2 Corinthians 4:13-5:1 - Center for Excellence in Preaching (2024)

This Sunday’s Epistolary Lesson brings to mind two relatively famous quotes about the dangers of thinking too much about our “eternal house in heaven” (5:1) that is our resurrected bodies in the new creation. Oliver Wendell Holmes once reportedly said, “Some people are so heavenly minded that they are of no earthly good.” Johnny Cash echoed Holmes’ critique of heavenly mindedness. “You’re shinin’ your light and shine it you should,” crooned Cash, “But you’re so heavenly minded you’re no earthly good.”

With the indispensable help of the Holy Spirit, 2 Corinthians 4:13-5:1 offers preachers an opportunity to preach about our “building from God” (5:1). However, it also offers a chance to explore how the prospect of that building helps shape Gods’ dearly beloved people’s treatment of others and our earthly tents. This Sunday’s Epistolary Lesson offers preachers a chance to explore with our hearers how heavenly mindedness, in fact, leaves plenty of room for doing “earthly good.”

In verse 18 the apostles call Jesus’ friends to “fix our eyes [skopounton]* not on what is seen [blepomena], but on what is unseen [me blepomena].” The New Living Translation of the Bible paraphrases them as writing here, “We don’t look at the troubles we can see now; rather we fix our gaze on things that cannot be seen.” Paul and Timothy, in other words, invite Jesus’ friends to concentrate not on what is now visible to us, but on what remains to us invisible.

Some painful things were visible in the lives of the apostles. Their misery’s weight demanded much of their attention. They experienced things like floggings, shipwrecks and trials. So their readers aren’t surprised to hear Paul and Timothy assert in verse 16, “Outwardly [ho exo] we are wasting away [diaptheretai].” They are literally rotting on the outside. The Greek verb even intimates that they’re being destroyed.

Preachers might spend some time inviting our hearers to consider some of the painful things we “see.” Some of us are experiencing physical decay or with mental illness. Hunger stalks many corners of society and world. Parts of our world seem to be in perpetual flames caused by oppression and warfare. Creation groans under, among other things, climate change.

Yet when Paul and Timothy summon Jesus’ friends not to “fix our eyes” on those things that we see, they aren’t inviting us to ignore the misery that’s so visible. The apostles invite us to, instead, concentrate on what we can’t yet see. After all, what we can’t yet see both gives God’s dearly beloved people hope for the future and helps shape our response to the misery that we see nearly everywhere.

It may be tempting to view the apostles’ assertion in verse 18 that “What is seen is temporary [proskaira], but what is unseen is eternal [aiona]” as advocating for a kind of Pollyanna approach to the world’s misery. That they’re just saying something like, “There, there my dears. Things are gonna be alright.” However, by saying, “What is seen is temporary,” the apostles are simply asserting that the misery and pain we see and experience won’t get the last word. Only what we don’t yet see will last forever.

In 2 Corinthians 5:1 Paul describes one of the things we now do see that is temporary. There he speaks of “the earthly [epigeios] tent [oikia] that we live in.” The apostle is comparing our bodies to some kind of dwelling place. Scholars generally agree that he’s speaking of a type of temporary tent.

The “abodes” that are our bodies are fragile. They “waste away” and experience “troubles” (4:16). Because our earthly bodies may, in fact, be “destroyed” [katalythe], they are only “temporary” (4:18). They can be, in The Message’s lyrical paraphrase, “taken down like tents and folded away.”

However, Paul goes on to write about one thing that we do not yet see but will last forever. In verse 1 he insists, “We have a building [oikodomen] from God, an eternal [aionion] house [oikian] in heaven [ouranois], not built by human hands [acheiropoieton].”

The apostle insist that the contrasts between our earthly and heavenly bodies are sharp. The building that is our earthly bodies is, in some ways, built by people. The building that is our heavenly bodies will be built by God. The building that is our earthly body is almost constantly on the move. The building that is our heavenly body will never have to move out of the new creation.

Nearly everyone can now see the building that is our earthly body. None of us can yet see the building that will be our heavenly bodies. The building that is our earthly bodies can be destroyed. The building that is our heavenly bodies will be indestructible.

After all, we know, as the apostles write in verse 14, “that the one who raised [egeiras] the Lord Jesus from the dead will also raise [egerei] us with Jesus and present [parastesei] us with you in his presence.” Just as God raised Jesus from the dead, God will raise us from the dead and give us what Paul calls the “building from God” that will be our resurrection bodies.

But while these are such encouraging and hopeful words, they easily distract God’s adopted children from following Jesus in and with our earthly bodies. 2 Corinthians 4 and 5 are so lovely that they can tempt us to be so heavenly minded that we’re of only limited value to those with whom we share our earthly spaces.

So preachers will want to spend some time describing how this Sunday’s Epistolary Lesson’s hope informs how we love God and, especially, our neighbors. Accounts of Jesus’ post-resurrection appearances at least suggest that while resurrected bodies will be different from earthly ones, they’ll also share some similarities. So preachers might reflect with our hearers on how this Sunday’s Epistolary Lesson summons us to care for the earthly tents that we now see that are others and our own bodies.

But focusing on what is unseen (18) also suggests that our suffering that what we now “see” has an expiration date. Those things that cause so much grief and misery will not get the last word in any person or things life. So Jesus’ friends don’t just proclaim by what we do and say to our neighbors the hope of eternal life. We also treat them as those with whom our buildings from God may share all of eternity.

The Scriptures offer few concrete details on what we don’t yet see that will be eternal. The Bible largely uses metaphors that suggest relief of the misery that so many people now experience. The Scriptures suggest heaven will, for instance, be a bit like a banquet for hungry and thirsty people.

They imply that heaven will be a place where people who are blind can see, who are deaf can hear and who are disabled will be fully abled. The Scriptures suggest that in heaven Christ will completely unite people from every nation, tribe and language.

This Sunday’s Epistolary Lesson summons God’s adopted sons and daughters to focus on those things that we don’t yet see so that the Spirit can shape our lives around those future realities. It encourages us to work to give people who are hungry and thirsty a foretaste of heaven by giving them food and drink. 2 Corinthians 4 and 5 encourages Christians to work to relieve the suffering of those whom disabilities currently haunt. This text encourages God’s dearly beloved people to work to bring together people whose differences easily drive us apart.

*I have here and elsewhere added in brackets the Greek words for the English words the NIV translation uses.

Illustration

The congregation I serve shares our building with congregations whose members are largely Cameroonian- and Indonesian-American. We conduct most of our worship services separately and in French, Bahasa Indonesian and English respectively. There is generally minimal visible unity among even the various followers of Jesus Christ who share the same worship space.

But on Pentecost our three separate congregations came together to worship God. Our worship planner very carefully drew up a liturgy that contained songs, Scripture readings and other expressions of faith in our three respective languages. We even celebrated the Lord’s Supper together. Sometimes we took turns reading in one of the three languages. At other times we simultaneously spoke and sang in those languages (and more).

There were times during the service when we saw and heard chaos. But we knew that chaos is only temporary. In fact, our Pentecost, 2024 worship service offered us a glimpse of what we do not yet see, but trust will, by God’s amazing grace last forever. We caught sight of our eternal worship of God in our resurrected bodies that will be our buildings from God.

2 Corinthians 4:13-5:1 - Center for Excellence in Preaching (2024)

FAQs

What does 2 Corinthians 4 13 5 1 mean? ›

Paul, writing to the Corinthians in 2 Corinthians 4:13 – 5:1 -5, described the hope that we have as believers. He said that our physical body is “the tent that is our earthly home.” The manner in which St. Paul describes this “tent” might cause the reader to consider that the earthly dwelling was somewhat of a prison.

What does 2 Corinthians 4 14 5 1 mean? ›

Everything indeed is for you, so that the grace. bestowed in abundance on more and more people may cause the thanksgiving to overflow for the glory of God. Therefore, we are not discouraged; rather, although our. outer self is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day.

What is the meaning of Corinthians 4:13? ›

Paul sums up how he and the other apostles are thought of by the unbelieving world. They are like the scum of the earth. They are like garbage, to be thrown away. It's not just that the larger world sees them as nothing. The world regards them as something detestable that must be removed.

What scripture was Paul quoting in 2 Corinthians 4-13? ›

Paul says that we too have the same “Spirit of faith” recorded in Scripture: “I kept my faith, even when I said, 'I was greatly afflicted'” (Psalm 116:10). We too can trust in the God who enables us to speak (and thereby have agency) even when in a deplorable state (2 Corinthians 4:13).

What does 2 Corinthians 13 4 mean? ›

Paul is saying he may have been weak when he was with them in the past—in a Christlike way—but when he comes to visit them this time it will be to deal with them in the Christlike power of God. In other words, the Corinthian church should not expect Paul to seem weak or feeble at his next visit.

What does it mean that the husband is sanctified by the wife? ›

As mentioned before, this sanctification does not mean that the unbelieving spouse (or their children) are automatically saved by virtue of marriage, but it does mean that God blesses that particular household in a very special way.

What is the meaning of 2 Corinthians 4 1? ›

Second Corinthians 4:1–6 begins with Paul's insistence that he would never act in disgraceful or deceptive ways. He and his co-workers present the truth of God's Word openly. They invite others to openly evaluate their conduct before God.

What does crushing mean in the Bible? ›

Crushing, rather, is the way of preservation. It's also the way to get what's most valuable, the oil, out of the olive. Keeping this perspective is how we can be troubled on every side yet not distressed… pressed to the point of being crushed but not crushed and destroyed.

What does Corinthians 4:14 mean? ›

First Corinthians 4:14–21 focuses on Paul's role as spiritual father to the Corinthians, since he is the one who led them to Christ. He urges them to change their attitudes and behaviors and to imitate his example in living out the gospel.

What does 2 Corinthians 4 teach us? ›

In 2 Corinthians 4, Paul talks about the light of the gospel (2 Corinthians 4:1-6). He explains that, as Christians, we are to proclaim the light – that light being Jesus. Jesus allows us to see and know the glory of God (2 Corinthians 4:6). We are to proclaim the light of Jesus in the darkness of this broken world.

What can we learn from 2 Corinthians 13? ›

The letter concludes by urging the Corinthians to rejoice, to strive for restoration, to encourage each other, and to live in peace. They are assured the God of love and peace will be with them.

What does Corinthians 13 teach us? ›

Love as described in 1 Corinthians 13 is best understood as a way of life, lived in imitation of Jesus Christ, that is focused not on oneself but on the “other” and his or her good. Love is about action, how a person lives for the Lord and obeys him and how a person lives for others and serves them.

Who is Paul referring to in 2 Corinthians? ›

In Paul's second letter to the Corinthians, he again refers to himself as an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God and reassures the people of Corinth that they will not have another painful visit, but what he has to say is not to cause pain but to reassure them of the love he has for them.

What is Paul trying to tell the Corinthians? ›

In this letter to the church at Corinth, Paul covered a number of different issues related to both life and doctrine: divisions and quarrels, sexual immorality, lawsuits among believers, marriage and singleness, freedom in Christ, order in worship, the significance of the Lord's Supper, and the right use of spiritual ...

What is the same Spirit of faith? ›

"Having the same Spirit of faith," he says. He is content— nay, he is full of joy—to have the same Spirit working faith in him that worked faith in them. He claims no superiority in the matter. If he has a like faith, it is because he is made by God's grace to share in a like fountain of faith.

What does it mean to visit orphans and widows in their affliction? ›

Visiting orphans and widows is so much more than just taking a trip to another country to hand out some food to people you will never see again; visiting orphans and widows means to look after, to take care of, to provide for, with the implication of continuous responsibility.

What does it mean to serve God with a perfect heart and a willing mind? ›

Righteous men and women have always applied their hearts and minds to understanding and obeying the laws of God. Understanding comes through study, faith, and earnest prayer. Once he understands what to do and how to do it, the righteous person strives with all his heart to obey what he knows and feels is right.

What does it mean to love God with heart soul and mind? ›

Loving God with your soul means to love Him for eternity. When our hearts stop beating, our souls keep living. And God wants our relationship with Him to last forever. Loving God with your mind means to love Him unconditionally–because we know that He is worthy of love–even when we don't feel like it.

What does it mean to have your feet fitted with the gospel of Peace? ›

Having our feet fitted with the shoes of the gospel of peace allows us to be ready to share God with others at all times. As Christians, we should always be prepared, as we never know when an opportunity may arise to share the good news of the gospel with someone else.

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