But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. -1 Corinthians 1:27 (NIV)
I’m a nerd. I’m willing to admit it. See, this is one of my favorite verses in the entire Bible. I love the message it brings to us about broken lives and about the good news of Christ. On Sunday afternoon, instead of taking a longer nap, I decided to wake up and do a word study on the word “foolish” in this verse. Told you I was a nerd.
Regardless, what I found when I dug into this verse a little was fascinating. The word translated foolish in this verse is the Greek word mōros. Yes, it is one of the roots from which we get our word moron. While it can be used to carry a meaning of a dull or stupid person, it also carries a deeper meaning.
Mōros carries a meaning of “morally worthless, a scoundrel… mōros scorns [a man's] heart and character.”
The fools Paul is referring to in 1 Corinthians aren’t unintelligent people. They are morally repugnant people. Scoundrels. The opposite of those human logic would dictate the God of the universe would choose. He has a whole world at His disposal and he chooses the “morally worthless?”
I’m glad God chose me, a morally worthless scoundrel, to be part of his Kingdom. To share in his good news. To take his message out. I’m glad he chose you too. Welcome to the club, you fool.

