Continuing to verse sixteen, we hear “Therefore do not let
what you consider good be spoken of as evil” (14:16). As Paul has said,
“I know and am convinced that there is nothing unclean in itself” (14:14a).
Paul informs his hearers, whose unity of table fellowship as befits the
kingdom of God is of utmost concern to him, “If it is good for you, then it is
good for you. Don’t let the opinion of another overshadow the application
of conscience, especially if that opinion erects walls between believers.”
Why? “For the kingdom of God does not consist of food and drink”
(14:17a).
By now, this should be more than obvious. Those that
participate in the kingdom of God, justified, in right covenant standing with
the Creator God of the universe (the one that elected Abraham, Israel, and now,
through Jesus, a people composed of all nations), should not allow differences
in dietary practices, and especially those differences that are connected to
the identification of the people of God before the coming of the Christ and the
Christ-event (crucifixion and Resurrection), to persist or to play a
determinative role in the way that the kingdom of God is primarily represented
to the world, which was partially accomplished through the revolutionizing of
the Hellenistic meal-table.
The meal table, which was so very crucial, in that time, in
terms of delineating social position and standing, was transformed by the
church as they sought to emulate the meal tables of their Lord Jesus.
Whereas the Hellenistic meal table of the Greco-Roman world offered
well-defined stratifications such that the meal table reflected the social
status of all of its participants, the Christian meal table eschewed these
stratifications, and when properly executed in accordance with the example of
Jesus, presented to a watching world something that would have been conceived
of as a jumbled and disjointed mess. Ideally, it would have been
impossible for an observer, or a participant for that matter, to determine the
social standing of the individual members of the assembly by means of an
analysis of the meal table, for all mixed freely, sharing the same food and
drink, participating in the activities of the table equally, and functioning as
an egalitarian society in which the first were last and the last were
first. All of this was done (or to be done) in a spirit of love and
community, in such a way that no one, even in a situation in which social roles
were reversed, lorded their newfound status over another. Failure to live
up to this meal-table ideal was part of Paul’s major critique of the Corinthian
church, and was a significant contributor to the rest of the problems in that
church with which he found himself dealing.
However, if Jews and Gentiles managed to position themselves
at separate tables, or to sequester themselves at different locations at the
table in such a way that it became relatively simple to identify those that
were Jews and those that were Gentiles, simply on the basis of their food, then
what was being communicated that the kingdom of God did, in fact, consist of
food and drink, rather than “righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit”
(14:17b). Those who eschewed food-based divisions, neither foisting their
predilections on others, nor condemning those that did not share their own
sensibilities, but rather focused on the fact that all participated equally in
God’s covenant based on belief in Jesus, that food had no intrinsic qualities
of uncleanness, and that all that confessed Jesus as Lord did so because of the
pouring out of the Holy Spirit on Jew and Gentile alike (according to the
earliest traditions of the church), could have it said of them that “the one
who serves Christ in this way is pleasing to God and approved by people”
(14:18).
With all that said, what’s the conclusion of this portion of
Paul’s dissertation? Paul writes “So then, let us pursue what makes for
peace and for building up one another. Do not destroy the work of God,”
that being His temple (both individually and corporately) and the sign of His
faithfulness to His covenant promises, “for the sake of food. For
although all things are clean, it is wrong to cause anyone to stumble by what
you eat” (14:20). Naturally, this could go both ways. Jewish
believers could consider themselves to be unclean by food, and Gentile
believers could be made to believe that they are somehow less than full
participants in the covenant and its promises if they do not abide by the
Jewish dietary practices that fell into the category of old covenant markers.
Thusly, “It is good not to eat meat or drink wine,” items often used or
dedicated or blessed in the temples of different gods (and therefore most
definitely polluted by idolatry, possibly by sexual immorality, and certainly
not slaughtered properly), “or to do anything that causes your brother to
stumble” (14:21). The ambiguity here does not allow for dogmatism.
Rather, it interjects an operative principle, which is love.
Consequently, and reaching again to the long-running
narrative of God’s covenant faithfulness that begins with Abraham and
culminates in Jesus, Paul says “The faith that you have, keep to yourself
before God. Blessed is the one who does not judge himself by what he
approves. But the man who doubts is condemned if he eats, because he does
not do so from faith, and whatever is not from faith is sin” (14:22-23).
What is crucial is bearing the divine image and reflecting the glory of God
into the world. Faith is that which operates to cause belief in the
Gospel’s proclamation, inculcates love, and marks one as a member of God’s
covenant people. This is that of which we cannot lose sight in our
dealings inside the assembly of the people of God. Acting in ways that
are contrary to the Gospel and kingdom message, as demonstrated by the life of
Jesus (and His meal tables), is what runs contrary to the faith that is claimed
and what leads to a failure of both the individual and the community to rightly
bear the image of God (sin).
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