“And I will very gladly spend and be spent
for you; though the more abundantly I love you, the less I be loved.” -2
Corinthians 12:15
In American, we live in a consumer based
culture. If you are currently breathing,
then in some way, shape, or fashion, there is a product or service being pushed
at you. They want you to buy the latest
this, or go to the newest that. Modern
day culture is a consumption culture, and if culture influences Christians; the
modern day Christian will be consumption Christian. This can be counterproductive to the kingdom
of God, for he calls us to contribute.
We are to spend and be spent, not for ourselves, but for others.
The Apostles Paul’s mentality towards
the Corinthian church holds a dramatic contrast to the consumption culture we
find ourselves in today. Paul was adamant
about not taking anything from the church at Corinth, and defended his position. In one place saying: “If others be partakers of this power over you, are not
we rather? Nevertheless we have not used this power; but suffer all things,
lest we should hinder the gospel of Christ.”(1 Cor 9:12) He did not want anyone or anybody to have the slightest
notion that he was there for any other reason than to preach the Gospel. Others preachers must have picked up on this
and began sowing discord at Corinth, causing them to believe that Paul had
robbed them of the chance to perform a virtuous act, and by not taking from
them he was less than others who had. I
imagine those same somebody’s were taking from them and preaching “another
Jesus” and “another Gospel.” In response
to this, Paul lays out a beautiful argument both affirming his position and illuminating
the vanity of theirs saying: “for the
children ought not to lay up for the parents, but the parents for the children.”(2
Cor 12:14) In this we see the two sides
taken. The false teachers saying that it
is good to take from your congregation, and Paul saying that it is better to
contribute than consume. That he will
gladly spend and be spent for the children in Christ he loves so dearly. In doing so, he not only shows the love of
Christ to these people, but he leaves on record a wonderful example to all who
would follow. Today we stand in this
generation amidst many false teachers (mostly through an Iphone screen) who
would lead us to believe that consumption is better than contribution. In contrast, we have the example of Paul
following the example of Christ; willing to forsake the culture of consumption
to spend and be spent so that many or few may be saved. We need the culture of contribution to consume
the culture of consumption. How can we
effectively serve the lost if we are consistently looking to serve
ourselves? How can we expect to build
and grow, if we are looking to consume and not contribute? Paul understood this and he set the example.
In the last chapter of the book of
second Corinthians Paul writes “examine
yourselves.” We must each examine
ourselves and ask ourselves: are we a consumer or a contributor? Do we go to church to take what they have to
give; or to give so others make take? We
must leave off thinking what can the church do for me, and begin to ask; what
can I do for the church? This can mean
both the local church you attend, and the global church whose membership is
written in heaven. If 80% of your church
is in a consumption mindset then that eighty percent will exhaust the other
twenty percent who are in a contributing mindset. However, if one hundred percent of the church
is in a contributing mindset; then you will not only encourage one another, but
it will overflow to reach them who are without.
The lost, who are without hope, without love, without Jesus; those who
need the gospel. For their sake and our
own, let us leave off consumption and gladly contribute.
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