Seated Saints: Grace Before the Grind
1 Corinthians 1:1-3
"Paul, called by the will of God to be an apostle of Christ Jesus, and our brother Sosthenes,
To the church of God that is in Corinth, to those sanctified in Christ Jesus, called to be saints together with all those who in every place call upon the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, both their Lord and ours:
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ."
Opening Prayer
Father, open our hearts and minds to receive Your calling and Your grace today. Amen.
Corinth was a mess; divided, immoral, and proud. Yet Paul calls them sanctified (set apart) and saints (holy ones). Not because they felt holy, but because they were in Christ. Their identity wasn’t rooted in behavior but in belonging. They are "called", and that's a significant distinction.
Paul doesn’t say, "To the church in Corinth, if you clean up your act…"
He says, "To those sanctified… called to be saints…"
The call precedes the change.
The identity anchors the improvement.
Take a look at Paul's companion mentioned here: (v. 1) "and our brother Sosthenes"
Paul could have written alone, but he didn't. He names Sosthenes; not as a footnote, but as family: "our brother."
Who was this man?
Turn back to Acts 18:17.
In Corinth, the same city, a mob seizes Sosthenes, the synagogue ruler. They beat him in front of the judgment seat. Why? Because he likely defended Paul, or at least stood too close to the gospel flame. Now, years later, that same bruised man stands beside Paul, co-signing a letter to the church that once watched him bleed. That’s not a career move. That’s conversion, a calling. And Paul includes him for a reason.
To the Corinthians, Sosthenes was proof of that calling. Proof that the gospel changes enemies into brothers. And from Sosthenes perspective it was proof that you’re not defined by your circumstances, but by the Brother who stood with you.
Paul doesn’t say "Sosthenes, former synagogue ruler."
He says "our brother."
Past titles don’t stick. Belonging does.
As for the Corinthians, this opening is an immediate lesson in grace. By referring to them as "called", we should think of it like a royal adoption. Especially in regard to this Corinthian audience who loved oratory. They applauded slick speakers, ranked apostles like debate champions, and prized eloquence above everything. And Paul knows this. So he opens his letter like a master rhetorician, but subverts their game.
The child doesn’t earn the title "prince" by acting royal. He is prince because the king has named him so.
Behavior follows belonging, not the other way around.
The Corinthians were horrible people:
Divided over leaders
Tolerating sexual sin
Suing each other
Abusing spiritual gifts
Doubting the resurrection
Yet Paul opens with dignity, not disgust.
Why?
Because their mess didn’t nullify their membership in Christ.
And so, instead of a flashy prologue castigating them, he gives them three hammer-blows of grace:
"Paul…and our brother Sosthenes"
"To those sanctified…called to be saints together with all those who in every place call upon the name of our Lord Jesus Christ"
No exclusive claim, no party or tribal spirit endorsed.
"Grace to you and peace…"
Not "Try harder." Not "Earn this." Grace first.
Then peace follows. The order is very deliberate.
It’s a grace ambush.
They understood hierarchy. They chased after status. Paul says: You already have the highest title. Not by speech, not by purity, not by faction, but by adoption.
The Corinthians wanted to climb.
Paul says: You’re already seated, with Christ (Ephesians 2:6). Now walk like who you are.
In our modern context this is a message for all those who tout their churchly pedigrees. The message? Stop auditioning for a role you’ve already been given. You’re not a citizen in training, you’re a child of the King. Let your behavior catch up to your birthright. The throne isn’t a goal, it’s your starting point.
Our Modern Echoes
Today, we tout pedigrees:
"My church is historic."
"Our theology is purest."
"We’re the real remnant."
Paul’s message? Stop it!
You’re not auditioning for heaven’s ensemble. You’re family, adopted, seated, secure.
Closing Prayer:
Father of grace, shatter our status games. Remind us we’re all adopted, not auditioning; all seated, not striving. Unite us with every saint, everywhere, under Your Holy name. Let peace flow from Your unearned favor. In Jesus’ name, Amen.