Big Idea: Paul challenges believers to be witnesses of the new covenant by distancing themselves from this age and by being transformed in their minds so that they can fulfill the will of God.
Understanding the Text
Romans 12:1–2 is, in genre, parenetic (exhortational) material. The basis of Paul’s challenge to the Roman Christians (and us as well) is the mercy of God—that is, the blessings of the new covenant delineated in 3:21–11:36: justification, sanctification, glorification, and so forth. Thus, the indicative is the basis of the imperative. In light of those mercies, Paul challenges believers to live out the will of God. God’s will is spelled out in 12:3–15:33: using one’s spiritual gifts for the body of Christ (12:3–8); being a witness of Christ to society even if persecuted for doing so (12:9–21); obeying the government (13:1–7); living in the light of the imminent parousia (13:8–14); accepting one’s fellow Christians (14:1–15:13); and supporting evangelism and missions (15:14–33). Thus, 12:1–2 introduces the theme of 12:3–15:33: commit to being witnesses of the new covenant. Romans 12:1–2 is easily outlined:
1. The basis of commitment (12:1a)
2. The act of commitment (12:1b)
3. The means of commitment (12:2a)
4. The result of commitment (12:2b)
Historical and Cultural Background
1. The first facet of the historical and cultural background is eschatological in nature. Paul refers to this “age” (ai?nos) in 12:2, with reference to this present evil age. He exhorts Christians not to be “conformed” (sysch?matiz?) to this age but rather to be “transformed” (metamorpho?) by the “renewing” (anakain?sis) of the mind. The latter injunction—transformed/renewing—alludes to the age to come, as many commentators recognize. So believers are to daily break with this age by renewing their commitment to the age to come.
2. Romans 12:1 is chock-full of sacrificial language, as many commentators also recognize: “offer your bodies as living sacrifices”; “holy and pleasing to God”; this is the Christian’s “spiritual/reasonable worship” (latreia). But I suggest that the concept behind this sacrificial language is the “witness” component of the covenant format. Note the following connections between 12:1–2 and the covenant.
(a) “Mercies” (NIV: “mercy”) translates the Greek oiktirmoi, which in the LXX often translates the Hebrew rahamim. In the Old Testament, this Hebrew word is used at times to refer to God’s covenant mercy with Israel (e.g., Deut. 13:17 [13:18 MT]; Ps. 51:1 [51:3 MT]; Isa. 47:6; Jer. 42:12).
(b) As James Dunn notes, the mention of renewing one’s mind is parallel to Jeremiah 31:31–35 and Ezekiel 36:26–27—that is, the obedience of the new covenant wrought by the Holy Spirit.1
(c) Furthermore, Douglas Moo calls attention to the covenantal nuance of doing the “will of God” (12:2), identifying this as the ethic of the new covenant.2
(d) The sacrificial language of 12:1 takes on new meaning as we see it through the lens of the covenant. Moses sprinkled the blood of the sacrificed bulls on the people of Israel as a sign that they accepted the terms of the covenant with Yahweh (Exod. 24:1–8). Moreover, in the covenant renewal service recorded in Joshua 24, the children of Israel reaffirmed their acceptance of the covenant with Yahweh by pledging to serve him alone and to thereby be “witnesses” of the covenant (Josh. 24:22–27). Rather than appealing to other gods, Joshua appeals to the Hebrews to be witnesses of their covenant with the true God.
(e) Indeed, Romans 11:26–27 (quoting Isa. 59:20–21) asserts that at the parousia, Israel’s sins will be removed and God will renew his covenant with them.
I suggest, then, that in 12:1–2 Paul exhorts Christians to accept the terms of the new covenant: obey God with a renewed mind. This is what he means by challenging them to be living sacrifices. The blood of Christ, the perfect sacrifice, has cleansed them and incorporated them into the new covenant (recall 3:21–31). Now they must give witness to that covenant by being obedient to God.
3. I suggest that Adam theology is at work in 12:1–2. Paul challenges Christians to worship God with a renewed mind rather than conforming to this evil age begun by Adam that perverts worship of the Creator into worship of the creation and that ruins one’s mind. It is only reasonable that they worship God (compare 12:1–2 with 1:21–25).3
Interpretive Insights
12:1 offer your bodies as a living sacrifice . . . your true and proper worship. At the beginning of this verse the “therefore” (oun) connects 12:1–2 with what precedes (3:21–11:36). Paul can exhort the readers because he is their apostle. Paul’s challenge is that the Roman Christians (and all believers) present their bodies to God as a living sacrifice. Three words call for comment here. First, by his use of the verb “offer” (parast?sai), Paul is not suggesting that we offer our bodies only once to God. Instead, as the verbs in 12:2 indicate, “offer” is a continual action, a daily occurrence. Second, “bodies” includes the whole person. Third, “living sacrifice” might mean a live versus a dead sacrifice. But more likely it is “living” in a spiritual dimension—those alive spiritually in Christ.
Just as the Old Testament sacrifices were to meet the divine requirements, so should Christians present themselves as a sacrifice, “holy and pleasing to God.” That is, the Christian should live a holy life that pleases God. Logikos is translated as “spiritual” in the NRSV. This is true, but the word logikos has a long history in Greek philosophy and in Hellenistic Judaism as meaning “reasonable,” in the sense of appropriate or suitable.4Thus, Paul declares in 12:1 that it is most appropriate that believers worship God by being living sacrifices for him because of God’s mercies to them.
As I mentioned above, the “mercies of God” tap into the covenant blessings described in 3:21–11:36: justification, sanctification, and glorification, and so forth. Indeed, chapters 9–11 are devoted to the theme of the mercy of God in salvation history, for both Gentile and Jew. Therefore, I suggest that 12:1 is analogous to the covenant ceremony in Exodus 24:1–8 and Joshua 24. Christians are to accept the terms of the new covenant by dedicating themselves to God as living sacrifices. Christ died for them; now they must live for him. Thus, 12:1 contains the basis of Christian commitment (the mercies of the new covenant) and the ongoing act of commitment (become living sacrifices to God). This is what it means to be a living sacrifice for God and thereby to be witnesses of the new covenant.
12:2 be transformed by the renewing of your mind . . . to test and approve what God’s will is. This verse gives the means and result of commitment to Christ. The means for doing so is not to be conformed (sysch?matiz?) to this age but rather to be transformed (metamorpho?) to the age to come (implied) by the renewing (anakain?sis) of the mind. The two verbs are imperatives. While older scholarship distinguished these verbs as outward conformity and inward transformation, recent scholarship rightly rejects such a distinction. Rather, both verbs suggest a total commitment. Thus, Christians should continually reject this age in favor of the age to come. “Renewing” (anakain?sis) is similar to kainos (“new”) with reference to the age to come (2 Cor. 3:6; 5:17; Gal. 6:15; Eph. 2:15; 4:24). The renewed mind is, in effect, the renewed heart of obedience envisioned by the new covenant. The result of being a living sacrifice is that the Christian discovers and does the will of God (12:2b). “Test and approve” translates dokimaz?, not in the sense that God needs our approval for his will to be good, but rather that we experience in practice that his will is good. The will of God is worth discovering, for it is good, acceptable, and perfect. God’s will, the ethic of the new covenant, steers the right path between legalism and libertinism. In other words, for the Christian, God’s will is no longer dictated by the Torah but is instead found in Spirit-guided discernment.
Theological Insights
Several theological insights can be culled from Romans 12:1–2. First, Christian commitment is based on God’s mercy. The imperative proceeds from the indicative. Second, serving Christ is a sacrifice; it means a daily decision to part company with this age and to align oneself with the age to come, the kingdom of God. Third, the key to it all is to continually renew one’s mind to think the thoughts of God. Fourth, doing the will of God is worth the effort, for God’s will is the only way to go.
Teaching the Text
I would preach/teach Romans 12:1–2 by following the four points of the outline above: the basis, act, means, and result of commitment to Christ. First, the basis of our Christian commitment is the mercy of God. Lives lived in dedication to God should be motivated by what he has done for us in Christ. Otherwise, sanctification, like justification, can become legalistic in orientation. In the early part of my pastoral ministry I was involved in a well-intentioned but Pharisaic-like church that focused on outward appearance, not on the motivation of one’s heart. How liberating it was for me to move out of that overly strict tradition and enter into a loving and irenic church, one in which I and my fellow congregants grew spiritually.
Second, the act of our commitment to Christ involves the totality of our being. In Paul’s mind, such a commitment quite possibly paralleled Old Testament Israel’s renewal of the covenant ceremony. On a different note, the last twenty years has witnessed a debate among evangelicals as to whether a person accepts Jesus as Savior only, or as Savior and Lord. In light of the analysis offered above, I suggest that one comes to Jesus as Savior and Lord, but that Christ’s lordship over our lives is progressive; hence the need to daily dedicate ourselves to God afresh and anew.
Third, the means for doing so is to fill our minds with the word of God through daily devotions. Such a devotion time, I suggest, is best cultivated by studying and applying one book of the Scripture after another. I began that practice as a teenager, and it has made all the difference in the world for my spiritual progress.
Fourth, the result of daily commitment to God in Christ through the power of the Holy Spirit is that we as Christians discover and do the will of God, which is God’s perfect plan for us.
Illustrating the Text
Real worship is the offering of our everyday lives to God.
Poetry: “The Altar,” by George Herbert. The Welsh-born Herbert (1593–1633) was a gifted poet, writer, and orator educated at Cambridge who, having once had aspirations toward a courtly life, eventually became a country parson. Few individual lives exemplify such holiness and devotion. He had single-mindedness of purpose toward God, shown in all that he did and wrote. His well-known poem “The Altar” is an example of such devotion and reflects well the themes of sacrifice, worship, transformation, and renewal found in Romans 12:1–2. Refer also to other poems he wrote, to his sermons, and to his biography.
Essay: “Tremendous Trifles,” by G. K. Chesterton. In this essay/story Chesterton (1874–1936) argues for attention to the ordinary events of the everyday, for the power to see wonder in what lies around us instead of always having to look beyond. As he wrote, “The object of my school is to show how many extraordinary things even a lazy and ordinary man may see if he can spur himself to the single activity of seeing.”
Real worship demands a radical change of the inward personality.
Literature: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, by C. S. Lewis. In chapter 6, a captivating section of this third book of The Chronicles of Narnia, Lewis paints this process of change as the “un-dragoning” of the character Eustace, one that will force him to shed his pride and unbelief. Eustace starts out as a selfish young boy who only values facts and so will not listen to his cousins when they talk about Narnia. One day, however, he is “pulled” into Narnia and forced into the company of people who understand that selfishness is a joyless way to live. Eustace becomes a dragon—a lonely creature that feeds off other dragons, animals, and human beings—as he insists on “greedy, dragonish thoughts in his heart.” In time, he feels the horror of his monstrous self and begins to weep. Eustace, wearing dragon scales instead of clothes, begins to scratch himself, only to find more dragon skins underneath. Desperately he claws at himself, only to find still another layer. Aslan then offers to undress him, and proceeds to dig his claws into Eustace deeply until, the pain being so intense, Eustace thinks that his heart is penetrated. After Aslan throws Eustace into a crystal-clear pool, the boy sinks into the pure water and discovers that he has turned back into a boy. His pride is gone. He is ready to worship Aslan.
Literature: Paradise Lost, by John Milton. In book 1 of this epic poem Milton (1608–74) provides a vivid view of the pride that led to Satan being cast out from heaven, and drove him to deceive “the mother of mankind” and even to claim that it is “better to reign in hell than serve in heaven.” It serves as a warning and illustrates what this passage in Romans calls the Christian to be.
Service in the New-Covenant Community
Big Idea: Paul’s challenge to believers in 12:1–2 to become living sacrifices to God is given specific content in 12:3–8. Believers are to serve one another in the new-covenant community. This service takes the form of using one’s spiritual gifts to minister to others in the body of Christ.
Understanding the Text
Romans 12:3–8 provides one practical way Christians are to be living sacrifices for God: serving others in the new-covenant community through the exercise of spiritual gifts. Romans 12:3–8 can be outlined as follows:
1. The authority behind Paul’s exhortation (12:3a)
2. The content of Paul’s exhortation (12:3b)
3. The context of Paul’s exhortation (12:4–5)
4. The outworking of Paul’s exhortation (12:6–8)
Historical and Cultural Background
1. Paul’s exhortation to Christians to serve one another is rooted in the Old Testament covenant, especially its stipulation. Not only was Israel expected to keep the law of Moses as the stipulation of the covenant, but also a part of that requirement involved serving fellow Jews, covenant brothers and sisters. This is why the Old Testament prophets often thundered forth against Israel: Israel sins against God by not treating fellow believers rightly (see the classic illustration in Mic. 6:1–7:7). Hence the emphasis on social justice by the prophets.
2. Paul’s analogy of the body of Christ in 12:4–5 has been much discussed in terms of its background (cf. 1 Cor. 12:12–28; Eph. 4:7–16; Col. 1:18). Seven theories can be delineated (see the “Additional Insights” section after this unit).
3. As a third piece of historical-cultural data, I offer some introductory comments about Paul on the subject of spiritual gifts. There are three key texts on the subject in his writings: Romans 12:3–8; 1 Corinthians 12–14; Ephesians 4:7–16. Several general observations can be made concerning the gifts. (a) The word for “gift” (charisma) refers to an endowment to believers by God’s grace, which is to be used for his glory and the good of others (Rom. 12:3–8; Eph. 4:7–16). (b) The gifts are distributed to believers by the Spirit; they are “Spirit-ual” gifts (1 Cor. 12:10–11; 14:1). (c) Every believer possesses at least one gift (1 Cor. 12:7; Eph. 4:7). (d) It is through the diversity of the gifts that the body of Christ matures and is unified (Rom. 12:4; 1 Cor. 12:12–31; Eph. 4:7–18). (e) Spiritual gifts are eschatological in nature and, in particular, are stamped by the “already but not yet” dialectic. The gifts are a sign that the eschaton has already dawned, but they should be exercised in love, which is itself eternal and therefore belongs to the consummation of the age to come. (f) A glance at the lists of spiritual gifts in the three key texts above reveals that they do not disclose all the spiritual gifts available to the body of Christ. The lists both differ and overlap.
Interpretive Insights
12:3 by the grace given me I say . . . : Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought. This verse contains the authority behind Paul’s exhortation in 12:3–8 and the content of that exhortation. Paul is the apostle to the Gentiles, commissioned to be so by the sheer grace of God. This divine authority empowers Paul to make requests of the Roman believers (12:3a). The content of Paul’s exhortation is this: the members of his audience should not have an exaggerated opinion of themselves (12:3b). In the Greek text there is a clever play on the word phrone? (“to think”): the Roman believers should “think” (phrone?) of themselves not with “lofty thought” (hyperphrone?) but rather with “sensible thought” (s?phrone?). The last term was used in the Greek world in contrast to that despised trait called hybris (“pride”). The reason why Christians should not be arrogant is that God has distributed to each believer the measure, or quantity (metron), of faith that it takes to use their respective gifts.1
12:4–5 in Christ we, though many, form one body. Verses 4–5 explain the context of Paul’s exhortation for Christians not to be haughty in the usage of their spiritual gifts: the body of Christ. We examined earlier the notion that Christ is the last Adam, whose body is the corporate people of God (see the units on 5:12–14; 5:15–21). Verses 4–5 assume the obvious, that the human body consists of many members, each with its respective function, but then add the profound truth that Christ’s body, the church, is composed of many members, each with its own spiritual function.
12:6–8 We have different gifts, according to the grace given to each of us. Verses 6–8 give more detail regarding Paul’s exhortation in that they record the outworking of spiritual gifts in the body of Christ. Verse 6a indicates that spiritual gifts (charisma) are grace (charis) gifts (dotheisan, “given”). Moreover, God in his wisdom measures or distributes those gifts to believers as he wills (diaphora, “different”) as well as supplies the needed faith to exercise them.2Other than the opening participle in 12:6, “having” (echontes), there is no verb in 12:6–8, which is reflected in the NRSV translation, whereas the NIV supplies the likely intended verbs (“prophesy,” “serve,” “teach,” etc.).
Seven gifts are listed, with no intended symbolism accompanying that number here. Whoever has the gift of prophesy (proph?teia) should use it according to the faith given by God (12:6b). Prophecy was treasured in the early church (1 Cor. 12:28; 14; Eph. 2:20; 4:11). The prophets spoke spontaneously to the gathered congregation as the Spirit gave them utterance. The church was then supposed to evaluate that prophecy to see if it squared with apostolic teaching (1 Thess. 5:19–22). Prophecies could be predictive (Acts 21:10–11) or declarative, speaking the word of the Lord for a specific congregation (1 Cor. 14:29–33). Service (diakonia) probably has to do with rendering financial and material assistance. Perhaps the first deacons are in view here (cf. Acts 6:1–7). The gift of teaching (didaskalia) involved explaining the Old Testament in light of the arrival of the Messiah, passing on the sayings and works of Jesus (see Rom. 12:9–21), and teaching catechetical material.3The content of the teaching probably was based on the apostles’ doctrine (cf. Acts 2:42). Parakl?sis is the gift of exhortation or encouragement to apply God’s truth to one’s life. The fifth spiritual gift that Paul mentions here is generosity (haplot?s) in giving with reference to the tangible needs of others. The gift of leadership comes next. The proistamenos is an appointed leader in the church, whether elder or deacon (1 Thess. 5:12; 1 Tim. 3:4, 5, 12; 5:17) or deaconess (Rom. 16:1). The seventh spiritual gift is to have cheerfulness (hilarot?s) when showing mercy to others.
Theological Insights
Several truths surface in Romans 12:3–8. First, God has distributed spiritual gifts to every believer. Second, God gives the faith needed to exercise those gifts. Third, because spiritual gifts are rooted in God’s grace, there is no room for arrogance or feelings of inferiority among Christians. Fourth, spiritual gifts are to be used for others, especially the new-covenant community. Fifth, diversity of spiritual gifts brings unity to the body of Christ.
The Background of Paul’s Body Imagery: As noted in the “Historical and Cultural Background” section, the background of Paul’s analogy of the body of Christ in Romans 12:4–5 has been much discussed. There are seven basic theories.
1. Eduard Schweizer called attention to the political view, which compares the body of Christ with the Greek idea that associates a gathered political group of people with a human body (see Livy, Hist. 2.32).1While this view explains the parallel (community = body), it leaves unanswered the question of why Paul speaks of the “body of Christ” (e.g., 1 Cor. 12:27).2
2. Wilfred Knox argued that the notion of the body of Christ and its individual members originated in “the Stoic commonplace of the state as a body in which each member had his part to play.”3But, like the political theory, this suggestion cannot explain why Paul calls it the “body of Christ.” Ernest Best points out in this regard that the comparison is not between the body and its members, but rather between the members as members of the body of a person.4
3. Lucien Cerfaux claimed that the idea of the body of Christ originated in the church’s celebration of the Lord’s Supper.5But this theory, which equates the body of Christ with the bread of Christ, is based on the assumption that Paul’s teaching on the Eucharist is borrowed from the mystery religions’ belief that partaking of the meal of the deity was tantamount to being united with the god.6
4. Rudolf Bultmann popularized the position that gnosticism informed the Pauline concept of the body of Christ. That view promoted the “primal man” myth, a teaching identifying individuals as pieces of an original cosmic, heavenly man, who, upon his fall to earth, disintegrated into myriads of human bodies. On recollecting their original spiritual state, however, those individual pieces are ultimately regathered into the one primal man.7Few scholars today, however, date that myth to the first century AD.
5. James Dunn roots the body-of-Christ concept in the charismatic worship of the early church. As believers gathered for worship and as God manifested himself through the charismata (spiritual gifts), the people sensed themselves to be a corporate body, unified in Christ.8This suggestion is too generic, however, especially since two other ideas better explain the phrase.
6. W. D. Davies insightfully argues that the Jewish apocalyptic/rabbinic concept of the corporate body of Adam is the best antecedent to the notion of the body of Christ.9He writes, “Paul accepted the traditional Rabbinic doctrine of the unity of mankind in Adam. That doctrine implied that the very constitution of the physical body of Adam and the method of its formation was symbolic of the real oneness of mankind. In that one body of Adam . . . [all people] were brought together as male and female.”10There is much to commend this view, especially since many interpreters see Adam behind the Pauline passages on the body of Christ (compare 1 Cor. 12 with 1 Cor. 15:44–49; Rom. 12:4–5 with 12:1–2; 5:12–21; 7:7–13; 8:17–25; Col. 1:18 with 1:15; Eph. 4:7–16 with 1:15–23; 5:22–33). The major objection is that there is no explicit mention of the “body of Adam” in the Jewish literature contemporaneous with Paul. But this objection can be adequately met by the next theory.
7. A. J. M. Wedderburn proposes that the roots of the idea of the body of Christ stem from the ancient Hebrew belief that one person represents many, and many are incorporated in the one (Gen. 12:1–3; compare Gen. 14:17–20 with Heb. 7:4–10; Josh. 7:16–26).11This reciprocal relationship takes one a long way toward understanding the body of Christ, and it is commensurate with the Adamic theory that the first man is the representative of the fallen human race (Rom. 5:12–21). If so, then the church, the corporate body of Christ, is none other than the eschatological Adam (1 Cor. 15:45), the new humanity of the end time, which has now appeared in human history.
Teaching the Text
A couple of approaches could be taken to preaching or teaching Romans 12:3–8. One could follow the four-point outline offered above: the authority, content, context, and outworking of Paul’s exhortation. Or, one might provide a list of the spiritual gifts that Paul mentions in 1 Corinthians 12–14; Romans 12:3–8; Ephesians 4:7–16 and, after explaining each of the gifts, allow the audience members to identify what might be their respective gifts. Below I gives some details for doing the latter.
An apostle, technically, was one of the twelve apostles of Jesus, also including Paul. However, the word “apostle” could be used more generically of someone sent by the Lord to preach the gospel. This latter sense could encompass missionaries.
A prophet is directly inspired by the Spirit to give a word from God. It seems that in the worship services of the early church prophecy was an integral part of God’s revelation to his people. “Discernment of spirits” refers to the gift whereby someone had the ability to detect demonic activity in the life of an individual or to sense false teaching. It also could be associated with discerning the message of the prophets to ensure that the proclaimed word was in keeping with the gospel. Today, churches differ in their opinion as to whether God still speaks through prophets or whether God speaks only through the Bible.
A teacher is adept at explaining biblical doctrine. In New Testament times, teaching, like preaching, was devoted to poring over the Old Testament to see how Jesus fulfilled its messianic predictions. A “word of wisdom/knowledge” is a gift whereby the Lord instructs someone in how to address a particular problem in a church, perhaps in the worship setting. These gifts are sometimes thought today to be associated with those well trained in interpreting and applying the Scriptures.
A pastor both teaches and preaches, all the while shepherding the congregation toward spiritual maturity.
An evangelist is especially successful at winning others to Christ. But this particular calling does not eliminate the mandate of the Great Commission that all believers be witnesses to Christ as well.
An exhorter is someone in the body of Christ who is good at challenging and encouraging believers to greater heights in their spiritual growth.
A person with the gift of faith has a vision of God’s plan for a church or perhaps has unusual faith in God’s healing ability. The gift of miracles is possibly related to this last gift. Healing is similar to the previous two gifts, except that healing seems to focus on human need.
The gift of tongues, according to Acts 2:1–8, is a supernatural ability to speak in a human language not known by the speaker. However, according to 1 Corinthians 14, tongues is a supernatural ability to utter ecstatic speech intelligible to God. The gift of interpretation allows a person empowered by the Spirit to translate this ecstatic speech in the worship setting of the church. Indeed, Paul insisted that such interpretation should accompany ecstatic speech so that the congregation could understand and unbelievers would not misconstrue ecstasy as insanity (compare Acts 2:13 with 1 Cor. 14:23).
The gift of ministry is possibly applied to someone who serves the Lord and people behind the scenes in both physical and spiritual ways. Administration is the ability of Christians to provide leadership for local congregations. Being a ruler may involve the same gift just mentioned, though with a focus on the leaders themselves. Being a helper may involve the same gift as ministry—that is, it may refer to those who prefer not to be in the limelight as they quietly serve the church. Mercy is a gift well suited to those believers called to serve in the medical field. Giving refers to those Christians who possess an exceptional ability to make money and give a portion of it back to the Lord; this is to be distinguished from the responsibility of every Christian to give a portion of their income to the Lord.
Illustrating the Text
Every believer has spiritual gifts and can exercise them by faith.
Story: “Modern Hexameron: De Aranea,” by Walter Wangerin. In this little story Wangerin, who was noted earlier in the commentary (see the “Illustrating the Text” section under Rom. 1:8–15), writes about the life habits of a mother spider.4 Wangerin shows how even this lowly creature, which we tend to despise, uses her native gifts to give life to her offspring at the cost of her own.
Recalling that our spiritual gifts are from God prevents arrogance and inferiority.
Apologetics: Mere Christianity, by C. S. Lewis. In chapter 8 of book 3 Lewis identifies pride as the worst of all sins and asserts, “Pride has been the chief cause of misery in every nation and every family since the world began.” In the same section he also asserts that the solution to pride is not to be a “greasy, smarmy person who is always telling you that, of course, he is a nobody.” Instead, the truly humble person will be cheerful, giving little if any thought to self at all, one way or the other. The author emphasizes much the same thing in story form in The Screwtape Letters.
Poetry: “I’m Nobody! Who Are You?,” by Emily Dickinson. In this very short poem of only eight lines, Dickinson (1830–86) addresses the narcissism all too prevalent in society while indicating the opposite extreme as a potential problem.
I’m nobody! Who are you?
Are you nobody, too?
Then there’s a pair of us—don’t tell!
They’d banish us, you know.
How dreary to be somebody!
How public, like a frog
To tell your name the livelong day
To an admiring bog!5
The diversity of gifts among believers brings unity to the body of Christ.
Film: Places in the Heart; It’s a Wonderful Life. These films have wide appeal, and both illustrate beautifully the concept of individuals in communities responding in varied ways to the sadness and tragedy in the lives of their members, each one giving what he or she can to resolve the needs. In Places in the Heart (1984), set in Texas in 1935, a widow tries to keep her farm together with the help of, among others, a blind man and an African American man during the Great Depression. The movie ends as it opens, in church with church music playing. The minister reads 1 Corinthians 13. As the choir sings, communion is passed from person to person, and we see characters both alive and dead sharing in fellowship. In It’s a Wonderful Life (1946), a man who has helped many others gets into deep financial trouble when his uncle misplaces a large sum of money. The movie ends with the entire community coming to his aid, each person contributing a lot or a little to repay the lost money. Certainly, what happens in these communities serves as a metaphor for the Christian community.