The Wisdom of Becoming a Fool

The Wisdom of Becoming a Fool

The Wisdom of Becoming a Fool

(1 Corinthians 3:18-23)

Series: Chaos & Correction (1 Corinthians)

 Rev. Todd A. Linn, PhD

Henderson’s First Baptist Church, Henderson

• Take your Bibles and join me in 1 Corinthians, chapter 3 (page 769; YouVersion).

 

Our series of messages through 1 Corinthians is entitled, “Chaos & Correction.” There was chaos in the church at Corinth, and Paul brings correction to the church by way of

the Word of God. He writes this letter to correct the chaos and the first area Paul addresses is the dissension and division occurring in the church. Many of the church

members divided among themselves into various cliques and groups. They were not groups uniting together in a common purpose, but rather groups that had formed from

prideful, self-righteous behavior. Some said they were followers of Paul, some of Apollos, some of Cephas, and still others of Christ. And the idea was like, Our group is

more spiritual than your group!

 

So Paul addresses this problem of arrogance by focusing upon the cross of Christ. He talks to the Corinthians about the difference between living for the world and living for Christ. Christians are to think differently, act differently, live differently than non-Christians. We would expect unbelievers to act in these ways, prideful self-centered,

self-righteous behavior—but not Christians.

 

When we were last together we studied Paul’s metaphor in

verses 11 and following, where he describes the church

body as a temple. And he writes about how each

Christian builds this temple with either good materials or

bad materials. If we build with good materials like gold,

silver, and precious stones, then we will enjoy a reward in

heaven on the Day of Judgment. If, however, we serve

the church using bad materials like wood, hay, and straw,

then our good works will burn up on the Day of Judgment.

 

Given the context, good materials are things like the right

attitude, the right motivation, godly Christian behavior.

Bad materials are things like self-centeredness, self-righteousness,

proud, divisive behavior. Christians can

serve the church with the right attitude and motivation or

the wrong attitude and motivation. So Paul calls for the

church members at Corinth to correct their prideful hearts

by no longer acting as the world acts, the world being

those who are not followers of Christ.

 

So just prior to our passage this morning Paul reminds the

Christians that collectively they are a church body in whom

dwells God Himself, by way of the Holy Spirit. He says,

You all are a temple, you all have the Holy Spirit within

you.

 

Now he continues in verse 18 by again contrasting worldly

behavior with Christian behavior. The world accuses

Christians of being fools. The world believes they are

 

wise. And Paul reminds the church at Corinth that it is

Christians who are actually wise and non-Christians who

are actually fools. Listen for this now as we read verses

18 and following.

 

• Please stand in honor of the reading of God’s Word.

 

18 Let no one deceive himself. If anyone among you

seems to be wise in this age, let him become a fool

that he may become wise. 

19 For the wisdom of this world is foolishness with

God. For it is written, He catches the wise in their

own craftiness; 

20 and again, The Lord knows the thoughts of the

wise, that they are futile. 21 Therefore let no one

boast in men. For all things are yours: 

22 whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas, or the world or

life or death, or things present or things to come—all

are yours. 

23 And you are Christ’s, and Christ is God’s.

 

• Pray.

 

Introduction:

 

I wondered what it would be like if we inserted our own

names into 1 Corinthians and our church here at

Henderson’s First Baptist divided up into prideful, self-centered

groups. I am of Brother Todd, I am of Rich,

 

or, I am of Matt. I stand with Alan, I’m with Ms. Ellie,

or, I’m with Ken, or Jim. Or some of us said, I am of

this class or, I am of that class. I’m a follower of this

deacon or that teacher. And the idea is the same: We

are more spiritual than you because we identify with this

person or that person.

 

That was the problem at Corinth and it could become a

problem here. Rather than uniting together as one

church, the people at Corinth had divided into various

prideful groups and factions. And Paul seeks here to

correct that prideful and arrogant behavior by reminding

Christians that they don’t belong to the leader who

baptized them or the one whose teaching they loved the

most, rather Christians belong to God. So our boast is

not to be in human leaders, but our boast is to be in God.

 

To boast in human leaders is to act foolishly. Foolish,

spiritual arrogance is the very root of divisiveness in the

church. So Paul reminds us that Christians are to act

wisely and Christians define wisdom differently than the

world defines wisdom.

 

So in these last six verses Paul gives us the benefits of

becoming a fool in the eyes of the world. He answers

that question, Why be a fool in the eyes of the world?

Two main reasons, number one:

 

1) You will have True Wisdom (18-20)

 

 

The world defines wisdom largely by knowledge. That is,

the more you know the wiser you are. The more science

you know, the more arts and literature you know, the more

mathematics you know, the wiser you are.

 

By the way, speaking of math, awhile back I tweeted this

statement: “It has happened again: another full and

fulfilling day without once using algebra.”

 

That’s a statement that resonates with anyone other than

a lover of mathematics! But you know, the world defines

wisdom by the knowledge of disciplines such as math,

English, history, current events, and so forth.

Now I believe in all of those things—even math! I think

there is biblical support for studying hard and learning as

many facts as one can about all things, but wisdom is not

really defined by the knowledge of facts and information.

Wisdom is defined differently.

 

Have you heard this poem? It’s by my favorite author,

Anonymous. It gets a little closer to the right definition of

wisdom. Listen to this:

 

He who knows not and knows not that he knows not, He is

a fool—avoid him.

He who knows not and knows he knows not, He is simple

—teach him;

 

He who knows and knows that he knows, He is wise—

follow him.

 

So this gets us a little closer to the difference between true

wisdom and folly. But years ago I learned a definition of

wisdom I have always liked. It goes like this: Wisdom is

the ability to see things from God’s perspective. You may

want to write that down: Wisdom is the ability to see

things from God’s perspective.

 

And the point is: often what the world considers wisdom is

at odds with what God considers wisdom. Rather than

seeing things through the eyes of the world, try to see

things through the eyes of God. As God says through the

Prophet Isaiah, My thoughts are not your thoughts, nor

are your ways My ways (Isaiah 55:8). Wisdom is the

ability to see things from God’s perspective.

 

Now look at verse 18:

 

18 Let no one deceive himself (so it’s possible for us to

think ourselves wise when we’re really fools. Let no one

deceive himself). If anyone among you seems to be

wise in this age, let him become a fool that he may

become wise.

 

That’s just a great way to put this, isn’t it?! If you are

defining wisdom as simply the knowledge of facts and

information, then you’re seeing things only through the

 

eyes of the world. And if you’re defining wisdom as the

more facts you know, the wiser you become—Paul says,

No, time out. You are deceiving yourself. Furthermore,

you need to become a fool so that you may become wise.

 

That is, you need to become what the world considers

foolish in order to become truly wise. So we’re back to 1

Corinthians 1:18:For the message of the cross is

foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are

being saved it is the power of God.

 

True wisdom is found in Christ. True wisdom is found in

the Gospel. True wisdom is found in Christianity. Verse

19:

 

19 For the wisdom of this world is foolishness with

God. For it is written, He catches the wise in their

own craftiness (that’s a reference from the Old Testament

book of Job; Job 5:13); verse 20:

 

20 and again, The Lord knows the thoughts of the

wise, that they are futile (that’s from Psalm 94:11).

 

So here again now in 1 Corinthians, Paul is contrasting the

so-called wisdom of the world with the so-called

foolishness of Christianity. And he’s like, Even by those

standards, know that ‘the foolishness of God is wiser than

men (1 Corinthians 1:25).’

 

So actually it is Christian living that is wise and non-

Christian living that is foolishness. And think about it, if in

fact we amass all matter of worldly knowledge, we can

converse fluently in the arts and sciences, we know all the

great philosophers, we’ve read all the great books, we can

identify every geographical location on a world map, we

can locate every single constellation in the night sky, we

have memorized the entire periodic table of elements, but

we don’t have Christ. What are we?

 

We are smart, we are educated, and these are all good

things. We ought to aspire to be the smartest student in

our class, the most knowledgeable employee or worker in

our field—but without Christ we are lost. And if somehow

we have gotten the idea that it is through all of our smarts

that we are truly wise, then sadly we are truly fools.

 

So be smart, work hard, study, grow, learn—but don’t

confuse the knowledge of worldly disciplines with wisdom.

Wisdom is living for Christ, following Christ, carrying the

cross of Christ on your shoulders every day. That is true

wisdom.

 

Don’t forget that Christian husband. You can work all day

to support your family and make a wheel barrel full of

money each week, but if you’re not leading your family to

follow Christ, you’re living a fool’s life.

 

Don’t forget that Christian wife and single mom. You can

shuttle your children to every soccer game and band

competition each week but if you don’t teach them how to

live for Jesus, you are modeling for them a fool’s life.

 

Young people, don’t live for the passing pleasures of sin.

Live for Christ, live a wise life, follow Jesus Christ and live

for Him.

 

Be a so-called fool in the eyes of the world and you’ll be

wise in the eyes of God. Remember that if the world calls

your Christian faith foolish, remember that you have true

wisdom. Number two, if you’re a fool in the eyes of the

world, not only will you have true wisdom, but secondly:

 

2) You will have True Wealth (21-23)

 

21 Therefore let no one boast in men. For all things

are yours:

 

Paul is correcting that boastful behavior that the Christians

at Corinth had unfortunately adopted. Remember, they

had divided into different cliques and factions, and groups,

splitting into one group over here and another group over

there. Some were saying, I follow Paul, and another, I

follow Apollos, and still another, I follow Cephas.

 

Paul says in verse 21, Let no one boast in men. That is,

You don’t belong to these men. You don’t belong to Paul,

 

to Apollos, to Cephas. You don’t belong to these mere

human leaders, you belong to God! That’s how he

concludes this chapter, verse 23, And you are Christ’s,

and Christ is God’s.

 

So Christians should take care not to place human leaders

before God. Paul had said earlier in this chapter that he

himself was nothing, Paul is nothing, Apollos is nothing.

He says, Neither he who plants nor he who waters is

anything (1 Corinthians 3:7). So don’t boast in human

leaders, boast only in God (1 Corinthians 1:31).

 

Then Paul turns this whole thing around in a way we may

not expect. He says, You were thinking you belonged to

Paul, or Apollos, or Cephas, but actually they belong to

you. He says at the end of verse 21, For all things are

yours (verse 22 now):

 

22 whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas, or the world or

life or death, or things present or things to come—all

are yours.

 

Wow! All things belong to the Christian. How is that

possible? Verse 23:

 

23 And you are Christ’s, and Christ is God’s.

 

That is, because you are in Christ, you have everything.

So follow Paul’s logic here. He argues, It’s not like you

 

Corinthians were thinking with this business of, I am of

Paul, or, I am of Apollos, or I am of Cephas, (1

Corinthians 1:12; 1 Corinthians 3:4). He’s like, You all

don’t belong to the apostles; the apostles belong to you

all! The apostles are servants of the church, ministers to

the church body.

 

You don’t belong to these leaders. They weren’t crucified

for you. They didn’t die on a cross for your sins. You

weren’t baptized into their name. They were merely your

servants. You don’t belong to them, they belong to the

church. They didn’t die for you, Jesus died for you. Again,

verse 23:

 

23 And you are Christ’s, and Christ is God’s.

 

That is, just as Christ obeyed the Father, lived for the

Father, submitted to the Father, so we are Christ’s. We

obey Christ, live for Christ, submit to Christ.

 

But again, note the Christian’s true wealth. Trace it again

from verse 21. Don’t boast in mere men, boast in God.

Why? Verse 21, because all things are yours, verse 22:

whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas—you don’t belong to

them, they belong to you. They are merely human

servants of the church. They belong to you along with

other things that make you truly wealthy. What other

things? Verse 22 continuing:

 

 

…the world…life…death…things present or things to

come—all are yours.

 

Christians do not belong to the world or to life as though

this life were all there is. Christians do not belong to death

as though death were the end of everything for the

Christian. No, these things belong to the Christian. Even

things present and things to come. These things all

belong to the Christian. Wow, such spiritual wealth!!

 

The non-Christian belongs to the world and lives for this

world only. The non-Christian is shackled by life in this

world, can’t see beyond the rigors and disciplines of this

world only. The non-Christian is held in bondage to death.

The non-Christian cannot see beyond things present and

has no hope for things to come. Don’t miss this in verse

22!!

 

But the Christian—the so-called fool in the eyes of the

world—the Christian has true wealth.

 

Because the Christian, verse 23, belongs to Christ. Paul

says, You are Christ’s! The Christian enjoys all things; all

things are his—the world, life, death, things present and

things to come.

 

To quote the song we often sing:

 

No guilt in life, no fear in death

This is the power of Christ in me

From life’s first cry to final breath

Jesus commands my destiny

 

Do you see the benefits of being a so-called fool for

Christ? Remember these things when the world beats you

up this week! Remember these things when people

persecute you or make fun of your Christian convictions.

Why be a fool in the eyes of the world? Because fools for

Christ have:

 

1) True Wisdom

2) True Wealth

 

• Stand for prayer.

 

COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER: The text contained in this sermon is solely owned by its author. The reproduction, or distribution of this message, or any portion of it, should include the author’s name. The author intends to provide free resources in order to inspire believers and to assist preachers and teachers in Kingdom work.