1 Corinthians 10:1-13 · Warnings From Israel’s History
Nobody’s Too Good To Repent
1 Corinthians 10:1-13
Sermon
by Mark Ellingsen
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Historically, dating back to ancient times, the third Sunday in Lent was the time when candidates for baptism on Easter (the day when the ancient church performed all baptisms) were given careful scrutiny regarding how prepared they were to become followers of Jesus.

In Latin it was called Occuli [Eyes] Sunday, because it was the Sunday that the church had its eye on those who were to be baptized.[1] If we want to keep in touch with this heritage, this is a Sunday, then, for us to reflect how we have been doing as Christians and to vow to change as we fall short. 

The second lesson for today gives us some clues for evaluating ourselves on the question of how we are doing as Christians. You won’t want to hear the answer. How are we doing as Christians? Paul says: Not very well. Let’s review what he said.

Paul says in our lesson that the ancient Hebrews sinned, even though they had received signs of God’s love, just like we Christians have to this day (vv.3-6). If the devoted followers of Moses sinned, people who had trusted God enough to leave their Egyptian homeland, if they sinned, is it any surprise that we are sinners too?

Let’s take a look first at how we 21st Americans are guilty on the very issues Paul warned — idolatry and sexual immorality (vv.7-8). One poll taken early in the decade estimated that if you count internet affairs, 50% of married women and 60% of married men have engaged in extramarital affairs. A 2017 Gallup Poll stated that 73% of the Americans deem divorce morally acceptable, 69% find extra-marital sex morally acceptable, and 62% see nothing wrong with out-of-wedlock birth.

How about idolatry? If free sex is not a false god, how about materialism, the latest goods?

In the most recent study on the subject (in 2016) it was found that our shopping mania had led to household debt that exceeds disposable income by 105%! We will do anything, it seems, even jeopardize our futures or our children’s educations in order to serve the gods of materialism.

“Oh come on, Pastor. You are much too judgmental. This is just innocent shopping. It’s the American way.” That’s the point. We really think we are good — too good to need repentance. But that’s not how Paul sees it in this lesson (or most anything else he writes).

There is no way that you and I (or any human being) can avoid the concerns raised, even those of us not caught up in materialism and sexual license. Martin Luther once (all too clearly) explained why:

The reason is that our nature has been so deeply curved in upon itself because of the viciousness of original sin that it not only turns the finest gifts of God in upon itself and enjoys them (as is evident in the case of legalists and hypocrites), and indeed it even uses God Himself to achieve these aims, but it also seems to be ignorant of the very fact that in acting so iniquitously, so perversely, and in such a depraved way, it is even seeking God for its own sake.[2] 

We are always trying to get our own way in everything we do. We’re inherently selfish since the fall into sin and that selfishness infects even our good deeds.

Think about it: Have you ever done a deed that was not motivated at least in part by a desire to feel good about it? Is that not the reason we do good, because the deed makes us feel good about ourselves? I know my good deeds, raising kids, loving my wife Betsey, caring for students or for the poor seem selfless, until you scratch me deep enough, and see all the goodies I get out of them.

This selfishness infecting our outwardly good deeds means that what we do is not done in self-giving agape love. And that is what makes all we do sin. Research on the human brain supports this understanding. When you do good or practice spirituality your brain is flooded with a pleasurable brain chemical, dopamine, which has properties of amphetamines.[3] In fact, love and prayer feel good. On this side of the fall into sin, our prayers and caring for others are selfish deeds, make us feel good and may be at least sub-consciously motivated by the desire to feel good. You and I need to repent of our selfishness. 

The health of your faith depends on recognizing these realities. John Calvin noted powerfully the misery in which we find ourselves:

Those who are puffed up with vain confidence and are satiated, or who, intoxicated by earthly appetites do not feel thirst or soul, will not receive Christ.[4]

No two ways about it. We need to repent. It’s like the ancient African theologian Clement of Alexandria once said: “For unless a man believes that to which he was addicted to be sin, he will not abandon it...”[5]

Repentance is nothing more than a hatred of sin, not liking where we are headed with our selfishness and acquisitiveness. That’s all God wants. And the good news is that we don’t even have to do it. God’s love, God’s grace, does it for us. Pope Benedict XVI spoke profoundly on this matter, on how any change in our lives is the result of grace: 

He [God] has loved us first, and he continues to do so; we too, then, can respond with love... He loves us, he makes us see and experience his love, and since he has “loved us first,” love can also blossom as a response within us.[6]

And Clement of Alexandria, whom we met earlier, also insisted that repentance is just an effect of faith.[7]

What happens to you when sin is renounced in this way? It does not make you perfect.[8] It does not mean that there will not still be temptations, that all the selfishness and materialism will vanish (v.13). Famed modern theologian (a martyr in the persecutions by Hitler of his opponents) Dietrich Bonhoeffer described the outcome of repentance in a profound way. He wrote:

Let us leave this... repentance worship service not with despondent hearts, but with joyous and believing hearts. Come judgment day — joyfully we wait for you since we shall see the merciful Lord and take his hand and he will love us.[9]

Repentance leads to joy, because we know that God is taking us in his hand to change us, even if not every problem is solved. The Scottish Reformer John Knox told the brethren that for those in Christ all troubles are tolerable.[10] When you know you are in God’s hand, everything is tolerable.

Have you been wondering how you are doing in your walk with God? Uncertain if you have the strength to withstand the temptations and the tough things in life? There is good news. We have a God who is there to take each of us in his hand, a God who will turn you around and will never let you and me go! Nobody’s too good to repent. And nobody’s so far gone that God will not be there to turn her or him around.


[1] See Luther Reed, The Lutheran Liturgy (4th print.; Philadelphia: Fortress, 1975), p.494.

[2] Martin Luther, “Lectures On Romans” (1515-1516), in Luther’s Works, Vol.25 (63 vols.; St. Louis-Philadelphia: Concordia Publishing House-Fortress Press, 1955ff.), p.291.

[3] Dean Hamer, The God Gene, pp.72ff.; Anthony Walsh, The Science of Love.

[4] John Calvin, “Commentary On the Book of the Prophet Isaiah” (1550), in Calvin’s Commentaries, Vol. VIII/2, trans. James Anderson (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2005), p.156.

[5] Clement of Alexandria, “The Stomata” (194), in Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol.2, eds. Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson (2nd print.; Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1995), p.353.

[6] Benedict XVI, God Is Love (Vatican: Ignatius Press, 2006), pp.42-43.

[7] Clement of Alexandria, p.353.

[8] Holiness/Methodist users of the sermon might revise this point, noting that perfection is linked to an appreciation of renouncing sin such that the faithful do not want to sin any more. See The Book of Discipline of The United Methodist Church (Nashville, TN: United Methodist Publishing, 2004), p.47.

[9] Dietrich Bonhoeffer, “On Repentance” (1933), in A Testament of Hope, eds. Geffrey B. Kelly and F. Burton Nelson (New York: Harper San Francisco, 1990), p.230.

[10] John Knox, “An Exposition of The Sixth Psalm of David” (1580), in The Works of John Knox, Vol.3, ed. David Laing (Edinburgh: Bannatyne Club, 1854), p.125.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., A Rebellious Faith: Cycle B sermons for Lent & Easter based on the second lesson texts, by Mark Ellingsen