CHRISTIAN LOVE
The Controlling
Guideline
1 Corinthians 8:1-13
INTRODUCTION
In the
chapter that serves as our Scripture reading, the Apostle Paul is dealing with
a practice that was common in the first century but is not familiar to us
today. N America today people generally
either worship one god or no god at all.
In ancient Corinth there were many gods and many different
religions. Sacrifices were made to these
various idols, and then the worshipers and their guests ate the meat offered in
sacrifice. To eat meat offered to an
idol was to engage in a form of worship and to receive nourishment and the hope
of help from the idol god whose sacrifice was being consumed.
Those
who were converted to faith in Jesus Christ forsook the worship of idols and
recognized idols to be nothing. Some of
these new converts insisted that, since the idols had no reality, there was no
harm in feasting at an idol temple, or in purchasing the meat offered in
sacrifice to idols.
Paul says that to participate in such feasts or to use the
meat offered to idols could be harmful to those who had not yet come to a
knowledge of the true God. He declares
that not everyone has the knowledge of the truth as they had come to know it in
Christ Jesus. He is eager that these new
converts relate properly to those who are still pagans. In our text he enunciates a principle that
reveals that Christian love must be the controlling guideline for all of our
conduct as it affects nonbelievers.
It is
interesting to note how the various modern translations deal with this
verse. Today’s English Version says, “If food makes my brother sin, I myself will never eat meat again, so
as not to make my brother fall into sin.”
Phillips translates it,
“This makes me determined that, if there
is any possibility of meat injuring my brother, I will have none of it as long
as I live, for fear I might do him harm.”
Williams translates it,
“So then, if food can make my brother
fall, I will never, no never, eat meat again, in order to keep my brother from
falling.”
What the Apostle Paul, and
these translators of the Word, are trying to tell us is that:
We are responsible for our influence (Matt 5:16).
Christian
love will cause us to recognize our responsibility for our influence and cause
us to beware lest we cause others to stumble.