One Body, Many Parts PDF Print E-mail
Sermon Archive
Wednesday, 20 January 2010 00:03

A New Story

Donald Miller, the American writer tells the story of a middle aged man, whose life was in crisis.


He was going nowhere in his job

His marriage was in trouble

And his teenage daughter, a constant source of worry, was going out with a guy who was wholly unsuitable.


His way of addressing this was quite radical.


He had discovered that it was possible, with exchange rates being what they were, for an American to build and orphanage in Mexico for only $45,000.  This was the kind of money that he and his family could begin to think getting their hands on.


So one day he called the family together

He, his wife and his daughter sat down and he dropped upon them this bomb shell


“Here’s what we’re going to do.  We’re going to go to Mexico and build an orphanage for $45,000”


You can imagine what the first response to this, was total shock.


But after about two days the second response kicked in.

The wife kissed her husband for the first time in months, and their relationship began to rediscover some of its old affection.


And the daughter what did she do?

She began to use Facebook to contact all her friends and raise money for building this orphanage.

And after some weeks she broke off the relationship with the boyfriend.


Miller suggested that the reason for this was that the daughter had a new story.

It was the “build an orphanage for abandoned children” story

It was a story in which she was the heroine

And heroines don’t go out with losers – their term not mine,

And so she ended the relationship with the boyfriend.


Do you ever see someone you really care about

You really value and cherish

Perhaps your own daughter, in a relationship with someone who is wholly inappropriate

And you are thinking “What are you doing with that guy?  You could do so much better than him?”


But part of the problem is that she has not realised what she is

How precious she is

And does not think that she is worth any more than his

Promises that never come to much

His derogatory names for her

His refusal to offer him any sort of a firm commitment

And she begins to think that that is what she is worth.


That is the pain that Paul is in with the Church in Corinth


The Corinthian Church, like all his Churches, is like a daughter to him

It is like a child

And the child is in pain.


The child is in pain, because it is tearing itself apart into different factions

It is in pain because some of the factions are suing each other in court

It is in pain because some of the factions come to communion and eat all the bread and drink all the wine – the wealthy factions versus the slaves who have to finish work

It is in pain because some of the parts of the Church look down on other parts, for being less religious than them

And yet when they do have a part of the Church that is behaving way out of whack, that is causing genuine harm, they do nothing.


And so what does Paul do with the child that is in pain

He gives them another story

In fact he gives them two stories.


The second story is that the Church is going to be redeemed and become part of God’s everlasting creation

That’s the story that we will be thinking about over the next few weeks

But the other story that the Church is given is


“You are the body of Christ”


You are messed up

And you are sinning

And you are failing to live the kinds of lives that you are called to

But you remain the body of Christ

That is your story.


In the passage straight before this one

Is the one about some of the Corinthians feeling superior to others, because some of them can speak in tongues, and others cannot.

And the one before that is about the communion services where the rich are fed and the poor go away hungry.


And Paul says “You are one body”

One Body, Many Parts

The first thing that Paul says about the body is that bodies have many parts

You cannot get a body that is of one part

Nor can you get many parts that not part of a body, unless they are dying I guess.


You have to deal with the fact that Christ works on this principle of the many being one.


Sometimes, people say “I prefer to talk to God by myself”, “you don’t need to go to Church to be a Christian”


And those things are right

But,

You are going to handicap your Christian growth so much,

Because you violate the principle that Christ’s body is many parts

It is not just you


And for all the pain of their being many parts

Of different parts having to be co-ordinated

Of different visions

Christ says “No, it is the many parts approach that we are going for.”


“many parts being one”

This great miracle that something which is many, can have something about it which is unified, one.


That is the story

Many, but most truly one.


Paul, from verse 12 through to 14, says three times, “many” – “one”


And he notes that we have all been baptised

And we have all been made to drink of the Spirit.


We have different backgrounds

We are middle class and working class

We are employed and unemployed

We are male and we are female

We are young and we are old

We have been coming to Church all our lives, we have been coming for a matter of weeks

We can remember who Mr Sillars was, and Mr. Currie was, and some of you have only known me.

Some of us like old hymns, some of us like modern worship songs – the guitar wars

Some of you relate to me, and some of you find me odd and distant

But we all came out of that font

And we have all been made to drink of the Spirit – any of us who have believed the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation as Ephesians puts it


All “one”


And the many-ness is not the last word,

It is the one-ness


So as we look to the future, so we are “one”

Not Feeling Part Of The One

Now in the body in Corinth,
There is a problem, that some people are acting superior

Saying you have to speak in tongues

Arriving first to the communion services and eating all the food


And Paul has spoken against that thing.


But it is interesting now,

He turns to the people who  have been on the wrong end of that kind of behaviour

And he anticipates their resentment

And it is this resentment that he addresses.


Because if one of the obstacles to Church membership is the complacent and arrogant behaviour of those who are sure that they belong

Another is the resentment and hurt of those who are given the message that they do not.


And it is that second group that Paul addresses here

And he has the audacity to suggest that they have modes of behaviour that they need to change.

Not a part of the body

Have a read of verses 15-16

If the foot were to say, “Because I am not a hand, I don’t belong to the body,” that would not keep it from being a part of the body. 16 And if the ear were to say, “Because I am not an eye, I don’t belong to the body,” that would not keep it from being a part of the body. [1]


And Paul is saying here, actually your resentment, your pain

Your sense of inadequacy doesn’t actually change your belonging to the body


It’s almost like saying “tough, too late now, no you feel rubbish, but actually, you might feel not a part of the body, and all that feeling may be very powerful, may cause you to think all kinds of divisive, neglected thoughts,

But actually, it changes nothing, you still are a part of the body.


Why you feel nothing

And then Paul begins to address, why you might not feel anything

It is because the body has assigned a rank to you

And you have believed it.


In fact, our resentment, our sense of not being needed, does not mean that we not part of the body.


It is interesting that when we are handed jobs in the Church

Or parts of the body

Some jobs are inevitably more glamorous than others

Or given a different ranking.


And Paul senses that there is a different ranking that we give to parts of the body

Hand is ranked higher than foot

Eye is ranked higher than ear, which in turn is ranked higher than nose.


Curiously, this is a ranking that actually does operate still today.  The state of Connecticut in American assigns the following compensations for different body parts:  The master hand is worth 168 weeks of pay, the other hand, 155 and the foot 125.


The Eye is worth 157 weeks of pay

And the nose is worth 35.


The heart is worth 416 and the pancreas 416, the liver 347 and the kidney 117.


The state of Connecticut has ranked the value of parts of the body.


But what about actual people, would we ever be so crude as to rank them

As to put a value on how much they are worth

Of course we do, it is reflected in how much we pay them.


One of the galling things about these bankers saying “I am entitled to £500,000 worth of pay” is effectively what he is saying is “I am worth 20 of you.”


And you could get angry with these guys.

You could be full of resentment.


But that would only be because you worried that this valuation actually might be true.


And so Paul gets to work on the Banker’s valuation system

And the State of Connecticut’s valuing system and he offers instead one of his own.


And Paul’s valuing system is that every part of the body is ranked the same.


And this partly goes back to the fact that we are all baptised

And all been made to drink of the Holy Spirit.


But also because all are needed.


If the body did not have you, Oh ear who is worth 130 weeks’ pay, how could it hear

If the body did not have you, Oh nose, who is worth 35 weeks pay, how could it smell.


You are thinking “Could live with that, could live without being able to smell”

But Paul won’t hear of it

A body that can’t smell is as unthinkable as a body that can’t see.


And this is something that we have to realise about our body here

There will be something vitally important

And that this body will not be able to do if you are not a part of that


And the first person who has to believe this is not me – I am the second person that has to believe it

The first person that has to learn to believe this, is you.


You are in the body, and you are worth as much as a Session Clerk

As an elder

As an organist

As a board member

As a Sunday School teacher

As a property convener

As a treasurer

As a minister


We don’t communicate that

We don’t use you enough

But that is the truth.


And how we get to the better future, is if we start to believe that.




[1]None. Good New Translation - Second Edition (electronic ed.) . ,: :

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