This week, we have been having a frank conversation
about sex by looking at a section of a letter that is recorded for us in the
Bible called 1 Corinthians. Wednesday, we discovered that God created and
designed sex to occur when one man leaves from his home to commit himself in a
covenant relationship with one woman for an entire lifetime. Any sex that
occurs outside of one man and one woman united in a monogamous marriage
relationship for life is outside of God’s design.
The members of the church at Corinth, however,
misunderstood God’s design for sexuality and the powerful nature of sex as God
designed it. Paul also revealed that the sexual intercourse that occurs in a
covenant marriage relationship that provides for the open expression of love in
the context of total vulnerability and intimacy is a glimpse of the depth of
the intimacy that we will have in our relationship with Christ for all
eternity.
Today, as Paul continues, we see him give a timeless
command to followers of Jesus that reveals for us a timeless truth when it comes to
love and lasting relationships. So let’s look at this timeless
command together, beginning in 1 Corinthians 6:18-20:
Flee
immorality. Every other sin
that a man commits is outside the body, but the immoral man sins against his
own body. Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who
is in you, whom you have from God, and that you are not your own? For you have
been bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body.
In verse 18, Paul commands the members of the church
at Corinth, and us today to flee immorality. Now the word “flee” here literally
means to flee from something in order to avoid and keep from engaging in
something because of its potential danger. In this case, Paul is referring to
immorality, which is unlawful sexual intercourse, which is any sexual activity
outside of a covenant marriage relationship; whether it is sex before marriage,
sex in addition to marriage, which we call adultery, homosexual sexual activity
and any other sexual activity that occurs outside of marriage.
Paul then gives the reason for such a strong command
by stating that every other sin that a man commits is outside the body, but the
immoral man sins against his own body. Paul’s point here is that the nature of
sexual sin is so unique that the person who engages in unlawful sexual
intercourse pollutes and corrupts their bodies in a way that no other selfish
and sinful act can.
In verse 19, Paul then asks a rhetorical question
that introduces another well known and generally accepted fact that the church
should know in order to explain the reason that we should flee when it comes to
sexual immorality: do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy
Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and that you are not your own?
Paul is revealing for the church at Corinth, and us as well, that followers of
Jesus are temples of the Holy Spirit. In other words the Holy Spirit takes up
residence and dwells in the bodies of followers of Jesus. The Apostle explains
that the reason that the Holy Spirit dwells in us is because God has given us
the Holy Spirit.
Paul then provides another reason why we should flee
sexual immorality when he states that you are not your own. As followers of
Jesus, the reality is that we are God’s possession. God owns us. Now this
morning, you may be wondering, what do you mean God owns us? How does God own
us?
In verse 20, Paul answers this question for us by
stating for you have been bought with a price. Paul is bringing the members of
the church of Corinth back to the reality of the cross. The cross reveals the
reality that Christ rescued and redeemed us from our selfish and sinful lives
by allowing Himself to be treated as though He lived our selfish and sinful
lives so that God the Father could treat us as though we lived Jesus perfect
life. And it is the price that Christ paid that not only brings us the
forgiveness of sin and the relationship with God that we were created for but
also makes us His possession.
Paul then concludes this section of this letter by
explaining that in light of the price that Jesus paid to rescue and redeem us;
in light of the reality that we are His possession, we are to glorify God with
our bodies. The idea of glorifying God means to influence one’s opinion about
God so as to enhance God’s reputation. Paul here is calling the members of the
church at Corinth, and us here today to honor, extol, and make much of God by
how we handle our physical bodies when it comes to sex. One of the ways that we
reveal and reflect Christ to the world around us is by how we handle ourselves
when it comes to our sexuality. We best reflect God’s other centered
sacrificial love when we engage in sex in the context of marriage.
And
it is in this passage that we see revealed for us a timeless truth when it
comes to love and lasting relationships. And that timeless truth is this: Love and lasting relationships require that we flee
sexual immorality. When it comes to love and
lasting relationships we must flee sexual immorality. We must flee and keep on fleeing.
Now, I want to address four potential questions or objections. First, there may
be some of you here this morning who are thinking to yourself “Dave that is
just old fashioned thinking”.
And my response to that
objection is this: I will go out on a limb and say
that there is not a single person who would ever say that they regretted
following the counsel that Paul provides about this topic. There is not a
single person that would make the statement “I really regret following Paul’s
advice here”. On the contrary, for many of us in this room, whether you are a
follower of Jesus or whether you are here because someone agreed to buy you
lunch if you went to church with them, maybe the greatest regret in our lives
involves failing to follow the timeless truth that Paul provides us in this
passage.
Second, there may be some of you who are thinking to yourself “Dave you just don’t
understand. I have needs. I have needs that have to be met”. And my response to
that objection is this: This morning, it is a scientific fact that no human
being has to have sex in order to survive. I am unaware of any human being who
has died because they did not have sex. You see, you do not have a need; you
have an appetite, a desire, a want.
Third,
there may be some of you who
are thinking to yourself “Dave you just don’t understand. How am I going to know
if the sex is going to be good if I don’t have sex with my boyfriend or
girlfriend before we get married? Dave, I need to test drive the car before I
buy it”. My response to that objection is this: How do you know that the sex
won’t be good?
You see, sex is the very thing
that one wants to test which is destroyed by the testing. Because of the
differences in how men and women have been wired, after the first, often
awkward act of sexual intercourse, more often than not, women leave the
experience having given their hearts away, while men often walk away thinking
“that was not as good as I expected it to be”.
And fourth, there may be some
of you who are thinking to yourself “Dave if I don’t give in and have sex
before I get married, then I will lose all the good men or women”. My response
to that objection is simply this: If you troll with your body, you will catch
body snatchers.
So
here is the question: how are you going to approach sex?
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