Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Corporate vs. Individualist Perspective (March 2025)

 “For as the body is one and has many parts, and all the many parts of that one body are one body, so also is Christ. For by one Spirit we are all baptized into one body, whether we are Jews or Gentiles, whether we are slaves or free, and we have all been made to drink of one Spirit. The body is not one part, but many.” 

(rf. I Cor. 12:12-14 MEV)

 

            As humans, especially as Americans, we are programmed from birth to believe strongly in our individualism. Though we often laugh at the antics of toddlers and find their behavior cute, when toddlers learn the term and concept of “mine”, they believe it fervently and will act accordingly, especially if someone attempts to take what they believe belongs only to them. Sometimes sibling rivalry begins with the simple clash of each sibling evoking the concept of “mine” (i.e. not being willing to share or play together).

            On the contrary, the Bible teaches us that, though we are important as individuals to God, He is more concerned and centered upon the whole rather than the parts. When He works out His will in the world, though He undoubtedly uses individuals to accomplish tasks, He does so for the benefit of the larger group, not just for the instrument of use. 

            We see this at work in the Bible’s terminology. As in the text quoted above, Paul uses the concept of the “body of Christ” when referring to the Church because the Church and its benefit and blessing are the focus of God in Christ in the New Testament (and to the present day). Even in the Old Testament, God referred to the Israelites as “My people” (ex: II Chron. 7:14). Jesus makes it clear that He as the Good Shepherd “gives His life for the sheep” (rf. Jn. 10:11), speaking in terms of the whole herd of sheep, not just one. Even our individual salvation is shown to be a result of Christ’s mission to “save His people from their sins” (rf. Matt. 1:21), an obvious reference to the whole and not the individual.

            If we are to fulfill all that God wants us to do while here on earth, we need to move our thinking to fit the Scripture’s truth, angling from individual to corporate in focus. We need to be more concerned about God using “us” rather than God using “me”. Such a change in perspective would also cause a change in action as we shifted attention from what benefits or blesses “me” to what will bless His Church as a whole. Once all of us complete this necessary change, we will see God begin using His Church in new and powerful ways to reach a world that desperately needs His truth and love.

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