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A Sacred Responsibility

Truth for Life / Alistair Begg
The Truth Network Radio
October 4, 2024 4:04 am

A Sacred Responsibility

Truth for Life / Alistair Begg

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October 4, 2024 4:04 am

Paul's unusual perspective on rights and preaching is rooted in his divine compulsion to share the gospel, which he sees as a sacred responsibility, and his freedom to restrict his own rights for the sake of others.

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Most people, when they're thinking about what they want to do with their life, choose a profession and then get the necessary education or training to do the work. But preaching the gospel is different than other jobs. Today on Truth for Life, we'll find out why simply getting the right training cannot prepare you to be an effective preacher of God's word. Alistair Begg is looking at what the apostle Paul has to say on this subject.

First Corinthians chapter 9. There's hardly a day goes by without somebody somewhere doesn't mention rights. Rights. It's not uncommon in conversation for somebody to say, You have no right to say that, or to affirm, I have my rights, you know, or to have the face of some enterprising lawyer on our screen saying words like, If you have reason to believe that your rights have been violated, call this number now. And it is a great appeal to the rights of individuals. We have civil rights, human rights, gay rights, women's rights, animal rights. We could say that it really just isn't right how much emphasis there is upon rights.

And yet, despite the fact that we, in this advanced state of civilization, pride ourselves on being so different from our forebears, Cleveland is not too far removed from Corinth. Because when you turn to 1 Corinthians chapter 9, you discover that there is one word which is the predominating word, and it is the word right, or rights. In fact, in the first fourteen verses, when we studied them, we saw that Paul provides five reasons as to why it is right that he would be able to have these rights. Now, just when we might expect him to be taking off his sandal and banging it on the table, as it were, and saying, Therefore, in light of all this, give me my due, he changes gears and adopts what was and is an unusual perspective.

He adopts an unusual perspective on three things. First of all, on rights. On rights. He has just laid down, and very clearly so, the legitimacy of him being able to gain and use his rights. But he has chosen not to. In verse 12, he says, If others have this right of support from you, shouldn't we have it all the more? Yes.

Decision. But we did not use this right. And in verse 15, again, I have not used any of these rights.

Now, he explains his unusual perspective. First of all, he says, the reason that I didn't use the right was because I didn't want to dig up the entrance road of the gospel. On Solon Road, down here the other day, they had the sign up. It said, Road Closed Down Here. I have to be honest and tell you that I don't often pay a lot of attention to those signs, because in my experience, the road is often not closed. It is the same as these large barrels on the motorway. They are everywhere, and they have a sign which says, Man at Work.

Have you ever seen any man at work? Okay. So what reason have we been given to believe that the sign will actually be true? So I assumed that there was no road closed down Solon Road, and since I needed to go down there, I would proceed in any case. So I got so far down the road, and the road was closed. Not only was the road closed, but the road was dug up something fierce, and it was impossible to move.

What only a few days before had been a means of access down into Chagrin Falls was now completely torn up, and forward movement was dramatically impeded. That is the exact word which Paul uses here. He said, If I take money for what I do, I am concerned that my exercising that right will dig up the roadway in front of people who might otherwise be the recipients of the good news of Jesus Christ.

The word is variously used for the cutting down of a tree. And so he says, I have an unusual perspective on rights, and the reason is that I don't want that in the lives of those who have received the seeds of faith, that my right would become the basis for their ruin. And what he immediately affirms, and what he comes back to again and again, is this, that the ultimate exercise of freedom for Paul was the freedom to restrict his freedom. That's how he showed how free he really was by not using the freedom that he really had. And he does what he cautions that should be done in verse 9 of chapter 8, Be careful, however, that the exercise of your freedom does not become a stumbling block to the weak. So he says, As that relates to me, this is my perspective. Secondly, his unusual perspective on rights was because he didn't want them to think that he was coming by the back door looking for material gain.

I think that's the explanation of the second sentence here in verse 15. He first of all says, I've not used any of these rights, and people would be able to concur with that. And then he immediately adds, And I'm not writing this in the hope that you will do such things for me. He's not coming at it the way somebody comes whereby they tell us all the things that they don't want, when in actual fact they're telling us all the things that they do want.

Paul closes down that option. He doesn't want them thinking that. And thirdly, he didn't want them to fall into the trap of thinking that they paid him to preach. If he were to take money for his preaching in the Corinthian context, then he would be deprived of his boast. What is his boast? His boast was that he took nothing for preaching.

And if he then started to take it, he wouldn't be able to boast about the fact that he didn't take it. You don't have to be too smart to understand that, right? That's straightforward. Turn for a moment to 1 Thessalonians chapter 2, just to get a flavor of this.

Just go forward a little bit. 1 Thessalonians 2, verse 8, We loved you so much that we were delighted to share with you not only the gospel of God but our lives as well, he says to the Thessalonians, because you've become so dear to us. Surely you remember, brothers, our toil and hardship. We worked night and day in order not to be a burden to anyone while we preached the gospel of God to you. There's an interesting thing here, insofar as Paul never takes remuneration from the place where he's actually preaching. Money has come to his support from different places at different times. But when he was in Thessalonica doing the preaching, he didn't take money from the Thessalonians. When he's in Corinth, he doesn't take it either. Money comes from Macedonia to support him, but he's able to say to the group, Hey, I'm not up here on a per-sermon basis. And if I were, he says, then the good news would be hindered in the lives of some.

Others would think that I'm trying to manipulate for more. And by and large it would be a dreadful perspective on what is a legitimate privilege. So that, then, is his unusual perspective on rights. His great boast is that he took nothing for preaching.

He's not boasting of his accomplishments. He is simply affirming this truth. Now, the unusual perspective extends not only to his rights but also to his preaching. And we come to this in verse 16. He says, When I preach the gospel, I cannot boast, for I am compelled to preach. Now, what does he mean by that? He's telling the Corinthians that he can't take any special pride in the fact that he is a preacher of the gospel.

Why? Well, because he had absolutely nothing to do with it. He didn't invent the gospel. He's not responsible for its content.

He did not give it out. Nor did he actually choose, as we will see, to become a preacher himself. The perspective of Paul should be the perspective of all who are entrusted with a similar responsibility. You can find it if you turn forward a page into 1 Corinthians 11, verse 23, For I received from the LORD what I also passed on to you. That's how we ought to judge the preaching that we receive Sunday by Sunday.

Does it fit that framework? Is this an individual who has received from the Lord in the Word passing the Word on to you? That's the great test.

Not was he entertaining, not was he good or short or long or apparently effective, but did he take what he received from the Lord and pass it on to you? Such a perspective on preaching was unusual then, and frankly, it is unusual now. I think we can get to grips with it if we note down two words. The first word is the word compulsion. Compulsion. I can't boast, he said, when I preach, because I'm compelled to preach.

It's inside of me, he says. I can do nothing else except preach. Now, let's just do a little bit of cross-referencing here. Turn to Galatians chapter 1 and verse 15, and notice what he says. Speaking of his life before he came to Christ, he then picks up verse 15, But when God, who set me apart from my mother's womb and called me by his grace, was pleased to reveal his Son in me, so that I might preach him among the Gentiles. Paul explains his coming to faith in Christ in direct relationship to the fact that he proclaims this good news. You find the same thing in the Old Testament with the prophets there.

We could go to different places. We could go to Amos, or we could go to Isaiah, but let's just go to Jeremiah. Jeremiah chapter 1 and verse 5, The word of the LORD came to me, saying, Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you.

Before you were born, I set you apart. I appointed you as a prophet to the nations. Jeremiah, why do you exist? I exist to be a prophet to the nations. Jeremiah, do you think you're a great speaker? No.

What's your perspective? Here it is in verse 6, Sovereign LORD, I do not know how to speak. I am only a child. But the LORD said to me, Do not say, I am only a child.

You must go to everyone I send you to and say whatever I commend you. Do not be afraid of them, for I am with you and will rescue you, declares the LORD. We had a conversation this week in the course of our routine with various people, and one individual volunteered the fact that he could find no call in the Bible to the task of preaching. No call in the Bible. Now, we didn't engage in a prolonged conversation.

I had already embarked on my studies here, but I said to myself, Well, either I am finding it, reading it into the Bible, or it's actually in the Bible. This sounds a little bit like a call to me. Does this sound like a call to you? I formed you in the womb, and when I formed you in the womb, you were going to preach to the Gentiles.

I formed you in the womb, and as I formed you in the womb, you were going to proclaim my name before the nations. It is a compulsion. It is a fire in his bones. Despondency can't rid it out.

Nobody can gainsay it. You turn forward in Jeremiah and listen to him in chapter 20. He's complaining now. Remember, Jeremiah's a wailing prophet.

He had a lot of… He was a whiner. Verse 8, whenever I speak, I cry out, proclaiming violence and destruction. Oh, he says, This is dreadful. Every time I go to preach, the word of the Lord has brought me insult and reproach all day long. He says, I say what I'm supposed to say, and what do I get? Nice letters, lousy letters. I say what I'm supposed to say, and what do I get? Benefactors?

No, insulters. So he says, I'm going to chuck it. I'm not going to speak anymore. Then he says, But if I say, I will not mention him or speak any more in his name… Now, notice this. His word is in my heart like a fire, a fire shut up in my bones. I am weary of holding it in.

Indeed, I cannot! That is an unusual perspective on preaching. That is a biblical perspective on preaching. And it is understood in terms of divine compulsion. Well, then, you say to yourself, if that is the case, why is it that people who stand up and around pulpits seem to do so with such little impact?

Indeed, from time to time they appear totally unconcerned about what they're doing or why they're doing it. Well, listen, loved ones, by this kind of standard, much of what passes for preaching is not preaching. Every performance or discourse from behind a pulpit should not be equated with preaching—not this divine compulsion.

J. I. Packer gives a very helpful definition of preaching in this specific sense, when he says Christian preaching is the event of God bringing to a congregation a Bible-based, Christ-related, life-impacting message of instruction and direction from himself through the words of a spokesman. That's what it is. People say, Well, you know, I was going to another church, and we used to spend an awful long time on the sacraments, but there was hardly any time given to the homily.

That's what they say. Why do you give so much time to the homily, Mr. Begg? In comparative terms, not so much time to the Lord's Supper.

Can you answer that? Because our conviction is that Christ is made known in the Word. And that individual believes that Christ is made known in the sacrament. Therefore, the key is to receive the sacrament. We say the key is to receive the Word. And the sacrament sets alongside but does not replace. So one word, then, is compulsion.

I think you can understand that. He says, There's no reason for you to applaud me if I preach. I can't help preaching.

Indeed, I would be utterly miserable if I failed to preach. The second word is the word conscription. Compulsion and conscription. Any young men here like to join the army? Nope? I mean, you can put up your hand if you'd like to join the army.

Not a single taker. Okay? That's fine.

That's clear. Can you imagine what it would be like, then, if you got a letter through your mailbox tomorrow morning saying, Mr. X, congratulations, you are now a member of the forces of the United States of America? What are you going to say? You're going to say, Hey, I didn't volunteer for this.

That's right. I didn't call an 800 number. I mean, I didn't send in one of those cards, did I? I like to get free CDs. Good grief. I kind of read it all.

I got eight free CDs, and I also joined the Navy. This is unbelievable. Well, I'll have somebody phone. I'll just phone up and tell them, Hey, I'm not in it. I checked the wrong box. I'm not in this. The day that you or I get conscripted, you can check any box you like.

You're in. There is a difference between being a volunteer and a conscript. Paul says, I didn't volunteer for this. I was conscripted. Nobody in their right mind is going to volunteer for this.

Now look at it. Preaching wasn't a choice. He says in verse 17, if I preach voluntarily, I have a reward.

But, says Paul, this is a sacred responsibility. And it is a very freeing thing, because he is now liberated from the need for applause. He's not tyrannized by the prospect of criticism.

He's got things in perspective. That's why back in chapter 4 we heard him saying, verse 3, I care very little if I'm judged by you or by any human court. Indeed, I do not even judge myself.

My conscience is clear, but that doesn't make me innocent. It is the Lord who judges me. He recognizes that when he's done his best, he's just an unworthy servant. That's what Jesus was teaching in Luke chapter 17 to his disciples so that they would understand, so that there was no reason for them or any who followed them to get a fat head about their task, especially as it relates to the gospel. Luke 17 verse 7, Suppose one of you had a servant plowing or looking after the sheep. What do you say to the servant when he comes in from the field, Come along now and sit down to eat? Would he not rather say, Prepare my supper, get yourself ready and wait on me while I eat and drink?

After that you may eat and drink. Would he thank the servant because he did what he was told to do? It's a rhetorical question.

Assuming the answer, no. So you also, when you have done everything you were told to do, should say, We are unworthy servants. We've only done our duty. That's an unusual perspective, isn't it? In a world that exists with applauds and plaudits?

In a world where men cannot get by without always knowing that somehow it was wonderful or it was good or it was great or it was…? There is a lesson here. He was under an obligation to preach. Because he was under obligation, he neither expected nor he desired a reward. And that brings us, finally, to his perspective on rewards. Paul had to preach, but he didn't have to preach without charge.

He's already laid down that his rights made it possible for him to do these things. But he says in verse 18, What then is my reward? Just this, that in preaching the gospel I may offer it free of charge, and so not make use of my rights in preaching it.

His highest pay is to serve without pay. Now, I have to tell you that that was the first part of this morning's message. It then goes from preaching to a lesson in adaptability, to the question of how do we reach people who live in a different cultural environment from our own? The second half of this message is quite good, you know?

But I don't want to begin and stop halfway. And so I would rather take the time to ask you to think out the implications of what's being said here—an unusual perspective in a world of rights. He's applied it in relationship to his own life. Why don't you apply it in relationship to yours?

Ask yourself how many of your hernias—hiatus hernias—and how many of your headaches and how many of our tummy ulcers and how many of our disappointments and how many of our self-pity parties are directly related to our constant, all-consuming longing to have our rights? And how different, from the example of Jesus and the illustration of Paul, an unusual perspective? May God make us increasingly unusual people. Let us pray together. Our God and our Father, as we come around your table, where we saw Christ, who had every right to have people wait upon him, wrap a towel around his waist and wash the feet of his apostles. Teach us, Lord, to live in the realm of sacred privileges and awesome responsibilities, and set us free from the tyranny of demanding our rights. Break our hearts afresh, we pray, and fill our lives with an understanding of your truth.

For Jesus' sake. Amen. You're listening to Alistair Begg on Truth for Life with a message he has titled, A Sacred Responsibility. I presume many of you share the Apostle Paul's passion for God being glorified and his love for the church. Here at Truth for Life, strengthening local churches is part of our mission. In fact, we often hear from pastors who tell us how much they value the Bible teaching and encouragement they receive from this program.

So we're excited to announce a new website feature that is specifically for pastors and churches. If you're a pastor or a church leader, let me encourage you to visit truthforlife.org slash churches. There, you will find free and low-cost Bible teaching materials specifically for pastors and for use in the local church. For example, right now you can download a free five-week Advent preaching guide that matches up with Alistair's upcoming Christmas devotional.

You can also sign up to receive quarterly updates so you don't miss out on new content, new study guides, and a whole lot more. Again, visit truthforlife.org slash churches. If you're not a pastor, keep in mind that every time you give a donation to Truth for Life, you are making free and at-cost resources available for pastors and churches. And if you're able to give a donation today, we want to invite you to request a book called Gospel People, a call for evangelical integrity. This book is a call for all of us as believers to be Christ-centered and gospel-centered in our personal discipleship, in our community involvement, and as members of Christ's church. Ask for the book Gospel People when you donate today. You can give a one-time gift at truthforlife.org slash donate, or you can arrange to set up an automatic monthly donation when you visit truthforlife.org slash truth partner. Thanks for studying with us this week. On Monday, we'll consider how we can extend beyond our personal comfort zones to share the good news of the gospel with others. The Bible teaching of Alistair Begg is furnished by Truth for Life, where the Learning is for Living.

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