Sermon: Servants, Stewards, and Suffering
Manage episode 511228183 series 3553423
Sermon Date: 10/5/2025
Bible Verses:
1 Corinthians 4:1‑21
Speaker: Rev. Timothy "Tim" Shapley
Theme: https://uppbeat.io/t/northwestern/a-new-
Part I: Servants of Christ, Stewards of God’s Mysteries – 1 Cor 4:1‑5
- Servants (Under-Rowers)
- Paul uses the word hyperetas – essentially an “under-rower,” one who doesn’t steer the ship but obediently rows under direction.
- As Christians, we are first and foremost servants of Christ (not our own agendas).
- Stewards (Household Managers of the Mysteries)
- Steward (oikonomos) implies management, administration, responsibility.
- The “mysteries of God” are the truths of the gospel—once hidden, now revealed.
- A steward must be found faithful (v. 2) — that is the standard, not popularity or success.
- Judgment and Timing (vv. 3–5)
- Paul says: he doesn’t judge himself, nor is he judged by men; the Lord is the ultimate judge (v. 4–5).
- We are cautioned not to jump ahead—God will bring to light what is hidden.
- 2 Corinthians 5:10 – all must appear before Christ’s judgment seat
Supporting Scriptures and Themes:
- Romans 12:1‑3 – presenting our bodies as living sacrifices, humility in gifts
- Proverbs 16:18 – pride precedes destruction
- Jeremiah 9:23‑24 – boasting only in understanding and knowing God
Key Application for Part I:
- Reorient your identity: you are a servant, not a celebrity
- Guard against pride in ministry or spiritual gifting
- Be faithful in your stewardship—small things count
Part II: Not Beyond What Is Written – 1 Cor 4:6–13
Here Paul confronts the Corinthians’ arrogance and the temptation to measure ministry by worldly standards.
- “Not to think beyond what is written” (v. 6)
- He applies his example (himself and Apollos) so they don’t overreach.
- A warning: don’t exalt one teacher over another or claim superiority above what Scripture supports.
- Beware of Pride (vv. 7–8)
- “Who makes you different? What do you have that you did not receive?” (v. 7)
- They were already “full,” rich, reigning—without Paul (v. 8).
- The danger of self-sufficiency in spiritual life.
- Paradox of Apostolic Suffering (vv. 9–13)
- Paul describes the apostles as displayed as last, like those condemned to death (v. 9).
- “Fools for Christ’s sake… weak… dishonored… laboring” (v. 10–12) Enduring Word+1
- Though reviled, they bless. Though persecuted, they endure. Though slandered, they plead kindly (v. 12).
Supporting Scriptures:
- 2 Corinthians 11:16‑33 — Paul speaks more on the “foolishness” and suffering aspect Rev. Tim Ehrhardt
- 1 Corinthians 1:27 — God choosing the foolish and weak to shame the wise (ties to the paradox)
- Philippians 2:5‑11 — the humility of Christ, the paradox of exalting those who lower themselves
- 2 Corinthians 6:4 – recommendation of oneself in hardness, trials, etc.
Key Application for Part II:
- Do not measure spiritual maturity by visible success or acclaim
- Embrace the paradox: suffering can accompany ministry
- Walk humbly and serve sacrificially
Part III: Correction, Imitation, and Gentle Authority – 1 Cor 4:14‑21
- Fatherly Correction (v. 14)
- Paul clarifies he does not write to shame them but as beloved children. The tone is corrective but pastoral.
- Imitate Me (v. 16)
- Because he became their spiritual father through the gospel—he urges them to imitate him.
- This is not blind followership, but following a model of Christlike integrity.
- Authority: Rod or Gentle Spirit (v. 21)
- He asks: “Shall I come to you with a rod, or in love and a spirit of gentleness?”
- Leaders carry authority—sometimes corrective, but always tempered with compassion.
Supporting Scriptures:
- Romans 1:16 — the gospel as power (motivating ministry)
- Ephesians 6:17 — sword of the Spirit (authority in God’s Word)
- Hebrews 4:12 — the Word is living and active, discerning motives
- Matthew 18:15–17 — Church discipline guidelines
- Galatians 6:1 – restore with gentleness
Key Application for Part III:
- Recognize correction as love, not punishment
- Be discerning about models you imitate—choose those who model Christ
- Use authority gently, grounded in the Word, not domineering spirit
Conclusion & Transitions
- The Corinthians had elevated personalities, boasted in leaders, and failed to honor true ministry. Paul brings them back to the basics: servant posture, faithful stewardship, humility in suffering, and correction rooted in fatherly care.
- Today:
- If you lead — ask God for humility, faithfulness, and compassion.
- As a follower — receive correction, discern models worth following, and resist false pride.
- As part of the Body — support those who serve, not by flattery, but by honoring the call.
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