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							My adult children still laugh and tease me about it, 
							but when my wife and I were raising them as 
							teenagers, I would often need to remind them that 
							“Adulthood is this direction!” I did so because 
							sometimes teenagers regress and act childish. 
							Occasionally, we parents need to remind them, “Let’s 
							keep growing here. Let’s not go backwards.” 
 The same could be said of the book of I Corinthians. 
							The Apostle Paul watched a church become a messy 
							ministry and writes them a letter calling them to 
							grow up. “Adulthood is this direction, people!”
 
 Now, no church is perfect! But wow, the early church 
							of Corinth was about as dysfunctional as any church 
							could be. It was marked with numerous difficulties, 
							divisions, immature and carnal people, 
							controversies, skepticism, and sin. However,
 God still had a big heart for them, and Paul 
							certainly wanted to see them mature in a way that 
							would thrill the heart of God. Paul believed as 
							messy as this ministry may have become, they could 
							still be the church God dreamed of.
 
 How does a messy ministry move toward maturity? Keep 
							ringing the bell for purity. Keep ringing the bell 
							for unity. Keep ringing the bell for God’s truth. 
							Remind the people not to regress. After all, 
							“adulthood is this direction.”
 
 I don’t remember what year it was when I watched a 
							TV airing of an old WWII movie titled The Dirty 
							Dozen, but I do remember it was with my father, and 
							we enjoyed it together. It is a film about an 
							unusual top secret, pre-invasion, mission against 
							the Nazi’s. The idea was to gather a small band of 
							the Army's worst ex-soldier convicts, those awaiting 
							court marshals, and turn them into an elite fighting 
							commando team. Those felons who survived would have 
							their sentences reduced and returned to active duty.
 
 The only problem was these soldiers had a hard time 
							banding together. For the first half of the movie, 
							they were at each other’s throats. They squabbled. 
							They backbit. They pushed each other around and 
							threw a few punches. They distrusted each other's 
							motives. As a result, they failed to see the best 
							results. It takes a lot to get these men to
 finally start working together smoothly, but it does 
							happen. Eventually, they are sent on their mission, 
							and with some major hiccups and the mission nearly 
							being sabotaged, they get their act together and 
							great things are accomplished.
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							The funny thing is, that pretty much could 
							describe God's plan for His church. And, 
							unfortunately, the first half of The Dirty Dozen 
							pretty much describes the way it often works out for 
							churches. It certainly describes the way the church 
							was functioning (or malfunctioning) in Corinth. 
							However, we can learn from their messy church.
 
 Our winter sermon series is going to take us verse 
							by verse through the book of I Corinthians. We’re 
							going to look at what messy church is today and how 
							we can move ourselves toward spiritual adulthood and 
							functional ministry.
 God gave us this material for a reason. He wants the 
							church to learn and grow from the
 experiences of the Corinth church. Starting in 
							January and continuing through Easter,
 we will dive deeply into the book of I Corinthians. 
							Come join us!
 
 [Ron Otto, preaching minister
 Lincoln Christian Church]
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