Obstacles
- What refreshing and potentially helpful advice from Paul for our own age
which has long since been divided over non-essentials and differences of
biblical interpretation. Fundamentalists, evangelical conservatives,
evangelical liberals, and flaming liberals (!) all distance themselves over
differences of opinion. In a season when argument and berating too often
out-shouts charity and tolerance, Paul’s discussion about the weak and
strong is a welcomed one.
A Non-Sequitur? - This topic of Christian forbearance has a direct
trajectory from the earlier discussion that all you need is love. Apparently,
disputes threatened community love, thus Paul uses current cultural issues as
examples: food taboos and holy days vis-à-vis all days as being holy. [1]
NIB - At the heart of this appeal is love. Love here is not a
sentimental reaction . . . it is rooted in the conviction that the Messiah
died for the other person, too, and that, being oneself a beneficiary of his
self-giving love, one cannot deliberately put a stumblingblock in the way of
another beneficiary. The family identity of God’s people . . . meant that
taking care of one another, and thinking how to avoid making life difficult
for each other, was of prime importance. [2]
What kind of rules did
your family have for what you could or could not do on Sunday? What did you,
or do you, refuse to eat or drink?
- What “obstacles” divide the church (divide Christians) today?
- What gray areas of Christian practice / belief are stumbling blocks to
others?
- How does Paul address both people who hold conservative and liberal
interpretations of beliefs and practice?
- What should be our main guideline in determining what we do or say in
the presence of other Christians?
Raise the Problem-examples
of current divisiveness, include Emo Philip’s humorous sketch about the guy
who tries to talk a potential suicide victim down from the Brooklyn Bridge and
who, in the process gets into a discussion about denominational loyalty, and
who ends up pushing the guy off!
- Shift to the text-identify the deep-seated cultural issues that sought
to divide early Christian communities-Jewish food taboos and holy days.
- Note a distinction between adiaphora, “things indifferent,”
and possible non-negotiable values of Christian practice (e.g. Paul would
not consider the practice of living with the wife of one’s father,
indifferent-he would advocate to throw the guy out!)
- Shift to “all you need is love,” as the denouement for Christian
tolerance and forbearance. Envision for folks what such
love-made-specific-in-context might look like, and how shalom and unity
can be maintained as a result.
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[1] For an example of a similar kind of dispute over food, cf.
Galatians 2:11-14, at the center of which concerned centuries old Jewish taboos
regarding food.
[2] New Interpreter’s Bible X (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2002), page 750.
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