Showing posts with label bible. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bible. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Ministry of the New Covenant

Back in 2 Corinthians. I hit a sweet spot in studying tonight and wanted to share a couple of paragraphs that excited me. The passage is 2 Corinthians 3:7-11. The comments are below.


Ever conscious and grateful for the Old Covenant, Paul draws a contrast between the old and new. He refers to the old covenant as a ministry of death (3:7) and condemnation (3:9), not because it was malicious, but because its express role was to identify sin in the people and their need for salvation (cf. Rom 7:7-10). It had no power in itself to give life, but it clearly identified the sickness that was causing death. It exactly served the purpose for which God created it, and He gave it with His manifest presence. Paul makes no mistake about it: the old covenant was a glorious thing.


However, if the old covenant was so glorious, even with all of its purposeful shortcomings, how much more glorious must this new covenant be? This covenant doesn’t just have the power to convict sin—it has the power to bring about righteousness. The old covenant was passing away, and the new covenant was eternally remaining. Something much more glorious had come upon the scene, and it was this covenant of which Paul and his team were made ministers.

Doesn't it just make you excited to be saved?

Monday, January 15, 2007

2 Corinthians Outline

Inspired by seeing Ron Downing's post of the outline of Matthew for his group's practicum class, I decided to unapologetically swipe the idea and do the same for my group's assignment of 2 Corinthians. Here's where we're at:


I. Greeting and prayer (1:1-5)
II. Affliction and comfort (1:6-13a)
- A. Rightly interpreting the affliction (1:6-11)
- B. Boasting in simplicity (1:12-13a)
III. Paul explains his absence (1:13b-2:13)
- A. The intention to come (1:13b-1:18)
- B. The Godhead, the pattern to follow of faithfulness and follow-through (1:19-22)
- C. Sparing the Corinthians more grief (2:1-4)
- D. Parenthesis: Forgiving the one who has caused grief (2:5-11)
- E. Divine appointment preventing Paul’s earlier arrival (2:12-13)
IV. The ministry of the New Covenant/ministry of reconciliation (2:14-6:10)
- A. Praising God for the effectiveness of the ministry (2:14-3:4)
- B. Explaining the ministry (3:5-6:11)
- - 1. The glorious new covenant of the Spirit (3:5-11)
- - 2. Veiled under Moses, unveiled in Christ (3:12-18)
- - 3. Ministers of the New Covenant (4:1-2)
- - - a. Explaining why some are still unable to receive the ministry (4:3-6)
- - - b. Explaining the apostle’s lowly state (4:7-15)
- - - c. Hope in the trial: eternal weight of glory, the resurrection (4:16-5:5)
- - - d. Confidence even in death (5:6-11)
- C. Motive and message of the ministers (5:12-18)
- - 1. Regarding no one by the flesh because of the new creation (5:12-18)
- - 2. Standing as ambassadors of Christ (5:19-6:10)
V. Appealing for purity amongst the believers (6:11-7:3)
VI. The apostle’s comfort in the report of the Corinthians (7:4-7)

- A. Godly sorrow and comfort (7:8-13a)
- B. Titus’ refreshment in the church’s repentance (7:13b-16)
VII. Generous giving (8:1-9:15)
- A. Example of giving: the generosity of the Macedonians (8:1-5)
- B. The Corinthians exhorted to give generously (8:6-9:15)
- - 1. Titus sent to complete the grace in them (8:6-7)
- - 2. Christ the example of extravagant giving (8:8-9)
- - 3. Follow through on your giving (8:10-15)
- - 4. Parenthesis: Commending Titus and his companion [who will collect the gift] (8:16-24)
- - 5. Motivating the Corinthians to give (9:1-15)
VIII. The apostle’s authority (10:1-18)
- A. Speaking in meek authority (10:1-2)
- B. The warfare is not carnal, but spiritual (10:3-6)
- C. Judging the apostle by outward appearances (10:7-11)
- D. The apostles contrasted with false apostles who commend themselves (10:12-18)
IX. Paul resorts to a little foolish boasting for the sake of the Bride of Christ (11:1-4)
- A. Paul challenges the Corinthians to find blame in him (11:5-11)
- B. The deceptive nature of false apostles (11:12-15)
- C. Countering the false apostles with a little boasting of his own (11:16-12:13)
- - 1. Boasting foolishly (11:16-21a)
- - 2. Paul’s pedigree (11:21b-22)
- - 3. Boasting in infirmities (11:23-33)
- - 4. Visions and Revelations of the Lord (12:1-5)
- - 5. The thorn in the flesh (12:6-10)
- - 6. Paul, a genuine apostle (12:11-13)
X. Paul’s upcoming visit (12:14-16)
- A. Refusing to take advantage of the church (12:17-19a)
- B. Examine yourselves (12:19b-13:5)
- C. Praying for the Corinthians to be made complete (13:6-10)
XI. Farewell (13:11-14)

Apostolic Prayers and Interns...

Surprisingly, I am not blogging about 2 Corinthians. I actually spent the last solid hour or two of my prayer room time tonight reading up on the historical background of it, and my poor little brain could use a break. I've learned and re-learned a lot of helpful context that will arm me to tackle the rest of the book with the right perspective... tomorrow. Which is technically today, if you're one of those day-schedule types.

However, I do want to write about my fabulous interns and co-core leader, and where we're going in the Word together. I'm assistant core leader to Lacey, who is a great leader (not to mention a good friend--we did FITN track 1 and 2 together). We've got an apartment of 7 ladies who are all awesome. I really like our group.

Every night before the Prayer Room, we have our Burn Team briefings. Basically, we get together in one of the side rooms for fifteen minutes and get focused and geared up to go for another night on the wall.

We're working our way through the Apostolic Prayers in these briefings. It's been good for me to explain to the interns (and remind myself) the value and wisdom of praying these prayers. I get so used to what we say on the microphone night after night, that I forget sometimes how mind-bogglingly awesome these things are.

The past week, we focused on Ephesians 1:17-19, "That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give to you the spirit of wisdom and revelation, the eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that you may know what is the hope of His calling, what are the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints, and what is the exceeding greatness of His power toward us who believe, according to the working of His mighty power..."

Do we even realize what we pray on the microphone every night? Seriously, this is amazing stuff. We're asking for the knowledge of God--God, infinite, holy, unsearchable--yet He wants to make Himself known. We're asking to know the "exceeding greatness of His power..." That power, we find out in verse 20, is the same power that raised Jesus from the dead. We're talking some serious power. And that's the power God has towards us. That's the power the prayer is asking to know.

And somehow, I can hear that being prayed over the microphone and still manage to tune out because "I've heard it before." Looks like I could definitely use some of that wisdom and revelation.

I love discussing these passages with people who aren't over-familiar with them. It always reawakens my heart to how cool the Lord truly is and how amazing His Word is.

Sunday, January 14, 2007

Not Yes and No... Yes and Amen

For my upcoming semester at FSM (which--excitingly and frighteningly, is my last one), my class has the practicum assignment to write a commentary on the New Testament. One of the assigned books for my group is 2 Corinthians. I suggested we start with it, mostly because I'm chickening out of trying to outline Luke just yet.

Luke is a very big book.

Anyway, 2 Corinthians is only thirteen chapters long. I must admit I haven't spent too much time in it up until now. But reading through it and trying to structure it into an outline has been very eye-opening for me, and I'm happy that I'm going to be spending the next few weeks commenting on it. You can bet that most, if not all, of my next few blog posts will revolve around it.

What jumped out at me today was the context of 1:20 - "For all the promises of God in Him are Yes, and in Him Amen, to the glory of God..." I'd always heard this verse as sort of a stand-alone, reminding us how we can completely trust God to follow-through with what He's promised. Of course that's true, and a great application, but reading it in it's context adds a whole new sobering weight to it: that's what's being upheld as a standard for faithfulness.

In this verse, Paul is explaining his absence, defending it by saying that the apostles' promise to the Corinthians was not "Yes and No." Why not? Because "the Son of God, Jesus Christ...was not Yes and No, but in Him was Yes." Jesus is the pattern Paul is following for faithfulness and follow-through. Since He was unwaveringly faithful, that's how Paul and his ministry team determined to conduct themselves.

So there's one more reason to let our "yes" be "yes" and our "no" be "no"...