00:00
00:00
00:01
Transcript
1/0
I want to invite you to take
out your copy of God's Word and turn to 2 Corinthians chapter
10 and find your place at verse
7. The title of today's message
is, By What Standard? If there's one passage of Scripture
that the world loves to quote, especially toward the church,
it is Matthew 7.1. And what does Matthew 7.1 say? Judge not, lest ye be judged. Ye. They apply this, the world applies
this in the most egregious of areas. insisting that no behavior
ever be condemned, no attitude ever be denounced, that we are
never supposed to judge because of the text that says, Judge
not lest ye be judged. Not reading the rest, not reading
the context, not understanding what Christ was trying to convey,
we are told that any judgment is wrong. But the reality is
that there are many things which we are commended to judge. We are called to discern truth
from falsehood. That's making a judgment. We
are called to determine a tree by the fruit it bears. Well,
that's making a judgment. We are called to exercise discipline
in the church. Matthew 18 says that we have
to make decisions. Well, that involves judgment. And one thing that we are clearly
called to discern are the ministers and ministries which claim to
be coming in the name of Jesus Christ. Since the beginning of
the church, there have been those who have claimed to speak on
behalf of Christ, who have claimed to be ministers of Christ, but
the Word of God says they are actually agents of Satan himself. That they are false teachers,
that masquerading as angels of light, they are actually ministers
of darkness. And we are told to be discerning. And we see them early in the
church. Galatians was written because
Paul had planted a church, planted churches in the southern Turkey
area, which we called the Galatian area, Lystra, Iconium, and Derbe.
He had planted churches there. And after leaving, men had come
in, infiltrated their churches, brought false teaching, false
doctrine. And so Paul writes a letter to them. And that letter
is a letter of rebuke. Oh foolish Galatians, who has
bewitched you? referring to the false teachers
who had made their way into the Galatian community. And those
little letters. toward the end of your Bible,
2 and 3 John, Paul is admonishing the church to be concerned about
those who would come and seek to be received as itinerant ministers. Watch out for these men because
some of these men in fact are not ministers of the gospel.
Some of them in fact are here to abuse you and to mistreat
you and to take advantage of you. So we are called not to be judgmental
But we are called to be discerning when it comes to receiving someone
who claims to come as a teacher and preacher of the gospel of
Jesus Christ. And in this text today, this
section of 2 Corinthians, which we have been studying 2 Corinthians
verse by verse. We've been in the book now for
several months. In this section, Paul is going
to show us what righteous evaluation looks like. He is going to show
us that there are right standards and wrong standards. And He's
going to seriously pose the question to us, maybe not in these words,
but in this sense, He's going to say, what standard are you
using to judge? Merely by the external? Merely
by what you see? Or are you judging according
to God's commendation? And so, let us stand and read
the text together. beginning at verse 7. I will
be reading from the ESV, and it will be on the screen. Beginning in verse 7, Paul says, Look at what is before your eyes. If anyone is confident that he
is Christ, let him remind himself that just as he is Christ, so
also are we. For even if I boast a little
too much of our authority, which the Lord gave for building up
and not for destroying you, I will not be ashamed. I do not want
to appear to be frightening you with my letters, for they say
his letters are weighty and strong, but his bodily appearance is
weak and his speech of no account. Let such a person understand
that what we say by letter when absent, we do when present. Not that we dare to classify
or compare ourselves with some of those who are commending themselves,
but when they measure themselves by one another and compare themselves
with one another, they are without understanding. But we will not
boast beyond limits. But we'll boast only with regard
to the area of influence God has assigned to us to reach even
to you. For we are not overextending
ourselves as though we did not reach you, for we were the first
to come all the way to you with the gospel of Christ. We do not
boast beyond limit in the labors of others, but our hope is that
as your faith increases, our area of influence among you may
be greatly enlarged, so that we may preach the gospel in lands
beyond you without boasting of work already done. in another's
area of influence. Let the one who boasts, boast
in the Lord. For it is not the one who commends
himself who is approved, but the one whom the Lord commends. Father in heaven, I pray and
ask your mercy on this message. Lord, I pray as I pray every
time and have prayed hundreds of times to keep me from error. For your word is worthy to be
preached properly. Your scripture is the truth,
and I do not want to fail to proclaim that truth and muddle
it or mix it with some error. I pray, Lord, as your people
are taught today that your Holy Spirit would be the teacher I
pray that you would cause me to decrease and Christ to increase. And I pray, Lord, for the believer
in this room, that they would recognize the great burden of
discernment that is placed upon all of us to not simply receive the word
of God as if it were the word of God from anyone, but to discern
whether or not they are actually proclaiming what the word says
in truth. And also, oh God, to seek the truth as we study. And Lord, for the unbeliever
in this room, whether they be young or old, child or adult,
Father, I pray that you would minister right now through the
power of your spirit to the hearts of men and women in this room
and children, drawing them to yourself if they do not know
you. And through your grace, give them mercy that leads to
life. And I pray all this in Jesus'
name. Amen. For those who have not been with
us, again a reminder that we are in a study of the book of
2 Corinthians. And where we are in the letter
is on the latter portion. The book can be broken into three
sections. The first seven chapters is Paul's defense of his ministry. He has been called into question
regarding his integrity by some of the men who had come into
Corinth just like in Galatia where he had planted the churches
and people had come in after him and taught falsely and called
into question his ministry well the same thing had happened in
Corinth and many men had risen up against him and had begun
to teach against him and we're gonna see in the chapters to
come exactly his thoughts about them but in the first seven chapters
Paul defends his ministry. He calls it a ministry of reconciliation. He calls it a ministry of the
new covenant. And he gives us some of the most
precious and profound theological truths in all of the New Testament
in those first seven chapters. Then in chapters eight and nine,
he gives us a call to generosity, gives the Corinthians a reminder
that they had committed to be generous to the church in Jerusalem,
which the churches in Macedonia had demonstrated their generosity.
And Paul looks at the Corinthians and he says, just as the Macedonians
have been generous, so too should you not fail to be generous in
your giving because the church in Jerusalem is in need. And
so in chapters 8 and 9 of 2 Corinthians, we have some of the most profound
teaching on Christian giving in all the New Testament. In
fact, I would say the preeminent verse of teaching on Christian
giving is found in 2 Corinthians 9, which tells us that we are
to give as we have decided in our heart, not under compulsion,
for God loves a cheerful giver. But then in chapter 10, as if
he flipped a switch in his mind, he goes right back into the defense
of his ministry. But now instead of defending
his ministry, he's now on offense. And as one ancient theologian
said, the best defense is a good offense. So Paul, rather than
defending in the first seven chapters, he now switches and
he goes after those who are his opponents. And I must say, looking
forward to the next several months of preaching as I finish this
book, I'm really looking forward to expounding to you some of
the things that he says because some of them are just very powerful. Some of the portions between
chapters 10 and 13 are really reminders to us that we are at
war. Spiritual warfare is real and Paul comes in with his sword
in hand, ready to slay those who would stand in the way of
the gospel. Not physically, of course, but to slay them spiritually. And not slay them spiritually,
let me back that up. Carefully say, not that, if you know what
I'm talking about. But the point is, Paul is ready
for war. And as I said last week, or two
weeks ago when I preached last time, the first six verses of
chapter 10 are Paul's expression of his preparedness for war.
He says, even though we walk according to the flesh, we do
not wage war according to the flesh. And he says, we tear down
strongholds, we destroy arguments, we take every thought captive
to Jesus Christ. Paul understands the mission.
He understands the battle. He understands the enemy. And
so he is letting the Corinthians know that they are at war. Verses 7 to 18 is a long section. And you may wonder why I'm placing
it all together in one sermon. And you may even be thinking
to yourself, no way he's getting through it all today. I'm going to try because
it is one idea. And what's interesting about
this text, and I have to share this because as I was looking
at Dr. MacArthur's, what he said about
this text, he said, this is one of those texts that wouldn't
get preached if you weren't an expositor. He said, this isn't
one of those texts that's highly theological or has a lot of actual
practical things that people would run to as a topical preacher
would run to certain texts and would go to those texts. He said,
but this text doesn't get preached a lot because simply the only
reason you'd come to it is if you had to. You're preaching
through a book and it's there. He said, because there's not
a lot of theology in here, but what you do have is you have
Paul calling to mind the importance of understand making righteous
judgment. So it's important, it is practical, but it's not
one of those texts that you're probably going to find on a billboard
at Hobby Lobby. But I hope today to show you
that this text is very important when it comes to making evaluations,
because we are called to make evaluations. We are called to
make sound judgment as to who we will listen to, who we will
sit under, who we will support, where our money will go. and not that I need to say this
but I will, how many of us can look at the landscape of evangelicalism
today and not be absolutely overwhelmed with the amount of false teachers,
false ministries, men who claim to be men of God, who are actually
ministers of Satan, who are bringing shame upon the church and bringing
shame upon the name of Christ himself. So if there's one thing we should
be good at, It's discerning who we ought to be listening to. So I have this outline for you.
I put it up on the board. And this is not intended to be
an outline that's stuck to strictly. It's just to give you an idea.
Paul talks first about an evaluation, then an accusation, then a comparison,
recognition, and then commendation. So let's look first at the evaluation.
verse 7. The ESV translates this first
phrase, look at what is before your eyes. And I want to say
right away that if you are looking at different translations, this
one sentence will be translated in three different ways, and
all three different ways could lead you to a different conclusion,
so it's not an easy sentence to translate, and it's not an
easy sentence to preach, because How you determine its conclusion
will determine the direction you head. But I want to tell
you how I reached my conclusion, and if at the end you disagree,
then we will hopefully still be friends. The ESV translation
translates this as an imperative. Notice the text. I'll put it
on the screen. It says, look at what is before your eyes. However, if you have a New American
Standard Bible, It translates it in the indicative. And you
say, well, what's the difference in the Greek? There's not a difference
in the Greek. The indicative and the imperative are the same.
So you have to determine your translation based upon context.
So the ESV translates it as an imperative. Look at what is obvious.
But the New American Standard Bible translates it as, you are
looking at things as they are outwardly. Now, that's quite
a bit different. And then, of course, you have
the King James Bible, Michael. that comes in the interrogative. Do ye look on things after the
outward appearance? And it's like, oh, just had to
throw a different one into the mix. But the point that I want to
get across is if Paul is saying, as the ESV says in the imperative,
look at what is obvious, which I don't think is actually correct,
but that is the ESVs, then what Paul is saying, if that is correct,
is look at what is true, look at what is right, look at what
is obvious. But if the New American Standard is correct, and this
is one of those times where Mike's going to be happy, because I'm
going to say the New American Standard, I think, is correct, and that's the Bible
he uses, and it would agree with the King James, that what Paul
is actually doing is he's actually giving an indication that what
they are doing is they're looking at the outwardly, instead of
looking at what they should be looking at. So even if the ESV
is correct, we could still kind of get there because you could
say Paul is saying look at what is right, look at what is true,
look beyond the obvious. But if it is in the indicative,
you are looking at the obvious, then it's a rebuke. And if it is in the interrogative,
do ye look after the outward things? It's a rebuke. Because
what are we told? If we're not told anything else
in the Bible, what are we told about the outward? Don't look
at the outward appearance. How many times throughout the
Bible did people fail because they were enamored by the outside,
not looking at what was within? What were the Pharisees so consumed
by in their teaching? The outward. Remember in Matthew's
gospel where we have the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus talks about
those who make their prayers long so that they are heard for
their many words. Or those who give their offerings
out in the open so that they're seen for giving their offerings.
These men who make their phylacteries broad so that they can be impressive
to other men. It's all about the outward. So
based upon that, I do come to the conclusion that I do think
that Paul is rebuking them and saying you are looking after
the outward appearance. But again, even if the ESV is
right, look at what is true, it would still be a call to look
beyond the outward. So now you can argue with me about nothing,
because I said they all agree with me. But the point I believe
is that what we have here is we have people who are consumed
with the outwardly. And I base this not only because
of the context of this passage, but also because of the context
of what we learn later. What we learn later is that these
men who are coming in, who are disagreeing with Paul, who are
teaching false things about what Paul has taught, these false
teachers make themselves important by their outward appearance.
Remember earlier in the book, he talked about them bringing
their letters of commendation. He calls them, later in this
book in chapter 11, he calls them super apostles. And I imagine
these men presented themselves in such a way that they did have
an outward appearance that was quite impressive. And one thing
we know about the apostle Paul, not from the scripture necessarily,
but from history, is Paul probably didn't have an outward appearance
that was very impressive. Now, there's no paintings from
the first century. There's no photographs, obviously,
because such technology did not exist. And what we do have about
Paul's appearance comes 200 years after he lived, and it was based
on a tradition from the time that he lived. And we can't say
it's accurate because, again, it's 200 years removed. But here's
what it did say, in case you're curious. A 200-year-old, or a
200-year writing after the time of the Apostle Paul said that
he was short, bow-legged, bald, He had a unibrow and a hooked
nose. They said he was short, crooked
legs, and the way it reads it says, and his eyebrows did not
part. One straight across. But here's the thing, I don't
think that's really the situation. I don't think that's the focus.
I've just brought that out because if you're thinking about outward
appearance, obviously we often think of that. But there is the
reality that Paul talks about his speech as not being like
the great orators. He doesn't have all of this gifting
that some of these other men have. These men were very impressive
outwardly. And whether we're talking about
looks or whether we're talking about giftedness, whether we're talking
about how they presented themselves, how they explain themselves,
their great use of language and articulation, all of these things
were not commending them from God, but they were impressing
the Corinthian people. And Paul's saying, you're looking
at the obvious. I like John Calvin's quote on this passage, he says
this, he said, So basically Calvin was saying, because Paul didn't
look like one of the fancy guys, because Paul didn't have the outward
expression of a lot of these guys, he just looked like a common
man, and therefore, to many, was unimpressive. Paul Barnett in his commentary
on this same passage. He said the Greek world admired
physical beauty. It admired leisure. And despised
imperfection and manual labor. And in comes Paul, the tent maker. One who works with his hands.
One of amateurish speech and doubtful appearance. He was not
one who would have commended himself by the outward things. This past month, I was asked
to review a book. A man sent me
a copy of his manuscript, asked me to review the book, and if
I thought it was good to provide a... What's it called? You're right.
Nice. Not the forward, but the... Not a review. What's it? Recommendation,
thank you. I don't know why I can't give
him a book. He asked me to write a recommendation. He shouldn't
have asked me, apparently. He asked me to write a recommendation
for his book. So I read his book. His book
is called Worship Tainment. And it documented many of the
things that are happening currently in the church that are not worship,
but are intended solely for entertainment. And I could rattle off a list
to you. Pastors dressed like Batman,
sanctuaries decorated like the Death Star. I mean, just absolute
ridiculous things in the church. And so through this book, Worshiptainment,
he outlined some of the crazy things that are happening. But
one of the chapters that really got my attention was the chapter
on preachers. and how the modern preacher has
to be a man who presents himself the way the world wants to be
impressed. And he talked about the way that
many modern preachers present themselves and they present themselves
very much looking like the latest rock star. And he says, why is
this popular? It's because this is what the
world wants. They want to come in. They don't want to sit here
from the man of God. They want to hear from a buddy. And I remember
this years ago. This is not an exaggeration. This absolutely happened. I was doing a funeral at the
National Cemetery, which is out here on Laney Road. And right
before the funeral, I was simply looking at my notes. I was preparing
to preach the funeral. And it was for a family I didn't
know. I was doing some work for the funeral home, helping them
out. But I could hear two men having a conversation. They were
about six feet from me. I wasn't in the conversation,
but I was listening. I was exercising my pastoral
prerogative and eavesdropping. Pretending to read my notes,
I listened very carefully. Don't you act like you ain't
never. So I'm sitting there listening, and the man is telling the other
man, I just started going to a new church. It's great. The pastor has a Mohawk. It's
awesome. And I thought to myself, is that all it takes? I mean, would a Mohawk bring more people?
Not on this head, but that's the point. We are so consumed
with the outwardly. We're so consumed with the things
that just don't matter. We're nothing new. Even in the
first century they were consumed with the things that did not
matter. I have to move on past the first
sentence. I said I was going to get through like 12 verses. I haven't
even got through half of the first verse, but you understand
this sets everything else up. Paul, I believe, is rebuking
them for their concern regarding the outwardly. And then he points
directly at those who would oppose him and he says this, if anyone
is confident that he is Christ's, let him remind himself that just
as he is Christ's, so also are we. Who is that person? Who is he talking about? Well,
he could be talking just to the Corinthians. If you think you're
of Christ, then certainly we would be. But I think he's speaking
directly to those who would call into question his ministry. Listen,
this person who you think, this person who thinks he has this
great ministry, if he thinks he's of Christ, then so are we. Why is he putting himself up
and telling us that we're wrong? Why is he exalting himself and
putting us down? What is going on? If any man
thinks that he is of Christ, Let him remind himself that just
as he is of Christ, so are we. But then in verse eight, he says
this, for even if I boast a little too much of our authority, which
the Lord gave for building you up and not for destroying you,
I will not be ashamed. You might say, well, what is
that all about? Paul is simply saying this. I am claiming an
authority that Christ has given to me. And I may be expressing
it in a way that is to really point it out. Notice how he says,
even if I boast a little too much of our authority, I will
not be ashamed. Why? Because it comes from Christ.
You think you're of Christ. This person thinks he's of Christ.
Well, I am of Christ, and I'm not afraid to say it, and I'm
not going to be ashamed of it. I'm going to speak the truth
because I have been called by Christ Notice what he says, for
building you up and not tearing you down. I want to say this
real quick, and this is not the point of the sermon, but as I
was reading this this week, it just kept coming in my mind.
If you are called of God to be a man of God, your job is to
build up the church, not tear it down. If you're a leader,
your job is to build up the church, not tear it down. That just should be simple, but
I thought we'd hang on that for a minute. Paul wants the Corinthians to
make a proper evaluation of him, his ministry, and his authority.
He wants them to understand it comes from Christ. And if they're going to think
anyone is of Christ, they should understand that he is. And what's
amazing is that shouldn't even be a question in their mind.
Paul planted the church. He grew the church. He was leading
the church. It shouldn't even be a question,
but these guys come in, and this is how false teachers do it.
They come in with all these little questions, like the little foxes
that spoil the vine. They come in with all these little
issues, and all these little problems, and they tear down
what the man of God has built. Paul is that man of God, and
these men are tearing it down. Paul says, I have an authority
which is from Christ, and I'm not ashamed. I'm not backing
out on this. I'm not taking it back. God put
me here. God put me in this position.
And later we're going to see Paul is going to specifically
say between verses 13 and 16, God assigned me you. Because
he's going to talk about the sphere of influence that he's
in and he's going to say, you are my sphere of influence. If
someone else has come in to destroy you, understand they're coming
in my lane. That's his job. And that's how
he sees himself. Now verse 9, I labeled this the
accusation because he says these words. He says, I do not want
to appear to be frightening you with my letters. Remember, this
is probably the fourth letter of Paul to the Corinthians. Even though we only have two,
this is probably his fourth letter. The third one we call the severe
letter, the harsh letter, the letter that was a harsh rebuke.
And Paul says, I do not want to be frightening you with my
letters. Understand this, Paul's purpose
is to be corrective, not to be a bully. And I will say this,
one of the things that I have seen, and I've talked to our
elders about this, I've talked to other pastors of other churches
about this, one of the things that I have seen that absolutely
frightens me in the church today is how many people behind the
pulpit exercise an attitude of a bully. rather than the attitude
of a shepherd. I've given this illustration
before, but I think it's true. The difference between a cowboy
and a shepherd is a cowboy gets behind and drives the herd. The shepherd gets out front and
leads the sheep. And in a lot of churches, and
sadly in a lot of reformed churches, because of the great weight of
authority which is given to the office of elder, In a lot of
reformed churches, the elders mistreat their people. Mike,
am I wrong? We've talked about this very thing, haven't we?
Andy, we've talked about this very thing, haven't we? And the
danger of men who would come in and abuse God's people over
exerting an authority. It's one thing to understand
the authority God's given us. It's one thing to exercise that authority
properly. But notice we're supposed to exercise it for the building
up of the church, not tearing it down. And there are men who
are tearing the Bride of Christ down. Because they're bullies
and they're not shepherds. One of the most famous ministries
in the last 20 years was brought to its knees because it was found
that the man behind the pulpit was nothing but a bully. And he is not alone. So Paul wants the people to understand.
Understand this. I do not want to frighten you
with my letters. That's not the point. It's corrective,
not abusive. And if you don't understand the
difference, there is a difference. If someone comes to you, it doesn't
have to be an elder, if anybody comes to you and offers you a
correction in the Lord, the Bible says you're a fool if you don't
listen. That's not abuse, to be corrected. But it is abuse. when we pile on to a person and
we berate them and we manipulate them and we mistreat them. That
should never happen from anyone, especially a man called to lead
God's people. And there's a line. Again, we're
making a judgment, right? How do we judge? Does he lovingly lead
in a corrective way or is he abusing the people of God? I
believe in my heart these men who were at Corinth, these super
apostles are abusers. Because Paul's going to straight
up call them that later. He's going to say, you're hurting
the people of God and there must be a reckoning. And I'm on my
way. Paul's like, Wyatt Earp, Titus is Doc Holliday. I'm on
my way. Now I call this part the accusation
because I think Paul has been accused of being a bully. Again, often times the people
who are opposed to you will claim what you are doing is actually
what they're doing. I don't know if you ever had that happen before?
Where somebody's doing something and you call them out on it and
they say, no, no, no, you're the one doing it. You're the
one. And so Paul is saying, I'm not wanting to appear to be frightening
you with my letters, for they say, by the way, there's a textual
variant here. Some translations say they say,
some say he says. So it could be an individual
who's accusing Paul. We don't know for certain. I
mean, we could go through all the variations of the text, but ultimately we
know someone has made an accusation against Paul. And this is the
accusation. His letters are weighty and strong, but his bodily appearance
or presence is weak and his speech of no account. This again takes
me back to the idea, Paul's presence and presentation wasn't as fancy
and outwardly impressive as theirs. They say, yeah, his letters,
he's strong in his letters, but when you meet him, he's really
very timid. He's not really the man he claims
to be in his letters. I think I said this two weeks
ago, the keyboard commando. You met that guy right? The guy
at work who writes the really strongly worded email but when
he talks to you in person he can't back it up? Well that's
basically what they're accusing Paul of being. They're accusing
him of being a first century keyboard commando. He writes
strong but when he meet him he's not very impressive. I love what Paul says. Verse
11. Let such a person understand that what we say when we're absent
we do in present. You think the letter is something.
You think what I wrote is bold. Wait till I get there. Now again,
understand this, and this is key. Paul is kind, but he's not
weak. And I want to say this to you
church, never ever confuse kindness with weakness. Just because a man is kind does
not mean he's being weak. Now some people are weak and
they're afraid to speak the truth. There are those who are weak
because they're unable in any sense of the matter to be bold.
But just because a man is kind, we should be kind, shouldn't
we? I was just about to say, the fruit of the Spirit is love,
joy, peace, patience, kindness. goodness, gentleness, faithfulness,
and self-control against such there is no law. Let me ask you
this, men of God. I'm not talking about the elders,
I'm talking about all the men in this room. If I were to ask
somebody to give me three adjectives about you, would one of those
adjectives have anything to do with kindness? We are called to be kind. Paul
is being kind, but he is saying, my kindness is not weakness.
When I come, my words that were strong will be accompanied by
a strong man. And I will, as he said earlier,
we looked at verses one to six last time, he said, when I come, there's going to be punishment.
Paul is going to punish those who have been opposing the gospel. Not for his own sake, not to
simply vindicate the name of Paul, but because those who have
denied his gospel have denied Jesus Christ. And it will not
continue. Now verse 12, I believe, and
I'm going to put it on the screen. Verse 12 sort of brings everything
together. Because this is where Paul points out the difference
between how those people that he's talking about are making
their assessments, their judgments, and he says what the righteous
standard of judgment is. Notice what he says. He says,
not that we dare classify or compare ourselves with some of
those who are commending themselves, but when they measure, Excuse
me, when they measure themselves by one another and compare themselves
with one another, they are without understanding. What's the problem
that's happening? They are judging by the wrong
standard. And what standard are they judging
by? Themselves. They're judging by one another.
They're judging by the outward. They are judging by themselves. I want to ask you this and I
want you to consider this thought. If I were to ask you today to
consider what standard would you use to
judge someone who claims to be from Christ, to be a man of God,
to be preaching the word? What standard would we use? Often our standards are very
worldly. Well, look at the size of the guy's church. He's got
to be preaching the truth. I mean, he filled a basketball
stadium in Texas. He's got to be preaching the
truth, right? He's got a million followers
on TikTok. So I said, no. By what standard do we use to
judge? I can't help but think about the Bereans every time
I think about this. Because they had one standard. Paul come in,
preached, they listened to what he said, and they compared it
to the Word of God. And you know what the Word of
God says about the people in Berea? It says they were more noble
than those in Thessalonica. Because they listened to what
Paul had to say and they compared it to the Word of God. I don't
care how popular a pastor is. I don't care how large his ministry
is. I don't care what annual salary he draws or how many books
he writes. If he does not agree with the
Word of God, he is not a man you need to be sitting under. He's not a man you need to be
sending your money to. And I'm also not saying that
any level of popularity automatically discounts a man. Because John
MacArthur has great popularity and he's one of the greatest
pastors of the last hundred years. Though he's wrong about Revelation,
Mike, right? I love that. But what I'm saying
is we look at someone and just because they have a large ministry
doesn't mean that they're bad. Dr. R.C. Sproul had a wonderful
ministry and out of that ministry, since his death, has produced
a college and a ministry that lives on after his death. And that's a blessing to see
God expand a man's ministry and expand his territory. We're going
to see that in verses 13 to 16 here where he talks about his
territory. To see a man's territory expand is not a bad thing, but
to think that that is the only measure of success. Beloved, it's easy to expand
a territory when you're preaching false. Because the Bible says
people are looking to have their ears tickled. So to find an audience
of people who want their ears tickled is easy. It's hard to
do it right. Therefore, when you see a man
like John MacArthur or R.C. Spohr or someone else who God
has given the blessing of expanding their ministry well beyond any
natural border and have a worldwide ministry with a gospel that's
still intact, you should be thankful to God for that man and for what
God has done. And there's dozens of others.
I'm only using those two as a sample. We should not measure ourselves
by ourselves. We should not measure ourselves by worldly standards.
We should measure ourselves by the one standard, which is Christ
and his word. That is the standard. He is the
standard. And how woefully wrong are we
when we miss our evaluation because we use the wrong standard? Now verses 13 to 16 form a little
unit here, where Paul seems to take a departure, but he's not
departing. Understand this is all one thing.
And when he gets to verse 13, he says, but we will not boast
beyond our limits. We will boast only with regard
to the area of influence God has assigned to us each to reach
even you. The phrase area of influence
in the ESV is translated differently in different translations, sphere
of influence. What's interesting is that word,
is the word canon. And it would later become the
word that we used for the Bible when we talk about the canon
of scripture. Mike was talking about the canon this morning, right? The canon
of scripture means the list. But the word canon means a measure,
but it can also mean a sphere or an area. And one of the ways
that it was used, it was used when runners would run a race.
They would have a lane. It's still today. When you put
runners on a track, each runner is supposed to do what? He's
supposed to stay in his lane. Right? And so, with that in mind,
he says, we're not boasting beyond limits, but we'll boast only
in regard to the lane or the area of influence God has assigned
to us to reach you. God put me in your lane. Paul
is saying, God assigned you to me because he brought me to you
to bring you the gospel. Like, God put me in your lane. And then he says this, for we're
not overextending ourselves as though we did not reach you.
I'm not saying you're in my lane by imagination. I actually came
to you. I've been there. I've walked
on the dirt. I've pitched the tents, made the tents. I've been
among you. This lane is my lane. For we are not overextending
ourselves as though we did not reach you, for we were the first
to come all the way to you with the gospel of Christ. We do not
boast beyond limit in the labors of others, but our hope is that
as your faith increases, our area of influence among you may
be greatly enlarged, so that we may preach the gospel in lands
beyond you. Understand at this point Paul
still has a mind to go further. Paul wants to go to Rome. Paul
wants to go to Spain. Paul wants to expand his lane.
As I said earlier, there's nothing wrong with a man's ministry expanding.
Paul wants to see it expand. But the last section is what's
really the key. He says, we may preach the gospel
in lands beyond you without boasting of work already done in another
area of influence. Now who's he talking about there?
He's talking about the guys who came in to the church that he
founded, after he founded it, and were boasting as if they
were the ones who founded it. They come in after him. They
come in and it's not as if they came in to support Paul. They
came in to diminish Paul. To demolish what he had done
and build up their own kingdom. In a place where he had already
placed the gospel by preaching the truth. Can you imagine? Just for a second. A church planter. Try to bring
it into a modern-day situation. A church planter from 70 years
ago. No, I'll give you a better one,
a better one. Video came out this week of a
guy who's a preacher and he's a drag queen. And he's expressing
how his church has rainbow flags and how his church has all this
other stuff. And he's using all this language
about his church. And he's a drag queen, like straight
up drag queen. First words out of his mouth,
our church is 300 years old. And you know what? I will lay
you dollars to donuts that if any of those people 300 years
ago knew what was going on today, they would roll over in their
graves. Because what was planted for
Christ has been corrupted by the world. Paul's dealing with the same
thing. Paul planted a church in Corinth. He planted it for
Christ. He planted it to grow. Other men have come on to where
he planted and have sought to destroy it with falsehood. And Paul says this, and this
is very simple, you're in my lane. You know Paul didn't do that
to other people. Just to throw this out there. You know what
Paul's passion was? To plant churches where Christ
had not been named. We read that in the scripture.
Paul didn't go behind other men who planted churches. He went
to places Christ had not been named. That's one of the passions
that we talk about here. That's why we support Scott Phillips
the way we do. Because Scott And I want to say
this outright. I think there's a place for missionaries
and ministers who go to places where churches exist, but have
fallen into bad teaching and try to build them back up. I
think there's a place for that. But Scott's passion is not that.
He's not for raising up the ruins. He's for going to the people
who've never been reached. The Dow tribe never saw a white person
before. He came backpacking in. And remember, they couldn't even
communicate. for the first few months that
he was there. But by God's grace, God went before him and opened
the hearts of those people to receive him. And he didn't even
know why they received him. This is a miraculous story. If
you haven't read about missionary Scott Phillips, the missionary
that we support in this church, you need to read his story to
see how God worked among a man who said, I'm going to go where
Christ has not been named. We should have a passion for
that. Finally we come to the commendation.
Paul says, Paul is here quoting Jeremiah 9, 23 and 24. He quotes
it in 1 Corinthians 1, 31 I believe it is. And he quotes it again
here. And really this should really
bring us to the answer to the question of by what standard? What standard do we use? Well
we use the Word of God. So when it says here, it is not
the one who commends himself, but the one whom the Lord commends.
Well how does the Lord commend a man? Through the preaching
of the Word. The Lord commends a man through
the Word. We don't have signs from heaven pointing out,
false teacher, false teacher. It would be nice if we did. It
would be nice if there were clouds that simply said, oh, watch out
for this guy. We don't have that. But what we do have is we have
a standard. We have a standard to measure
our teachers. We have a standard to measure
the men that we sit under. We have a standard to measure
what we receive what we give our wives and our children. And
that standard is the Word of God. And let the one who boasts, boast
in that. Not in what he wears. Not in how good he looks. Not
in how big his church is. But let the one who boasts, boast
in this. That the Lord is his satisfaction. and he's satisfied
in the Lord. And if the Lord chooses to expand
his lane, wonderful. And if the Lord keeps him in
the lane that he's in until he dies, praise be the name of the Lord. It's not the one who commends
himself who is approved, but the one who the Lord commends. Beloved, we are not to evaluate
By looks, giftedness, talentedness, oratory skills, or charisma.
But we evaluate according to the Word of God. In Latin there's a phrase, and
I'll end with this. In Latin there's a phrase called Norma
Normans. Norma Normans was one of the phrases that was used
by the reformers to describe the Bible. Norma Normans in Latin
means the standard of standards. Or the norm of norms against
which all other things are normed. That's actually what norma normans
means. It means the standard against which all other things
are measured. That's why we call it the canon. It's the standard. It's the measure. Everything
has to be measured against this word. You come to me today, you say,
I don't know if I'm saved. You know where we're gonna go? The word of God.
You want assurance? You're going to find it in the
Word of God. You come to me, you have questions about your marriage. We're going
to go to the Word of God. You come to one of our elders, you
have questions about leadership or anything. What we're going
to do? We're going to go to the Word of God. Because this is
the standard. And this is that which all things
must be measured by. Especially the man who claims
to teach it. Let's pray. Father, I thank you
for your Word. I thank you for your truth. And
I pray now, even now, God, that you would be with us as we move
toward our time of the Lord's Supper. As we are reminded what
your word tells us, that on the night that Jesus was betrayed,
he took the cup and he blessed it. And he said, this is my blood
given for you. And he took the bread and he
said, this is my body, which is broken for you. And as often
as you eat this bread and drink this cup, you show forth the
Lord's death until he comes. Lord, may we be people of the
Word. May the Word guide us. May the Word teach us. May the
Word be our standard. We pray in Jesus' name. Amen.
By What Standard?
Series 2 Corinthians Exposition
| Sermon ID | 915241934145369 |
| Duration | 53:06 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | 2 Corinthians 10:7-18 |
| Language | English |
Documents
Add a Comment
Comments
No Comments
© Copyright
2026 SermonAudio.