law (Exod. 4:1–9).
Elijah & Elisha – To call Israel back to God (1 Kings 18:36–39).
Christ & the Apostles – To authenticate the Gospel (Heb. 2:3–4).
These gifts were most prominent when God was giving new revelation. Once the message was confirmed and Scripture completed, the need for ongoing signs diminished.
That’s why, even in the New Testament, miracles cluster around those eras and are not the norm for all believers in every age.
5. The Corinthian Obsession
5. The Corinthian Obsession
Michael Green described Corinth like this:
“The Corinthians were like children with new toys—fascinated by the spectacular.”
They were elevating tongues above all other gifts. Paul later says in 1 Corinthians 14:19,
“Yet in the church I had rather speak five words with my understanding… than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue.”
They were chasing the dramatic instead of cherishing the edifying.
6. The Diversity and Unity of Gifts
6. The Diversity and Unity of Gifts
1 Corinthians 12:12 — “For as the body is one, and hath many members… so also is Christ.”
Paul’s body analogy reminds us:
No one gift is sufficient alone.
No member is unnecessary.
Unity comes when diversity is appreciated, not when everyone has the same gift.
Illustration
Illustration
In a symphony, every instrument is different, but when they follow the conductor, the sound is beautiful. The church is God’s orchestra. The Holy Spirit is the conductor. When we play our part in time and tune with Him, the result is harmony, not chaos.
Quote:
Quote:
“Gifts are for the benefit of the whole body, not the glorification of the individual.” – Warren Wiersbe
Conclusion
Conclusion
The Corinthians needed to hear this: the Spirit’s gifts are not trophies to display but tools to serve.
The church is healthiest when all gifts operate under the Lordship of Christ, empowered by the Spirit, and motivated by love.
Your gift—whether it is preaching in public or serving in private—is God’s chosen way to strengthen His people.
Discussion Questions
Discussion Questions
How does knowing there are three main categories of gifts help you better understand their purpose?
Why might God have concentrated miracles in certain biblical eras instead of spreading them evenly through history?
What are some practical ways to ensure we value all gifts equally in the church?
Lesson 3 – Discovering, Developing, and Deploying Your Spiritual Gifts
Lesson 3 – Discovering, Developing, and Deploying Your Spiritual Gifts
Text: Romans 12:4–8; 1 Peter 4:10–11
Theme: Every believer is gifted by God, and we are called to discover, develop, and deploy those gifts for His glory.
Goal: To help believers identify their God-given gifts and actively use them to build up the body of Christ.
Introduction
Introduction
In Lesson 1, we learned about the Corinthian problem—lots of gifts, little godliness. In Lesson 2, we saw the categories and purposes of gifts—given by the Spirit, directed by the Son, empowered by the Father.
Now we come to the practical question:
“What am I supposed to do with the spiritual gift God has given me?”
Many Christians treat their gift like a collectible—kept safe on a shelf but never actually used. God intends our gifts to be like tools—well-worn, dependable, and ready for service.
1. Discover Your Gift
1. Discover Your Gift
Romans 12:6 — “Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us, whether prophecy, let us prophesy according to the proportion of faith…”
God has already given you at least one spiritual gift. The issue is not if you have one—it’s if you know what it is.
A. Pray for Clarity
A. Pray for Clarity
Ask God to reveal His design for you. James 1:5 — “If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God…” He delights to show you where He wants you to serve.
Ask with a surrendered heart. God is not going to reveal a gift you have no intention of using.
Pray with patience. Discovery is often a process, not a lightning bolt moment.
B. Examine Your Desires
B. Examine Your Desires
Look for God-given burdens. Philippians 2:13 — “For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure.”
Identify areas of joy in service. If serving in a certain area energizes you, it may align with your gifting.
Distinguish between passing interest and sustained passion. Some desires fade; others grow stronger over time.
C. Seek Confirmation from Others
C. Seek Confirmation from Others
Ask mature believers where they see God’s hand in your life. Proverbs 11:14 — “…in the multitude of counsellors there is safety.”
Listen for repeated affirmations. If several people independently say you’re gifted in teaching, serving, or encouraging—pay attention.
Be open to unexpected insights. Others may see gifts in you that you’ve overlooked.
D. Serve and See
D. Serve and See
Step into opportunities. Don’t wait for a “perfect fit” before trying something.
Watch for fruit. John 15:8 — “Herein is my Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit…”
Adjust as needed. Sometimes you discover your gift by finding where it isn’t and then moving toward where it is.
2. Develop Your Gift
2. Develop Your Gift
2 Timothy 1:6 — “Stir up the gift of God, which is in thee…”
A. Study the Word
A. Study the Word
Learn the biblical passages on gifts. 1 Corinthians 12–14, Romans 12, Ephesians 4, 1 Peter 4.
Understand God’s purpose for your gift. This keeps you from misuse.
See how Jesus modeled ministry. Every gift ultimately reflects His character.
B. Learn from the Gifted
B. Learn from the Gifted
Find mentors who excel in your area. Watch how they serve and handle challenges.
Ask questions about their preparation and motives. Gifting without godliness is dangerous.
Humbly receive correction. A teachable spirit is essential for growth.
C. Practice Faithfully
C. Practice Faithfully
Serve consistently, not sporadically. Faithfulness matters more than flashiness.
Serve in small ways before large ones. Luke 16:10 — “He that is faithful in that which is least is faithful also in much…”
Stretch beyond your comfort zone. Growth happens when you risk failure for the sake of obedience.
D. Guard Against Pride
D. Guard Against Pride
Remember the source of your gift. 1 Corinthians 4:7 — “What hast thou that thou didst not receive?”
Deflect praise to God. Let compliments turn into thanksgiving to Him.
Measure success by faithfulness, not applause.
3. Deploy Your Gift
3. Deploy Your Gift
1 Peter 4:10 — “As every man hath received the gift, even so minister the same one to another…”
A. Serve Where You Are
A. Serve Where You Are
Start in your local church. God placed you there for a reason.
Look for needs, not positions. Ministry is about meeting needs, not chasing titles.
Bloom where you’re planted. Even obscure places can be fertile ground for ministry.
B. Serve with the Right Motive
B. Serve with the Right Motive
Love must be the driver. 1 Corinthians 13 warns that gifts without love are worthless.
Seek God’s glory, not your reputation. Matthew 5:16 — “…that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father…”
Pursue the building up of others. The aim is not to showcase ability but to strengthen the saints.
C. Serve in the Power of the Spirit
C. Serve in the Power of the Spirit
Depend on His strength, not yours. 1 Peter 4:11 — “…let him do it as of the ability which God giveth…”
Pray before, during, and after service. Prayer fuels power.
Stay sensitive to His leading. The Spirit may direct you to unexpected opportunities.
4. The Dangers to Avoid
4. The Dangers to Avoid
Self-comparison – 1 Cor. 12:15–16 warns against feeling inferior because your gift differs.
Superiority complex – 1 Cor. 12:21 warns against feeling others are unnecessary.
Neglect – 1 Tim. 4:14 warns against letting your gift go unused.
Misuse – Acts 8:18–23 warns against using gifts for selfish gain.
Illustration
Illustration
Dr. W. A. Criswell once told of a man in his church with the gift of giving. Early in life, his resources were small, but he faithfully gave what he had. Over time, God blessed his business immensely. The man said, “Pastor, God shovels it in, and I shovel it out—but God’s got a bigger shovel.” The principle is simple: faithful deployment enlarges your capacity for Kingdom impact.
Quote:
Quote:
“God has entrusted to each of His children some peculiar gift or talent. The great object of life should be to use it for the glory of God.” – D. L. Moody
Conclusion
Conclusion
Your gift is not a decoration—it’s a divine assignment.
Discover it through prayer, counsel, and active service.
Develop it through study, practice, and humility.
Deploy it in love, for God’s glory and the good of His people.
The happiest Christians are not the ones sitting on the sidelines—they’re the ones faithfully using what God has given them.
