2 Corinthians 10-13: Paul the Regular Guy #30daysofPaul

I’ll be honest: I’m having a really hard time with 2 Corinthians here.

In case you couldn’t tell.

It must be the jumbled nature of it, how there is no narrative flow here because of it being four different letters spliced together. Or maybe it’s the nature of the content, of the little petty things Paul is addressing here, in contrast to the big theological concepts of Galatians, and 1 Corinthians and Romans.

But I’m just really having a hard time finding themes to riff on.

Today’s not much different. We have four uninterrupted chapters here, but Paul spends it being sarcastic and angry and listing his own qualifications as an apostle against those moving in on his territory and trying to turn the church at Corinth against him.

Ugh.

But then, maybe that’s the point here. While not theologically the most enlightening parts of the Bible, these letters provide an extraordinary window in the world of the first century church. Here, we see Paul addressing the everyday, small issues that plagues him and his churches. He gets involved in petty spats, and goes after other teachers, and answers small criticisms and questions.

Just like us.

Maybe this letter, and the others from the last couple days, can show us that Paul and Peter and James weren’t superheroes or something. They were regular people, leading and guiding other regular people, dealing with regular, everyday issues.

I’m liking this more and more. Try reading today’s chapters in the Message translation. The modern language fits this passage better, as it translates the struggles Paul had here, and the irony and derision and mockery he writes with, better than a word-for-word translation.

And just enjoy knowing that St. Paul the Super-Apostle wasn’t so different from us.

Next: 2 Corinthians 1:1-2:13, 7:5-16, 8-9

For a PDF of the 30 Days of Paul reading plan, click here.

2 Corinthians 4-6:13; 7:2-4: Everything Has Become New! #30daysofPaul

I want to refocus. I want to get this #30daysofPaul series back on track. I’ve fallen behind, shirked my duties, lost focus. So let’s take a deep breath, center ourselves and realign.

When I started this, I said I wanted to read Paul with a focus on liberation theology. I’ve hit that bits and pieces throughout, but not in any consistent or meaningful meaner.

But this passage is the perfect one to jump back in on.

Why do we liberate?

What is the purpose of working towards liberation for all of humanity?

What is the utility of viewing the Gospel from the perspective of those who labor?

Those who are shackled?

Those who are oppressed?

Those held in bondage?

We liberate because our faith has made us free from the hold of sin, as embodied by the law. Because we find ourselves free from these spiritual bonds, we must also work to make ourselves free of all bonds that hold us back from living in relationship with God. We must break all the chains that hold us back from truly living into our imago dei.

And not just our chains. We must work to break all chains, for all people, especially those who cannot do for themselves.

The only way to do this work of liberation is to live into the existence of those who need liberation the most. We can only identify their bonds, and participate in their liberation, by becoming as they are, by seeing the world through their eyes. We must live to serve the other.

Only then can we open the shackles, and break their chains.

Here is 2 Corinthians, in the second part of his letter defending his ministry, Paul describes the life of faith, achieved through reconciliation with God. In 5:17, he says:

“So if anyone is in Christ, there is a new creation; everything old has passed away; see, everything has become new!”

Here, we can see the final step of liberation. The work towards freedom is the work of shedding our old selves, and becoming new, becoming whole and healthy and liberated and holy.

Why do we liberate?

Because we are compelled by our relationship with God to make all things new.

Paul warns that the fruits of our work for liberation may not always be apparent to the world. “We are treated as impostors, and yet are true; as unknown, and yet are well known; as dying, and see – we are alive; as punished, and yet not killed; as sorrowful, yet always rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet possessing everything.”

The burdens we carry will be enough to crush us; nothing will be given easily. But it is the only way. Only by working to liberate, to make all things new, are we doing the will of God. This is what bringing the Kingdom of God looks like.

The Kingdom is a place where all are freed from the burdens they carry.

But the Kingdom doesn’t just come about on it’s own. Only by our hard work:

feeding

clothing

freeing

serving

dying to ourselves to become new again.

Only then will we see the Kingdom on Earth.

Next: 2 Corinthians 10-13

For a PDF of the 30 Days of Paul reading plan, click here.

2 Corinthians 2:14-3:18: Removing the Veil #30daysofPaul

We move on to 2 Corinthians now, and things are going to get jumbled. In case you didn’t notice, we aren’t starting “in the beginning” here.

Why? Because Paul’s second letter to the Corinthians isn’t just one letter. In fact, scholars now think it more probable that 2 Corinthians is a composite of four separate letters and parts of letters that Paul wrote in continued with correspondence with the church at Corinth.

In fact, the book we refer to as 1 Corinthians isn’t even Paul’s first correspondence with the church in Corinth; at best, it’s the second letter he wrote them, based on the cues in gives.

So, over the next 5 posts, we’ll be bouncing around the book of 2 Corinthians. The splits we are using are those explained in The Authentic Letters of Paul, from the Westar Institute, as laid out by our fearless leader, Cassandra Farrin, who explains more here.

Ok. 2 Corinthians 2:14-3:18. Let’s dig in.

So, in 1 Corinthians, Paul addressed some specific questions the church had posed to him, and provided some pastoral guidance around the idea of unity. Now, Paul is writing back to them here to defend his ministry and his status as an apostle.

Remember, all the way back in Galatians, when we talked about Paul’s tendency to get defensive very easily? This is one of the best examples of this character trait.

He writes about Moses, and how he brought the law, the first covenant, to the people of Israel. Moses was the original messenger of God, but as the law had shortcomings and was unable to fully justify the people of Israel, they could not be shown the full glory of God revealed through Moses.

Paul contrasts that to his own ministry, and the ministry of his fellow apostles, who bring the full glory of God to the people who have been justified to God by faith in Christ. Paul describes this in striking terms in 2:15-16, saying.

For we are the aroma of Christ to God among those who are being saved and among those who are perishing; to the one a fragrance death to death, to the other a fragrance of life from life.”

Paul is describing the Christians as a “light to the world,” as the shining example of God’s kingdom on earth. Much as Moses carried the light of God following his personal encounter with God at Sinai, all followers of Christ, all those who emulate his liberating example in the world through their faith, shine with God’s unquenchable light. Paul describes this beautifully in chapter 3. (I’m quoting from Eugene Peterson’s Message translation here):

“Whenever, though, the turn to face God as Moses did, God removes the veil and there they are-face to face! They suddenly recognize that God is a living, personal presence, not a piece of chiseled stone. And when God is personally present, a living Spirit, that old, constricting legislation is recognized as obsolete. We’re free of it! All of us! Nothing between us and God, our faces shining with the brightness of his face. And so we are transfigured much like the Messiah, our lives gradually becoming brighter and more beautiful as God enters our lives and we become like him.”

I love that. Throughout this passage, in the Message translation, Peterson describes the old covenant and the new covenant as the “Government of Death” and the “Government of the Living Spirit,” the “Government of Condemnation” and the “Government of Affirmation.” I think those perfectly reflect the image Paul was trying to convey through all his letters when talking about the Law and Faith.

So what is Paul trying to achieve with this writing? He is pushing back against claims that somehow his ministry is invalid, that he isn’t a legitimate apostle. Instead, he describes how everyone that follows Jesus is commissioned to spread the Gospel, and how he is carrying that out, the proof being the vitality of the church at Corinth. He is reminding them of their own commission, that they shouldn’t be cowed by those who try to hold them back.

Through the grace given by our faith, we are all made like Moses, with the light of God shining from our very faces. Don’t veil it, but let it illuminate all the world, driving out darkness to be replaced with the light of God reflected in each of us.

Next: 2 Corinthians 4-6:13; 7:2-4

For a PDF of the 30 Days of Paul reading plan, click here.