When Fire Needs Focus
Apostolic Wisdom to a Gifted Church
The Corinthian church was not lacking in spiritual gifts. If anything, they were overflowing. Tongues, prophecy, healing, discernment—it was all there, and loud. Yet Paul writes, “Now about spiritual gifts, brothers and sisters, I do not want you to be ignorant.”
Why?
It’s the kind of line you skip past if you assume Paul’s main concern is simply about misuse. But if you pause, there’s fire under the surface. This wasn’t about them not having enough gifts. It was about them not knowing what their gifts were for.
They had power, but they were forgetting purpose.
In Corinth, the gifts of the Spirit were being wielded like badges—identity markers that shouted, “I’m spiritual,” or worse, “I’m superior.” But Paul saw through the noise. He saw a people hungry for God, but confused by their own experience. A people drawn into something real, but disoriented in how to live it out.
He wasn’t trying to tame their fire. He was trying to aim it.
That’s what this letter does. It calls their gifts home—not into silence, but into surrender to love.
Paul’s opening phrase, “I don’t want you to be ignorant,” is deeply pastoral. It's not a slap. It's a shepherd’s plea. In the Greek, it carries the tone of “You don’t see the whole picture yet.” And here’s the picture he paints:
Gifts are not status—they’re service.
Power is not performance—it’s presence, God’s Presence.
The Spirit doesn’t come to make some shine, but to make Jesus known.
Yes, the Corinthians had abundance. But without clarity, abundance becomes chaos. That’s why Paul presses in—not to correct excess, but to root it in intimacy with God and unity with one another. “You are the body,” he reminds them. “Each one of you is a part of it.”
Their gifts weren’t the problem. Their forgetfulness was.
So what does that mean for us?
We’re living in an age of renewed hunger for spiritual gifts. Prophetic words, healings, dreams, deliverance from demonic oppression—they’re surging again in local churches and prayer rooms, online threads and quiet living rooms. It’s beautiful. It’s real. But like Corinth, if we don’t anchor these in love and clarity, we’ll drift into performance, hype, and spiritual competition.
Paul’s words ring louder now than ever: Don’t be unaware. Don’t forget what this is about.
Because when spiritual gifts serve love, they build up the church.
When they reveal Jesus, they invite the world.
And when they are stewarded with humility, they become a sign—not just of power, but of God’s Presence among His people.
If we want to live lives marked by the Spirit, we need more than gifts—we need groundedness. We need the kind of knowing Paul longed for the Corinthians to have. Not ignorance dressed in charisma. But awareness that stirs awe. Discernment that births devotion. Gifts that reveal not just what God can do—but who He is.
Let’s not be unaware.
Let’s not forget.
Let’s remember what the gifts are for.
We are bulding the doxa app to better remember what God has promised (prophesies) and what he has done (testimonies) so we can fight the good fight (and win).



That is so rich, a true centering on God's purpose. A timely reminder, which could be re-read from time to time to keep the right focus.