My title is drawn from two commands Paul makes in 2 Corinthians 13:5. Most translations of the Bible read, “Test yourselves… examine yourselves” or they reverse the two imperatives saying, “Examine yourselves… test yourselves”. In the Greek, the first imperative is a different word from the second. Either one may be translated test or examine which explains why translators have difficulty differentiating between them. The difference I find is in the subsequent verses. Paul uses forms of the second word four more times in the next two verses.
This is not just a trivial linguistic issue in my opinion. The
first command asks the Corinthians to test or examine themselves “to see if you
are in the faith.” What he means is to see if you are truly a believer, one who
is “in the faith.” Throughout church history, there has been a debate over how people
can know if they are saved – “in the faith.” It is glaringly obvious that the
Corinthian church had people who claimed to be in the faith but acted very much
like those who were not – like unbelievers. The two letters we have from Paul
to the Corinthians are full of correction and rebuke. He certainly questioned
the legitimacy of their belief.
One could ask whether the Corinthians believed Paul’s
message at first (got saved), but later they stopped believing (lost their
salvation). The answer to this question generally comes from one of two
perspectives: either Calvinist or Arminian. (I wrote about this in some detail
in “Calvinist
or Arminian”) The Calvinist position holds that once a person is saved, it
is not possible to lose salvation: once saved; always saved. The Arminian view
is that everyone makes a conscious decision to be saved and can therefore
decide to be “unsaved.”
This passage may be Paul’s entrance into the debate. I say
this because of the second word he wrote in verse five. Whereas test or examine
is a fair translation of the first of his commands (πειράζω), the word he used in the second
command is dokimazō (δοκιμάζω) which may legitimately be translated “qualify.” The fact that he used
forms of this word repeatedly in the rest of the passage leads me to think he
meant “to qualify” rather than test or examine. An alternative translation of
Paul might read, “Qualify yourselves! Or do you not recognize regarding
yourselves that Jesus Christ is
in you, unless you are unqualified? And I hope that you will recognize
that we are not unqualified! Now we pray to God that you not do wrong in
any way, not that we are seen as qualified, but that you do what is
good, even though we are seen as though unqualified.”
In the larger
context, Paul had been asserting his qualifications as an apostle. At this
point, he told the Corinthians not to concern themselves with his
qualifications but to look to their own condition. In the end, the only thing
that mattered was if they were qualified as believers. So, the question becomes
what Paul says qualifies one as a believer. They claimed to be “in the faith,”
or in Christ. Paul insists that to qualify as a believer, Christ must be “in
them.” As
he said to the Colossians: “Christ in you the hope of glory.”
The important question one must ask is what kind of faith
qualifies one to say, “Christ is in me.” Paul
told the Roman believers, “But if anyone does not have the Spirit of
Christ, this person does not belong to him. But if Christ is in you, the body
is dead because of sin, but the Spirit is life because of righteousness. And if
the Spirit of the one who raised Jesus from the dead lives in you, the one who
raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also make alive your mortal bodies
through his Spirit who lives in you.”
This was Jesus’ promise to His disciples on the night He was
betrayed. He
prayed to His Father, “that they may be one, just as we are one – I in them, and you in me, in
order that they may be completed in one, so that the world may know that you
sent me, and you have loved them just as you have loved me.” Just before this
prayer for His disciples,
He had told them, “If you keep my commandments, you will remain in my love,
just as I have kept my Father’s commandments and remain in his love…. This is
my commandment: that you love one another just as I have loved you.” The
quality of faith that proves Christ is in you is a faith that loves selflessly,
agape love, the love of Jesus. This reminds me of what James said: “Faith
without works is dead.”
It should be no surprise that we are called to obey Jesus; life
in Christ is a “long obedience in the same direction,” according to Eugene
Peterson. That direction is conforming our life to the life of Christ. In his
book Rumors of Another World, Philip Yancey asserts that, “Those who
invest their hope in an unseen world prove it by their actions in this world…. putting
feet to Jesus’ prayer that God’s will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” If
we are in Christ and Christ is in us, we must continue His work doing His
Father’s will.
None of this should suggest that once I am “qualified” I am
good for eternity. In the same way that I had to fulfill continuing education
requirements to maintain my teaching certificate (qualifications), believers
must continue to affirm their qualifications by continuing
to grow up into maturity in Christ. The essential quality of maturity is
demonstrating selfless love to a greater and greater degree.
One wonders how this quality of faith affects the quality of
one’s life here on earth. Yancey quotes Albert Schwietzer: “The only [people]
who will be really happy are those who will have sought and found how to
serve.” It is no coincidence that throughout the Old Testament prophets, the
promised Messiah is called God’s Servant. He shocked His disciples at the “Last
Supper” by washing
their feet and proclaiming that servanthood was to be the hallmark of His
disciples. Jesus
said He, “came not to be served, but to serve.” I believe that one
important qualification for saying you are “in Christ” is servanthood. Are you
qualified?
Related Posts: Necessary
Obedience; Weak-day
Christians
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