1 Corinthians 10 Read in the Light of the Cross: Pastor David Jang

Through 1 Corinthians 10, Pastor David Jang delivers the message “in the light of the cross”—the wilderness tests, the essence of idolatry, the union of the Lord’s Supper, an ethic of freedom and consideration, and the gospel’s compass that converges on “whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.”


1 Corinthians 10 confronts us with the fact that faith is not sustained only inside a brightly lit sanctuary; it must remain alive and active even amid the winds of the wilderness and the noise of the city. The central point Pastor David Jang (founder of Olivet University) emphasizes as he holds onto this text is not merely the language of warning, but the texture of grace that flows through and beyond the warning. Paul does not fossilize Israel’s wilderness experience as a “past event.” Rather, he summons it as a living spiritual memory—one the church, the believer, and the community of today must rehearse again and again. The truth that even those who crossed the Red Sea, were guided by the pillar of cloud and fire, and tasted manna from heaven and water from the rock still fell, gives a sharp wake-up call to believers who easily loosen their vigilance simply because they have experienced grace. That is why Paul says, “Let anyone who thinks that he stands take heed lest he fall.” Pastor David Jang reads this sentence not as a threat meant to provoke anxiety, but as an invitation to recover the spiritual sensitivity that keeps grace truly grace. Only those who face the possibility of falling can learn not to use it as an excuse for despair, but to cling to God all the more.


The wilderness is not merely a geographical space we once passed through; it is an environment that repeatedly forms within the human interior. The moment believers step out of the church building, they face the wilderness again. Cracks in relationships, eruptions of desire, the thirst to be recognized, and the pressure of a society that enthrones success and efficiency as gods become the landscape of the day. Pastor David Jang unpacks 1 Corinthians 10 like a “modern wilderness manual” for this very reason. We sometimes mistake spiritual achievement for “spiritual invincibility.” We served diligently, listened to the Word, even experienced answers to prayer—so we assume we are now safe. Yet Paul’s narration does not erase experiences of grace; it reveals that such experiences do not automatically confer immunity. Pastor David Jang warns that the moment grace becomes the basis for self-conceit, grace loses its function as grace and can begin to operate like an idol. When “believing in grace” mutates into the self-assurance of “I’m fine,” that assurance can easily become worship of the self rather than trust in God.



And yet the tone of 1 Corinthians 10 is not pessimism, but faithfulness. Paul immediately adds the promise: “No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man… God is faithful… he will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it.” Pastor David Jang introduces this verse as a passage that reorients believers who have only repeated the prayer, “Take the test away.” God does not leave tests in place in order to ruin us. Rather, within the harsh time called temptation, God makes a way so that we may confess God again as God—and so that our faith may be trained like muscle. Here, “the way of escape” does not mean a simple exit from the problem. Sometimes the way of escape is a corridor of grace that enables us to pass through the same reality with a different heart. It is not merely the person who praises God because the trial ended, but the person whose center has been rearranged so that they can trust God even in the middle of it, who truly glorifies God. At this point Pastor David Jang defines faith not as “managing circumstances,” but as “the continuation of worship.” The wilderness is not only a place that snuffs out faith; it can become a furnace that burns away faith’s impurities.


This wilderness narrative is immediately connected to the city’s problem of idols—one of the tensions that runs through 1 Corinthians 10. Paul speaks with clarity: “Therefore, my beloved, flee from idolatry.” Corinth was a place where a polytheistic landscape and temple culture permeated daily life like air. This was not merely a theological debate; social meals, economic activity, and the very way networks formed were intertwined with religious rites. Pastor David Jang explains that the terror of idolatry lies precisely in its “everydayness.” Idols rarely shout openly, “Worship me.” Instead, they offer convenience, soothe anxiety, and rationalize desire, slowly stealing the central place of the heart. Thus idolatry is not only bowing before a particular statue; it is the sum of all systems and habits that persuade us we are sufficient without God.


Modern idols return under different names. We may not invoke Zeus or Apollo, yet we absolutize success and efficiency, use consumption as the language of identity, and train our hearts by endlessly absorbing stimulation from screens. Pastor David Jang describes idolatry as “the heart’s autopilot after losing God,” and urges believers to examine what they unconsciously treat as the highest value. What governs my time, my emotions, my choices? What do I fear losing so much that I lose sleep? What do I believe I must gain in order to be safe? These questions are not mere moral reflection; they are worship questions. Worship is not simply a religious act performed at a set time—it is the spiritual reality revealed by who sits on the throne of the heart.


This is also why Paul brings up the Lord’s Supper immediately within the flow of his warning against idolatry. The Supper is not only a traditional church rite; it is an embodied confession of what kind of “fellowship” we are participating in. The words—“The cup of blessing that we bless, is it not a participation in the blood of Christ? The bread that we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ?”—show that the Supper is the language of participation that goes beyond symbol. Pastor David Jang calls the Lord’s Supper “a table that turns the cross into the present tense.” It is not merely recalling Golgotha as the past; it is allowing the meaning of that sacrifice to rewrite the decisions of my life now. The Supper is not information but relationship, not mere knowledge but union. So before the table, believers do more than say “I believe.” They bodily pledge: “I belong to Christ, and I will follow Christ’s way.”


At this point, a famous masterpiece comes to mind. Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper is widely known as depicting the tense, confessional moment just before Jesus breaks bread and shares the cup with his disciples. Pastor David Jang suggests we need not treat this scene as mere art appreciation, but can receive it as a symbolic “mirror” that reawakens the essence of the Supper. Not only perfect people were seated at that table. Doubt, rivalry, self-protection, and even the shadow of betrayal were present. Yet the Lord still broke the bread and offered the cup. The Supper is not an ordinance for “only the already mature”; it is a conduit of grace by which the wounded and the flawed are invited under the light of the cross to participate in the life of the new covenant. From this perspective, the Lord’s Supper is not decorative garnish that beautifies the community; it is a furnace that refashions the community anew.


Paul binds the meaning of the Supper directly to the formation of the community. “Because there is one bread, we who are many are one body, for we all partake of the one bread.” This verse shakes individualistic faith at the root. What Pastor David Jang consistently stresses in his preaching on 1 Corinthians 10 is that when the Supper is reduced into a tool of “private spirituality,” the church weakens and loses its light before the world. The Supper does not speak only of a private relationship between me and Jesus. It demands a reordering of my relationship with others in Jesus. As we share the one bread, we declare to each other: “You are not my competitor; you are a member I must love, a brother or sister I must consider.” Here, koinonia is not emotional socializing; it is spiritual union bound by the order of the cross. And that union flows into kerygma—not merely proclaiming the gospel with words, but letting a life of love and consideration become a living sermon. Further still, it takes shape as diakonia. The grace of the table does not remain inside the sanctuary; it expands into hands that care for the weak and into the community’s sense of responsibility.


Paul’s contrast between pagan temple sacrifices and the Lord’s Supper is strikingly provocative. His words—“What pagans sacrifice they offer to demons and not to God”—are not written to fuel mere religious hostility, but to diagnose how “misdirected fellowship” can seize and shape a person. Here Pastor David Jang presses in the insight of “the God who was crucified.” In the Greek and Roman imagination, the gods were often constructed around the logic of power and victory, glory and display. A strong god provides benefits; humans maintain the relationship through offerings and rites like a transaction. But the God revealed in the gospel makes himself known not through transaction but through grace. Humans do not offer sacrifices to manipulate God; God offers himself to save humanity. The cross is not a tool to justify human desire; it is God’s way of judging and healing desire.


The “light of the cross” Pastor David Jang speaks of arises from this very paradox. We instinctively admire strength, crave victory, and import success narratives even into faith. But the cross strips away the costume of strength and makes plain that God’s chosen way is self-emptying and humility, sacrifice and forgiveness. As Philippians teaches, Christ emptied himself and took the form of a servant. This emptying is not defeat; it is the shape of love. Pastor David Jang reads the cross as “the place where God’s character shines most brightly,” and says the only way believers can break free from an idolatrous culture is to reestablish the logic of the cross at the heart’s center. The habit of proving everything by achievement, the reflex of measuring one’s worth by comparison, the identity that sways with others’ gaze—these are re-educated at the foot of the cross. The cross stops the engine of desire with the declaration, “You are already loved,” and sets life in motion by the power of grace.


Now Paul descends into a very practical question: in a context where meat offered to idols circulates in the marketplace, is it permissible to eat it? This debate is not mere table etiquette; it asks how to balance faith and culture, freedom and community. Paul’s statement—“All things are lawful, but not all things are helpful… not all things build up”—still applies with astonishing breadth today. Pastor David Jang explains that this verse guards believers against two extremes that are frequently misunderstood. One extreme is legalism: forbidding even what is permissible and turning faith into suffocating rules. The other extreme is license: using “freedom” to justify desire and ignore the community’s pain. Paul does not deny freedom, but he teaches that freedom, if not trained by love, can destroy a community.


What Pastor David Jang especially underscores is “consideration for conscience.” Paul acknowledges that an idol is nothing and that, as the psalm confesses, “The earth is the Lord’s, and the fullness thereof”—God’s sovereignty remains over creation. Therefore, in principle, eating meat from the market can be permissible. But when someone says, “This has been offered to idols,” Paul says do not eat—for that person’s conscience. Here love is not sentiment but choice, and consideration is not looking down on the weak but practicing mature self-restraint. Pastor David Jang describes this principle as the essence of Christian ethics. Believers are not those who become strong by expanding their rights; they are those who beautify freedom by choosing love. Freedom is not a license granted to enthrone the self; it can become a responsibility entrusted by God to bring life to others.

This message translates into countless scenes of ordinary life today. A cultural activity may not be sin in itself. A preference or a purchase may be permissible in principle. Yet if it can shake someone’s faith, erode the community’s trust, or blur the fragrance of the gospel, believers do not ask only, “Can I do this?” They also ask, “Does this build up?” Pastor David Jang says we might call this “the calculus of agape.” The world teaches the calculus of efficiency, but the gospel teaches the calculus of love. Efficiency counts profit and loss; love first considers the neighbor’s good. The cross reveals how far the calculus of love goes. God chose what looked like loss in order to give us life. Therefore, the more Christian ethics resembles the direction of the cross, the deeper it becomes.


In the end, the conclusion of 1 Corinthians 10 gathers every area of life into worship with a single declaration: “So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.” Pastor David Jang urges believers not to consume this verse as decorative slogan, but to hold it as the standard that reorganizes an entire day. The glory of God is not an abstract concept. It becomes concrete in where the purpose of my choices is aimed, in who my words and attitudes build up, in what fruit my freedom bears. A life that stays alert rather than presumptuous under trial—clinging to the Lord in prayer—glorifies God. A life that discerns the many faces of idolatry and returns the throne of the heart to God honors God. A life that inscribes union with Christ at the table and extends that union into communal love brings joy to God. A life that meditates on the God of the cross—who reveals strength through weakness—and chooses humility and sacrifice against the speed of secular values shines with gospel light in and of itself.


Pastor David Jang’s exposition of 1 Corinthians 10 is persuasive because he refuses to reduce Paul’s exhortation into merely “private piety,” expanding it into communal ethics and timely discernment. The church today often wavers between two temptations. One is the temptation to blend into the world and lose its identity. The other is the temptation to wall itself off from the world and lose the gospel’s expansiveness. Paul chooses neither. He presents a way to live as those who belong to God in the middle of the world. He flees idolatry without denying the goodness of creation. He affirms freedom without abandoning the responsibility of love. He does not mystify the Supper and separate it from everyday ethics; he allows the Supper to form the habits of life with the ethics of the cross. Pastor David Jang hints that we might describe this balance as “freedom in the light.” The freedom offered by darkness drifts toward indulgence, but the freedom given by the light of the cross matures into consideration and sacrifice.


From this vantage point, the title “in the light of the cross” is not a sentimental phrase but a theological coordinate that runs through 1 Corinthians 10. Light exposes. It reveals the idol in the heart, strips off the mask of presumption, and illuminates indifference toward the community. At the same time, light heals. It does not end with condemnation of exposed sin, but leads to repentance—and does not end repentance with despair, but guides into the path of grace. Light gives direction. Paul’s exhortation to live for God’s glory becomes a compass of faith in an age where choices are so numerous that we easily lose our way. As Pastor David Jang says, the believer’s calling is not to flee from the world, but to leave the fragrance of the gospel within it. That fragrance does not come only from grand performances. It rises from the table, from the fingertips that hold a smartphone, from the way we spend money, from the temperature of a single sentence, from small restraints that honor another’s conscience, from choices that empty out time for a wounded neighbor.


Therefore, the faith that holds onto 1 Corinthians 10 becomes steady. Even when trials come, the confession “God is faithful” anchors the center. Even when idolatry approaches in subtle forms, the word “flee from idolatry” functions as an alarm system in life. Each time believers partake of the Supper, the reality of participating in Christ’s body and blood leads to the confession that life is no longer one’s own. Each time freedom is enjoyed, the habit of asking “Does this build up?” preserves the community and beautifies the gospel. And ultimately, the standard “whatever you do, for the glory of God” prevents faith from shrinking into a weekend religious event and expands it into Monday’s reality. Pastor David Jang’s message through this text is clear: the person who lives in the light of the cross does not fear the wilderness. They do not take idols lightly, but they hold grace more weightily. They live amid the world’s culture without serving the world’s gods. As a community that shares one bread, they consider one another, use freedom beautifully through the ethic of agape, speak the kerygma of the gospel with their lives, deepen the koinonia of fellowship, and open the door toward the world through diakonia of service. At the end of that path, the believer no longer makes “What will I gain?” the central question. Instead, the questions that occupy the center of life become: “Does this choice please God? Does this action reveal the glory of God?” And in that moment, the ancient words of 1 Corinthians 10 begin to breathe anew inside today’s heart.


www.davidjang.org

 


작성 2026.01.04 22:20 수정 2026.01.04 22:20

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