Guided Question
How can we move beyond merely possessing spiritual gifts and knowledge to experiencing a daily, intimate fellowship with Jesus that transforms our lives?
Summary
The message highlights the spiritual condition of the Corinthian church, which had been richly blessed with grace, teaching, spiritual gifts, and the hope of Christ’s return, yet struggled to live out a truly transformed Christian life. Their sainthood was based on calling, not conduct, revealing that true Christian identity depends on relationship with Christ, not personal merit. The key issue was a lack of intimate, daily fellowship (koinonia) with Jesus, which is essential for godliness and effective Christian living. The message challenges believers today to examine their own fellowship with Christ as the foundation for a vibrant, powerful faith.
Outline
Introduction: The Reality of Our Calling
We are saints by calling, not by conduct (1 Cor. 1:2)
Conduct often falls short, but calling is the foundation
The Spiritual Wealth of the Corinthians
They had grace (1 Cor. 1:4)
They were enriched with knowledge and speech (1 Cor. 1:5)
They had every spiritual gift (1 Cor. 1:7)
They eagerly awaited Christ’s return (1 Cor. 1:7-8)
The Tragic Gap: Lack of Changed Lives
Despite all blessings, their lives did not reflect transformation
They failed to develop a real, intimate fellowship with Jesus
The Key to Christian Life: Fellowship with Christ (1 Cor. 1:9)
God calls us into communion, communication, partnership with Jesus
True godliness flows from daily fellowship and obedience
Without this, spiritual gifts and knowledge remain ineffective
Application: Self-Examination and Encouragement
Are we living in daily fellowship with Jesus?
Is our faith more than ritual or knowledge?
Fellowship fuels godliness and spiritual power
Conclusion
An impressive beginning does not guarantee spiritual maturity
Intimate fellowship with Christ is the key to fulfilling our calling
Key Takeaways
Sainthood is a position by calling, not by our behavior or merit.
Spiritual gifts, knowledge, and hope are valuable but not sufficient alone.
Intimate, daily fellowship (koinonia) with Jesus is essential for real transformation.
Without genuine communion with Christ, spiritual life becomes weak and ineffective.
True Christian living requires ongoing relationship and obedience to Jesus, not just rituals or knowledge.
Regular self-reflection on our fellowship with Christ can help us grow in godliness.
Scriptural References
1 Corinthians 1:2 — Saints by calling, not by conduct
1 Corinthians 1:4-8 — Grace, knowledge, gifts, and hope of Christ’s return
1 Corinthians 1:9 — Called into fellowship (koinonia) with Jesus Christ
John 15:5 — "I am the vine; you are the branches..."
1 John 1:6 — Fellowship with Him and walking in darkness is a lie
Recorded 3/15/81