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bigmike
Read: 1 Corinthians 6:1-11
If any of you has a dispute with another, do you dare to take it before the ungodly for judgment  instead of before the Lord's people? Or do you not know that the Lord's people will judge the  world? And if you are to judge the world, are you not competent to judge trivial cases? Do you not  know that we will judge angels? How much more the things of this life! 1 Corinthians 6:1-3
The apostle does not use the word stupid here, but his implication is that these people are very  foolish for doing what they are doing. They were obviously engaging in lawsuits, dragging them  before the Roman courts, and having all their quarrels and dirty linen washed in public and settled  by a secular court. This, the apostle says, is foolish, and he has two reasons for implying this.
First, he implies that it is an act of audacious boldness: Dare any one of you having a grievance  against his brother take it to a law court to settle? His clear implication is that this is an  audacious act; it is an outrageous act; it is a bold, daring thing to do. Paul implies that, of  course, by the word he uses — that one who does such is uncaring; he has reached the point where he  does not care what anybody thinks or feels and he is acting regardless of the injuries that may be  done to others. Paul then suggests, in the two questions he asks, that anybody who does such a  thing is really an ignorant person: Do you not know that the church is going to judge the world,  and do not you know that the church is going to judge angels?
These questions he asks imply a certain degree of knowledge that the Corinthians ought to have had.  Do you not know, he says, that the saints will judge the world? Surely he is referring to those  passages both in the Gospels and in the Epistles where we are clearly told that when the Lord  returns the saints are going to share the throne of judgment with him. We are to rule and to reign  with Christ, entering into judgment with him. We are not told whether we are all assigned a little  throne to sit on, and have a certain number of people come to us, or whether we divide up according  to the alphabet. We are, however, to enter into the mind and heart of God as he examines the  motives and hearts, the thoughts and innermost desires and urges of men. In Chapter 4, remember,  Paul said that we are not to judge before the Lord who will examine the motives, the hidden things  of the heart. But we are learning how to do that, and that is the point Paul is raising here. He  does not mean to put down the systems of justice that were practiced in that day or any day. Paul  admired and honored Roman law -- he himself called upon it for defense on occasion -- but he is  saying that human law by its very nature has to deal with trivial, superficial things, with  actions, and not with urges and deep, hidden motives.
Then the apostle goes even further and says, Do you not know that we are to judge angels? Just  think of that! We do not know much about angels. They are beings of a higher order than we are.  They are different in their very nature than we, and yet the amazing statement of Scripture is that  God is preparing a people who are going to be so capable of delving into the motives, and hidden  desires, and urges of all beings, that some day they will sit with him in judging the angels that  have fallen. You can see Paul's argument then: Is it not rather ridiculous that you people who are  going to have to deal in such difficult and hidden and subtle matters as the judgment of the world  and of angels cannot even settle these little squabbles among yourselves? It is almost like having  a mathematician who works with those great computers call in a ninth-grader and ask him for help to  balance his checkbook. It's ridiculous, isn't it?
Father, teach me to understand more thoroughly the great sweep of Scripture extending even beyond  this life where I am now learning things and principles that I will be putting into practice in the  life to come.
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