Monday, September 22, 2008

I Get It! Introduction


“I Get It”

1 Corinthians 1: 18-25 GJW
18 For the word of the Cross to the ones being destroyed is foolishness but to the ones continually being saved, to you, it is the power of God. 19 For it has been written, “I will destroy the wisdom of the wise ones and the intelligence of the intelligent, I will push out of the way.” 20 Where is the wise one, where is the learned one, where is the debater of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world? 21 For in as much as in the wisdom of God, the world did not know God through wisdom, God took pleasure through the foolishness of the proclamation to save the ones believing. 22 And in as much as the Jews demand a sign and the Gentiles seek wisdom, 23 we on the other hand, we proclaim Christ having been crucified…to the Jews it is a stumbling block, to the Gentiles moronic. 24 But to the called ones, both Jews and Gentiles, Christ is the power of God and the wisdom of God. 25 For the stupidity of God is wiser than (the wisdom) of man and the weakness of God is stronger than (the strength) of men.


The “ah hah!” experience is famous in psychology as the moment when suddenly you get it; when your eyes open to what you never understood before, when your brain synapses all at once fire into inspiration mode. We’ve all had something like this happen to us; maybe not as world changing as the Wright Brothers suddenly knowing what was wrong with their airplane design or Thomas Edison realizing what he needed to do to correct his first light bulb but our ah-hahs are pretty important to us. You remember where you put your brush. Ah-hah! You think of your friend’s daughter’s name. Ah-hah! Inspiration comes for fixing your car’s carburetor. Ah-hah!

Recently I have been bemused by the “ah-ha” so many in the political world seem to be having about Jesus. The slogan that has sprung up recently as an “ah-hah” of sorts is that Jesus was a community organizer. Listening to a conservative talk-show, I was floored by the ah-hahs bandied around regarding Christ. A caller, decrying the slogan of Jesus being a community organizer told the host that Jesus was most certainly not a community organizer; he was a “teacher”. Now, as soon as the caller made his point, the host immediately corrected him. “Oh no” he expounded, “Jesus was not a teacher, he was truth”. That is what the Bible tells us about him and what Christians believe. So that was it. Three ah-hahs! Jesus was a community organizer, Jesus was a teacher, Jesus was truth. Honestly, I cannot find fault with any of the ones who thought they could define Jesus as they did. They each based their impressions on what they thought they had figured out and normally that is good enough. The trouble with Jesus is that your ah-hah will never be adequate…for that matter an ‘ah-hah can be your most fatal mistake when it comes to Him. Jesus is not an explanation, a definition nor even a biography. But to know Him is an impossible task if you rely just upon your common sense.

There are two types of understanding. The first is a natural wisdom, a common sense intelligence that everyone possesses to some degree or another. It takes things in and then makes decisions based on experiences, impressions and influencers. The ah-hah for natural wisdom is the result of mental synthesis, putting it all together and then the brain remaking what is there into an understanding. We operate out of this in practically every area of life. We discipline our kids based on it, choose careers based on it, form friendships and develop opinions through natural wisdom. For most people, that is all they know. We may see Gorillas using sign language to ask for water but you will never hear of one writing a book about family relations or discussing the grief process because it is not possible for them. Natural wisdom is all the wisdom the world has and so it cannot be charged with ignorance for being unable to go beyond it. Paul insists there is a wisdom that rises above natural wisdom just as distinctively as the wisdom of man soars above the understanding of a gorilla.
To Be Continued

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