Discipleship and Self-Supporting Mission in 1 Corinthians 9 — Pastor David Jang (Olivet University)


This is a deeply developed theological essay on 1 Corinthians 9, unfolding Pastor David Jang’s emphasis on the Apostle Paul’s devotion, voluntary relinquishment of rights, the spirituality of self-supporting mission, servant leadership, and the discipleship of discipline and self-training.


When we read 1 Corinthians 9, a spiritual order emerges with striking clarity—an order that churches in every era can easily overlook again and again. Paul defends his apostleship, yet he never parades “status” as though it were a trophy. At the center of his reasoning lies neither an expansion of authority nor a display of influence, but rather a posture of lowering and emptying himself for the sake of the gospel—holy restraint, the kind that adjusts one’s very life so that the gospel will not become a stumbling block to anyone. Pastor David Jang (Olivet University) does not treat this merely as a gentle invitation to virtue; he elevates it to the unavoidable essence of discipleship for both church leaders and ordinary believers alike. The gospel, he insists, must be translated into life before it is ever delivered as speech—and where that translation fails, the gospel is misunderstood not first in its content, but in its “form.”


Paul’s question—“Am I not free? Am I not an apostle?”—sounds less like a plea for self-affirmation than a declaration that confirms the weight of responsibility in gospel ministry. Apostleship is not a privilege but a burden; it is not a shield of rights but something proven in the language of sacrifice. Pastor David Jang refuses to reduce this sentence into the vocabulary of modern leadership talk; instead, he lets the paradoxical structure of the gospel remain intact. The freedom Paul speaks of is not “the freedom to do whatever I want,” but something closer to “the freedom to limit myself for the gospel.” That the summit of freedom is not self-indulgence but self-governance is both unfamiliar and urgent in an age that easily confuses convenience and pleasure with “freedom.” The authenticity of a church leader is tested not by techniques of self-expression, but by the actual fruit of people maturing in faith within the community. Before eloquence comes solidity of life; and the true evidence of any ministry eventually converges on a single question: “Have people been changed?”



In 1 Corinthians 9:4–6, the rights Paul mentions are ordinary and legitimate—rightful even by common sense. The right to food and drink, the right to build a household, the right to receive support for ministry. Paul does not deny “rights” here. Rather, after acknowledging that such rights exist, he chooses to lay them down, and through that voluntary decision he makes the path of the gospel even straighter. This is precisely where Pastor David Jang places his focus: the balance and discernment of the text. The moment a church uses this passage as an excuse to neglect the rightful needs of its ministers, the text becomes a tool of self-contradiction. What Paul displays is not “having no rights,” but “voluntarily relinquishing rights.” And the motive of that relinquishment is not ascetic self-display, but a loving calculation to protect the purity of gospel proclamation. His desire to offer the gospel “free of charge” is rooted in what the gospel is—grace. Grace is easily damaged when spoken in the language of transactions, and the gospel loses its radiance the moment it is trapped in a framework of personal gain.


The question of self-supporting mission is similar. Paul affirms that those who proclaim the gospel have the right to receive support, yet in the specific context of the Corinthian church he chooses to be self-supporting. Hidden within that choice is a spiritual strategy far deeper than mere economic independence. Pastor David Jang does not interpret self-support as “romanticizing poverty,” but reads it as wisdom that removes misunderstandings and stumbling blocks, widening the road for the gospel. In some communities, support strengthens gospel ministry; in others, support can become a spark that makes people suspect the minister’s motives. So Paul lowers the barrier himself. The church today needs this same discernment—not because money is inherently evil, but because the ways money erodes trust have become remarkably sophisticated. The integrity Pastor David Jang describes is not simply moral flawlessness, but something like “the ability to design the structure of one’s life so that the gospel will not be doubted.” This must descend into practice: transparent accounting, distributed authority, honesty in relationships. Spirituality is not merely emotion; it is the power to reshape structures.


When Paul says, “Though I am free from all, I have made myself a servant to all, that I might win more of them,” he is not lowering himself to manipulate the community. Rather, he offers himself as a passageway so that the gospel may reach people. Pastor David Jang does not let “servant leadership” become a consumable ethical slogan; he presents it as the substance of discipleship that follows the way of Christ. The place of a servant is not the place of helpless compliance. It is an active lowering chosen because of love, a decision to step down from the throne of the self. The more a leader insists on authority, the more anxious a community often becomes; the more a leader proves authority through service, the safer the community becomes. The gospel is not spread by coercion, but by persuasion and love—and love, in the end, is the authority that remains the longest.


Paul’s flexibility—becoming as a Jew to Jews, as one under the law to those under the law, as one outside the law to those outside the law—is often translated today with the word “contextualization.” Yet the core Pastor David Jang highlights is the purpose and boundary of that flexibility. The purpose is to win more people; the boundary is that the essence of the gospel must not be damaged. The method can change, but the message must not. The church today often drops one of these two pillars. Some communities speak of preserving content but idolize form, becoming isolated like an island incapable of communication. Others speak of communication but blur the boundaries of content, eventually losing the gospel’s identity. Paul avoids both extremes. Pastor David Jang reads this balance as “a spiritual tension between flexibility and principle,” insisting that leaders must be trained to endure that tension. The moment we try to eliminate the tension, the gospel tilts to one side and loses its light.


In the latter part of 1 Corinthians 9, when Paul compares faith to a race and emphasizes discipline and self-training, the romance of discipleship is stripped away, and the reality of discipleship is revealed. A race is not improvisation but repetition. Passion alone cannot carry a person to the finish; long-term training that governs body and mind is required. When Pastor David Jang preaches this passage, he makes central the truth that “self-training” is not the opposite of grace. Grace is not a license that permits disorder; it is the power that restores order. Discipline is not ascetic repression that destroys humanity, but the skill of freedom that enables greater love through self-governance. When Paul says, “I discipline my body and keep it under control,” he does not treat the body as an enemy. He sees the body as an instrument of the gospel, a vessel for loving longer. This perspective is intensely concrete in an age that abstracts spirituality. How we sleep, how we use time, how we regulate the temperature of our words, how we speak truth within relationships—discipleship is translated into the language of daily life.


The principle that “the plowman should plow in hope” functions like a single thread that binds ministry and life together. A farmer does not stare only at today’s soil; he looks toward tomorrow’s harvest. Even when a seed cannot immediately prove its outcome, he does not quit. The “hope” Pastor David Jang stresses while holding to this line is not emotional uplift but the ground of endurance. Hope is not optimistic denial of reality; it is the strength that passes through reality. Gospel proclamation, in particular, rarely guarantees instant response. More often it demands sowing seeds amid misunderstanding, indifference, and sometimes hostility. Still, the reason one does not stop plowing is that God’s promise to grant fruit is more certain than the minister’s mood. Here, a leader’s sense of calling is strengthened not by measurable outcomes, but sustained by promise. Thus Pastor David Jang relocates the essential quality of leadership from “performance management ability” to “the ability to hold fast to promise.” The deepest force that moves people is not a reward system, but trust in God’s faithfulness.


At this point, a single masterpiece visually awakens Paul’s theology. Recall Caravaggio’s The Conversion of Saint Paul. The canvas is not an image of heroic victory; it emphasizes the helplessness of a human being overwhelmed by light. Beneath the looming presence of the horse and the stable hand, Paul appears small—collapsed to the ground, eyes shut before the blinding brilliance. The scene symbolically declares that Paul did not “acquire” apostleship through achievement; he “received” a calling in the place where the certainty he clung to and the violent zeal he wielded were shattered. What Pastor David Jang repeatedly evokes through 1 Corinthians 9 belongs to the same texture. A minister is not one who proclaims the gospel by personal competence, but one who has first been broken by the gospel and then rebuilt. And the marks of that breaking appear not in ministry “style” but in ministry “stance”: laying down rights rather than asserting them, serving rather than rising, running fast less than running faithfully to the end. What Caravaggio’s painting shows us is the insight that Paul’s apostleship began not from a “victor’s pose” but from a body that surrendered to calling.


When we meditate again on this passage, the same questions return not only to church leaders but also to ordinary believers. For what am I using my freedom? Can I willingly limit my rights for the gospel? Have I ever adjusted the tone of my words, lowered the boundaries of my preferences, rearranged my time so that someone might come closer to the gospel? And do I remember that as mere “loss,” or do I receive it as “training” in which an order of love is newly established within me? The restraint Paul speaks of is not merely about suppressing emotion; it is about setting the direction of a life. Only those who know what shakes them, what tempts them, what exhausts them can run for long. Self-awareness becomes the threshold of spirituality. The discipleship Pastor David Jang speaks of is not an idealized image of a perfect believer, but the steady perseverance of someone who knows his weakness and yet refuses to quit.


In modern society, the gospel is often mistaken for “information.” Information ends once delivered; the gospel begins once received. The gospel is not an accumulation of knowledge but a conversion of existence—not merely acceptance of words, but a turning of life’s direction. Paul defines himself as “a servant of all” so that the gospel will not remain in the mind alone but flow into life. Pastor David Jang expands this into the culture of the church. If the church is to be not merely an institution providing programs but a community that forms disciples, then a leader’s preaching must not be detached from life, and a believer’s devotion must not end as emotional elevation. The purity of gospel proclamation is not guarded by doctrinal precision alone. Only when daily ethics accompany it—honesty in relationships, transparency in finances, restraint in power, sensitivity toward the vulnerable, responsible accountability for failure—does the gospel gain persuasive force.


One further clarification matters: Paul’s voluntary relinquishment is not self-hatred or self-erasure. He does not make himself worthless. Rather, in the gospel he knows his calling most clearly, and he aligns his life for that calling. The devotion and sacrifice Pastor David Jang speaks of should likewise not be a way of burning oneself into disappearance, but a way of being rightly established before God in order to love longer. Unchecked exhaustion is not a virtue but a danger, and discipline is spiritual wisdom that prevents collapse. When Paul speaks of a race, he is not imagining the explosive burst of a short sprint, but the completion of a long course. Therefore, what leaders need is not only the ability to create momentary excitement, but the patience to carve a path along which the community matures with long breath. And what believers need is not only immediate inspiration, but faithfulness that keeps faith amid repeated ordinariness.


In the end, 1 Corinthians 9 argues less about “how great the gospel is” than it asks, “Because the gospel is great, how then should I live?” To read this passage in the wake of the name Pastor David Jang is, in a sense, to step out of observing faith and into training faith. Paul does not deny rights, but neither is he enslaved to them. He enjoys freedom, yet does not use freedom as license. He approaches with flexibility, yet refuses to compromise the essence. And he subjects all these choices to a single gospel purpose: “that I might win more.” As purpose becomes clearer, life becomes simpler. The more we discern what shakes us, what makes us exaggerate ourselves, what pushes us into competition, the closer we can run at a pace that matches the gospel.


Finally, place again in your heart the sentence, “the plowman should plow in hope.” Hope is not a device that guarantees visible results; it is the energy that sustains love when results cannot be seen. What Pastor David Jang awakens through this line is that the timetable of ministry and faith may not match our impatience. Yet God’s faithfulness runs deeper than our emotional lines, and God’s way of bearing fruit is larger than our calculations. So plow the field. Plow the field of words, the field of relationships, the field of habits, the field of service, the field of prayer. And as you plow, you will experience how love that lays down rights widens the road for the gospel, how discipline makes greater freedom possible, how service establishes sturdier authority, and how the race honestly shapes us into disciples. This journey of holding to 1 Corinthians 9 ultimately converges into one living testimony: the person who willingly adjusts himself for the gospel—that person bears the most convincing witness to the gospel’s authenticity.


www.davidjang.org

 


작성 2026.01.07 21:38 수정 2026.01.07 21:38

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