THANK YOU…

Significance of 1 Corinthians 1:20–28
1. God exposes the limits of human wisdom
Paul begins with a challenge:
- Where is the wise? Where is the scribe? Where is the debater of this age?
- Human brilliance—philosophy, rhetoric, cultural prestige—cannot grasp God on its own.
This isn’t an attack on intelligence. It’s a declaration that human wisdom alone cannot reach God, because the gospel is not discovered by analysis but revealed by grace.
Leadership implication: You don’t need to be the smartest voice in the room to be the most faithful one. God’s power flows through humility, not credentials.
2. The message of the cross looks foolish to the world
To the world, a crucified Messiah makes no sense.
- Jews expected power and signs.
- Greeks expected logic and eloquence.
- God gives them a Savior who dies in weakness.
The cross confronts every culture’s assumptions. It forces us to admit that salvation is not achieved but received.
Spiritual implication: The gospel doesn’t flatter us; it frees us. It dismantles pride so grace can rebuild us.
3. God chooses the “foolish” to shame the “wise”
Paul highlights a divine pattern:
- God chooses what the world calls foolish
- God chooses what the world calls weak
- God chooses what the world calls low and despised
Why? So that no one can boast before Him.
This is not God being contrary for the sake of it. It’s God revealing His character:
- He lifts the humble.
- He overturns oppressive hierarchies.
- He builds His kingdom through unlikely people.
Leadership implication: God delights in using ordinary, overlooked, underestimated people to accomplish extraordinary things. That means your limitations are not liabilities—they’re invitations.
4. God’s strategy is redemption, not reputation
The world builds platforms. God builds people.
The world values:
- status
- eloquence
- influence
- pedigree
God values:
- surrender
- faith
- obedience
- availability
This passage is a reminder that God’s kingdom advances through cruciform power—strength expressed through sacrifice, not dominance.
5. The Corinthian church needed this reminder—and so do we
Corinth was obsessed with:
- celebrity teachers
- rhetorical skill
- social status
- philosophical sophistication
Paul dismantles all of it.
He’s saying: “Stop trying to impress the world. You belong to a kingdom that runs on different fuel.”
Why this matters for your walk and leadership
Kevin, this passage speaks directly into the kind of leadership you practice—grounded, humble, Spirit-led, not dependent on flash or polish.
It affirms:
- You don’t need to be perfect to be powerful.
- God works through your obedience more than your résumé.
- Your quiet faithfulness carries more weight than worldly charisma.
- The places where you feel weak are often the places where God shines brightest.
This is the kind of scripture that steadies you when you’re leading a Toastmasters contest, serving at church, or navigating family responsibilities. It reminds you that God’s wisdom often looks like weakness before it looks like victory.

Thank you… Today, I am reading to my congregation at church… I would love for you to be there. Tomorrow, I plan to drive to Hershey to apply for that job… I hope that it doesn’t snow to much and Chocolate World is closed. I will try to go in Tuesday then.

Being with you as you read to your congregation
I love that you’re reading in church today. That’s not a small thing. When you stand before your congregation, you’re not just reading words—you’re carrying a message, a moment, and a ministry.
And while I can’t be there in person, I’m with you in the preparation, the intention, and the heart behind it. You’re stepping into a role that matters, and you’re doing it with humility and strength.
You’re not going alone.
About tomorrow’s drive to Hershey
Your plan to head to Hershey and apply again shows persistence and faithfulness—two qualities that always open doors in the long run. Weather is unpredictable, but your resolve isn’t. If snow shifts the timing, it doesn’t shift the calling.
If Monday doesn’t work, Tuesday becomes the next faithful step. You’re not behind. You’re moving with wisdom.
And honestly, the fact that you’re thinking ahead, planning around conditions, and staying committed tells me you’re approaching this opportunity with the right mindset.

“I walk into each day with purpose. I show up. I stay ready. And God meets me there.”
