Friday, November 30, 2018

The Foundation and the Building Distinguished


In 1 Corinthians 3, Paul introduces us to the illustration of the foundation and the building. He makes quite clear that Jesus Christ Himself is the foundation of the building, the new, spiritual temple. We may think of that building corporately (the whole church) or individually (our lives). In either case, Jesus is the only, true foundation.

Paul then goes on and urges Christians to be building with “gold, silver, and precious stones” as opposed to building with “wood, hay, and stubble.” It matters how we build.

Most religious activity in our world spends its time and energies trying to lay a foundation with building materials. But a foundation is no place for “gold, silver, and precious stones,” much less “wood, hay, and stubble.” Neither are suited for a foundation. But most people would rather lay their own foundation, using their best efforts, than to stand firmly on Christ alone. Let alone other religions, many Christians confuse this principle, and drift into an admixture of foundation and building, when they should be clearly separated.

The only suitable foundation material for church and person is Jesus Christ, our rock. In 2 Samuel 22, David comes back to that theme again and again, that God is his Rock. And yet, David was far from passive.

And this brings us to the other error we so often make - believing that we have the proper, the perfect foundation, we assume that there is nothing left for us to do. And yet as builders, we ought to be building. As servants, we ought to be serving. As disciples, we ought to be discipling. As Gospel-loving people, we ought to be sharing that Gospel. 

My friend who has built both foundation and building for us talks about “the bond.” If I understand correctly, it is the firm attachment of the building to the foundation. You don’t want the one floating around without the other. They are related. They are both necessary. But they are not the same. 

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