1 Corinthians 3:21-23 Therefore let no man glory in men. For all things are yours;… A great gulf is fixed between God and man by sin. The Bible reveals a chain depending from the throne of God stretching across the void and holding up the dislocated world. I. CHRIST IS GOD'S: that is the highest link. The Creator rejoices in all His works, but He has a special and peculiar interest in man. 1. When the work of creation, as to its bulk, was nearly done, the Creator was not yet satisfied. He found no point of sympathetic contact between Himself, a spirit, and the material world which He had made. Then was held that council in which humanity was planned. "Let us make man in our own image." Allied to God by an intelligent mind and an immortal spirit, yet wedded to matter by his body, man was added to the upper edge of creation, a link of communion between the Maker and His work. 2. The mystery of the fall came on and the connecting link was broken. But Satan was not permitted to triumph. When the creature called into being as a son has become an alien, where shall God now find a man, holy as Himself, to be His companion and reciprocate His love? 3. Here is the mystery revealed: Christ is God's. "Behold the man"! He dwells in the bosom of the Father, and yet is bound in brotherhood to the human family. This is the plan of redemption. The Father cometh to no man; no man cometh to the Father but by Him. The Father's delight in the Son incarnate (Psalm 42.; Matthew 3:17) is the uppermost link of the chain whereon all our hope for eternity hangs. How strong and sure it is! Satan tried in the wilderness to separate between this Man and God, as in the garden he had separated between the first man and God. The Tempted triumphed and the tempter fled. II. YE ARE CHRIST'S: the next link. It is not that He is your portion, but that ye are His. In actual experience, however, the union is mutual. The vine holds the branch, and the branch holds the vine. "My beloved is mine" — there lies my present happiness; but "I am His" — there lies my everlasting safety. A very slight temptation may break asunder your love to Christ; but all the powers of darkness cannot overcome His love to you. Who shall separate? A British subject may be safe although surrounded by enemies in a distant land, and his confidence in his queen may rebuke the feeble faith of a Christian. Note — 1. How He obtains His property. (1) By the sovereign gift of God. "Thine they were, and Thou gavest them Me" (John 17.). (2) By the price of His own blood. Ye are not your own, ye are bought with a price. (3) By the renewing of the Holy Spirit. God the Father gives you to Christ, and you give yourselves. This latter is the effect of the Spirit working repentance and faith in a human heart. 2. How He will use His property. (1) As objects to exercise His kindness on. The good delight in doing good. Christ in giving grace to His people is getting delight for Himself. (2) As servants to do His work. He desires your service and deserves it. To work willingly is a mark of a true disciple. (3) As living epistles in which the world may read the riches of His grace. (4) For company at His coming, and for portion evermore, III. ALL THINGS ARE YOURS: the lowest link. All the fulness of the Godhead bodily has been treasured up in Christ expressly that it may be within the reach of His people. 1. The ministry. The full-bodied doctrinal teaching of Paul, the melting and arousing eloquence of Apollos, and the abrupt, fiery energy of Peter — all are gladly recognised as a wisely mingled provision from the hand of that Father who paints the rose and the violet of different hues but equal loveliness. But, besides the bounty of the Giver, the liberty of the receivers also is signalised in this text. Paul and Apollos and Cephas are yours — not ye theirs. In Rome the ministers have the people; here the people have the ministers. The ministry is an article in the inventory of a Christian's goods. They are the Lord's gifts to the heirs, not lords over the heritage. 2. "The world." The world, under direction of its god, wars against the soul. But our Father in heaven holds that enemy and compels it, in His own time and way, to serve His sons. 3. "Life." The natural life is indeed corrupt, but over its corrupt root the new nature is engrafted, and so this lower earthly life becomes the root of a spiritual life in heaven. 4. "Death." Through Christ it is only the dark, narrow door in the partition wall between time and eternity, through which the children are led from the place of exile into the mansions of the Father's house. 5. "Things present or things to come." All things are yours in virtue of your union to Christ, whether they lie within the horizon of time or beyond it in the unseen eternity. We have reached now those things that no ear hath heard, and no tongue can tell. I once heard a father tell that when he removed his family to a new and ampler residence his youngest son, yet a lisping infant, ran round every room and scanned every article with ecstacy, calling out in childish wonder at every new sight, "Is this ours, father? and is this ours?" The child did not say "yours"; and the father was not offended with the freedom. The infant's confidence in appropriating as his own all that his father had was an important element in his satisfaction. Such, I suppose, will be the surprise and joy and appropriating confidence with which the child of our Father's family will count all his own when he enters the infinite of things to come. (W. Arnot, D. D.) Parallel Verses KJV: Therefore let no man glory in men. For all things are yours;WEB: Therefore let no one boast in men. For all things are yours, |