1 Corinthians 3:1-23 · On Divisions in the Church
You Are God's Temple
1 Corinthians 3:1-23
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Since tomorrow is Presidents’ day, I thought I would begin with a favorite story about Abraham Lincoln. One of the endearing traits that Lincoln displayed was his ability to laugh at himself, and especially at his rather plain appearance. He said that sometimes he felt like the ugly man who met an old woman traveling through a forest. The old woman said, “You’re the ugliest man I ever saw.”

“I can’t help it,” the ugly man said.

“No, I guess not,” the woman admitted, “but the least you could do is stay home.”

One reason Lincoln was a great man was his ability to laugh at himself.

One of the most popular films of recent years was a movie about a mentally challenged man named Forrest Gump. In the book by Winston Groom upon which the movie was based, there is a scene in which Forrest and his roommate at the University of Alabama have a serious problem. The friend’s car has a flat tire, and while the friend is changing it he drops the lug nuts into the sewer. The friend is very upset because the two of them are late for football practice. Their legendary coach, Bear Bryant of the Alabama Crimson Tide, would not tolerate this. Forrest makes a suggestion, “Well, why don’t you take one nut off the other three tires, and then all four wheels will have three nuts. That should at least get us to practice.”

The friend looks at him. His face turns beet red with anger and embarrassment at the simplicity of Forrest’s suggestion. At the top of his lungs his friend screams, “I don’t understand how could you think of that. You’re an idiot!”

Forrest replies, “I may be an idiot, but at least I’m not stupid.” (1)

How do you feel about yourself? Abraham Lincoln knew that he was homely in his appearance, but that did not keep him from becoming our greatest president. Forrest Gump understood his limitations, but that did not keep him from seeing things other people missed.

How do you feel about yourself?

A few years back, The Rev. Jesse Jackson energized many young people, particularly many African-American young people with his chant, “I am somebody! I may be poor but I am somebody! I may be in prison but I am somebody. I maybe uneducated but I am somebody!”

How do you feel about yourself? Here’s what the Bible says about you: “Don’t you know that you yourselves are God’s temple and that God’s Spirit lives in you?”

Did you hear that? You are God’s temple. How do you feel about yourself now? This is why you are somebody: you are the dwelling place of God.

Here is where we begin: God’s dwelling place is within God’s people. When Paul used these words, “Don’t you know that you yourselves are God’s temple . . .” he was referring to the church. God’s dwelling place is the church. But not our building. There are two words in Greek for “temple.” The one used here denotes not so much a building but the true dwelling-place of God. Paul is saying that as individual members of Christ’s body and as a church body, we are God’s dwelling place.

Do you remember when Jesus had his encounter with the Samaritan woman at the well? Remember how she said to him, “Our fathers worshiped on this mountain, but you Jews claim that the place where we must worship is in Jerusalem.”

How did Jesus answer this woman’s statement? He said, “A time is coming and has now come when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for they are the kind of worshipers the Father seeks. God is spirit, and his worshipers must worship in spirit and in truth.” (John 4:22-23)

God is Spirit. That means that God does not have a physical dwelling place. God is not on a mountain or in a building. God dwells within the hearts and minds of God’s people. The dwelling place of God is God’s people.

Now we have to be careful. Some of our New Age friends would declare that because we are the dwelling place of God, therefore we are God. At least that was actress Shirley MacLaine’s famous contention a few years back that we are God. Nothing could be further from the truth. We are all too human. That is why in a later chapter St. Paul warns us, “Flee from sexual immorality.” We are all too human, but listen as Paul continues this interesting thought: “All other sins a man commits are outside his body, but he who sins sexually sins against his own body.” Then he adds these comforting words that resemble today’s text, “Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? You are not your own; you were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your body.” (6:18-20)

It could not be clearer. We are not God, but we are the dwelling place of God if we belong to Christ. This is why we are somebody. Not because of our intelligence, not because of our looks, not because of our athletic ability but because the Holy Spirit of God lives within us.

Flannery O’Connor once wrote a short story titled, “A Temple of the Holy Ghost.” In it O’Connor tells of a precocious twelve‑year‑old girl. This girl has two teenage cousins who have come to visit her. Well, teenage girls have a way of attracting teenage boys. Two country boys have come to visit her cousins. The girl overhears her cousins mock a certain nun, Sister Perpetua. This good Sister has suggested a formula for young ladies to use in fending off fresh young men in the back seats of cars. “Stop sir!” the nun taught the girls to say. “I am a Temple of the Holy Ghost!”

The cousins think such advice is hilarious. The twelve‑year‑old girl, however, is moved by it. The news that she is the dwelling place of God makes her feel as if somebody has given her a present. She takes it seriously. (2)

We should take it seriously, too. We are the dwelling place of God. We are the temple of the living God. What does that mean? Let me suggest some things.

First of all, when God dwells within us, we know who we are. That’s important. Many people wander around saying they need to find themselves. No, they need to find Christ then they will find themselves.

Tommy Nelson in his book, The 12 Essentials of Godly Success, tells about a man named Robert Howard. Robert Howard was from Cross Plains, Texas. A small man, says Tommy Nelson, Robert Howard was a borderline schizophrenic. He lived in his own world. Howard had few friends, didn’t marry and lived with his mother. Howard earned his living by doing odd jobs. He didn’t relate well to people.

Then his mother fell ill and went into a coma. His mother was the only friend Robert ever had. When the nurse told him she would never recover, Robert went home and fired a bullet into his brain. He was thirty years old.

When relatives went through Robert’s meager possessions, they discovered great bundles of writing that Robert had never submitted to a publisher writing which showed a brilliant imagination. In his writing Robert had erected his own personal world. In this world which he imagined, he was not a frightened young man from Cross Plains, Texas, who lived with his mother. Rather he was a bold, strong, handsome adventurer who conquered kings and warriors. This daring adventurer knew no fear. He was loved by women and revered by men. In his imagination, Robert Howard had created a popular hero which he named Conan the Barbarian. Yes, it is the same Conan which we know not only from Robert Howard’s writings but from a most popular movie starring Arnold Schwarzenegger. Millions and millions of dollars worth of Robert Howard’s works about Conan the Barbarian have sold, all of which came after his tragic death. (3)

What a sad, sad story. Robert Howard had no sense of personal identity. He did not know who he was. He tried to live his life through the fictional Conan. In the real world, he was a man who couldn’t cope.

Contrast Robert Howard with the twelve-year-old girl in Flannery O’Connor’s short story. This girl is moved by the idea that she is the dwelling place of God. What a healthy idea to grab a young woman’s brain. This idea gave her a heightened sense of her own worth. St. Paul writes, “Don’t you know that you yourselves are God’s temple and that God’s Spirit lives in you?” That’s who we are. So that’s the first thing it means to have God dwelling with us. We have the presence of the Holy Spirit in our lives to give us a sense of identity. We know who we are.

In the second place, when God dwells within us, we know how we are to live. Our sense of identity our sense of self-esteem as it is sometimes called cannot be divorced from our behavior.

In Sy Montgomery's book, Journey of the Pink Dolphins, the character Necca speaks these unforgettable words, "When people forget who they are, they forget how to act."

Steve Farrar tells about a young man named Adam Clarke who was a salesclerk in a store that sold fine silk to people of the upper classes in London. One day his employer showed young Adam how he could increase sales and profits. As he measured the silk out he was to subtly stretch it, thereby giving the customer less for his or her money.

Young Adam Clarke looked his employer straight in the eye and said, "Sir, your silk may stretch but my conscience won't." (4)

Adam Clarke knew who he was and therefore he knew how to live. Our sense of identity our sense of self-esteem cannot be divorced from our behavior.

Psychiatrist Theodore Dalrymple wrote an article for the September 1995 issue of Psychology Today magazine. He wrote that twenty years earlier, when he first began to practice, no one ever complained of a lack of self‑esteem. Now, hardly a week goes by, he writes, without a patient making that com­plaint as if they expected him, the doctor, to fix it.

One young man came to visit him concerned about his low self‑image. He felt this was the cause of most of his problems. His mother agreed. She, too, felt he suffered from low self esteem. It was this condition, the patient and his mother said, that caused him to beat up his pregnant girlfriend, which resulted in a miscarriage.

The doctor was not convinced. “It couldn’t be the other way around, could it?” the doctor asked.

The young man asked, “What do you mean?”

The doctor said, “Could it be that your behavior caused you to have a poor opinion of yourself?”

This possibility, of course, was rejected out of hand by the patient, and probably by his mother as well. (5)

Our schools and many self-styled self-help gurus have done an excellent job of helping people, particularly many young people, develop high self-esteem. This will only serve them well if they also develop good character, for identity and behavior cannot be separated.

As Joseph Telushkin says in his book The Ten Commandments of Character, “Self‑esteem . . . derives in part from knowing that one has done the right thing. (6)

When God dwells within us, we know who we are and we know how we are to live. We are to live like Jesus. We are to live with integrity and with love.

But one thing more needs to be said. When God dwells in us, we have a Friend who will be with us in any situation. When God dwells in us, we not only have an internal guide, but also an internal comforter. When God dwells in us, we are never on our own, and neither are those we love.

The Right Reverend Charles G. von Rosenberg tells an important story involving his son John. At age two and a half, John was found to have a kidney problem that required surgery. Their family lived in a rather remote area of North Carolina at that time, without good medical facilities, and so they traveled to Duke University Hospital for the surgery.

On the night prior to the trip to Durham, von Rosenberg spent hours pacing in John's room. He was afraid, upset, and angry angry at the circumstances, angry at God, and, in truth, angry at himself. After all, he was John’s father, and he was supposed to be able to protect his son from this kind of experience. And so, he paced and paced and paced.

At some point about 2:00 in the morning an amazing thing happened. Charles von Rosenberg says he suddenly became aware of something new, as though something had been spoken to him. And the message was this. The child in that hospital bed, his child, was in truth, first of all, God's child. As his dad, von Rosenberg had only a temporary responsibility, on God's behalf. But the child belonged to God. Therefore, whatever happened at Duke even the worse that can happen would not change the most important thing that could be said about John. He is and always will be God's child.

At 2:00 in the morning, says von Rosenberg, a tremendous burden was lifted off his shoulders. He knew that he still had a responsibility for his son but not the ultimate responsibility. Further, he knew that neither the absolute best nor the absolute worst for John was in his hands. Rather, that it was and is in God's hands. (7)

That’s what it means to be a temple of the Holy Spirit. We belong to God, and so do those we love. When God dwells in us, we know who we are. We know what we are to do be Christ’s disciple. And we know who goes with us a Friend who can meet our every need. “Don’t you know that you yourselves are God’s temple and that God’s Spirit lives in you?”


1. Cited by Ron Brugler, http://www.swedenborg.org/odb/sermon_detail.cfm?sermonID=2543.

2. Flannery O’Connor: The Complete Stories (New York: Farrar, Straus Ft Giroux, 1983), p. 238. Cited by Philip Yancey, Rumours of Another World (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2003), p. 85.

3. (Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2005), pp. 101-102.

4. Finishing Strong Going the Distance for Your Family (Sisters, OR: Multnomah Publishers, Inc., 1995), pp. 93-94.

5. Http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=35176. Cited by

Stephen Arterburn, The Secrets Men Keep (Nashville: Integrity Publishers, 2006), p. 136.

6. (New York, NY: Random House, Inc., 2003), p. 25.

7. http://www.etdiocese.net/sermons/2005/1-30-St-Francis-Ooltewah.htm.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Sermons First Quarter 2011, by King Duncan