|
By Bernie Gillespie
8
Feb.
18, 1991. All Rights Reserved
|
1
Corinthians 2:6-16
6 But we speak
wisdom among the mature, though not a wisdom of this age, nor of the
rulers of this age who are brought to nothing.
7 But we speak
God's wisdom as a mystery, which has been hidden, which God foreordained
from eternity for our glory.
8 Which none of
the rulers of this age understood; for if they had known they would not
have crucified the Lord of glory,
9 But as it is
written:
"Things
which no eye has seen, nor ear heard,
Nor
conceived in the heart of man,
How much
God has prepared for those who love Him."
10 But1 God has
revealed these things to us through the Spirit; for the Spirit searches
all things, even the depths of God.
11 For what man
knows the things of a man, except the spirit of a man that is within
him? So also, no one comprehends the things of God, except the Spirit of
God.
12 Now we have
not received the spirit of the world, but the Spirit of God, so that we
may know the things freely given to us by God.
13 Which things
we also speak, not in words taught of human wisdom, but in words taught
by the Spirit, interpreting spiritual things with spiritual things.
14 But a
natural man receives not the things of the Spirit of God2; for they are
foolishness to him, and he cannot know [them], because they are
spiritually discerned.
15 But, on the
one hand, the spiritual man judges all things3, while on the other, he is
judged by no one.
16 For who has
known the mind of the Lord, who will instruct him? But we have the mind
of Christ. |
INTRODUCTION
The
relationship between the Spirit and the Word is crucial as we approach the
nature and meaning of Scripture. Even more today, when are living in a
post-authoritarian age and confidence in the Bible's ability to communicate
divine truth is in crisis. A very important part of the Christian faith is
belief in the ability of God to reveal himself and so mediate this revelation
that it communicates His will. This being so, it is necessary at all points,
that God's Word and God's Spirit are viewed inseparable.
This
does not mean identical. It means that Scripture can not be Sacred Scripture
without the working of the Holy Spirit, and that we cannot have sufficient
knowledge of the Holy Spirit without Scripture. The Scriptures and the Holy
Spirit relate in several important ways. "Some of the more significant
dimensions of the Spirit's work vis-a-vis Scripture include inspiration,
illumination, application (conviction), and the testimonium.4
First, inspiration
is the work of the Spirit in creating and preserving the revelation of the Word
from God. Second, is the "internal testimony of the Holy Spirit,"
which is the work of the Spirit to confirm the truthfulness or trustworthiness
of Scripture to the believer. But, just as important, is the work of the Spirit
to illumine the heart and mind of the believer. This work effectively assists
the reader in understanding and properly interpreting the meaning of Scripture.
The idea
of the Illumination of Scripture is usually linked with the 1 Corinthians
2:7-16. We will now look at this passage to obtain a clearer view of the
doctrine of Illumination as expressed in Scripture.
THE
ILLUMINATION OF THE SPIRIT
Briefly,
we must understand some background to Paul's writing of 1 Corinthians. Corinth
was a cosmopolitan, Greek, sea-port city. It was an ancient "New York
City." With respect to our passage, Corinth was highly inculcated with a
general respect for Greek philosophical thought. It was also influenced by
"hero worship" (esp. because of Isthmian games). Both elements play a
part in understanding the reason for what Paul wrote to the Corinthian church.
The
Corinthians were divided in their affections for different leaders. Paul
reproves them for lifting up men rather than Christ (some possible influence of
hero worship). He reminds them that he did not preach to them with "eloquent
wisdom" that "the cross of Christ might not be emptied of its
power" (1:17, NRSV). He stated their problem was they "desired
wisdom" and, therefore, saw the cross of Christ as "foolishness"
(1:22,23).
Rather
than assume Paul was merely fighting Gnosticism, "it seems wiser to assume that
Paul is trying to combat the charge of irrationality in the Gospel by an appeal
to the revealed nature of its 'wisdom,' foolish though it may appear to
Gentiles trained in philosophy."5 Because of their hubris in trusting in
"human" wisdom, he told them,
I
did not come proclaiming the mystery of God to you in lofty words or wisdom.
For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and him
crucified. (2:1f NRSV)
Why?
"So that your faith might rest not on human wisdom but on the power of
God" (2:5).
But, in
verse six he does not reject all wisdom. He says that among the mature (τέλειoι)6
he speaks wisdom. However, it is neither a wisdom of this age nor of the rulers
of this age. He contrasts "God's wisdom as a mystery," with the
accumulated human wisdom outside God. There is a wisdom far superior to the
wisdom of man. Man's own raw wisdom cannot elevate him to it (in contrast with
much Greek philosophy).
He even
admits that the "rulers of this age"7 would not have crucified
Jesus if they had understood the wisdom from God (2:8). This wisdom or plan of
God, was veiled in the OT (2:9 a loose reference to Is. 64:4). But now, since
the NT has come through Christ, "these things God has revealed to us
through the Spirit" (2:10). It is the Spirit that reveals (apolaklupto)8
this hidden wisdom of God to us.
Man must
be aided by the Holy Spirit to understand the wisdom of God. The Spirit searches
(present tense) everything - "fathoms everything"9 - (extent),
even the "depths of God" (depth). By illustration, Paul
explains that no human can understand human wisdom unless a human spirit
searches it out. It must be explained to him by another human. Just so, no one
can search out God's wisdom, but God. It must be explained to a human by the
Spirit of God (2:11).
But the
believer can understand the wisdom that comes from God because "we have
received the Spirit that is from God" (2:12). This enables those
convinced by the Spirit to trust in God to understand what God has done for
them.
The
things that Paul speaks to them - the Cross and the Gospel - are not inspired by
human genius, but are "taught by the Spirit" (2:13). This is
not an esoteric or mystical communication. It simply means Paul did not generate
what he was preaching to them out of his own human wisdom. God's Spirit actively
communicated to him the understanding of what God had done through Jesus Christ.
The significance of what Jesus did could only be explained by the One to whom it
meant the most, i.e. God.
The
Spirit enables "spiritual things" (truths) to be "interpreted"
in "spiritual words" (language).10 But, those who are "unspiritual"
or "natural"11 are unbelievers who have not accepted the
enlightenment of the Holy Spirit that teaches them the wisdom of God. Because
they refused the illumination of the Spirit, the wisdom of God, through human
wisdom, appears foolish. Why? Because the wisdom of God is "spiritually
discerned " - anakrinw (2:14).This has
reference to the ability to make intelligent judgments or assessments.
By the
illumination of the Spirit the believer is able to "judge"
intelligently all things of the Spirit (2:15). Also, they are not subject or
dependent upon those with human wisdom to make their intelligent judgments.
This is
further brought out by Paul's quotation of Is. 40:13 from the LXX. This OT
passage questions the ability of the natural man to understand the "mind"
or wisdom of God. But, now, the Christian, by the Holy Spirit has "the
mind of Christ."(2:16) This means that the Spirit is the mind of Christ
giving us understanding of the wisdom of God. This wisdom is communicated to us
by the Apostles through the words (2:13) that the Holy Spirit teaches.
APPLICATION
The
important thing to realize from this passage is not how the Spirit of God
illumines our hearts and minds to understand Scripture. What is important is,
that, 1) only through the Holy Spirit can our minds be illumined. 2) It is
effective in doing so. 3) We cannot expect to understand the revelation of God
Incarnate, nor the Word in scripted by purely human wisdom. 4) God, Who breathed
it out also must illumine it. 5) As believers we are given the Spirit to aid our
understanding. 6) Without it we cannot "know the mind of the Lord"
or "conceive what God has prepared for those who love Him." By
it we can "understand the gifts bestowed upon us by God." 7) By
the illumination of the Spirit we have the "mind of Christ."
ENDNOTES
-
Metzger
feels that "loose use of the connective
*X...is entirely in Paul's manner, where
(VD
...has the appearance of being an improvement introduced by copyists.
"Bruce M. Metzger, A Textual Commentary on the Greek New Testament,
(United Bible Societies, 1971), p. 546.
-
Though
shorter reading strongly possible, the weight, age, and diversity of
external evidence supporting J@Ø
2,@Ø
compels inclusion into the text. Ibid., p. 547.
-
"On
the strength of p46 A C D* al the
J,
but the men
was a scribal addition to smooth the text." Ibid., p. 547f.
-
R.C.
Sproul, "The Internal Testimony of the Holy Spirit," Inerrancy,
Norman L. Geisler, ed., (Grand Rapids: Zondervan pub. House, 1979), p. 337.
-
Howard
Clark Kee, Franklin W. Young, & Karlfried Froehlich, Understanding
the New Testament, (New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1965), p. 184f.
-
"The
term JX8,4@4
...can possibly be taken to mean 'adults' in comparison with the
<ZB4@4
¦<
OD4FJè
(nepioi en Christo, 'immature Christians') of I Cor. 3:1. But the
contrasting term 3:1 is B<,L:"J46@\
(pneumatikoi, 'spiritual'), not
teleioi. Rather, the meaning of
teleioi as 'mature' here is more likely an expression for those with the
'mature insight' of the saved in distinction from the unsaved..." Frank
E. Gaebelein, gen. ed., The Expositor's Bible Commentary, (Grand
Rapids: Zondervan Pub. House, 1976, Vol. 10, p. 201.
-
Cp.
Gordon D. Fee, New Testament Exegesis, a Handbook for Students and
Pastors, (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1983), pp. 87-91, for why
–DP@<J,H
should be interpreted as "human" rulers.
-
"...a
strong term, usually used in the NT to indicate divine revelation of certain
supernatural secrets (Mt. 16:17; Lk. 10:22), Gaebelein,p. 201f.
-
Bauer,
Arndt, Gingrich, A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament,
(Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 1957), p. 306
¦D"L<VT.
-
Gaebelein,
p. 203f, for four ways this could be interpreted..
-
Cp.
Gaebelein, p. 202f, "psychikos
...basically means 'that which
pertains to the soul or life,' a word used in the NT and patristic
literature to refer to the life of the natural world and so contrasted with
the supernatural world and the Spirit. So from this comes the translation,
'man without the Spirit.'
|