1 Corinthians 8It is good not to eat meat or to drink wine, or to do anything by which your brother stumbles.
Here, the apostle describes a more egregious evil. Suppose a young man is invited to eat dinner with the pastor. When he sits down to eat, he notices that the Pastor is eating meat. What will the young man think? He might think, "The pastor is eating meat, I guess it's okay." He might think, "The Pastor is eating meat, which I know is wrong. Maybe the Pastor believes that a little sin occasionally is okay." Maybe the young man thinks, "The Pastor is eating meat, which I know is wrong. Maybe the Pastor thinks that sin is not wrong."
10For if someone sees you, the one who has knowledge, dining in an idol’s temple, will his conscience, if he is weak, not be strengthened to eat things sacrificed to idols? 11For through your knowledge the one who is weak is ruined, the brother or sister for whose sake Christ died. 12And so, by sinning against the brothers and sisters and wounding their conscience when it is weak, you sin against Christ. 13Therefore, if food causes my brother to sin, I will never eat meat again, so that I will not cause my brother to sin.
1. I thought you said a Christian would never do such a thing as sin?The main idea here is to understand how our actions can be misunderstood, especially by those who are less spiritually mature. If a young person believes that a small amount of wrongdoing is acceptable or that the pastor is not strict about morals, they might adopt the same attitude. This could lead the young person to stumble and go against their own conscience in favor of a more relaxed moral position.
2. No, again, that's only one of the issues Paul is dealing with.
Yep, and, so as not to raise cain, so as to avoid strife, don't do things you're free to do in front of your brothers whose convictions differ, who are "fully persuaded in their own minds" differently, because your brothers' welfare takes precedence over you walking in your freedom. That is true kindness.The faith which you have, have as your own conviction before God.
One way to avoid causing a brother to stumble is to keep your beliefs private and not practice them in front of those who may not understand. You shouldn't let your freedom to eat meat be seen as moral irresponsibility.
This is addressed with even more specificity in 1 Co 8: you will bring condemnation on yourself if you are "no longer walking in love" by walking in your freedom in a selfish, destructive, way.Happy is he who does not condemn himself in what he approves.
How can someone condemn himself for something he believes is right? He believes it's okay to eat meat because he understands that all food is clean. However, he might face criticism from others. To live a happy life, he needs to navigate the social norms of his community and avoid giving the impression that he approves of even a small wrongdoing or that he is morally weak.
1. Again, Paul is able to deal with, and is dealing with, more than one issue at a time:But he who doubts is condemned if he eats, because his eating is not from faith; and whatever is not from faith is sin.
Here the Apostle mentions someone who is eating meat but "not from faith." Based on his discussion so far, we can conclude that the "belief" in view is that "the kingdom of God does not consist of eating or drinking."
Thus, the word translated "doubts" should be understood as "he who is contentious". The man who causes division for the sake of food does not remember the essential truth that the kingdom of God is not about eating and drinking. His eating the meat is not consistent with a faith that places righteousness and service to Christ over religious rules and mores.
a) The issue (which you yourself have been acknowledging this entire time) that each man must be fully convinced in his own mind, and
b) The issue that even if someone is fully convinced of the rightness of his deeds in his own mind, and is free to walk in it, he is not free to do so in a selfish way, a way in which harm is brought to others (in the various ways Scripture details can occur).
2. No,
a) As in 1 Co 8, this touches on the other, former, issue: the one who does not believe he is free to do this or that before the Lord is not free to do it just because others are doing it, and if he goes beyond "each man is to be fully persuaded in his own mind", eating with doubt, instead of with faith, then he is condemned because that is sin, "because whatever does not proceed from faith is sin" (which you deny Christians commit) because "God's righteousness is revealed from faith to faith".
b) "Doubt" is a perfectly fine rendering, as it is always rendered so, because its opposite is "faith". Faith and doubt are opposites. Faith reveals God's righteousness, not our own, doubt reveals ourselves, our sinfulness.
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