Knowledge
In chapter eight
we begin a new section in 1 Corinthians, an epistle that has been brought on by
various problems in the church at
It is very common
for people to misunderstand the first verse of chapter eight: “Now concerning things sacrificed to idols, we know
that we all have knowledge. Knowledge makes arrogant, but love edifies.” So
there are people who come along and want to make this contrast between
knowledge on the one hand and love on the other hand. But that completely
misunderstands the whole structure of 1 Corinthians. He is not contrasting
knowledge per se with love, he is contrasting a certain kind of knowledge and
this is a knowledge that is based on human viewpoint and consequently it is
going to produce arrogance. This is what is contrasted with love. He sets this
up when he talks about the first kind of knowledge which is empirical knowledge.
This is represented by eye and ear. In other words, sense
data. Then rationalism. Then he says “the
things which God has prepared for those who love Him: revelation. So Paul makes
a clear distinction between empirical knowledge, knowledge that proceeds from
just thought alone—rationalism, versus revelation. The knowledge that Paul
mentions in 1 Corinthians 8:1 is GNOSIS [gnwsij]
as opposed to EPIGNOSIS [e)pignwsij]. EPIGNOSIS refers to that full knowledge that we have in the
soul that is the product of believing doctrine stored soul under the teaching
ministry of God the Holy Spirit. So in this short opening he is going to drive us right back to the basic problem at
The Greeks had a word that we
have brought over into English, and that is the word EPISTEMOS [e)pistemoj] which
we know as “epistemology.” Epistemology is considered a branch of philosophy
that deals with thinking: How do we know what we know? How do we learn things?
How does the human mind come to know certain things? How do we perceive truth?
What is truth? In other words, how do you know anything? How do you know that
God has spoken to you as opposed to the fact that you have just had some sort
of impression, maybe just some sort of subjective emotion? Many people,
especially in evangelical circles, adopt a very loose, imprecise way of
talking. God spoke to me! Well, wait a minute. How did God speak to you? Did
you hear a voice? Did somebody else hear the voice? Was their evidence that
substantiated this speaking? In Scripture, whenever God spoke to someone there
was always an accompanying validation. Well, is God still speaking today in the
way He spoke in the Old Testament and in the early days of the church age? No,
He does not. God no longer speaks in that way. He leads but He does not lead
through the same type of verbal, auditory revelation. So there is a problem from
the charismatic camp, and there is another problem from liberals where they say
God cannot speak and does not speak to man at all and has not in all of human
history, and even if He did speak we are so messed up by virtue of sin that we
couldn’t understand what He was saying anyway. Ultimately that involves the
presupposition that God cannot speak clearly to man, that He cannot understand
the basic problems of man clearly enough to be able to communicate to us. So
there is a second epistemological problem which comes from liberals and that is
that God has spoken to us and therefore the Bible is not God’s Word to man but
it is man’s human record of spiritual experiences. Once you redefine the Bible
in terms of a human record about God then all of a sudden the Bible is very
fluid and you no longer know what the Bible says. What has happened here is
that you’ve gone back and redirected your thoughts so that the ultimate
authority is no longer the Word of God, but you are now judging the Word of God
by either rationalism or empiricism. Instead of the authority being located in
revelation the authority is now located in the human mind. So man sets himself
up to be God.
This is a relationship now
between two key subjects that are going to be developed in the next few
chapters, and that is not only the problem of authority and revelation but the
problem of knowledge and idolatry. Part of this is the concept of love. Love
edifies.
The first six chapters of 1
Corinthians deal with the basic problems in
In chapter eight Paul is
going to introduce the subject of putting the other person first, being more
concerned about the weaker brother and hurting the conscience thereby creating
a spiritual stumbling b;lock
for the weaker brother. That is a manifestation of love. You are not concerned
about your freedom and your rights but you are concerned more about how this might
affect some other believer, and because it might have a negative effect on a
specific believer then you decide that rather than exercise your right you will
give it up for their benefit.
Then in chapter nine he is
going to give a personal example. He starts off: “Am I not free? Am I not an
apostle?” In 0other words, the issue underlying chapter eight is yes, the
believer is free in certain areas. There are decisions that we make in life,
categories of life that do not involve a decision of sin versus non-sin or
morality versus immorality, but it calls upon an interplay of wisdom and an
application of the principle related to impersonal love for other believers. So
Paul is going to make the case that as an apostle he clearly has the right to
be supported by a local congregation. However, because this has created a false
issue for some people Paul has chosen to give up that right and to work instead
and be self-supporting. But he is going to emphasize the principle of support
for the pastoral ministry and the fact that a congregation should financially
support the pastor.
In chapter ten he is going to
come back and tie this together with idolatry again. He is going to go back to
the Old testament, bring in the example that
Then in chapter eleven he
seems to make this shift again and he starts talking about head coverings for
men and for women. Then he is going to go to the Lord’s table.
But the problems they were having in the church because the breakdowns in role
relationships with men and women was because they didn’t understand love, they
didn’t understand that love still does not negate the role distinctions. And it
all creates a problem when they would come together as a body of believers.
Rather than serving one another they are more concerned about their own
personal pleasure and they are all coming to the Lord’s table
as if it is an orgy. Once again the basic problem is that they don’t have a
clue as to what it means to love one another as Christ loved the church.
Then there is another PERI DE in chapter
twelve, verse one. But sandwiched in between chapters twelve and fourteen is
probably the most positive statement in all of Scripture on what love is in
chapter thirteen, vv. 1-8. There he is going to make key statements as to what
love is, and he describes it through various characteristics. Love is a
notoriously difficult word to define. (You can describe something but it is
much more difficult to define it)
1
Corinthians 8:1 NASB “1 Cor 8:1 “Now concerning things sacrificed to
idols, we know that we all have knowledge [gnosis]. Knowledge makes arrogant, but love edifies.” GNOSIS is simply
academic knowledge, and it can relate to knowledge of any subject. It is not
the kind of knowledge that has been converted to EPIGNOSIS. The sanctimonious
slogan in
1 Corinthians 8:2 NASB
“If [1st class condition] anyone supposes[thinks]
that he knows anything…” Here he uses the Greek verb DOIKEO [doikew] for thinking, and this is not the function of NOEO [noew], which is NOUS [nouj], related
to the noun for mind, it has to do with seen to be, or what appears to be. They
have come to this assumption that they have knowledge. They don’t really, it is just an appearance, a façade of academic
information, not real knowledge. “…he has not yet known as he ought to know.”
Just academic knowledge alone isn’t indicative of anything spiritual.
1 Corinthians 8:3 NASB
“but if anyone loves God, he [this one] is known by Him.” The contrast is
between then person who thinks he knows something and the person who loves God.
1 John 2:3 NASB “By
this we know that we have come to know Him, if we keep His commandments.
Paul makes the point slightly differently and says: “If anyone loves God.” What we learn from 1 John is that to love God we have to know God, and that is exemplified by keeping His commandments. So when Paul says, “If anyone loves God,” these means somebody who has reached a point where he has doctrinal orientation, is applying that doctrine in their life, is keeping His commandments, and that is how you know you love God. You don’t know you love God simply because you have certain feelings for Him. Loving God is exemplified in a very objective manner; it is not subjective. The second phrase, “this one is known by Him,” is HUPO [u(po] plus AUTOU [a)utou] which emphasizes the source of that knowledge.
Relationship with God is a
two-way road that strengthens and deepens, and that is the process of growth.
That is the process Paul is referring to here. In contrast to the person who is
just operating on an academic information kick, instead they are applying
doctrine so that the person who loves God is known by Him. God hates arrogance,
so He is not going to be strengthening His relationship with an arrogant
believer. In contrast to this Paul is going to take this principle that he has outlined
in verses 1-3, the principle of love versus arrogance, the principle of academic
knowledge versus EPIGNOSIS knowledge, and he is going to apply this to a
particular problem that was facing the church in
1 Corinthians 8:4 NASB
“Therefore concerning the eating of things sacrificed to idols, we know that
there is no such thing as an idol in the world, and that there is no God but
one.” Paul is going to apply the principle of love for God versus just
utilizing an academic principle. As an academic principle as a believer you
know that there is nothing significant about an idol, it is not a real god, it
is just wood or clay or stone. But yet, Paul is going to bring out the
principle that there are others issues at stake here related to the spiritual
life of other believers. You may know certain things and yet that knowledge
needs to be tempered with an understanding of the weaknesses of other
believers.