My SPS or thesis for this message is that life becomes unnecessarily complicated when we resist Almighty God's design and His authority structures. True simplicity comes only from living within God's order: embracing His holy and spiritual commandments as well as respecting legitimate human authority.
The context of this verse is the apostle Paul's admonition to the congregation at Corinth to use their divinely-given gifts responsibly. The Amplified Classic edition renders this passage: For He [Who is the source of their prophesying] is not a God of confusion and disorder but of peace and order, as [is the practice] in all the churches of the saints (God's people)
Are we complicating our lives by resisting the very laws designed to bless us? Please consider: A river's banks never restrict the water but instead give it direction and momentum. Likewise, God's laws and most of man's laws provide secure boundaries that bring peace, safety, and simplicity.
This verse comes in the middle of Paul's extended teaching on orderly worship in the assembly of Christ's followers (I Corinthians 12‒14). Chapter 14 specifically deals with the use of spiritual gifts, particularly tongues and prophecy in public worship.
Paul insists that spiritual manifestations should only build up the church and never cause disorder or chaos. The Greek word translated as confusion, akatastasia, connotes disorder, instability, or chaos.
Paul feels compelled to correct inappropriate uses of spiritual gifts that were leading to disorganized, noisy, and unedifying worship service. His theological argument is simple: if the result of the church gathering is confusion, it cannot possibly reflect the nature of God, who is a God of order. True worship should reflect God's character, and since God is orderly, public worship likewise should be structured, respectful, and edifying.
The Greek word eirene suggests not only calmness or quiet, but also a sense of harmony and right relationship, between individuals in the gathered body of Christ and Almighty God. Paul is not advocating sterile, lifeless meetings, but instead what is Spirit-led and constructive. The apostle Paul's statement, as in all churches of the saints appeals to a universal standard. In other words, this is not just advice for Corinth but instead it is how all churches right up to this very day should function. Paul asserts that God's nature and expectations for orderly worship applies to every local gathering or assembly of chosen saints.
To summarize this section, Paul insists on: