Hi Telstar,
1Corinthians 10:1-4. “Moreover brethren,I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that all our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea;
And were all baptised unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea;
And did all eat of the same spiritual drink: for they drank of the same spiritual Rock that followed them: and that Rock was Christ”(KJV)
For a number of reasons I disagree with your hypothesis stated above in regards to 'this small fledgling congregation"
Paul’s desire indeed ,was to feed them with the ‘meat’ rather than just the ‘milk’ (1Cor3:3&4) but “hitherto ye were not able to bear it, neither yet now are ye able. For ye are yet carnal, and walk as men”
How then did this carnality manifest itself ? “Now this I say ,that everyone of you saith,I am of Paul ;and I of Apollos; and I of Cephas;and I of Christ.”
It is the question of carnality that Paul is here dealing with not so much with the ‘meat’ (or doctrine) and as this is a major priority for him here; in order to root it out, he would leave no stone, I believe, unturned.
First, my view of what Paul meant by “milk” and “meat” may be different than yours. I believe he’s referring to their spiritual progression, and their inability to grasp the more transcendent concepts of spirituality (meat), because they were still quibbling over the basic things (milk), like Who they should actually be following as Christians. So, he had to set them straight that it was Jesus that they must follow, first and foremost. If he had told them that Peter was the head of the flock at that time, it just would have caused more arguments and resentments among them. That certainly wouldn’t have solved the problems, but would have caused more, possibly fracturing the whole group.
If you consider that Paul in regards to those who were teaching the Corinthian 'church ’ that Paul’s ministry was somehow inferior to theirs( Paul especially deals with this problem at length in the last three chapters of his second letter) then Paul would be for me ,foolish to leave this young ‘church’ at the mercy of such if he was not to properly address the Cephas sect that had developed.
I’m a little confused as to who you’re referring to that you claim Paul’s ministry was “inferior to”. He does refer to some ‘false apostles’, that were teaching them error. But, I think those were some members of the church, not any of the ones that had been sent by him, or the other Apostles. He also infers that these so-called ‘apostles’ were becoming a burden to the church, where the true Apostles were never a burden to them. They provided for themselves and didn’t expect any kind of compensation, because they were only there to preach the Gospel.
As far as you claiming that there was anything like a “Cephas sect”, I really don’t see that. Paul mentions several Apostles that some of them claimed to follow, not just Peter. It was that they were choosing sides according to whoever Baptized them, as to who they thought ‘the greatest apostle’ was, that he was correcting them on.
Furthermore, as is seen in my opening verse Paul does not treat of this gentile ‘church’ with any less respect than that of their circumcised brethren. That is when he includes them with “all our fathers were under a cloud, and all passed through the sea”
Why wouldn’t he treat them with respect?
He’s teaching that the Jewish people being ‘under the cloud’, and passing through ‘the sea’, in the story of Moses are precursors of Christian baptism. And, by their Christian baptism, they also become children of God, like the Jews.
Notice that Paul is also going into some considerable depth of teaching here also, and what is also relevant is his reference here to Christ : “and that Rock was Christ”,
In context:
(DR) [3] "And did all eat the same spiritual food, [4] And all drank the same spiritual drink; (and they drank of the spiritual rock that followed them, and the rock was Christ.)"
This refers to them eating manna and drinking the water that came from the rock, which is the precursor of the Holy Eucharist (“the bread that came down from Heaven”). There’s no argument that Jesus is “that rock”, “the cornerstone that the builders rejected”. Paul was talking about Jesus, because it was a lesson about baptism and the Eucharist.
Ought not Paul for the same reason you are suggesting in regards to this 'fledgling ’ congregation ,that he should have refrained from using this metaphor in regards to Christ, if that is, they were somehow to here of another Rock( Cephas) in the apostles absence? what of this door of confusion?
Not if he was teaching about baptism and the Eucharist. Why would he say something completely unrelated to that? They had a hard enough time realizing that Jesus is the most important part of the Gospel, not the ones who teach it.
Another puzzling verse for them, later on, would be in the same letter (3:9) “We are labourers together’ that is in relation to " he that planteth and he that watereth are one”(verse 8)
Why did Paul tell us, all were on an equal level (among the twelve) if we now understand Peter to be the one exception?
As I said, those that preach the Gospel are all vessels used by God. They all do their part, one teaching, and another building upon what they’ve already learned. But, they should beware of anyone that tries to teach them things that are contrary to what they already learned from the Apostles. Those who preach the Gospel are less important than the message that they teach. In the end, God is the only One that has all of the power to accomplish what the Gospels teach, through Jesus. All are one in Jesus Christ. This lesson was to confirm that fact to them.