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A.B. Simpson

(Service for the King) 3. INSTRUMENTS OF SERVICE

A.B. Simpson teaches that God chooses the seemingly foolish, weak, and despised as His instruments of service to demonstrate His power and glory.
In this sermon, A.B. Simpson explores God's surprising choice of instruments for His service, focusing on the seemingly foolish, weak, and despised. He challenges believers to abandon worldly wisdom and pride, embracing humility and dependence on God. Simpson reveals how God's power is displayed through human weakness and calls listeners to glory only in the Lord. This message encourages a deeper understanding of divine selection and the nature of true spiritual service.

Text

"But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty; and base things of the world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, to bring to naught things are that no flesh shall glory in His presence; but of Him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption; that according as it is written, he that glorieth let him glory in the Lord." I Cor. i. 27, 30. This passage gives us an inventory of God’s favorite instruments—of the things that God likes best to use, and the people that God especially chooses; and some of you may be surprised to find yourselves not included in this inventory; some of you may feel that it would be a considerable humiliation to come within it. You have got your choice of five places: you can either be among the foolish things, or among the weak things, or among the base things, or among the despised things, or among the things that are not at all, and in one or the other of these classes you will have to muster if you are going to be one of God’s favorite instruments and one of the things which God hath chosen to amount to anything and to bring to naught the things that are strong and wrong. I. The foolish things. The Corinthians were terribly chagrined at the humiliation of having to give up their culture. It was a sort of modern Boston or Edinburgh and was very proud of its culture. And so when Apollos came among them and began to preach the philosophy of the Alexandrian school of which he was master, they were delighted with him, and turned away from the crude and barren style of old Paul and thought they had found something worthy to be compared with their wisdom. But Paul told them that God holds all this culture in great derision; that he thinks very little of it, indeed, that it is foolishness with Him, and that if any man will be wise, he must become a fool that he may be wise; that is, he must abandon his own natural and self-confident wisdom; he must be willing to esteem as of very little value the product of his own intellect and his education, and like a little child begin at the alphabet at the feet of Jesus, for God hath made foolish the wisdom of the wise and taketh the wise in their own craftiness. There is a great deal of danger in our modern American life of this same thing. There is an affectation of culture, and perhaps a real culture, which is beginning to become a kind of God to the higher classes of American society. You noticed probably with alarm the other day the sums that were spent on a few special works of art in this city—hundreds of thousands of dollars at a single sale, enough to sustain the Gospel for half a century in the great mission fields. People ought to pause a little and remember, that natural culture has often been associated with the world’s darkest ages. The man that built the first city, made the first musical instrument, and the first works of human industry and art was Cain, and since that day the world, when it goes away from God, tries to make the earth a paradise. The next great land of culture was Egypt, but God took His people right out of Egypt and He didn\

Sermon Outline

  1. I. The Foolish Things
    • God chooses the foolish to confound the wise
    • The Corinthians valued culture but God calls it foolishness
    • True wisdom comes from becoming a fool in God's eyes
  2. II. The Weak Things
    • God uses the weak to shame the strong
    • Human strength is insufficient without God
    • Spiritual power is revealed in weakness
  3. III. The Base and Despised Things
    • God selects what the world rejects
    • Humility is key to being used by God
    • God’s glory is shown through lowly instruments
  4. IV. The Things That Are Not
    • God uses what seems insignificant to nullify the mighty
    • No flesh can glory before God
    • All glory belongs to the Lord alone

Key Quotes

“God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise.” — A.B. Simpson
“If any man will be wise, he must become a fool that he may be wise.” — A.B. Simpson
“No flesh shall glory in His presence; but of Him are ye in Christ Jesus.” — A.B. Simpson

Application Points

  • Embrace humility and be willing to be used by God regardless of your worldly status.
  • Reject reliance on human wisdom and culture, seeking God's wisdom instead.
  • Recognize that your weaknesses can be powerful instruments for God's glory.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean that God chooses the foolish things?
It means God often uses those considered weak or unwise by the world to accomplish His purposes and demonstrate His power.
Why does Paul say we must become fools to be wise?
Because true wisdom comes from humility and dependence on God rather than human intellect or culture.
How can weakness be an instrument of God's strength?
God’s power is made perfect in human weakness, showing that victory comes through Him, not ourselves.
What is the significance of 'things that are not'?
It highlights that God can use those who seem insignificant or non-existent to accomplish great things for His glory.
How should believers respond to being chosen as God's instruments?
They should embrace humility, rely on God’s strength, and be willing to serve regardless of worldly status.

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