Meats for the belly, and the belly for meats: but God shall
destroy both it and them. Now the body is not for fornication, but for the
Lord; and the Lord for the body. (1Co 6:13)
Generally all believers will agree that the death and
resurrection of Jesus Christ has brought about the salvation of the spirit and
soul. Jesus forgave sins, gave the freedom to sin no more and healed many sick
bodies. Jesus came in the flesh to save mankind from sin and resurrected bodily to reveal the incorruptible body which we will soon receive at His
second coming. Until the time we either return to the Lord or He returns for
His church our bodies are still required for righteousness and execution of His
will on the earth. Hence we shouldn't exclude the body from its spiritual
connection. One is defiled, so is the other; similarly one is cleansed so must
the other be as well such that both are sanctified or exclusive for the Lord (2
Cor 7:1).
What? know ye not that he which is joined to an harlot is
one body? for two, saith he, shall be one flesh. (1Co 6:16)
Paul used the context of marriage to talk about the great
mystery concerning Christ and the church (Eph 5:32). The mystery is the oneness
the church has with Christ as He is with the Father and it is the testimony to
the world that Jesus was sent of the Father (John 17:21). If we, His Church is
one with Christ, than there cannot be any other party involved in this
supremely intricate and holy relationship. The joining of ourselves to any
other entity except Christ would deem as harlotry, a charge which is not uncommonly
used in Scripture. Harlotry is one that concerns both the act and the heart condition (Matt 5:28). God is concern with purity not innocence.
The latter is denying that we have sinned and deceiving ourselves; the former is that the Blood of
Jesus Christ has cleansed me and keep me in that exclusive position in Him. We
therefore daily conscientiously present our bodies as a living, holy and
acceptable, not dead, sacrifice to know or bring to realization His good,
perfect and acceptable will (Rom 12:1, 2). We are not slaves to sin, but we
through the Spirit mortify the deeds of sin of the body (Rom 8:13). Denying the
outworking of salvation through our bodies is to deny the complete work of the
Cross and the Church’s oneness with Christ as His body.
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