What Part Are You
1 Corinthians 12:12-27
You may remember a few years ago when Snoopy, the lovable beagle in the Peanuts cartoon, had his left leg broken. Hundreds wrote letters to Snoopy or sent sympathy cards. Snoopy reasoned about his plight one day while perched on top of his doghouse and looking at the huge white cast on his leg.
"My body blames my foot for not being able to go places. My foot says it was my head’s fault, and my head blamed my eyes.... My eyes say my feet are clumsy, and my right foot says not to blame him for what my left foot did...." Snoopy looks out at his audience and confesses, "I don’t say anything because I don’t want to get involved."
So, how do you feel about your body? Most of us would rather not think about our bodies and if we do, we probably don’t think very complementary things.
It’s too fat or too skinny, too short or too tall. Bumpy, lumpy or just plain ugly. Kind of like the guy who was so ugly when he was a kid that his parents took him everywhere they went so they wouldn’t have to kiss him good bye.
So, it’s kind of strange that Paul would say: Now all of you together are Christ’s body, and each one of you is a separate and necessary part of it. What a statement. We, you and I are the Body of Christ.
Pretty awesome, isn’t it? Look around; each one of us makes up a part of the body of Christ. As Paul reached out to find a simile to adequately describe the church of Jesus Christ the one he came back to time and time again was the comparison between the church and a body.
In Romans, 1 Corinthians, Ephesians and Colossians Paul makes over 30 references to the body of Christ. Those of us who are familiar with the Bible tend to skip over things like that without really taking the time to think about it.
We all know what a body is, after all each one of us occupies one every day, but do we really take the time to look at these vessels that we reside in and see where the similarities are between this which is flesh and blood and the church of Christ?
The first thing we need to recognize is that the analogy of the body applies to two definitions of the church. It refers to the church universal. That is the great all encompassing group of Christians throughout the world who call themselves by so many different names.
So, Maranatha COGOP is part of the same body as First Baptist, Calvary Chapel, Tri State Christian and all the rest who proclaim Jesus as Lord.
However, the local church, also needs to be viewed as the body of Christ. Why did the Apostle Paul choose to use something as imperfect as our material body to illustrate something as mystical as the church of Jesus Christ?
William Barclay sates “There is an “I” a personality which gives unity to the many and varying parts of the body.” This is a hand and this is a hand and that’s a foot and there’s another foot and here’s a head and they’re all separate, but “I” brings unity to make all of those things part of my body.
Barclay goes on to say that what “I” is to the body, is what Christ is to the church, it is in Him that all the diverse parts find their unity.
Alone we are just a David, a Sandy, a Cassie, a Rhonda, a Pastor T. But add Jesus Christ and we become a body.
Christ is no longer in the world, He no longer has a physical body and so if He wants a child taught, then He needs someone to teach. If He wants someone touched in compassion, then He needs to use our compassion and if He needs to cry, then He needs our tears.
And so we are His body, but the question remains what is His body? 1 Cor. 12:12 The human body has many parts, but the many parts make up only one body. So, it is with the body of Christ.
We have something in common. Each part of our body has something in common and that something is us! Your leg doesn’t belong to one person and your arm to somebody else.
Instead, each individual part of the body has “you” “us” “I” in common, you are the common denominator that ties everything together. In the same way the church, the body of Christ has a common focal point and that is Jesus Christ.
Recognize that the church doesn’t belong to anyone here. If you have never accepted Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord, then you are not a part of the body of Jesus Christ.
The very word “Church” in the original Greek means “Called out ones.” From that point of view, we realize that just because you attend a church doesn’t make you a part of the Church.
Just because you go watch a hockey game doesn’t make you a hockey player. Just because you go into a garage doesn’t make you a car. If a cat had kittens in the oven, they wouldn’t be cookies.
In the same way just because you attend a Christian church doesn’t necessarily make you a Christian and only Christians truly belong to the body of Christ.
So, if it isn’t church going, that the various parts of the body have in common, and if going to church doesn’t necessarily make you part of the body how do we achieve it?
Paul gives us the answer in the opening lines of this letter. 1 Corinthians 1:2 We are writing to the church of God in Corinth, (that’s the primary address, now he narrows it down a little bit) you who have been called by God to be His own holy people. (which simply means those set apart for holy use).
He made us holy by means of Christ Jesus, just as He did all Christians everywhere, whoever calls upon the name of Jesus Christ, our Lord, they are part of the body.
The Bible tells us that the path to becoming a Christian is relatively uncomplicated. 1) Confess your sins 2) Repent or turn away and walk in His ways 3) Believe in faith that He will forgive your sins.
Now we know that the body has many different parts, all are different. The diversity of the body is something beyond debate. No two parts of the body are identical, not only are your hands and feet different but your left hand and right hand are different.
We look at our bodies, and we marvel at the God who has created this unparalleled piece of equipment.
We have ears that hear, eyes that see and feet that walk. And none of us object to that. When was the last time you said, “Boy I wish I could see with my toes, or smell with my ears” Nor do we say, “I wish I was a big foot or a very large eye.”
Diversity isn’t just an accidental attribute of the body; it’s all part of the divine nature that designed us. And yet all too often we try to make every member of the body of Christ identical.
We even get to the point that instead of viewing our local church as the body of Christ we view it as only one member of the body of Christ. If we carry that to the extreme, then we end up with churches that instead of being bodies are just collections of the same body part.
So, in churches that are caught up in only social concerns we’d see row after row of bleeding hearts. And churches that are focused on evangelism would be full of beautiful feet. In churches where worship is the primary focus there would be pews full of uplifted hands. And if we looked into the churches where the visible gifts are prominent we’d see row upon row of tongues.
That isn't' a body. I mean a body isn’t made up of a whole bunch of tongues, or feet, or hands, or eyes or ears but instead it’s made up of a combination of each of the parts of the body, one of this, a couple of these and some of those.
You see even though God insists on unity He complicates the matter by also insisting on diversity.
God didn’t make us identical at our first birth, and I don’t think He intended to make us identical at the second birth. To listen to some people all Christians ought to look alike, dress alike, think alike, have the same haircut, read the same translation of the Bible, enjoy the same type of music and raise their children the same way.
In other words, those people think that all Christians ought to do things one way, and you know what way that is. It’s their way.
Just stop and think about it for a minute and let’s be honest, do you really think that we need another you? We certainly don’t need another me. A good place for an Amen.
So, not only are we all the same and not only are we all different, but we are all essential to the well being of the body. Paul personifies the parts of the body, and all the various parts of the body get together and have a complain session.
If the foot says, “I am not a part of the body because I am not a hand,” that does not make it any less a part of the body. And if the ear says, “I am not part of the body because I am only an ear and not an eye,” would that make it any less a part of the body? Suppose the whole body were an eye—then how would you hear? Or if your whole body were just one big ear, how could you smell.
In the church we don’t all do the same thing, someone says “Because I can’t preach like Pastor I’m not a part of the body, and because I can’t sing like Rhonda I’m not part of the body or because I can’t play piano like Sandy I’m not part of the body.”
We don’t just need preachers anymore than we just need singers or just need piano players. When you think about it, we need teachers and we need prayer partners, and we need people with big hearts to love and with long arms to hug.
It’s kind of interesting to note that the foot compares itself with the hand and not the eye. So, we become prone to envy those who surpass us a little, instead of those who are obviously in another class altogether.
Paul is very adamant that each of us in our diversity plays a vital part in the body of Christ. After all, if you were just like me, we wouldn’t need but one of us, would we?
Yes, there are many parts, but only one body so we all need to be heading in a common direction. So, as we face this paradox of being so dramatically different, we see the marvelous problem which confronts the church of Jesus Christ and that is how to preserve our diversity while maintaining our unity.
I’m sure that if we really wanted to and if we tried really hard we could be fairly united. But to be different and united at the same time, well that seems to pose a difficulty that we’re unable to overcome.
But if we look at the original analogy we see that this isn’t just possible with our physical bodies but essential. I can be scratching my head with my hand, walking across the floor with my feet, seeing with my eyes, hearing with my ears and smelling with my nose all at the same time.
The secret to keeping the Body of Jesus Christ that we know as Maranatha on the right path is that we must be seeking the same goal. And hopefully that goal is to reach people and introduce them to Jesus.
If your left foot wanted to go one place and your right foot wanted to go another place you’d be in a real predicament. But we say I’m going to walk over there and the instructions leave our brain, travel through the central nervous system causing each of the required body parts to work as required to take us on that trip.
In the same way the church determines the direction that God wants us to go and each of us as a part of this particular body move in unison toward that goal. Or at least that’s how it’s supposed to work. And that goal better be to share Christ with a lost community and to reach out and love people with the love of Jesus Christ.
This makes for harmony among the members, so that all the members care for each other equally. If one part suffers, all the parts suffer with it, and if one part is honored, all the parts are glad. When One Part Of The Body Hurts, The Whole Body Hurts.
One of the problems in some churches is that they just don’t care about one another. There are some core values for every church. Showing Christ's love to those who attend in practical and tangible ways. We need to be there for each other.
We need to care about one another. Providing meals for a family when needed. When someone has a terminal illness, being there for them and their family. Or when a couple is going through tough times, how can we be of help to them. We’d better figure it out.
Sometimes I think that we are so focused on heaven that we lose sight of those around us. When someone stumbles, we need to stoop over and help them up not scramble over them in an effort to get to heaven.
Sometimes Christians act as if sin is contagious and instead of trying to restore a brother or sister who has fallen in sin we avoid them as if they had the plague. We may not amputate a wounded member of our church family, but if we don’t administer first aid and just ignore it, in time it will die and fall off.
What happens when a part of your physical body gets hurt? If you hit your thumb with a hammer what happens? Actually several things happen all at once. Your mind registers pain, tears come to your eyes, you grab said thumb with your other hand, and you commence to jump up and down, maybe words rush forth from your mouth. The nature of those words being entirely dependent on your present spiritual condition.
What happened? Even though it was just one very small, very insignificant part of your body that was hurt, many other parts of your body became involved in an attempt to lessen the pain. So, when one part of the body of Christ hurts it is each of our responsibility as additional parts of the same body to help lessen the pain.
It may be hurt that comes with the death of a loved one, divorce, a lost job, your children or betrayal. It may be that they have given into temptation and need to be lovingly restored to the body. The responsibility lies not only with the pastor, or with the person next to you it lies with you.
So where are we? The question has to be what role will we play? What member of the body will we become? What function will we perform? How will we help to make the body what it ought to be?
God is depending on us.
Amen!

Maranatha Church of God of Prophecy
1032 Mineral Bluff Highway (Georgia Highway 60), P.O.Box 434, McCaysville, Georgia 30555
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