Proverbs 6:16-19; 1 Corinthians 3:1-4; Matthew 5:9-12.
This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on October 3, 2021.
This morning, we will look at the last thing on the list of things that God hates in Proverbs 6. It ends with describing a person who sows discord, or strife, among brothers.
This image of sowing begs the question, “How does one sow discord, strife, and conflict among brothers?” Or, we could also ask it this way. “Just what does a discord seed look like?”
Perhaps it is simply a question about another person in their absence, perhaps about their motives, or a remark about them. We might tell a story about them that we have heard, maybe even completely slandering them. It might be less aggressive by stirring up the irritations that others already have against the absent person. We really are only limited in this hated sin by our imagination, and people have honed this craft to an art.
Today, I want to look at the passage in 1 Corinthians 3 to bring out some things involved in this issue. Paul is speaking to the conflicts and strife that were going on in the church at Corinth. He puts his finger on their main problem: spiritual immaturity. Though a person cannot become any more saved than they are, we may or may not become spiritually mature.
Paul pictures spiritual maturity as receiving nourishment from God’s Word. Just like a newborn baby cannot digest complex foods and must drink milk, so a new Christian cannot immediately digest much of God’s Word. They need to feed on the simple milk of the Gospel until they have grown enough to take in the deeper things of God. The proper effect of God’s Word will be spiritual growth, as opposed to remaining carnal, or focused upon the flesh and its desires. Thus, spiritual maturity involves putting off carnal motivations, carnal thinking, and the actions that come with them, and putting on the mind of Christ taught within God’s Word. A spiritually mature person has motivations and thinking that come from God and His Word. They do the actions that have good spiritual impact upon themselves and others. Many in the Corinthian church were sowing seeds of conflict among the body of Christ, and Paul knew that this was breaking God’s heart, something that He hated.
Though spiritual immaturity is the main problem for the Corinthian church, there are other possible reasons why a person might sow discord. A person may simply not be saved. Jesus speaks in a parable (Matthew 13:24-40) about his enemy sowing “tares” in among the wheat. These would be people who are carnal because they are not born again by God’s Spirit. They have not been regenerated spiritually.
Of course, this is often the first accusation against others when you are carnal. It is easy to always believe the other person must not be saved when there is conflict. The spiritually mature person recognizes that even godly people can disagree on issues. However, we would be asleep at the wheel if we didn’t recognize that the external Church has many tares that have been sown into it by the enemy, and some of them are leaders.
Sometimes the sowing originates within the group as we have described, and sometimes it comes from outside of the group. Paul spoke of this in his farewell message to the elders of the Ephesian church.
“For I know this, that after my departure savage wolves will come in among you, not sparing the flock. Also, from among yourselves, men will rise up, speaking perverse things, to draw away the disciples after themselves. Therefore watch, and remember that for three years I did not cease to warn everyone night and day with tears.” -Acts 20:29-31 (NKJV)
The savage wolves can come in among you, but they can also be government leaders giving decrees that cause problems in the group. It is easy to miss the true source of conflict and only see the surface reasons. It is important for us to step into spiritual maturity by checking our own motives first. Line them up against God’s Word so that they can be purified. Then, look for any deeper causes for the conflict that are not readily obvious. Conflict always pushes us to rush our judgments, but this is not the will of God, nor the character of Christ.
In the end, we must learn to see through the schemes of the devil. Our true enemy is him and his evil spiritual forces. They are arrayed against the Church, and they use all manner of people: power hungry secular leaders, spiritually immature believers, con-artists, false prophets, etc. The devil has schemes and a mode of operating that become more evident as we spiritually mature. Whether whispering into the ear of Cain about his brother Abel, or catching Ahab’s eye with Jezebel, his strategies are generally the same, but his tactics are manifold.
So, what does God love? Let’s go to Matthew 5:9-12 for that.
Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the sons of God. Jesus, the Unique Son of God, came to earth on a peace mission, and so we are sent forth as his ambassadors also offering peace. We are to speak peace from God to those we meet. It is when we have peace with God that peace with one another is possible. Do not fool yourself. True peace is not possible among those who reject God and His Anointed One, Jesus.
There is a kind of anti-peace that is promoted by the antichrist system of this world. The anti-peace is not a peace at all, but it can result in a cessation of some strife. The Pax Romana (peace of Rome) protected many nations from invasion by others. However, they were always under the strife of Roman rule, and were conquered by them in the first place. If this is your definition of peace, then you can keep it.
True peace is built upon the foundation of a healthy fear of God and His judgment. It is not a fear that God will be capricious, but that God will not be mocked or fooled. He is not swayed by our words to Him. He judges in truth, reality. Anti-peace is built upon the foundation of the fear of man, and the powers of this earth.
Jesus said that if you stand for true peace with Him, then the world will hate you. The world offers a false gospel that delivers a false peace. Look around you. You see groups trying to build Utopia without God, without truth. Paul said in 1 Thessalonians 5:3, “When they say, ‘Peace and safety!’ then sudden destruction comes upon them, as labor pains upon a pregnant woman. And they shall not escape. But you, brethren, are not in darkness, so that this Day should overtake you as a thief!”
When Jesus says that we shall be called “sons of God,” he leaves off just who will call us sons of God. In fact, the next two verses talk about persecution. Who is the “they” who will revile and persecute the peacemakers? It is the world and all those who are one spirit with the false peace. Christians are makers of true peace, and thus God is not ashamed to call them His sons, but the world that loves false peace uses worse epithets for us. This persecution will come from outside of the Church and from within it. It has always been so. The early Jewish believers in Jesus the Messiah were persecuted by other Jews who claimed to love God. In the Middle Ages of Europe, Christians were often persecuted by other Christians who had power and authority, both religious and secular.
Don’t kid yourself. A new morality is being raised up even today that is not of God. Slowly, but surely, many denominations and Christians are moving from God’s Truth, to the anti-truth. May God help us not to be caught up in our conflicts with one another and lose sight of the true enemy and his tricks. The enemy is even now coming after believers that cling to the old ways of Jesus. The heat is being turned up.
Ultimately, Jesus promises a reward for those who promote true peace and pay the price for it in persecution. Not only will they be called the sons of God by him, but a day of manifesting just who are the sons of God is coming. We will share in the glory of Christ as he returns to earth in order to set up the kingdom that God has given him.
Now, your reward comes from the one you are serving. If we serve ourselves, and thus the world, we will receive the world’s rewards. The world will call us peacemakers and sons of God, but it will all be a lie. For those who fear God and work for true peace, God has a reward that outweighs any difficulties, tears, and trials on this earth.
Yes, in some ways, we are already sons of God who are participating in his kingdom. However, the terminology is “reward.” Rewards are handed out after a contest, or project. Jesus is pointing us to a point after the Resurrection in which we will stand beside him in his kingdom, a true utopia that will last for 1,000 years. The world that has rejected God’s peace offer sees His peace emissaries as those who are obstructing the peace that they envision. Christian, you must get used to being labeled by this world the opposite of what you truly are. No, it is not fair, but it is part of the path ahead of us. We can ignore their aspersions against us not in a sinful obstinacy, but in a steadfast, faithful determination to please our Lord Jesus!