1 Corinthians 1:18--2:5 · Christ the Wisdom and Power of God
In Defense of the Offense
1 Corinthians 1:18-25
Sermon
by James Merritt
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Recently on an airplane, as I was traveling back to Atlanta, I sat next to a lady whose name was Judith. We got into a conversation and she got around to asking me what I did. I told her that I was a minister. She immediately began to discuss religion. She began to criticize a certain Baptist seminary in Louisville, Kentucky and the extreme right-wing fundamentalists that had taken the seminary over. She had seen a movie about it and she was appalled at what had happened.

That led into an extremely interesting conversation that was an eye-opener for me. In the course of the conversation, she especially singled out Southern Baptists, and how she could not understand why we couldn't just "live and let live." She especially referred to the Southern Baptist emphasis on evangelism. She said, "I'm very offended at Southern Baptists trying to convert Jews, Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims or anyone else to their religion."

I said to her, "Well, if I knocked on your door, told you who I was and simply asked for permission to share my faith, and the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, would that be all right?" She said, "If you even knocked on my door, I would be offended."

She let me know that the gospel greatly offended her. I said to her, "You mean if I simply share with you the fact that Jesus Christ died on the cross for your sins; that He was buried, that He was raised from the dead, and that if you will confess your sins to God, repent, and ask Jesus into your heart, that would offend you?" She said, "Yes, especially if you asked me to receive Him as my Lord and Savior."

After about forty-five minutes of a very pleasant discussion, I said to her, "You have used the word ‘offended' probably 25 times in this conversation." I said, "Let me share with you the difficulty that I'm having."

I said, "By the very fact that I believe that salvation only comes through the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ; that there is no other way to heaven except through the cross of Jesus Christ; and that the only way to heaven is through Jesus Christ, the very nature of my message is offensive." She said, "You're exactly right."

Then I said this: "I have a dilemma. If I do not choose to share salvation through the cross of Jesus Christ, I will never run the risk of offending you, but then I will offend my Lord and my Savior." I said, "So if I'm going to obey my Lord and Savior, there is really no way of getting around being an offense to people like you."

That's why this morning I want to speak in "defense of the offense." Every religion and ideology has its visual symbol which illustrates its history and beliefs. For example: Buddhism uses the Lotus Flower. Because of its wheel shape it is thought to depict the cycle of birth and death, and the emergence of beauty and harmony out of the muddy waters of chaos.

Judaism has adopted the Star of David, a hexagram formed by combining two equal lateral triangles. It speaks of God's covenant with David; that his throne would be established forever, and that the Messiah would be descended from him.

Islam is symbolized by a Crescent, originally depicting a phase of the moon. It is a symbol of sovereignty and Muslim victory.

Even secular ideology has its signs. The Marxist hammer and sickle adopted in 1917 by the Soviet government, represented industry and agriculture. They were crossed to signify the union of worker and peasants of factory and field. Nazi Germany had as its symbol the swastika, which has been traced back some 6000 years. The arms of its cross are bent clock-wise to symbolize either the movement of the sun across the sky, or the cycle of the four seasons. It then became a symbol of the so-called superior race.

Well, Christianity also has its symbol, and its symbol is very simply not just a cross, but the cross; the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ, reaching from earth to heaven, and reaching around the world.

That cross has become a symbol of offense. In Gal. 5:11 Paul even refers to "the offense of the cross." I do not believe we should ever go out of our way to try to offend anyone, and we should be loving, gracious and kind as we share the Lord Jesus Christ. But at the same time, I want to stand up in defense of the offense because there will always be something offensive about Jesus and the cross. Paul talks about that very matter in this passage, and he has three wonderful things to say about the cross.

I. Through the Cross the Lord Jesus Saves Anybody

It is through the cross of Jesus that God's power of salvation shines through. "For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God." (v.18) The word "message" literally should be translated "word." The word of the cross is the power of God. Now this word is not what we say about the cross, it is the word of the cross. That is, it is what the cross says to us.

The word of the cross is God's first word and God's last word of salvation. It is God's first word because Jesus was slain before the foundation of this world. But it's also God's last word for this is where God has finally and forever provided a way for people to be saved and to go to heaven.

Get this down in your heart today. There is no "Plan B" to salvation. The only highway to heaven is Calvary Boulevard. You cannot bypass the cross if you want to go to heaven. You cannot go around the cross if you want eternal life.

That is why the world hates the cross so much. It leaves no room for human merit, no room for human achievement, no room for human goodness. Now you may say, "I don't like the way of the cross. I prefer going to church. I prefer being baptized. I prefer living a good life. I prefer earning my way into heaven." Well, Prov. 14:12 says, "There is a way that seems right to a man, but it is the way of death."

Years ago, I was watching a talk show and there was a television Christian personality on this particular show, and they asked him the question, "Is a Jew, without Jesus Christ, lost and in need of salvation?" Well, I couldn't believe this man, who is a Christian, and a well-known Christian, began to stammer and stutter, waffle this way and that way, and finally said, "Well, the Jews have their way of going to heaven, and the Christians have their way of going to heaven." That is the worldview, but that's not God's view.

The cross is not your way of going to heaven or my way of going to heaven. It is God's way of going to heaven. May I tell you that not only is a Jew lost without Jesus, a Gentile is lost without Jesus. My own mother, my own children, my brothers are lost without Jesus.

Paul goes on to say, "but to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and wisdom of God." (v.24) Now the world, spiritually, is divided in Scripture into two basic groups: There are the lost and there are the saved, there are the wheat and there are the tares, there are the sheep and there are the goats.

But nationally and ethnically the Bible says there are only two groups: Jews and Greeks, or Jews and Gentiles. Every one of you in this building is either a Jew or a Gentile. It doesn't matter what color you are, what language you speak, what country you were born in, you're either a Jew or a Gentile. When the Bible speaks of Jews and Greeks, it is simply the biblical way of speaking of everybody.

The cross is not just the Gentile way to be saved, or the western way to be saved, or the Baptist way to be saved, it is everybody's way to be saved. "God so loved ‘the world' that He gave His only Begotten Son."

Everyone needs both the power of God and the wisdom of God. That is a universal need. People need to know what is right and they need to do what is right. They need the wisdom to know what to do, and then they need the power to do it. Jesus Christ is the only one who gives both.

That's why Paul almost in a stubborn fashion said in v.23, "but we preach Christ crucified." Now that is very interesting. He wasn't going to primarily focus on the birth of Christ or the resurrection of Christ, but the death of Christ. Incidentally, it's amazing to think that Jesus never asked us to remember his birth nor His resurrection, but when He instituted the Lord's Supper, He specifically said to remember His death. There are three things that separate Jesus Christ from every other person who has ever lived—the cradle, the cross, and the crown; His virgin birth, His death on the cross, and His resurrection from the dead.

Now, without the cradle the cross is useless. Because if Jesus had not been born of a virgin and lived a pure and sinless life, He could not have taken my sins upon Him because He would have had sin within Him. But without the crown the cross is meaningless. Because if Jesus had not been raised from the dead, it would have been proof-positive that He was a liar and not the Lord, and not the Savior of the world. But without the cross both the crown and the cradle are needless.

In the cradle Jesus was born the Son of God. At the tomb Jesus was raised King of Kings. But it was at the cross that Jesus became the Savior of the world, and I not only need a risen Lord, I need a crucified Savior. It is Christ crucified not Christ at the cradle, not Christ on the throne, not Christ at the tomb, it is Christ on the cross that is the power of God to all of us who are being saved.

That is why the preaching of the cross and preaching Christ crucified, must be an absolute priority. Paul tells us in v.21 that "it pleases God to save those who believe through the foolishness of the message preached." Now it is not foolish preaching that pleases God. There is enough foolish preaching going around, but it is the foolishness of the message preached that saves people.

That's one reason I admire the Apostle Paul so much. He could have so easily compromised the message. He could have said that the message of the cross is a stumbling block to the Jews and foolishness to the Greeks, so he would alter it and change it, tone it down, polish it up, and make it more acceptable. But Paul knew that it is only in Christ crucified that we can have Jesus Christ the power and the wisdom of God.

Billy Graham tells of a time early in his ministry, when after preaching one night to a great crowd in the Cotton Bowl in Dallas. There was very little response to his message. As he was leaving the platform a dear old saint came up to him, put his arm around him and said, "Billy, you didn't preach the cross tonight. Your message was good, but you didn't preach the cross."

That great evangelist went back to his room and wept and made a resolve. He said, "Oh God, so help me, there will never be a sermon that I preach again unless the cross is central." That should be the heart and soul of every Christian; never to be ashamed of the cross of Jesus Christ.

II. Through the Cross the Lord Jesus Separates Everybody

"For the message of the cross is foolish-ness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God." (v.18) The cross not only saves some, it separates all. You see, the cross is the great divide. People don't mind religion. They don't mind the church. They don't really mind the Bible. But if you want to divide a group of people, you lay down the cross and you will watch people run to one side or the other.

Paul speaks here of those who are perishing and those who are being saved. Some people look upon the cross as foolishness, but others look upon it as the power of God. Some are "perishing." The word perishing literally means "to be cut loose." There are some people who come to the cross; they are repelled by it, and they just drift away from God. Then there are others who come to the cross and they are drawn by it and they have fellowship with God.

Now the way you see the cross determines whether or not you are perishing and whether or not you are being saved. It is how you respond to the cross of Jesus Christ that determines whether you are headed for heaven or headed for hell.

There are basically three different attitudes that people can take toward the cross. Some reject the cross. In v.23 Paul said the cross "to the Jews [was] a stumbling block." Now the Greek word for stumbling block gives us our word "scandal." The cross was a scandal to the Jews. It was repulsive to them. It was disgusting to speak of a common criminal being crucified by a Roman Empire as a "Savior."

Furthermore, in v.22 Paul said, "The Jews required a sign." That is, they were looking for wonders. They were looking for a political Messiah. They were not looking for a suffering servant or a crucified Savior. They were looking for someone that would come storming up on a white charger, sword drawn, ready to restore the lost glory of the kingdom of Israel and conquer the Roman Empire.

Even the disciples, after the resurrection of Jesus, asked him in Acts 1:6, "Lord, will You at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?" The Jews were continuously looking for signs, wonders, and miracles of the coming Messiah. Well, God did give the Jews a sign. But it wasn't the sign they wanted. It was the sign of the cross, and it was the only sign they ever needed to be saved. Yet, instead of rejoicing over it, they stumbled over it. Have you ever been looking for something and all the time it was just beneath your feet? Well, that is what the word stumbling block refers to.

I read the story one time of a man whose house was flooded. He was in the middle of the flood, so he got up on top of his roof and said, "God, I'm asking you to deliver me from this flood, and I'm just going to trust you to do it." Well, about that time someone came by in a rowboat and offered to take him to safety. He said, "Oh no, that's all right, don't worry about me. God will take care of me." The flood waters kept coming up and up, and they were almost at his waist.

About that time a helicopter flew overhead and the man inside the copter said, "Take hold of the rope and climb up." The man said, "Oh, don't worry about me. God is going to take care of me and deliver me." The helicopter left and soon after that, the flood waters rose and the man drowned.

The next scene was in heaven. This man still wet, walked up to the throne room of God and said, "Lord, I don't understand it. I asked you to deliver me and you let me drown. Why didn't you save me?" God said, "I sent you a rowboat and a helicopter, what else did you want?" Well, God sent a sign, the sign of the cross, and Paul is saying to the Jews even today what more could anyone want?

Now some ridicule the cross. Paul said in v. 23 that the cross "to the Greeks [was] foolishness. You see, to some the cross is a joke, it's a laughing stock. Matter of fact, the word "foolishness" gives us our English word "moron." The Greeks said in effect, only a moron believes that you have to go through the cross of a crucified Savior to go to heaven.

You see, the Jews sought after wonders, but the Greeks sought after wisdom. Now you know that the Greeks were known for their great philosophers and their great knowledge. They had come to the point where they literally deified wisdom. They worshipped at the shrine of science, reason, and knowledge.

We have people today who say, "If you can't put it into a test tube, or into a mathematical equation, then we will not believe it." Well, you can't put the cross in a crucible, and you can't put faith in a formula.

The Greeks just could not rationalize the fact that God would come down in a human body and die on a cross. In fact, this lady that I was talking to on the airplane, finally looked at me and said, "Everything you are saying to me is totally irrational, and I just cannot accept it."

You know, there are people everyday who look at the cross of Jesus, and the plan of salvation as just a religious joke. They ridicule and even persecute those of us called "Fundamentalist Christians" who dare to believe the Word of God, and who share faith in Jesus Christ. Well, I'm here to declare today that the cross is no laughing matter. You can joke your way into hell, but you cannot joke your way out.

That's why Paul said in v.20, "Where is the wise? Where is the scribe? Where is the disputer of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of this world?" You know heaven is full of wise people; hell is full of wise guys. God is too wise to let man come to know Him by his own wisdom. What people do not understand is they will never solve their problems because they will never recognize their source which is sin. Therefore they will never recognize the solution which is salvation. God is so wise that He is not going to let anyone come to Him by his own wisdom.

As a matter of fact, in chapter 3, verse 19 we are told, "the wisdom of this world is foolishness with God." And in v.25 Paul says, "Because the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men." In other words, if God were capable of a stupid thought that thought would be wiser than the wisest thought any human has ever conceived.

Jesus said that the things of God are hidden from the wise and the prudent, but they're revealed unto babes. If you are going to come to God, you'll have to come as a little child.

Then there are some who receive the cross. Paul says, "But to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God." (v.24) It is only when you lay aside your ambitions, crucify your prejudice, die to your intellectual approach, humble your pride, realize your sinful condition, accept His death on the cross, that you can truly understand it and truly be saved.

But I am telling you right now that the cross separates. It is either foolishness to you or it is the power of God. The cross is in the middle and you are either on one side or the other. You are either on the hell side of the cross looking toward heaven, or you are on the heaven side of the cross looking toward hell. The cross either stands between you and heaven, or it stands between you and hell. So which side of the cross are you on?

III. Through the Cross the Lord Jesus Sanctifies Somebody

Paul says something very interesting in v.18. He says that the word of the cross is "foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved, it is the power of God." He doesn't say to those of us who are saved, or to those of us who have been saved, but to those of us who are "being saved." Now why did Paul say that?

Well, understand that the Bible speaks of salvation in three tenses. A Christian can say, "I have been saved, I am being saved, and I will be saved." I have been saved from the penalty of sin. One day I will be saved from the presence of sin. But right now I am being saved from the power of sin.

I have been saved from the penalty of sin—that is justification. I will e saved from the presence of sin—that is glorification. But in this life I am being saved from the power of sin—that is sanctification. That is what Paul is dealing with in v.18.

Someone said a long time ago that salvation is a crisis followed by a process. It is a decision followed by a dynamic. You see, our problem is that we tend to leave the cross in the past when really and truly the cross should be a part of your everyday life if you are a Christian.

I don't know about you, but three things still bother me even though I have been saved now for almost forty years. Sin still bothers me, Satan still bothers me, and self still bothers me. Every day I need to be saved and am being saved from the power of sin, the power of Satan, and the power of self. What does that mean? It means I come to the cross for pardon, but I am to get on the cross for power. Now I know that is difficult to understand so let me explain it.

There are two principles in your life—Christ and self. Now if Christ is on the cross, self is on the throne. But if self is on the cross, Christ is on the throne. The key to having power over sin in your life is to die to self.

I have heard people say, "I want to be a Christian but it is too difficult to live the Christian life." Well, let me give you some good news. It is not difficult to live the Christian life, it is impossible to live the Christian life, and the only way you can live the Christian life is let the power of Christ and the person of Christ live through you. You do that by being crucified daily on that cross.

Paul said it this way in Gal. 2:20, "I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me." Now here is the process salvation is to take daily in my life. Jesus died for me, I died with Him. When I died to me, He lives in me. When He lives in me, I can live for Him. That's why Paul said in 1 Cor. 15:31, "I die daily." That is the power of the cross; not only to save you, and not only to separate you, but to sanctify you and to make you all that God wants you to be.

I remember when I was in high school, I was assigned the task of reading John Bunyan's classic allegory The Pilgrim's Progress. If you have read it, you remember the scene of the hero whose name is Christian. His shoulders are hunched, he is plodding through life straining with every step, and throughout most of the book he is carrying this great burden on his back; it is with him night and day. Never does he know relief from the weight of this burden.

In one of the most moving scenes of the book, Christian finds the path to salvation. Up the hill he staggers until he reaches the peak. There he sees a wooden cross and just below it, an empty grave. As he nears the cross a miracle happens. The straps binding the massive weight to his shoulders loosen, and his load tumbles away into that grave's waiting mouth, never to be seen again.

An unbelievable feeling of light floods his body. Joyous tears of relief stream down his face. Then three shining people approach him. The first announces, "Thy sins be forgiven thee;" the second strips away his rags and dresses him in splendid clothes; the third hands him a sealed scroll which he says is his pass into the celestial city called heaven.

In that brief but beautiful scene, John Bunyan eloquently and dramatically dramatized the message that we're all pilgrims making our way through life, born with a crushing load of sin on our back. But when we finally make our way to the cross, God takes that sin off of our back, forgives them, buries them forever in the grave in which Jesus was buried, never to remember them any more, dresses us up in robes of righteousness and gives us the ticket of eternal life which will surely grant us entrance into heaven.

That is an offense to those who are lost, but to those of us who are being saved, it is the power of God and we need to be unashamed to stand in defense of the offense.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James Merritt