Body and
Spirit
based on 1 Corinthians 12:12-31
by Richard Gehring
The human body is an amazingly complex and
intricately designed instrument. If you stop and
think about what all our bodies are made up of, it is truly mind-boggling. For
example, an adult person has somewhere around 60,000 miles of blood vessels
running around inside him or her. And amongst that vast web of veins and
arteries and capillaries, there about 15 million blood cells being produced and
destroyed every single second.
And that's just the beginning. Did you know
you've got some 640 muscles in your body? And they account for about half of
your weight. They're all bundled together in groups as large as 200 in your
buttocks and as small as five in each eyelid—five tiny muscles that keep you
blinking at a rate of 17,000 times a day or 4.2 million times every year. It's
amazing what all is going with your body that you never have to think about.
And then there's your skin. The average adult
is covered with twenty square feet of skin. If it were all stretched out flat,
it would be enough to blanket a queen-size bed. It's constantly renewing
itself, too. Every minute you shed between thirty and forty thousand dead skin
cells. In fact, seventy percent of the dust in your house is your old skin.
Over an average lifetime, a person loses forty pounds of skin—and yet most of us
still seem to be gaining weight. Perhaps it has something to do with the fact
that we still have enough fat in our bodies to produce seven bars of soap.
With all the intricacies of the human body,
however, a strikingly small change can have drastic results. For example, a
child's body only has about three grams of iron in it—significantly less than
you'd find in even a very small nail. Yet if the child doesn't get enough iron,
it can cause improper brain development. On the other hand, too much iron can
be highly toxic. As few as five or six of mom's iron pills can be fatal for a
kid. Indeed, 3500 children under the age of six are poisoned each year by
taking too much iron. It's truly amazing how intricate and delicate the human
body is.
Now, none of this information would have been
known to anyone living a couple thousand years ago. But the Apostle Paul in our
New Testament passage for today shows that he still knows a thing or two about
the body as he writes about the value of eyes and ears, hands and feet. Of
course, his main interest lies not in the human body but in the Body of Christ.
Paul addresses his
remarks to the church in the Greek city of Corinth—a church that had all kinds
of problems and disagreements. There was a controversy over what kind of role
women should be allowed to play in the church. There was a large gap between
the rich and the poor. There was tension and conflict between people of
different ethnic backgrounds. In other words, it wasn't too much different than
a lot of churches today. Perhaps as we prepare to gather for our annual meeting
this afternoon, we would do well to take a fresh look at what Paul had to say to
the Corinthians and see what we can learn about creating communities of faith
and compassion in our own time.
The image that
Paul uses of the church as a body is now a familiar one to many of us.
It may have become so familiar, in fact,
that we think we understand it and may miss some of the deeper connotations of
the metaphor. Actually, before Paul talks about the church as a body, he first
spends some time discussing the importance of the Spirit. The first 11 verses
of the chapter leading up to our passage today are about the gifts that are
given by the Spirit.
Now, it is helpful
to recognize that in Greek, the language that Paul was writing in, the word for
"spirit" is the same as the word for "breath." That's significant in
understanding what all Paul is saying here. Today we have technology that is
able to peer deep inside the body to see exactly how everything is functioning.
We can do EEG's to measure brain activity. We have EKG's to measure the beating
of the heart. We use X-rays and CT scans to look at all sorts of internal
bodily functions. We've even made a distinction between “clinical death” when
someone is unable to breathe or maintain a heartbeat on their own and “brain
death” when there is complete and irreversible cessation of brain activity. But
back in Paul's time, the measure of whether or not someone was alive was fairly
simply. You just checked to see whether or not they were breathing. The breath
or spirit is what was seen as giving a body life. And it's absence, therefore,
meant death.
That
understanding, I think, is implicit in Paul's analogy of the church as the body
of Christ. This body of the church must have the Holy Spirit in order to be
alive. Without this Spirit, the Breath of God, the body of Christ is dead.
And just as the
breath of life enlivens various parts of the body in different ways, so also the
Spirit of God gives life to the various parts of Christ's body in different
ways, too.
Some are like eyes, with the gift to perceive the vision that God has set
forth. Others are ears, particularly gifted in listening to the needs of
others. Some are feet, constantly propelling the body forward. While others
are hands, doing the work that so desperately needs to be done. The point is
that each ope is a part of the same body and each one is given life by the same
Holy Spirit. Without that Spirit, however, the parts cannot function together
and the body will eventually die.
So perhaps we we
would do better to spend less of our energy on looking and listening and walking
and working, and concentrate more on breathing. Most of the time, of course, we
don't really have to think about breathing. It just happens naturally. But
when our bodies have colds or allergies or asthma, then we realize just how
important it is that we continue breathing, and also how hard that can be. Or
if we exert ourselves by running faster or further than we are used to, we soon
find ourselves gasping for breath, especially if we're a little out of shape.
The same is true
for the Body of Christ, the church, when we're not exactly in top condition. We
could stand to be much more intentional about our breathing. The church needs
to keep itself focused on the Spirit that gives us life, and to allow that
Spirit to infuse every part of the body of Christ. For if that Spirit is not
with us, then none of the parts of the body are able to do what they are meant
to do.
It can be
difficult to recognize that the Spirit is with another part of the body when
that part's function is so different from our own. That's exactly what's
happening in Corinth as Paul writes to them. As he says in verse 21, "The eye
cannot say to the hand, `I don't need you!' And the head cannot say to the feet,
`I don't need you!'"
But just as that
occurred in Corinth in the first century, so it happens all the time in North
America in the twenty-first century. Granted, some of the issues are
different. We no longer argue much about circumcision or about eating meat
offered to idols. Instead we debate issues like homosexuality and abortion.
Then again, as I noted earlier, some of the issues do remain the same. We as
the church across the United States still have not reached consensus on
questions such as the role of women in church leadership. And we still struggle
with including the poor and ethnic minorities in an institution that is largely
dominated white, middle class leaders.
But whether the
issues themselves are the same or different, the division within the body plays
itself out in a very similar way: people divide into groups, create labels, and
pit themselves against those who don't fit their ideas. Back in Paul's time it
was the Jews versus the Greeks and slave versus free. Today, we have the
fundamentalists versus the feminists, the liberationists versus the literalists,
the premillenialists versus the postmodernists and so on.
Paul, however,
counsels the people in these various factions to view one another not as
opponents, but as members of the same body with different gifts and
functions—gifts that are complementary rather than contradictory. For all of
them are given by the same Spirit. All of them are empowered by the same
Spirit.
And that counsel is still good advice to the church today.
Just think what
the church in our country could be like if instead of looking for how we
disagree, everyone would first see where we agree; if instead of pushing our own
agendas and making sure others use the words we want them to, everyone would
first listen for those things we hold in common; if instead of aligning
ourselves with one group or another, everyone would first affirm the unity we
all have as Christians and members of the Body of Christ.
We live in such a
deeply fractured society. Red states vs. blue states. Baby-boomers vs. Gen-Xers.
Jocks vs. Geeks. We have all sorts of labels and stereotypes that we use to
categorize people and put them into boxes so that we can separate them and
sequester ourselves away from those who don't fit into the boxes we've built for
ourselves. And too often we bring that same spirit of factionalism to the
church. Praise bands vs. pipe organs. Charismatic vs. contemplative.
Mega-church worship centers vs. Gothic sanctuaries. Community Bible Fellowship
vs. First Insert-name-of-your-denomination-here Church.
But Paul makes it
clear that it shouldn't be that way. The church is a single, unified body.
The church should be a place where all of
our divisions are left behind. It should be a place where political affiliation
and income bracket and educational level simply don't matter. It should be a
place where the bonds of unity through the Holy Spirit take precedence over
divisions of race or age or creed. The goal of the church is not to make
everyone look the same and do the same things and think the same ways. Rather
the church is a place where all of our different gifts can be affirmed and used
for the glory of God through the Body of Christ.
It is that sort of
a community to which Paul invites his readers—a community in which they give up
their own agendas and come seeking God's agenda for everyone. As members of the
same
body, but with different gifts
all given by the same Spirit, they must find ways of working together. They
must struggle to affirm each other's gifts, as different as they may be.
There is also a
flip side to this issue. On the one hand, recognizing the value of every part
of the body means finding ways to appreciate and affirm those who are very
different from us. On the other hand, it means that our gifts, too, are
important and must be used in order to make for a healthy body. Some of us may
be able to identify with the eye in verse 21 who tells the hand, "I have no need
of you." But others of us are more like the ear of verse 16 who says, "Because
I am not an eye, I do not
belong to the body."
Perhaps it is
because the eyes of the world have been telling us for so long that we are not
important, but sooner or later we begin to believe them. We think that our
gifts are not as valuable as others. We see ourselves as some insignificant
part of the body like a little finger or a big toe.
Of course, anyone
who has injured or lost such an appendage can attest to the fact that such body
parts, while often overlooked, are not insignificant. Any part—no matter how
insignificant we might think it is—causes distress to the whole body when it
fails to function as it was meant to function.
Likewise, Paul
says there is no such thing as an insignificant part of the body of Christ.
Every body part, no matter how small or how hidden, is important. In fact, he
goes even further than that. He says, starting in verse 22, "those parts of the
body that seem to be weaker are indispensable, and the parts that we think are
less honorable we treat with special honor. And the parts that are unpresentable
are treated with special modesty,while our presentable parts need no special
treatment."
In other words, it
is precisely those parts of the body that we are least interested in flaunting
that are among the most important in the proper functioning of the whole body.
And the same is true of the church, the body of Christ
Many of those who
are least interested in drawing attention to themselves are precisely the ones
whose gifts are most needed in the work of the church. Those of us who fall
into that category need to be encouraged to share our gifts. For the gifts we
possess have been given to us by the Holy Spirit. And if we refuse to share
them, then we are depriving the body of Christ of some crucial organs. Often
times, those who refrain from engaging in certain ways think that they are
being true to Christ's call to humility. But if we deny others the benefit of
our gifts, we are not being humble. We are being selfish. We are depriving the
body of Christ of the full measure of the Spirit that gives it life.
That was a
challenge for the church in the first century. And it continues to be a
challenge for us today. But meeting that challenge is greatly rewarding. For
it means that we are able to find the sense of belonging and connection that we
so desperately seek. It means that we become a part of a true community—a
community that represents the broad spectrum of humanity rather than merely a
self-selecting interest group made of people who think the same and look the
same and shop in the same stores.
Indeed, perhaps
the biggest challenge we face is not to work harder, but rather to do less. You
see, the church is not primarily a human institution. It is rather a gift from
God. And while we might be tempted from time to time to return the gift or
exchange it for something that better fits our taste, the better course of
action is simple to accept the gift for what it is—a loving and faithful
expression of God's Rule in this world. And perhaps the real challenge we need
to face is not to create unity where there is disunity, but to recognize the
unity we have by virtue God's Spirit dwelling with us and fashioning us into the
Body of Christ.
For the hard truth
is that the Body of Christ is not something we create. Nor do we control it.
With our own bodies, there are certain things we can and should do to keep them
healthy—exercise, a good diet and so on. But the fact remains that most of what
goes on in our bodies is something that we have little or no control over. Our
heart keep beating. Our neurons keep firing. Our eyes keep blinking. We don't
even have to think about it. We just need to keep breathing. The same is true
with the Body of Christ. We just need to keep breathing, taking in the
life-giving and life-sustaining presence of God's Spirit and exhaling our own
used-up spirits that no longer have any power.
We are all a part
of the same intricately designed and unfathomably complex body, all of which is
empowered by the same Spirit. And being part of that body means that we
recognize and give thanks for the gifts that others bring, no matter how
different they may be from our own gifts or how difficult it may be for us to
comprehend how they even work.
Being part of the body also means that we each
must share whatever gifts we have. We cannot selfishly hide our talents and use
them for our own purposes. We must each recognize that we do indeed have gifts
and that those gifts are valuable enough for us to use and share with others.
Withholding our gifts makes the Body of Christ less healthy and less functional
than it could be.
To participate in
the church is to recognize one's participation within a community of compassion,
to affirm one's role as a part of the Body of Christ. For, as the apostle Paul
himself
wrote over 19 centuries ago,
"We were all baptized by one Spirit into one body . . . and we were all given
the one Spirit to drink."(v. 13)
Let us therefore drink deeply of that Spirit and
so be empowered to be the community of compassion which Christ as the head of
the body has called us to be.