Overview:
1 Corinthians 9:24–10:13
Disqualified. The mere mention of the word stirs up strong emotions. No matter the situation, the word smacks of shame, humiliation, and the worst kind of failure. The Scriptures call us to be like Christ, but they also offer warnings regarding disqualification. Some of us wrongly claim immunity from such attitudes; others of us believe we are beyond help. Paul reminds us that God’s faithfulness provides a way through the temptations that lead to disqualification.
Message Summary:
Message Key Facts:
- The Meaning of Adokimos: Swindoll explains the Greek word adokimos (disqualified) used in 1 Corinthians 9:27. In the ancient games, if a combatant competed unfairly, they were driven from the arena in disgrace. Swindoll parallels this to the "Slick Sleeve" ceremony in the Marine Corps, where a soldier is stripped of their chevrons and rank in front of their platoon due to a failure of character.
- The Danger of Overexposure: Drawing from 1 Corinthians 10, Swindoll notes that the Israelites had supernatural guidance (the cloud), supernatural deliverance (the Red Sea), and supernatural food (manna). Yet, "with most of them God was not well pleased." Swindoll argues that overexposure to spiritual privileges can produce a "burnout effect," where highly gifted people become "sour" and eventually disqualified.
- The Wolf and the Knife: To illustrate how sin deceives, Swindoll uses the analogy of an Eskimo wolf trap. A knife blade is coated in layers of frozen blood. As the wolf licks the blood, it eventually cuts its own tongue on the exposed blade. In its craving, the wolf unknowingly satisfies its thirst with its own warm blood until it bleeds to death. This mirrors how a "secret craving" for evil can destroy a believer.
- The "Hasty Defense": Swindoll applies a military concept to the Christian life: once you take a hill (achieve a victory), you don't relax; you set up a "hasty defense," establishing guards and communication lines to prevent a counterattack. Believers must never live on the laurels of past spiritual victories.
- The Progression of Disqualification: Swindoll outlines the downward spiral found in 1 Corinthians 10:
- Craving Evil Things: It starts with the imagination and inner attitude.
- Idolatry: Replacing Christ with a substitute or obsession.
- Immorality: Engaging in sexual sin (porneia), often fueled by private lust.
- Presumption ("Trying the Lord"): Taking advantage of God’s grace and dancing near the edge of disaster.
- Grumbling: A sour attitude where the "tongue betrays the heart".
- Buffeting the Body: Paul’s statement "I buffet my body" refers to beating oneself black and blue (like a boxer). It symbolizes the severe self-restraint required to keep the flesh in check so that the believer does not become a castaway.
Message References:
- 1 Corinthians 9:24–27: Paul’s exhortation to run the race to win and his personal discipline to "buffet his body" lest he be disqualified (adokimos) after preaching to others.
- 1 Corinthians 10:1–13: The historical example of Israel, who, despite having "all" the spiritual privileges (cloud, sea, manna, rock), fell into sin and were destroyed. This serves as a warning against craving evil things, idolatry, immorality, and grumbling.
- Matthew 6:1–18: Jesus’ warning against hypocrisy (doing righteous acts to be seen by others), which Swindoll contrasts with the authentic character required to avoid disqualification.
- Philippians 2:14–16: The command to do all things "without grumbling or disputing" to prove oneself blameless in a crooked generation.
- Galatians 6:1: The instruction to restore a brother overtaken in a fault, which Swindoll acknowledges as necessary, though he distinguishes restoration to fellowship from restoration to high-profile leadership.