Doctrine of Apostleship; 1
Corinthians 1:1-3
We find Sosthenes mentioned again in verse 1 and we find that he,
too, has become a believer and is travelling with Paul and is with Paul in
Paul begins in
verse 1 with the basic opening that he uses in almost every epistle. His
salutation is his epistles always give some clue as to why he is writing the
epistle. The introduction extends down through verse 17 and in this we will
discover the basic theme that Paul will emphasize throughout this epistle. 1 Cor 1:1 NASB “Paul,
called {as} an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God, and Sosthenes our brother.” He calls himself Paul which is the Greek name by
which he is known after his salvation. Prior to his salvation he is known by
his Hebrew name, Saul. It is translated in the NASB as “Paul, called
an apostle,” although the “as” is not in the original Greek. What we have in
the original Greek is KLETOS APOSTOLOS [klhtoj a)postoloj] which means “called an apostle.” Greek does not have
an indefinite article in it. So Paul says he is “called an apostle of Jesus
Christ.” Why does he start with this? Simply because he was
not a part of the original twelve. Paul’s statement that he is an
apostle of Jesus Christ indicates his relationship to the Lord, that the Lord
is the one who has commissioned him. The word apostle basically means someone
who is commissioned or sent on a mission, and when you are an apostle of Jesus
Christ the genitive indicates the source of the apostleship or commission, and
that is the Lord Jesus Christ. “Through the will of God” is the preposition DIA [dia] he genitive. When there is a DIA plus a
genitive noun it indicates means or mode; it is not cause.
Galatians 1:1 NASB
“Paul, an apostle (not {sent} from men nor through the
agency of man, but through Jesus Christ and God the Father, who raised Him from
the dead).” Paul had the same problem with the Galatian
believers and so in his introduction to the epistle to the Galatians he had to
emphasize his gift of apostle. Notice in that verse that the first thing he
says about being an apostle is that it is not from men. The NASB translates
that “not send from men” but that may not be the best translation. The
apostleship did not come from men, it was not bestowed
upon him by a group of men. In the Greek this is the preposition APO [a)po] plus the accusative, and he is emphasizing the fact
that he did not receive his apostleship from a group of men—not like Matthias
in Acts chapter one, in other words. He is indicating that the gift of
apostleship does not come from the source of men, a college of men, a board of
deacons or any other group. Then he says that “neither does it come through
men.” This is DIA plus the genitive which indicates instrumentality:
“neither does it come through the instrumentality of a man.” It comes only
through Jesus Christ. It is a divine commission and a divine appointment. It
was on the road to
The doctrine of apostleship
1)
Apostle comes
from the Greek word APOSTOLOS [a)postoloj] which means someone who is commissioned and sent on
a mission. It is a word that is not used very much in classical Greek
literature. There are a few instances of it where it is used to described the
mission of a military or naval commander, or a governor of a Greek colony, but
outside of a few uses it is a rare noun. The verb APOSTELLO [a)postellw]
which means to send is used much more frequently. But one of the things we
always have to remember when we get into the New Testament and into New
Testament vocabulary is that the background for understanding the terminology
of these words is more often than not Hebrew and Old Testament concepts rather
than fifth-century BC classical Greek. The precedent for the vocabulary is
the Old Testament. An apostle was someone who was sent out as a personal envoy
or representative and that was exactly the function of an apostle in the church, he was a personal envoy or representative of the
Lord Jesus Christ.
2)
There were two
categories of apostles in the New Testament. It is important to recognize that
there is a common and a technical use of the word “apostle,”
and it depends on who sends, who does the commissioning. In the technical use
which refers to the twelve apostles Jesus Christ is the one who sends. In the
common or everyday use which related to men who were commissioned by a local
church they were sent out as missionaries or on some specific errand or mission.
The common use refers to the local church sending out missionaries on to the
field. For that reason some other men were called apostles, but they did not
receive the commission from the Lord Jesus Christ, they received it from a
local church. The unique spiritual gift was only given to twelve men, eleven of
the original disciples outside of Judas Iscariot, and then Paul. 1 Corinthians
15:7-10. This was a temporary spiritual gift and it vanished from history with
the death of the apostle John about 96 AD. The second use had to do with a pioneer missionary
or someone who was specifically commissioned by a local church to fulfil a
specific mission. Acts 14:14; Romans 16:7. The gift of apostleship was a
spiritual gift. By definition, therefore, it could not be bestowed by man. All
spiritual gifts are sovereignly bestowed at the instant of salvation by God the
Holy Spirit. 1 Corinthians 12:28, 29.
3)
Three
qualifications for the gift of apostleship. First, they are appointed by God
the Holy Spirit and commissioned by the Lord Jesus Christ—1 Corinthians
12:8-11; 1 Corinthians 1:1; Galatians 1:1. Second, they were to be an
eyewitness of the resurrection, or have seen the resurrected Christ—1
Corinthians 15:8-9; Acts 1:22. Acts
4)
Apostleship came
after the ascension of Christ (Matthew 10 precedes the church).
5)
Apostles were
recipients of direct revelation from God and were the only authorized source
for divine revelation.
6)
The apostolic
gift died out in the first generation. There was no provision for successors. It
is not passed on though the laying on of hands, there is no such thing as
apostolic succession. That term was originally used in the next century, the second
century; but at first it did not refer to a succession of individuals, that was
the perversion of it as it came down into the Roman Catholic church.
It wasn’t a succession of individuals but a succession of doctrine. You were a
successor of the apostles if you taught the same doctrine the apostles taught.
1 Corinthians 1:2 NASB “To
the church of God which is at Corinth, to those who have been sanctified in
Christ Jesus, saints by calling, with all who in every place call on the name
of our Lord Jesus Christ, their {Lord} and ours.” Notice he says that this is
the “
1 Cor
1:3 NASB “Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the
Lord Jesus Christ.” Paul puts his
own touch to this under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. He used the word
for grace, which is CHARIS [xarij].
Under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit he is going to take the common everyday
salutation that you would find in a letter and tweak it so that it has a
doctrinal impact. He is emphasizing that grace comes from God and it extends to
us. The source is “God our Father.” He is going to use the same genitival
phrase there that we saw him using related to the gift of apostleship over in
Galatians 1:1, APO plus the genitive indicating the ultimate source of
grace and peace. He is going to connect these two because the only source of
grace and peace in life is God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. It does
not come from circumstances, from the details of life, from other people, from
financial success or vocational success. It you don’t have a relationship with
the Lord Jesus Christ and are not applying doctrine then you will never have
peace in your life. And no matter how horrible the circumstances of your life, if
you have a relationship with Jesus Christ and you are applying doctrine then
you will have peace that surpasses all comprehension. So Paul suddenly reminds us
of this in his salutation.
The doctrine of positional truth
1)
Positional truth
is not based on experience, it is based on a reality
that occurs at the instant of salvation.
2)
It is absolute,
it is not progressive. That is why Paul says “you have been sanctified.”
3)
Our position in
Christ, our sanctification, our position as saints, is not related to human
merit or human morality in any way.
4)
It is eternal, we
cannot lose it. This relates it to eternal security. Once we are identified
with Christ that can never be reversed.
5)
It is known only
by the Word of God. When you were saved you didn’t have a clue about positional
truth, but then you heard somebody teach it and you learned that at the point
of salvation you were entered into union with Christ.
6)
It is received
completely at the instant of regeneration.