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Servants of Christ
by Hilda Bright
The translated Bible text has been through Advanced
Checking.
Words in boxes are from the Bible.
A word list at the end explains words with a *star by them.
About this letter
Corinth
Corinth was an important city. It was on a very narrow section of
land (called an ?isthmus?) in the southern part of Greece.
1. It was the capital city of the region called Achaia.
2. It had two harbours. The harbour on the east coast was 4 miles
(6 km) from the harbour on the west coast. Today a canal joins the two
harbours. In Paul?s time, people pulled small boats across from one harbour to
the other one. They dragged them on a kind of ship railway. Porters carried
goods from large boats to the other side. They put the goods on a different
boat. The journey would otherwise have been over two hundred miles round a very
dangerous part of the sea.
3. As it was a busy centre for trade, Corinth was a good place
for the *gospel to spread. Merchants and travellers would hear the message and
take it with them. There were many different people in Corinth. There were
*Romans because it was a *Roman colony. (A colony is a city or country that
another country controls.) There were Greeks, *Jews, people from Asia and from
further east. There were rich people and many slaves.
4. There was a *temple to Aphrodite, the Greek female god of
love. There were thousands of *prostitutes in the city. Many of them belonged
to this *temple. Corinth became well-known for bad *sexual behaviour. To live
?like a Corinthian? meant to become a drunk often or to visit *prostitutes.
5. The Isthmian Games took place near Corinth. They were famous
and only second in importance to the Olympic Games.
Paul?s first visit to Corinth Acts 18:1-17
On his second journey to take people the good news about Jesus,
Paul arrived in Corinth from Athens. He had only very little success in Athens
and he did not stay there for very long. But he stayed in Corinth for 18
months. He spent longer there than in any other city apart from Ephesus. He
stayed with Aquila and Priscilla, who were tent makers like himself. He
*preached first in the *synagogue. When the *Jews opposed him, he used the home
of Titius Justus. Titius Justus lived next door to the *synagogue. Paul
*preached very successfully. Crispus, the ruler of the *synagogue, became a
Christian. When a new *Roman ruler arrived, the *Jews took Paul to him. They
said that Paul was teaching ?against the law?. But the ruler refused to listen
to the *Jews. This happened in about AD 51. Paul later went to Syria.
Paul?s letters to Corinth
1. The ?previous? letter. Paul said, ?I wrote you a letter. In
that letter, I told you to have nothing to do with men with bad character? (1
Corinthians 5:9). This letter is either lost or it may be in 2 Corinthians
6:14?7:1.
2. 1 Corinthians. When Paul was in Ephesus, he received news
about troubles in the church at Corinth. This news came from people who were
living in Chloe?s house (1 Corinthians 1:11), and from Stephanas, Fortunatus
and Achaicus (1 Corinthians 16:17). A letter also came from the Christians in
Corinth. They asked for Paul?s advice about various problems. Paul wrote 1
Corinthians.
3. The second ?painful? visit. Paul heard that problems in
Corinth were worse. So he made a second visit. There is no record about this.
But Paul writes about when he visited Corinth for the ?third? time (2
Corinthians 12:14; 13:1-2). So there must have been a second visit.
4. The ?severe? letter. Paul?s visit was not successful. So he
wrote a letter when he was feeling very hurt (2 Corinthians 2:4). He was almost
sorry that he had sent it. Some writers believe that chapters 10-13 in 2
Corinthians are the ?severe? letter.
5. The letter to show that the Christians at Corinth and Paul
were friends again. Paul was so worried about his ?severe? letter that he went
to meet Titus. Titus had taken the severe letter to Corinth. Paul met Titus in
Macedonia and learned that all was well. So, he wrote chapters 1-9 in 2
Corinthians. It is possible that someone put the severe letter and the next
letter together in the wrong order.
The contents of 1 Corinthians
1:1-9 ~ Greetings and *thanksgiving
1:10?4:21 ~ Quarrels about leaders in the church
5:1-13; 6:9-20 ~ Bad *sexual behaviour
6:1-8 ~ Christians at the law courts
7:1-40 ~ Marriage
8:1-11:1 ~ Meat that people have offered to *idols
11:2-34 ~ Problems in Christian *worship
12:1-31 ~ *Spiritual gifts
13:1-13 ~ Love
14:1-40 ~ *Prophecy and tongues
15:1-58 ~ *Resurrection
16:1-24 ~ Money for Jerusalem; Paul?s plans and greetings
Chapter 1
The Greeting 1:1-3
v1 This letter is
from Paul. It was God?s plan to choose me to be an *apostle of Christ Jesus.
This letter is also from our Christian ?*brother? Sosthenes. v2 We are
sending this letter to you, the members of God?s church in Corinth. God has
chosen you to be his holy people because Christ Jesus has made you holy. He has
done the same for all those everywhere who *worship our *Lord Jesus Christ. He
is their *Lord and ours. v3 We pray that God our Father and the *Lord
Jesus Christ will give you *grace and peace.
Verse 1 ?Christ? is the Greek word for *Messiah. It means the
king that God would send to his people. Paul emphasises that he is an *apostle
because of God?s plan. He describes himself in this way in other letters. But
it was important for him to state his authority to the Christians at Corinth.
Paul?s words in 1 Corinthians 9:1-23 show that some Christians at Corinth
doubted whether he was an *apostle. They doubted his right to tell them the
truth and to give them advice.
Sosthenes may have been the same person as the ruler of the
*synagogue in Corinth. People had hit him in front of the ruler Gallio (Acts
18:12-17). Sosthenes had become a Christian and he had travelled with Paul to
Ephesus. He may have acted as Paul?s secretary. Paul calls him ?our *brother?.
So, the Christians at Corinth must have known him.
Verse 2 Paul had written to the church ?of the people in
Thessalonica?. Here he speaks about the ?church of God? in Corinth. Paul did
not want the Christians at Corinth to feel proud about themselves. So, he
reminds them that the church belongs to God. They are like God?s field, God?s
building and God?s workers (3:9).
The Greek word for ?church? is ?ecclesia?. It means the people
whom God ?called out? to be his own people. Their behaviour must be different
from the way many Christians at Corinth were behaving. God has made them ?holy?
because they trusted Christ. Paul says to them what he has said to Christians
everywhere. The Christians at Corinth are only one part of God?s church.
Verse 3 Paul does not use the usual greetings that began and
ended letters. He prays that they will know peace. This peace comes as people
know the *grace of God. *Grace is God?s love that they do not deserve. And they
cannot earn God?s love. God has shown his love by Jesus. When they know that
love, they will feel safe. God has forgiven them. So they will have inner
peace.
Paul here unites Jesus Christ with God the Father. Jesus really
is God. And Jesus works with God the Father to *save his people.
*Thanksgiving 1:4-9
v4 I always thank God for you. I thank him because of
his *grace. He gave this grace to you by means of Christ Jesus. v5 God
has blessed you in every way because of him. He has made you speak and
understand the truth more completely. v6 You know very well the message
that we gave you about Christ. v7 Therefore there is no *spiritual gift
that you do not have. You wait eagerly for our *Lord Jesus Christ to come
again. v8 God will keep you strong in your *faith to the very end. Then
you will be without blame on the day when our *Lord Jesus Christ returns. v9
You can trust God. He has chosen you to share life with his Son, Jesus Christ
our *Lord.
Verses 4-7 Paul thanks God because they have accepted *salvation
as God?s gift. And that gift comes by Jesus Christ. Paul speaks about God?s
*spiritual gifts to the Christians at Corinth. He mentions how they speak. And
he mentions how they understand. The letter shows that the Christians at
Corinth had become very proud of these gifts. Paul writes about understanding
or knowledge in chapter 8 and ?speech? in chapter 14. Here, he says that their
gifts show that they have believed the good news about Jesus. The words
?*grace? and ?gift? show that they have no right to praise themselves.
Verses 8-9 Paul also reminds the Christians at Corinth that God
will keep their *faith strong. He will do so until Christ returns. God has
chosen them to share Christ?s life.
Arguments in the Church 1:10-17
v10 *Brothers and *sisters, I appeal to you all to
agree with each other. I appeal on behalf of our *Lord Jesus Christ. Then there
will not be divisions among you. You will be in complete agreement in all that
you think. v11 My *brothers and *sisters, some people from Chloe?s house
have told me that there are quarrels among you. v12 Here is what I mean.
One of you says, ?I belong to Paul?. Another person says, ?I belong to
Apollos.? Another person says, ?I belong to Peter?. And still another person
says, ?I belong to Christ.? v13 We cannot divide Christ. Paul did not
die on the *cross for you. I did not *baptise you in the name of Paul. v14
I am grateful to God that I did not *baptise any of you except Crispus and
Gaius. v15 No one can say that I *baptised you in my name. v16
(Yes, I also *baptised those who live in the house of Stephanas. I do not
remember if I *baptised anyone else.) v17 Because Christ did not send me
to *baptise. He sent me to *preach the good news. He told me not to use words
of human wisdom. Clever words would take the power away from the *cross of
Christ.
Verses 10-11 Paul uses the word ?*brothers? twice. He speaks as
one who loves them. They should love each other, because they are Christian
*brothers and *sisters. They belong to the same *spiritual family. God is their
father.
?In complete agreement? translates a medical word. It is about a
way to join bones together that are broken. So, they must mend the broken unity
of the church. Then the ?body? of the church will be healthy.
Chloe may have been a business woman whose servants had travelled
from Ephesus to Corinth. They had brought back news about the quarrels in the
church at Corinth.
Verse 12 Paul speaks about four groups:
1. Those who used Paul?s name. They may have been *Gentiles. They
were perhaps using Paul?s teaching about Christian freedom as an excuse to
behave badly. One group liked Paul. But other people opposed him.
2. Those who used Apollos?s name. Apollos was a *Jew from
Alexandria. He knew the *Scriptures and he could speak very confidently. He had
visited Ephesus. Aquila and Priscilla had taught him more about the Christian
*faith. The Christians in Ephesus then encouraged him to go to Corinth. There
he was very successful when he *preached the *gospel (Acts 18:24-28).
3. Those who used Peter?s name. We do not know whether Peter ever
visited Corinth. But the people there knew that he travelled with his wife (1
Corinthians 9:5). His supporters probably said that he had been the leader of
the 12 *apostles whom Jesus chose. Jesus had called him a ?rock?. Jesus had
made a special *resurrection appearance to him (Luke 24:34; 1 Corinthians
15:5).
4. Those who used Christ?s name. Those people probably said that
they were the only real Christians in Corinth. But the words may be Paul?s own
remark about the situation. ?I, Paul, belong to Christ?.
Verses 13-16 Paul uses the word ?Christ?. He wants to make the
Christians at Corinth understand about the church. It is like Christ?s body in
the world. The church cannot act as Christ?s body if it is in pieces. A body in
pieces is not alive.
Only a few people could say that Paul had *baptised them. Crispus
had been the ruler of the *synagogue in Corinth (Acts 18:8). Gaius must have
had a large house. He could be Paul?s host and welcome ?the whole church?
(Romans 16:23). As he wrote, Paul remembered Stephanas. He was the first person
to become a Christian when Paul came to Corinth (1 Corinthians 16:15, 17). But
Paul could not remember anyone else that he had *baptised. He did not want
anyone to think that a person had decided to belong to him. *Baptism was not
?in his name?, but ?into the name of Jesus?.
Verse 17 Paul?s work was to *preach the *gospel. Who *baptised
whom was not the most important point. It was important for the Christians at
Corinth to know the real nature of the *gospel. The message was simple. Christ
died on the *cross. To speak with clever words and ideas would attract
attention to the speaker. Then the message of the *crucifixion would lose its
power to *save people.
The *gospel and human wisdom 1:18-25
v18 The message of the *cross seems foolish to those
who are dying. But it is God?s power to us whom he is saving. v19
Because God said by Isaiah (Isaiah 29:14), ?I will destroy the wisdom of those
who are wise. I will bring to nothing the clever ideas of those who are
clever.? v20 Find me the wise person. Find me the expert in the law.
Find me the great thinker of this time. God has made the wisdom of the world
foolish. v21 God in his wisdom planned that the world would not know him
through its own wisdom. But God was pleased to *save those who believe. They
believe through the foolish message that we *preach. v22 *Jews demand
wonderful signs. Greeks look for wisdom. v23 But we *preach about
Christ?s death on the *cross. That offends *Jews. And *Gentiles think that it
is nonsense. v24 But Christ is God?s power and wisdom to those whom God
has called, both *Jews and *Gentiles. v25 The foolish things of God are
wiser than human wisdom. The weakness of God is stronger than human strength.
Verses 18-21 The world considers that some people are wise. But
these wise people cannot use their human wisdom to understand God?s ways. They
think that the message about a *crucified *Messiah is foolish. They want God to
act in ways that seem wise and powerful to them. But God *saves those who are
willing to trust him.
Verses 22-23 The *Jews thought that the idea of a *crucified
*Messiah was an insult to God. The *Romans *crucified only slaves and dangerous
criminals. And the *Jews believed that anyone who hung on a tree as a
punishment would suffer God?s anger (Deuteronomy 21:23). They did not think
that the message in Isaiah 53 was about someone who would suffer for other
people.
The *Jews also expected wonderful signs when the *Messiah came.
In the past, God had done wonderful *miracles for their nation. So they
expected him to perform even greater *miracles by his *Messiah. Therefore the
*Jews kept on asking Jesus for a sign to ?prove? that he was the *Messiah. But
he refused (Matthew 12:38-39; John 6:30).
The Greeks thought that God does not feel human emotions. And
they thought that he cannot change. Therefore, God could not become a man on
earth. The idea that ?the word became a *physical person? (John 1:14) was
impossible. The Greeks also liked to discuss ideas. And they liked to speak in
clever ways. The message about the *gospel was simple. Paul *preached it in
plain words. A *crucified God seemed to be the mad idea of people with little
education.
Verses 24-25 But God?s plan was to *save all those who believe in
Christ. No human wisdom or great effort can bring anyone into a friendship with
God. *Sin has spoiled that friendship. However, Christ?s death on the *cross
was not ?foolish? and ?weak?. ?God?s thoughts are not our thoughts. His ways
are not our ways? (Isaiah 55:8-9). The *crucifixion was a sign of God?s wisdom
and power. They are greater than any wise efforts that people can make.
The Christians in Corinth 1:26-31
v26 *Brothers and *sisters, God called you. Remember
what you were then. Not many of you were wise in the opinion of people in this
world. Not many of you had power over other people. Not many of you were born
into families with an important social position. v27 But God chose what
the people in the world call foolish. That makes ?wise? people humble. God
chose what the people in the world call weak. That makes ?strong? people
humble. v28 He has chosen those who have no value in people?s opinion.
The people in the world think that God?s people and his plans are worth nothing
at all. But God will use his plans to destroy the ideas in the present age. v29
God does all this so that no one can *boast about himself to God. v30
Because of what God has done, you belong to Christ Jesus. Jesus has become for
us the real wisdom from God. He makes us right with God. He makes us holy and
he sets us free from *sin. v31 So, in the words of *Scripture, ?Perhaps
someone wants to *boast about something. If so, he should *boast about what God
has done.?
Verse 26 Paul reminds them that the church in Corinth has only a
few important members. A few of them had more important places in society.
Crispus had been the ruler of the *synagogue (Acts 18:8). Erastus was an
official in the city (Romans 16:23). Gaius had a large enough house to act as
host to Paul and other Christians (Romans 16:23). But many of the Christians
were slaves. Some of them had once been slaves. Other Christians were ordinary
workers.
Verses 27-29 Slaves had no rights. They were ?things? that their
owners could use as tools. They were ?nothings? until the Christian *faith made
them into persons. Then they gained respect. God chose people like these. He
did this to show that he had defeated the world?s false ways to think. God does
not depend on what people can offer him. Everyone needs God?s forgiveness. No
one can be satisfied with himself in front of God.
Verse 30 God has acted by his Son. Jesus Christ?s death on the
*cross is God?s wise plan. So those who believe accept God?s plan. By the
*cross, Jesus sets us free from the *sin in our past. He makes us right with
God. He helps us to live in a holy way.
Verse 31 Therefore what Jeremiah wrote (Jeremiah 9:24) is true.
No one has any reason to *boast about himself. He should only be proud about
what God has done.
Chapter 2
What Paul *preached 2:1-5
v1 Christian *brothers and *sisters, when I came to
you I did not come with clever words or great ideas. I *preached to you the
truth about God?s love. v2 I decided to concentrate on only one thing
while I was with you. That was Jesus Christ and his death on the *cross. v3
When I came to you, I was weak and afraid. I was trembling. v4 I did not
*preach my message with clever words to persuade you. As I *preached, the *Holy
Spirit showed his power. v5 That was so that you would not believe
because of clever human ideas. But you would believe because of God?s power.
Verses 1-2 Paul calls the Christians his ?*brothers and *sisters?
because they are all in God?s family. Paul decided that in Corinth he would
only use plain words. His ?foolish? message would be about Jesus? death on the
*cross. There may be two reasons for this decision:
1. Paul had come from Athens. There he had explained his message
in a way that used philosophy. And he referred to Greek writers (Acts
17:22-34). But only a few people had become Christians.
2. Some people in Corinth were disappointed about the way that
Paul *preached: ?His words amount to nothing? (2 Corinthians 10:10). Paul knew
that clever words might attract attention to the speaker rather than to his
message.
Verse 3 He said that he was ?weak?. He may have meant a *physical
weakness. We know that he had a problem of some kind. It made him suffer (2
Corinthians 12:7). He may have been emphasising that his message was about the
?weakness? of God (1:25). He was afraid and trembled. Paul did not fear for his
own safety. He was anxious to carry out his work well. He probably thought
about the enormous task to *preach the *gospel in a city like Corinth. Its
people came from many countries. There were many gods. Everyone knew about the
bad behaviour of those who lived in the city. Paul would tremble as he thought
about all these problems.
Verses 4-5 Paul?s plain words had results. The *Holy Spirit?s
power convinced people that the message was true. People changed and became
Christians. The *Holy Spirit also showed his power in the gifts that he gave to
the Christians at Corinth.
The wisdom from God 2:6-9
v6 However, among those who have grown in the *faith,
I do use wise words. But these words are different from those of the wise
people or rulers in this age. People like these will not succeed. v7 We
speak about God?s secret wisdom, which has remained hidden until now. It is a
wisdom that God planned before time began. He planned to bring us the *glory of
*eternal life. v8 None of the rulers of this world understood God?s
wisdom. If they had understood it, they would not have *crucified the *Lord of
*glory. v9 The *Scripture says,
?God has prepared things for those who love him. But nobody
has seen those things and nobody has heard about them. And nobody knows what
they are.?
Verse 6 Those who had become Christians would know the main facts
about the *gospel. These facts were that Jesus died and became alive again. God
forgives those who trust Jesus. But Paul could teach more about God?s wise
plans to those whose *faith was strong. Some people thought that they were
wise. But Paul was not talking about their kind of wisdom. Their wisdom would
have no results.
Verse 7 Paul was speaking about the way that God had planned to
*save his people. God planned it, even before the beginning of the world. God?s
plan was that people should finally share in the wonderful life of heaven.
God?s plan was ?secret?. Only humble people can understand what God has shown
us by Jesus.
Verse 8 People cannot understand by an effort of their minds.
That is why the rulers could not understand that Jesus was the *Lord. So they
*crucified him. But those who love God will receive *blessings from him. Those
*blessings are impossible to imagine. Paul used a verse that comes in part from
Isaiah 64:4.
The *Holy Spirit understands 2:10-16
v10 But God has shown his plans by his *Holy Spirit.
The *Holy Spirit understands all things. He understands even the thoughts of
God that are most difficult to understand. v11 We cannot know what
another person is thinking. Only the person himself can know that. In the same
way, only the *Spirit of God can know what God is thinking. v12 We have
not received the *spirit of the world. We have received the *Holy Spirit from
God himself. The *Holy Spirit helps us to understand how generous God has been
to us. v13 This is what we speak about. We do not use words that people
taught us. We use words that the *Holy Spirit taught us. We use *spiritual
words to teach *spiritual truths. v14 A person who does not have the
*Holy Spirit cannot believe the ideas that come from God?s *Holy Spirit. They
sound foolish to him. He cannot understand them. People need the Spirit?s help
to understand these ideas. v15 Everyone who has the *Holy Spirit can
make right decisions. But no one can really understand those who have the
Spirit. v16 We can never know what is in the *Lord?s mind. No one can
teach him. But we have the mind of Christ.
Verses 10-12 No one can know what another person is thinking. No
one can know God?s thoughts except God himself. God?s *Spirit knows them. And
he can lead us to know God. God?s people have received God?s *Spirit. So they
can understand his plan to rescue people by the *crucifixion of Jesus.
Verse 13 Paul says that his message comes from the Holy *Spirit.
The Holy *Spirit taught Paul what to say.
Verse 14 The person who lives only for the things in the
*physical world cannot understand *spiritual things. He cannot understand
*spiritual truths. They seem foolish to him. He needs God?s *Holy Spirit. The
*Holy Spirit will help him to understand God?s ideas.
Verse 15 Those without the *Holy Spirit cannot understand those
with the Holy Spirit. The person with the Holy Spirit belongs the present age.
But that person belongs to the future age as well. With the *Holy Spirit?s
help, he can understand how to make decisions about right and wrong actions. He
can understand what is wicked. But a person who thinks only about his present
life cannot understand anything holy. For example, a greedy person cannot
understand how to be generous. The person without the *Holy Spirit cannot judge
the person who has the *Holy Spirit. He will not understand the way that a
*spiritual person thinks.
Verse 16 Paul says that ?we? have the mind of Christ. So he
includes himself with the Christians at Corinth. So they understand Christ?s
thoughts. But Paul would talk next about the quarrels of the Christians at Corinth.
And he would talk about the fact that they were so satisfied with themselves.
These things showed that they had not completely understood ?the mind of
Christ?. Christ had made himself humble in order to do what God wanted. He was
the servant who obeyed God (Philippians 2:1-5).
Chapter 3
God?s workers 3:1-9
v1 *Brothers and *sisters, I could not speak to you
as if the *Holy Spirit was guiding you. I had to speak to you as if you were
following the ways of people in the world. You are still only like baby
Christians. v2 The words that I spoke to you were like milk. They were
not like solid food. You were not ready for solid food. And you are still not
ready for it. v3 You are still following the ways of people in the
world. Some of you are jealous. Some of you are quarrelling. So, it must be
clear to you that you are following the ways of people in the world. You must
know that you are acting like ordinary people. v4 One of you says, ?I
belong to Paul?. Another person says, ?I belong to Apollos?. You are acting
like ordinary men and women. v5 Apollos is not important. Paul is not
important. We are only servants. We helped you to believe. The *Lord has given
each of us our own work to do. v6 I ?planted the seed?. Apollos
?watered? it. But God made it grow. v7 So the one who plants is not
important. The one who waters is not important. It is God who makes things
grow. He is the only one who is important. v8 The one who plants and the
one who waters have the same purpose. The *Lord will give each person a reward
for his own work v9 because we work together with God. You are like
God?s field. You are like his building.
Verses 1-2 The Christians at Corinth were not behaving as if the
*Holy Spirit was guiding them. They were acting in the same ways as people who
thought only about their *physical nature. Paul could not give them the kind of
teaching that was like solid food. They were still behaving like babies.
Verses 3-4 The Christians at Corinth were acting as if they were
no different from non-Christians (people who were not Christians). Some were
jealous. Perhaps they were jealous of the wealth or social position of other
people. They quarrelled about which leader they belonged to.
Verses 5-9 Paul spoke about himself and Apollos as servants.
There was no quarrel between him and Apollos. Each man did his job as together
they brought people to believe the Christian *faith. They were like farmers.
Paul planted the ?seed? of the *gospel when he *preached. Apollos helped. He
was like someone who waters seed. But only God could make it grow. God is the
only one who is important. Neither Paul nor Apollos was important. Each man had
his work to do, and God would reward him. God uses people to work together with
him. Paul and Apollos were servants who were working for the same master. The
Christians at Corinth were like a field in which God was working. They were
also like a building.
God?s building 3:10-15
v10 God kindly taught me how to lay a *foundation
like an expert builder. Now someone else is building on it. But each one must
be careful how he builds. v11 No one can lay any other *foundation than
the one that God has already laid. That *foundation is Jesus Christ. v12
A person may build on this *foundation. He may use gold, silver, precious
stones, wood, hay or straw. v13 But whatever the material, on judgement
day, God will show the quality of each person?s work. The fire of judgement
will test how good each person?s work is. v14 If the person?s work
passes the test of judgement, God will reward him for his work. v15 If a
person?s work has no good result, it will be like a burnt building. It will be
like a building that the fire has completely destroyed. The builder will be
safe. But he will be like someone who just escapes from a fire.
Verse 10 Paul worked for 18 months in Corinth (Acts 18:11). He
spent three years in Ephesus (Acts 20:31). Usually he stayed in a city for a
much shorter time. But wherever he went, he laid the same *foundation. He told
the facts about Jesus Christ. He let other people continue God?s work and help
the church to grow.
Verses 11-12 Jesus Christ alone is the *foundation of a Christian
church. Those who help it to grow must make sure that their work will last.
Then it will be as valuable as precious metals or stones. Wood, hay and straw
are Paul?s picture language for weak efforts that do not last.
Verses 13-15 Fire can test how pure a metal is. Fire can also
destroy. God?s judgement is like fire. On the day when Christ returns, God will
judge the value of each person?s work. He will reward those whose work was
valuable. God will destroy what has no value. The bad builder will only escape
God?s judgement like someone who just escapes from a fire. The bad builder will
not lose his *salvation. But he will not receive much reward in heaven.
God?s *temple 3:16-23
v16 You should know that you are God?s *temple. You
should know that God?s *Spirit lives in you. v17 If anyone destroys
God?s *temple, God will destroy him. That is because God?s *temple is holy. And
you are that *temple.
v18 Do not make a mistake about this. Perhaps one of
you thinks that he is one of the world?s clever people. Then he should learn
how to become a ?fool?, so that he may become really wise. v19 In the
*Scriptures, there are these words: ?God catches wise people in their own
clever plans.? v20 Again, it says, ?The *Lord knows that the thoughts of
wise people have no value.? v21 So then, you must not be proud that you
have a particular human leader. God has given you everything that you need. v22
He has given you Paul, Apollos and Peter as your helpers. He has given you the
whole world. Life and even death are your servants. God has given you all of
the present and all of the future. v23 You belong to Christ. And Christ
belongs to God.
Verses 16-17 Paul uses the words ?You should know? ten times in
this letter, and only once in other letters (Romans 6:16). The Christians at
Corinth were very proud about their ?knowledge?. But they had not really
understood the nature of the Christian church.
There were many *temples in Corinth. They all had *idols but none
of them contained a real god. The Christians in Corinth had God among them by
means of his *Holy Spirit. Therefore they were like a *temple. Because there is
only one God, there was only one true *temple in Corinth. The *spiritual
*temple of Christians existed to show that the only real God is holy. But the
bad behaviour of the Christians at Corinth was stopping the work of the *Holy
Spirit. Their jealous quarrels were destroying God?s work. The Christian church
was becoming like a weak building. God would punish those who were destroying
his church. Paul does not say how God would punish them. But he is probably
thinking about the day of judgement.
Verses 18-20 Some people thought that they were wise. Paul
repeats what he had already said about those people. In 1:18-25, he said that
people thought that God?s wise actions were foolish. Some people were proud
about their wisdom. But God thinks that those people are foolish. If they want
to be really wise, the Christians at Corinth must become ?fools?. That is, they
must become humble. Paul uses two verses from the *Old Testament to show that
his words are true. In Job 5:13, there is the picture of someone whom God has
caught in a trap. The Christians at Corinth think that they are like a clever
person. But God has shown that they are foolish. They are as foolish as an
animal that someone has caught in a trap. They do not realise that they will
destroy themselves. (Esther 5:12-14; 7:9-10 shows us a good example of this.)
Psalm 94:11 emphasises that human ways to think are of no use.
Verses 21-23 Therefore they must not be confident about their own
ways to think. They must trust Christ rather than trust people. They had said,
?I belong to Paul? or ?I belong to Apollos?. ?I belong to? was the kind of
language that described the relationship of slaves to their master. The
Christians at Corinth were making themselves the slaves of people. They do not
belong to Paul, Apollos or Peter. Instead, Paul, Apollos and Peter belong to the
Christians at Corinth. Those *apostles were servants to the Christians.
The whole world belongs to God. So the world belongs to the
Christians as well. Christians believe in Jesus? death and *resurrection.
Therefore, Christians have the real life from God that never ends. They can
have *eternal life now in the present time. They may suffer *physical death,
but they can never lose this real life from God.
Paul ends with words of praise. Christians possess ?all things?
because they belong to Christ. And Christ belongs to God. God has a plan. ?He
will bring everything together, things from earth, and things from heaven.
Christ will be the head of them all.? (See Ephesians 1:10.) Paul wants the
Christians at Corinth to understand that only one person is finally in charge.
This person is Jesus.
Chapter 4
Paul the servant 4:1-5
v1 This is how people should think about us. We are
Christ?s servants. We are *stewards (keepers) of the secrets that God shows to
his own people. v2 Now people who have received a trust must prove that
they are loyal people. v3 It matters very little to me what you or any
human court thinks about me. I do not even judge myself. v4 I do not
feel that I have done anything wrong. But that does not mean that I am
innocent. It is the *Lord who is the only true judge. v5 Therefore judge
nothing before the time that God has decided. Wait until the *Lord returns. He
will bring to light everything that people have hidden in the dark. He will
show the real reasons for people?s actions. At that time, each person will
receive his praise from God.
Verse 1 Paul uses two words to describe how the Christians at
Corinth ought to think about him and his friends. The words are ?servants? and
?*stewards?.
1. The word in this verse for ?servants? meant slaves who had to
work very hard in a *Roman ship. Paul was like a slave. He wanted to work hard
to please his owner.
2. A *steward was responsible to the owner of a big house. He was
responsible for his affairs. He ordered supplies. And he told the slaves what to
do. But he himself was responsible to the owner of the house. So whatever
position of authority a Christian may have in the church, he is still Christ?s
*steward.
Verses 2-4 The master must be able to depend on his *steward.
Paul speaks about three judgements:
1. Other people may judge whether someone has worked well. Some
of the Christians at Corinth did not like what Paul said. Some people had
refused to believe that he was an *apostle (2 Corinthians 10:7-10). But Paul
says that he does not worry about their opinion about him.
2. A person may judge himself. However, he may feel satisfied
with his own behaviour even when he has made a mistake.
3. God is the only true judge. God knows what circumstances have
affected someone?s actions. God also knows the intentions that caused a person
to act. Someone may do a good action but have a selfish desire. They may want
someone to praise them. Or they may want some other benefit.
Verse 5 So people should not judge other people before the time
when Jesus returns. Then God will show whether someone has done his duties in a
loyal way. God alone is the perfect judge. He will reward the people who have
been loyal *stewards in his ?house?, the church.
The need to be humble 4:6-13
v6 *Brothers and *sisters, I have used myself and
Apollos as examples. I want you to learn to live as *scripture tells us to
live. I do not want you to be proud that one person is your leader instead of
another person. v7 You are not different from anyone else. You received
everything that you have from God. And if you received things you should not
*boast. You speak as if you achieved it yourself. v8 Already you have
all that you want! Already you have become rich! You have become kings - and
you have left us outside the *kingdom! How I wish that you really had become
kings. Then we could rule with you! v9 I think that God has put us
*apostles on display at the end of the procession. We are like men that a ruler
has chosen to die in front of a crowd. We have become a show. The whole of what
God has created will see. We are a show to *angels as well as a show to people.
v10 We are fools for Christ. But you are so wise in the Christian
*faith. We are weak, but you are strong. People give you honour. But they think
that we have no value. v11 Up to this very hour, we are hungry and we
have nothing to drink. We have no clothes that can keep us warm. People behave
badly towards us. We have no homes. v12 We work hard with our own hands.
When other people insult us, we bless them. When they hit us, we suffer
patiently. v13 When they say bad things about us, we answer in a quiet
way. Up to this very moment, we have become like dust that people walk on. We
are everyone?s rubbish.
Verse 6 Paul and Apollos were humble. They knew that they were
God?s servants. God would judge them. In the same way, the Christians at
Corinth must be humble. God?s word makes it clear that false pride is wrong.
They should not go beyond God?s word. They should not *boast about who was
their leader.
Verse 7 It was God?s love that had *saved the Christians at
Corinth. They had forgotten that. Any gifts that they had came from God. They
were no different from anyone else whom God had blessed. They were behaving as
if they earned their own *salvation or their *spiritual gifts. They were not
grateful to God.
Verses 8-9 Paul makes fun of the opinion that the Christians at
Corinth have about themselves. They think that they have no need to learn any
more *spiritual truths. He says ?You have all that you want.? He means that
they are like people who have eaten more than enough food. They think that they
have all the *spiritual gifts that they need. They think that they have already
begun to rule in God?s *kingdom. Paul knew that the *kingdom is in the future
as well as in the present.
Paul used the picture of a procession. The *Romans had a
procession after they had defeated an enemy. The prisoners were at the end of
the procession. The *Romans used them for public entertainment before they
died. The prisoners would have to fight wild animals. Crowds of people would
come to watch them. Paul and the other *apostles were like those prisoners.
They were ready to die for Christ. The people in the world and the *angels were
like the crowd who watched.
Verses 10-13 Paul contrasts the life of the *apostles with the
life of the Christians at Corinth. The Christians at Corinth thought that they
were wise. Paul was ?foolish? because he believed the simple truth of the
*gospel. The Christians at Corinth believed that they were powerful. They did
not like the way that Paul *preached. He did not use clever words. So they
decided that Paul was ?weak?. They were very proud about themselves. They
imagined that people respected them. The Christians at Corinth did not give
honour to Christ. So they did not give honour to the *apostles.
Paul describes the difficulties that real *apostles had to
suffer. He had often been hungry and wanted a drink. His clothes were poor. He
had often had nowhere to sleep at night as he travelled from one place to
another place. He had worked hard with his own hands. He had earned money so
that he could live. We know that he was a skilled worker with leather. He made
tents and other goods (Acts 18:3; 20:33-34). Paul shows in 1 Corinthians
9:14-18 that the Christians at Corinth did not agree with his decision to do
this. So he says, ?We work hard with our own hands?, in this list of
difficulties. He therefore emphasises that he was a *disciple of Christ. Christ
had also suffered so that he could serve other people.
The Greek word for ?hit? describes the way that a master might
hit his slave. Paul took the position of a slave to please Christ his master.
Paul then replies to those who had behaved badly towards him.
Paul knew what Jesus taught. And he knew what Jesus did (Luke 6:28; 23:34). So,
when people insulted him, he prayed that they would be happy. He forgave them.
Paul was like Jesus. During his *trial and *crucifixion, Jesus had accepted
patiently the cruel attacks. People told lies about Paul. But he made a humble
appeal to them. He asked them to stop and to be like Christ.
Finally, Paul says that the *apostles are like the dust. People
swept up dust from the floor. Or they are like the dirt that someone washes
from the body. This picture language is similar to Lamentations 3:45. It
described anything that people thought had no value at all. Isaiah said that
people would think that God?s servant had no value (Isaiah 53:2-3). Paul and
the other *apostles were like this. People thought that they had no value.
Paul?s love as a *spiritual father 4:14-21
v14 I am not writing these things just to make you
ashamed. Because you are my dear *spiritual children, I want to warn you. v15
You may have ten thousand Christians who are looking after you. But you do not
have many fathers. I became your *spiritual father when I told you the good
news about Jesus Christ. v16 So I am urging you to be like me. v17
For this reason, I am sending Timothy to you. He is like a son that I love very
much. He is loyally serving the *Lord. He will remind you about my way to live
as I serve Christ Jesus. And that way to live agrees with what I teach
everywhere in every church. v18 Some of you have become proud. So, you
behave as if I were not coming to you. v19 But I will come to you very
soon, if the *Lord wants me to come. Then I will find out what these proud
people are saying. But I will also find out what power they have. v20
The *kingdom of God is not a matter of words. It is about how Christians live. v21
I could come to blame you with angry words. Or I could come to you with gentle
love in my mind. I would like to know which you would rather have.
Verses 14-16 Paul was writing like a father. A father wants his
son to do what is right. Paul described other Christians who taught them. They
were like the slave who looked after a child. He took the child to school. He
taught him how to behave. A child might have more than one of these slaves to
look after him. But he could have only one father. Paul was like a father who
loved his child. He had become the *spiritual father of the Christians in
Corinth. He had helped them to trust in Jesus Christ. He told them the good
news about *salvation. So, he wanted them to behave in the same way as their
?father? behaved.
Verse 17 Because he loves them, Paul is sending Timothy to visit
them. Timothy is Paul?s *spiritual son whom he loves. He knows that Timothy is
a loyal servant of Christ. Paul practised what he taught. Wherever he went, he
behaved in the same way. This was how he lived while he was at Corinth. Timothy
will remind them about that.
Verses 18-21 Some proud Christians in Corinth did not believe
that Paul would visit them himself. But Paul intended to visit Corinth as soon
as possible. He would go if Christ wanted him to go. Then Paul would discover
whether the Christians had the power to live in the right way. They had plenty
to say. But they must show by their actions that they belonged to God?s
*kingdom. Jesus had said, ?You will know them by their fruit? (Matthew 7:16). A
person might say that he belongs to Christ. But his actions will prove whether
his words are true. Paul asked whether he should come to punish them. He could
be like a father whose child had not obeyed him. Or they could change their
behaviour because of Paul?s letter and Timothy?s visit. Then Paul could come
gently to share his love with them.
Chapter 5
The problem of a serious *sexual *sin 5:1-5
v1 News has come to me that there is *sexual *sin
among you. A man has been having sex with his father?s wife. Even people who do
not know God do not *sin like that. v2 And you are proud! You should be
very sad instead. You should have made the man who did this leave your church. v3
Although I am not there with you, my *spirit is with you. And I have already
judged the man who did this. I have done so just as if I were there. v4
When you come together in the name of our *Lord Jesus, my *spirit is with you.
The power of our *Lord Jesus will also be with you. v5 When you come
together like that, hand this man over to *Satan. This is in order to destroy
his *sinful nature. And it is to *save his *spirit on the day when the *Lord
returns.
Verse 1 The law does not allow sex between two people who are
very close relatives of each other. In the church at Corinth, a man was having
sex with his father?s second wife. It was against *Jewish law (Leviticus 18:8).
Even *pagans thought that it was a terrible *sin. It was against *Roman law as
well.
Verse 2 Paul felt disgusted that the members of the church
allowed the situation. They even seemed to have been slightly proud of the
man?s action. They may have said that Christians had freedom from the law. They
thought that this action did not matter for a really *spiritual person.
Instead, they should have felt as sad as someone whose close relative had died.
Verses 3-4 Paul was not there. But he was thinking about them as
if he really were present. He had already decided that the man was *sinning.
When they met as a group of Christians, Paul felt as if he was *spiritually
with them. They also had the *Holy Spirit with them. The *Holy Spirit would
give them the power to act in the right way.
Verse 5 The Christians must punish the man. They must tell him
that he must leave the church. He would then be in the world, where *Satan
rules people?s lives. There the man would learn the difference between the
company of Christians and the ways of the world. Paul intended that this
punishment would make the man realise his *sin. Then he would ask for God?s
forgiveness. Then on the day of judgement, when Jesus returns, God would not
shut him out of heaven. The Christians had to punish him in this way. This
would be better for him in *eternity. And it would show that they loved him.
The effects of this *sin if it continues 5:6-8
v6 You are wrong to be proud about your church. You
must know that only a little *yeast spreads through the whole lump of *dough. v7
Remove the old *yeast. Be like a new lump of *dough without *yeast. That is
what you really are. That is because Christ is our *Passover *lamb. He has
become a *sacrifice for us. v8 So let us keep the *Feast, but not with
the old *yeast. I mean that hate and wicked behaviour are like*yeast. Let us
keep the *Feast with bread that is honest and pure.
Verse 6 Paul uses a picture from *Jewish practice. It shows why
the man should not stay in the church. *Yeast is a tiny substance. People put
it in *dough to make bread grow bigger. It affects the whole lump of *dough.
The *Jews thought that *yeast was a picture of an evil *influence. *Yeast
spreads through *dough. In a similar way, the man?s *sin would affect the whole
church.
It is possible that Paul was writing his letter near *Passover
time. The *Jews used to remove every tiny bit of *yeast from their homes before
*Passover began.
Verse 7 The Christians must remove the guilty man. But the ?old
*yeast? can also mean that they must clean out every bit of *sin in their own
lives. That is, they must be like a new lump of *dough with no *yeast in it.
They had to be a group of Christians with no *sin among them. They had received
God?s forgiveness for their past *sins. God forgave them by means of Jesus?
*sacrifice as the *Passover *lamb. Now they are free to live in a new way. So
they must behave like the new people that God has made them.
Verse 8 The *Passover *feast lasted for a week. During those
seven days, the *Jews did not eat anything with *yeast in it. Christians must
also be happy that God has forgiven them. Because of this, they must live in a
holy way. ?Hate and wicked behaviour? means that they were to remove any kind
of *sin in thought and action. They must not hide their real attitudes. Their
actions must be the result of honest and pure thoughts.
The church and the world 5:9-13
v9 I told you in my letter to stay away from people whose
*sexual behaviour was wrong. v10 I did not mean people of this world who
*sin in that way, or greedy people of this world. Or they may cheat or *worship
false gods. To stay away from them, you would have to leave this world. v11
But now, this is what I am writing to you. Some people say that they are
Christians. You must stay away from any of those people if they behave in these
wrong ways. Stay away from anyone whose *sexual behaviour is *sinful. And stay
away from anyone who is greedy. Stay away from him if he *worships false gods.
Keep away if he tells lies about other people. Stay away if he drinks too much
alcohol. Stay away if he cheats. Do not even eat with a person like that. v12
It is not my business to judge those outside the church. You are supposed to
judge those who belong to the church. v13 God will judge those who do
not belong to the church. Throw the wicked man out.
Verses 9-10 The Christians in Corinth had misunderstood Paul?s
advice. Perhaps they wanted to say that Paul?s advice was stupid. It is
impossible to stay away from everyone who *sins. This was especially true in a
city like Corinth. It was well-known for *sexual *sins.
Verses 11-12 Paul explains that he was talking about people who
called themselves Christians. He meant Christians who continued to *sin. He
spoke about:
1. *sexual *sins. These were *sins against a person?s real
nature. They made people behave like animals. It was selfish and wrong for
someone to use another person to satisfy his *physical needs.
2. those who were greedy. They had forgotten that other people
were like brothers and sisters. They must not steal from them. Instead, they
must love and serve them. The Christian *faith should make it a joy to give
rather than to get.
3. the *worship of false gods. This is a *sin against the only
real God. If a person does not *worship God, he will *worship something or
someone else. He might trust in things that he thinks will bring him luck. He
might make another person, like a singer or a man who is good at sport into an
*idol. A person who does all this is not a real Christian. The other Christians
should not even share a meal with him. To share a meal would make it seem as if
they agreed with his bad behaviour.
Verses 12-13 Only God can judge those who do not belong to the
church. God alone knows their hearts. But the members of the church must judge
someone in the church who does wrong things. The people outside the church must
see that the Christian *faith is a different way to live. If Christians refused
to punish such a serious *sin, they were a poor witness to their new *faith.
Paul gave a definite command, ?Throw the man out?. He used words from
Deuteronomy 17:7; 24:7. The Christian church in Corinth must put out evil
people.
Chapter 6
Christians and the law courts 6:1-8
v1 Suppose that one of you has a reason to complain
against another Christian. You may take your problem to the *pagan law courts.
But you should go to God?s people. v2 You must know that one day God?s
people will judge the world. And if you are to judge the world, you should be
able to deal with such small matters. v3 You must know that we shall
judge *angels. Then we should be able to judge the things of this life even
more. v4 If you have such arguments, appoint members of the church to be
judges. They should not be very important members! v5 I write this to
make you ashamed. There must be a single wise man among you able to judge
matters between Christians. v6 Instead, one Christian goes to court
against another Christian. And this happens in front of people who do not
believe! v7 Because you have taken another Christian to court, you have
already lost the battle. It would be better to suffer wrong instead. It would
be better to allow other people to cheat you. v8 Instead you cheat and
do wrong. And you cheat your Christian *brothers and *sisters.
Verse 1 The Greeks very much liked to go to the law courts. It
was like entertainment for them. Some of the Greeks had brought this habit into
the Christian church. Paul heard that a Christian in Corinth was taking another
Christian to a *pagan law court. Paul was disgusted. The *Jews usually settled
things in front of the important men in their village. Or they took the problem
to the important men in a *synagogue. They thought that it was wrong to go to a
*pagan law court. As a *Jew, and even more as a Christian, Paul believed that
this legal action was wrong.
Verses 2-3 Paul said that one day Christians would judge both
other people and *angels. So it was not sensible to use human law courts to
deal with small quarrels.
Verse 4 Christians should appoint other members of the church to
decide what was right. They should choose Christians who were not important.
Paul?s words seem like a command. So he is probably reminding them that they
should be humble. They are wrong to think that one Christian is more important
than another Christian. But other people have translated the sentence like
this: ?I do not know how you can let people outside the church judge. Their
opinions are not very important for Christians.?
Verse 5 Paul makes fun of the Christians at Corinth who are so
proud of their wisdom. He wonders if they can find even one wise man to make a
decision about the quarrel.
Verse 6 *Pagans will see that Christians are going to court.
Then, the *pagans will think that Christian behaviour is no different from
their own.
Verses 7-8 Whatever the result of the matter, the legal action
means that people will have a bad opinion about the church. Jesus had said that
Christians must defeat evil things with good deeds (Matthew 5:44). So, the
person who has gone to court is failing as a Christian. To go to law courts at
all was to forget that they were *brothers and *sisters in the Christian
family. Paul uses the word ?cheat?. So the quarrel may have been about a
business matter. But any quarrel should give the opportunity to show the power
of Christian love.
A list of *sins 6:9-11
v9 You must know that wicked people will not have a
place in the future *kingdom of God. Make no mistake. None of these will
possess the *kingdom of God:
those guilty
of *sexual *sins and those who *worship *idols;
those who
break their marriage promises, male *prostitutes and *homosexuals;
v10 thieves,
greedy people and those who drink too much alcohol;
people who
tell lies and cheat other people.
v11 And that is what some of you were. But God has
made you *spiritually clean. God has set you apart to live in a good way. The
*Lord Jesus Christ has made you right with God. The *Spirit of God has made
this change in you.
There are other lists of wrong acts in other letters. They all
show the kind of society in which Paul lived. They show what some people are
like. People are like this when they do not accept God and his laws.
Verse 9 Paul warns the Christians in Corinth about their
behaviour. If they continue to *sin, they are in danger of judgement. God will
judge them in the same way as he will judge non-Christians. God will refuse to
keep them in his *kingdom.
In Corinth, people *worshipped Aphrodite, the female god of love.
Their worship included much wrong *sexual behaviour. Also, many people did not
remain a loyal husband or a loyal wife.
?Male *prostitutes?
translates a Greek word that means ?soft?. Probably it describes boys and young
men who acted like women. They allowed older men to use them for their *sexual
pleasure. ?*Homosexuals? describes people of the same sex who have sex with
each other. In the *Roman world, both these forms of behaviour were common.
Even the *Roman rulers did these things.
Verse 10 Greedy people can become thieves or those who cheat
other people. There were many people like this in Corinth.
In those days, the water was not good. So the Greeks mixed wine
with their water. In Corinth, there were people who drank too much alcohol.
They thought only about their own pleasure.
To tell lies and to speak evil words about other people are
serious *sins. They make it difficult for people to trust each other and to be
part of society.
Verse 11 Some Christians had been like all these wicked people.
But they had become better. The water used to *baptise them had shown that they
wanted to change. God had made them his own people. The *Lord Jesus Christ, by
his death on the *cross, had brought them into right relations with God. God?s
Spirit had caused them to become new people. So, Paul uses these words to
encourage them to live properly as Christians. That would show that their
*faith was sincere.
Wrong *sexual behaviour 6:12-20
v12 You say ?I am free to do anything.? Yes, but not
everything is good for me. ?I am free to do anything?. But I, myself, will not
let anything control me. v13 ?Food is for the stomach and the stomach is
for food?, you say. But one day God will destroy them both. God did not intend
the body for *sexual *sins. He intended it for the *Lord. And the *Lord is for
the body. v14 God raised our *Lord from death by his power. He will also
raise us up. v15 You must know that your bodies are parts of the body of
Christ himself. I can never take parts of Christ?s body and unite them with a
*prostitute. v16 Everyone who joins himself with a *prostitute becomes
one body with her. You must know that. *Scripture says, ?The two people will
become one body.? v17 But he who unites himself with Christ becomes one
person with him in his *spirit.
v18 Keep far away from *sexual *sins. Every other
*sin that a person practises is outside the body. But the person who is guilty
of a *sexual *sin acts in a wrong way against his own body. v19 You must
know that your body is a *temple for the *Holy Spirit. The *Holy Spirit in you
is God?s gift to you. You do not belong to yourselves. v20 Christ paid a
great price to *save you. So, use your body in a way that gives honour to God.
Verses 12-13 The Greeks taught that the *spirit alone mattered.
The body was not important. So they could act in any way at all and it would
not hurt their *spirit. It was natural to eat. And it was natural to satisfy
their *sexual desires. Paul had also taught that Christians are free from the
law?s demands. So some Christians were continuing to visit *prostitutes after
*baptism. Corinth was a city so well-known for *sexual *sin that a ?girl from
Corinth? meant a *prostitute. So it was very easy for Christians to *sin in
this way. And it was very easy to find excuses for this behaviour.
Christian freedom does not mean that Christians are free to *sin.
Paul reminded them about that. What they chose to do must be helpful to them.
It must also be helpful to other people. It was wrong to be like a slave to
their former way to live.
Verse 14 The body belongs to God. By his power, God raised Jesus
from death. By the same power, he will raise both *spirit and body to be alive.
God intends the whole person for *eternal life in the future.
Verses 15-17 *Scripture says in Genesis 2:24 that a *sexual act
between two people makes them into one united body. Christians are part of
Christ?s body, the church. So for a Christian to give his body to a *prostitute
was a terrible *sin. He must unite himself with Christ in a permanent unity of
*spirit.
Verse 18 The Christians at Corinth may have said that *sin was in
the mind rather than in the body. Paul said that *sexual *sin was against the
person?s own body. It is true that to drink too much alcohol or to take drugs
are *sins against the body. But God wants to *save Christians? bodies and
*souls. So Paul explained that other *sins do not affect a person?s body in the
same way as *sexual *sins do.
Verse 19-20 The body is the *temple of the *Holy Spirit whom God
has given us. Therefore, the body is holy, set apart for God. Christ died to
*save a person?s whole nature, both body and *soul. So, a person is not free to
do as he likes with his body. It belongs to Christ. Therefore, he must use his
body in the way that God wants. He must give honour to God.
The second part of Paul?s letter, chapters 7-15, deals with
problems that the Christians in Corinth had asked Paul about.
Chapter 7 deals with various questions about marriage and *sexual
relations.
Chapter 7
Advice about whether to marry 7:1-2
v1 But now I will deal with the matters that you
wrote about. It is good for a man not to marry. v2 But there is so much
wrong *sexual behaviour. So, each man should have his own wife. Each woman
should have her own husband.
Verse 1 Some Christians believed that their body was *sinful. So
they thought that their natural desires were wrong. They believed that they
should not marry at all.
Verse 2 Paul was honest and practical. He knew that there was
much *temptation in Corinth. It would be better for a man to marry than to give
in to his natural desires in wrong ways.
Advice about *sexual relations between husbands and wives 7:3-7
v3 The husband must give his wife the *sexual
pleasure that she needs. The wife must give her husband his *sexual rights. v4
The wife?s body does not belong to her alone. It also belongs to her husband.
In the same way, the husband?s body does not belong to him alone. It also
belongs to his wife. v5 Do not stop having sex with each other except
when you both agree to do so. Do so for a time in order to be free for prayer.
Then come together again. In that way *Satan will not *tempt you because of
your lack of control. v6 I say all this as my advice. But it is not a
command from God. v7 I should like you all not to marry, but to remain
single like me. But each person has his own gift from God. One person has this
gift; another person has a different gift.
Verses 3-4 Some Christians in Corinth thought that it was more
?*spiritual to live as married people without sex. Paul said that sex was a
duty of both man and wife to each other. In a Christian marriage, the husband
and wife belong to each other. The *sexual act is a special part of their life
together.
Verses 5-6 Both husband and wife may agree to stop their *sexual
relations. But this must be for a short time only so that they can spend more
time in prayer. Then they should come together again. Then *Satan cannot *tempt
either husband or wife to look for *sexual satisfaction outside marriage. Paul
was not giving an order from God; he was offering his advice.
Verse 7 Paul wished that Christians would remain single, like
him. But he recognised that people are different from each other. God gave some
the gift to remain single. He gave other people the gift to be married.
Single people and widows 7:8-9
v8 I say this to widows or those who have not
married. It would be good if they remained single, like me. v9 But if
they cannot control themselves, they should marry. It is better to marry than
to let strong *sexual desires destroy them.
Verses 8-9 Paul thought that there was only a short time left
before Jesus returned. So, it would be sensible to remain single. But Paul
warns them not to stay in a situation where they would find it easy to *sin. It
all depended on the character of the person. If they had very strong desires,
they should marry.
Questions about divorce 7:10-16
v10 I give this command to married people. (It is not
my order, but a command from the *Lord.) A wife must not leave her husband. v11
But if she does, she must remain single. Or she must be willing to live with
her husband again. And a husband must not divorce his wife.
v12 For the other matters, I say this. (It is my
advice; it is not the *Lord?s command.) Suppose that a Christian has a *pagan
wife. If she is willing to live with him, he must not divorce her. v13
And suppose that a woman has a *pagan husband. If he is willing to live with
her, she must not divorce him. v14 This is because the *pagan husband
has become holy by his Christian wife. And the *pagan wife has become holy by
her Christian husband. If that were not true, your children would not be
included in God?s purposes. But as it is, they are holy. v15 But if the
*pagan leaves, let him or her do so. In such circumstances, a man or woman does
not have to stay married. God wants us to live in peace. v16 Wife, it is
not clear whether you will *save your husband. Husband, it is not clear whether
you can *save your wife.
Verses 10-11 Paul said that it was wrong to divorce. This was not
his opinion. It was the *Lord?s command. Jesus said, ?A man must not separate
what God has joined together.? (See Mark 10:9.) If a wife did leave her
husband, she must not marry again. Or she must be willing to go back to her
husband. And a husband must not divorce his wife.
Verses 12-14 Some people believed that a Christian should not
continue to live with a *pagan husband or wife. Paul had to give his judgement
about mixed marriages. There was no direct command from Jesus to which he could
refer. Mixed marriages could cause problems. (They still do cause problems.)
Christians like to go to church meetings. They like to serve other people. But
this would mean that a husband and wife would spend less time together. The
kiss of peace with which Christians greeted each other (1 Corinthians 16:20)
could easily have caused a quarrel. The *pagan husband or wife might feel
jealous and worried. They might not be sure whether they could trust their
partner.
Paul?s advice was practical. When the non-Christian partner
wanted to stay in the marriage, there should be no divorce. Because the
Christian was ?holy?, the partner and the children would be ?holy?. The
blessings that come from God do not only affect Christians. A Christian?s
belief would also benefit the partner who is not a Christian. And it would also
benefit their children.
Verse 15 The *pagan might be so much against the Christian *faith
that there would be quarrels all the time. If he or she wanted to leave, the
Christian should allow the *pagan to go. Paul thought that it was reasonable for
a marriage like this to end. God wanted peace in a family, not constant war.
Verse 16 The non-Christian might stay. Then there was the
opportunity to persuade him or her to become a Christian. Peter also believed
that this was possible. ?Wives, obey your husbands. There may be some husbands
who do not believe God?s message. But if their wives obey them, those husbands
may believe. They may decide to believe God, even if their wives have said
nothing to them about God?s message? (1 Peter 3:1).
Changes that are not necessary 7:17-24
v17 But each of you should remain in the place in the
world that the *Lord has given to you. Stay as you were when God chose you.
This is the rule that I order in all churches. v18 A man might have been
*circumcised when God called him. He should not try to undo his *circumcision.
A man might have been *uncircumcised when God called him. He should not want
*circumcision. v19 *Circumcision is nothing. To be *uncircumcised is
nothing. To do what God commands is what matters. v20 Each one should
remain in his situation when God called him. v21 You might have been a
slave when God called you. Do not let it worry you. But if you can persuade
your master to set you free, do so. v22 Someone may have been a slave
when God called him. Now he is the *Lord?s free man. Someone may have been a
free man when God called him. Now he is Christ?s slave. v23 Christ paid
the price for you. So do not become slaves of people. v24 *Brothers and
*sisters, you are responsible to God. So, each person should remain in the
situation to which God called him.
Verse 17 Paul believed that a Christian should practise his
*faith wherever he was. He did not need to change his place in society. God had
called him, whoever he was.
Verses 18-20 Paul chose as his first example *Jews and *Gentiles.
Some men were *Jews when they became Christians. Some were *Gentiles. A *Jew
should not try to change his *circumcision. A *Gentile need not think that
*circumcision was important for him. It did not matter whether a man had the
mark of *circumcision or not. What was important was to obey God?s commands.
Verses 21-23 Some people thought that slaves were ?things? rather
than people. But when God called a slave, he became the *Lord?s free man.
Instead, he had become the slave of Christ, but with the freedom to serve him.
A slave could save enough money to buy his own freedom. Christ had bought human
freedom by his death on the *cross. Paul encouraged slaves to gain their
freedom from their masters on earth. But some people thought that slaves had no
value. Slaves should take no notice of those people. Whether someone is a slave
or free person, they are ?all one family in Christ Jesus? (Galatians 3:28).
Verse 24 It is God?s opinion about a person that matters. So
there was no need to change a person?s situation after he became a Christian.
The important thing is to obey God.
The problem of two people who have agreed to marry 7:25-28
v25 Now I will write about *virgins. I have no
command from the *Lord. But because of the *Lord?s *mercy, you can trust my
opinion. v26 The present times are difficult. So, this is what I think:
It is good for you to remain as you are. v27 If you are married, do not
divorce. If you are single, do not look for a wife. v28 But if you do
marry, you have not *sinned. And if a *virgin marries, she has not *sinned. But
those who marry will have many troubles in this life. And I do not want you to
have those troubles.
Verse 25 Paul was probably writing about young women who were
engaged. Some Christians at Corinth were trying to persuade engaged people to
remain unmarried. They believed that sex was wrong. Paul says that the
Christians can trust his opinion on the matter. He does not say ?because I am
an *apostle with Christ?s authority?. They can trust him because the *Lord has
shown *mercy to him. Paul is thinking about what is good for them.
Verse 26 The Christians were already having difficulties because
people were opposing them. Paul believed that Jesus would return soon. Before
that happened, there would be a time of even greater danger and trouble. So, it
was not the time to make important changes in their lives.
Verses 27-28 Married people should not divorce. Single people
should not want to get married. But it is not a *sin to marry. It is not wrong
for a young engaged woman to marry. But marriage would bring extra problems.
Paul did not say what these ?troubles? were. But it is not always easy for even
a loving husband and wife to share each other?s needs and emotions. Children
take up a lot of time and they are not easy to train.
The time is short 7:29-31
v29 *Brothers and *sisters, I mean that the time is
short. From now on, those with a husband or wife should live as if they did not
have one. v30 Those who are sad should live as if they were not sad.
Those who are happy should live as if they were not happy. Those who buy
something should live as if it were not theirs to keep. v31 Those who
use the things of the world should not become too interested in them. Because
this world as it now exists is passing away.
Verses 29-31 Paul believed that Jesus would return soon. There
was not much time left to do God?s work. Paul wanted them to stop and think. So
he wrote in such a powerful way because he wanted them to be serious about
God?s work. He did not expect them to understand his examples in their exact
meaning. But he expected husbands to continue to love their wives. People would
continue to be sad or happy. Trade would go on. But these things should not
control their lives. Because of their *faith they already belonged to the world
of *eternity. So, their relationship to the present world was not the most
important one. The present world is in the process of passing away. God has
already decided the course of future events. Therefore, their hope for the
future should free them from too many worries about the affairs of this life.
Freedom from worry 7:32-35
v32 I want you to have nothing to worry about. A
single man thinks about the *Lord?s affairs. He wants to know how he can please
the *Lord. v33 But a married man is involved in the affairs of this
world. He wants to know how he can please his wife. He finds it difficult to
serve the *Lord completely and to think about his wife?s needs. v34
There is a difference between a wife and a *virgin. A single woman worries
about the *Lord?s affairs. She wants to serve the *Lord with both body and
*spirit. But a married woman is anxious about the affairs of this world. She
wants to know how she can please her husband. v35 I am saying these
things to help you. I am not trying to limit you. I want you to give yourselves
completely to the *Lord.
Verses 32-35 Paul wanted married men and women to think about the
demands of the *Lord?s work. This could be difficult when they also had their
wife?s or husband?s needs to think about. Those who were single were free to
concentrate on the *Lord?s work. For the woman to ?serve the *Lord with body
and *spirit? means ?to serve him in every way?. Body and *spirit are not
separate. Together they mean the whole person. Paul used similar language to
describe the whole person in 1 Thessalonians 5:23.
Paul pointed out this problem because he did not want anyone to
be anxious in their Christian lives. He thought that to remain single would
avoid the difficulty of divided responsibility. But he did not want his words
to be like a thick piece of string round people?s necks to control them. They
had the freedom to choose marriage. He wanted them to do whatever would help
them to serve the *Lord best.
Advice to men about *virgins 7:36-38
v36 Suppose that a man has promised to marry a girl.
And he thinks that he is not acting in the right way towards her. Suppose that
she is getting older. And he feels that he ought to marry her. He should do as
he wants. He is not *sinning. They should get married. v37 But perhaps
the man has decided not to marry the *virgin. And perhaps he has no urgent need
to get married and he can control his own desire. If he has made up his mind
not to marry, he also does the right thing. v38 So the man who marries
the *virgin does right. But he who does not marry her does even better.
Paul began to talk about engaged people in 7:25-28. Here he
continues his thoughts about the subject.
Verse 36 Some Christians in Corinth were making this man anxious.
He had promised to marry a girl. But they said that he should not marry her.
She had passed the age when she could easily find a husband. So, he would be
failing in his promise, if he did not marry her. The man should follow his own
desires and marry her. He would not be *sinning.
Verse 37 But a man with a strong control of his *sexual desires
need not marry. The man and woman can live their Christian lives as single
people.
Verse 38 The man who marries is doing the right thing. The one
who decides not to marry will do better. That is not because marriage is wrong.
Paul?s opinion is in verse 26. It is better because of the difficulties that he
has spoken about.
Marrying again 7:39-40
v39 A woman must stay married to her husband as long
as he lives. But her husband may die. Then she is free to marry anyone else
that she wants to. But the man that she marries must belong to the *Lord. v40
In my opinion she is happier if she stays single. And I think that God?s Spirit
has led me to say this.
Verse 39 The strict *Jews called the Essenes allowed only one
marriage. They thought that the unity of husband and wife continued after
death. Paul believed what Jesus taught. He taught that marriage was for life.
But a widow could marry again after her husband died. Women usually lived
longer than men, so Paul speaks about widows. But this same advice would be
true for men whose wives had died. In some ways, a second marriage is a way to
praise the first one. The first one had been so happy that one is not afraid to
begin a second one. The only limit to the choice to marry again was that the
new partner should be a Christian. This is a wise command. A marriage between a
non-Christian and a Christian could create great difficulties.
Verse 40 Paul reminds the Christians at Corinth that he has the
*Holy Spirit. He has the *Holy Spirit as well as they do. The *Holy Spirit
helped him when he gave his opinion about the widow. The widow would be happier
if she remained single. That is Paul?s opinion.
Chapters 8-10 deal with the problem of meat that someone had
offered to a *pagan god.
Chapter 8
The problem 8:1-13
v1 Now I want to deal with the question about food
that someone has *sacrificed to *idols. We know that we all have knowledge.
Knowledge makes people proud. But love helps them. v2 A person may think
that he knows. Then he still does not know as he should. v3 But God
knows the person who loves him. v4 So then, someone may have offered
meat to *idols. Here is what I say about that meat. We know that an *idol is
nothing at all in the world. We know that there is only one God. v5
There may be so-called gods either in heaven or earth. (There are in fact many
?gods? and many ?*lords?.) v6 But, for us, there is only one God. He is
the Father. All things come from him, and we live for him. And there is only
one *Lord, Jesus Christ. All things came by him, and we live by him.
v7 But not everyone knows this. Some people still
think about it as food that someone has offered to a real god. Because they
have a weak sense of right and wrong, they feel guilty. v8 But food does
not bring us close to God. We are no worse if we do not eat. We are no better
if we do eat. v9 But be careful how you use your freedom. Make sure that
it does not cause a weak person to *sin. v10 Perhaps you, who have this
knowledge, are eating in an *idol?s *temple. And suppose that a person with a
weak sense of right and wrong sees you. That person will probably start to eat
meat that someone has *sacrificed to *idols. v11 So your knowledge
destroys the weak *brother or *sister for whom Christ died. v12 When you
*sin against your *brothers in this way, you wound their weak conscience. When
you do this, you *sin against Christ. v13 What I eat may cause my
*brother or *sister to *sin. If so, then I will never eat meat again. In that
way, I will not cause him to *sin.
Verse 1 The Christians at Corinth had asked Paul about this
problem. Meat was expensive. But it became available when *Jews or *pagans
offered *sacrifices. The priests burnt a small part of the meat on the *altar.
Then the priests kept some. They gave the rest back to the person who offered it.
He would often make a *feast for his friends. This would be a pleasant social
occasion. Sometimes it was a public *sacrifice by the state. Then they sold the
rest of the meat cheaply in the market. So it was difficult to get meat that
did not involve *worship. There was no problem in Jerusalem because the meat
was a *sacrifice to God. But in other cities, the meat had been offered to a
*pagan god. Christians were not sure if it was right to eat that meat. Some
people in Corinth worried about it. Other people were proud of their superior
knowledge. They thought that there was no problem. They thought that they could
eat such meat. Paul?s answer was especially for those people.
The Christians at Corinth said that they had ?knowledge?. Paul
told them that ?knowledge? can make people proud about themselves. Real
knowledge comes from love. Love thinks about the needs of other people and it
makes their *faith stronger. Paul prayed for the Christians at Philippi: ?I
pray that you will continue to love each other more and more. I pray that you
will continue to know God more and more. Then you will understand things more
completely. You will understand why things are right or wrong.? (See
Philippians 1:9.)
Verses 2-3 The Christians at Corinth thought that they had real
knowledge about the way to behave. But they did not possess real knowledge. The
one who really ?knows? is the one who loves.
Verse 4-6 Paul uses words from their letter. They know that there
is only one God. And they know that *idols are not alive. *Pagans believed that
there were many ?gods and *lords?. ?*Lords? was the word that *pagans used to
describe some of the special gods in their religion. But Christians believe in
one God and one *Lord. God is the Father. We can be his children. He created all
things. He created us to carry out his plans. Jesus is the one *Lord. ?*Lord?
was the name for God in the *Old Testament. God created everything. It was by
Jesus that God rescued people from their *sin. These words about God and Jesus
are like the beginning of a statement about Christian belief.
Verse 7 Some Christians at Corinth did believe that *idols are
not alive. But they could not completely forget their belief that the *pagan
gods had power over their lives. They had believed in them for a long time. So
it worried them to eat this meat. It worried them because someone had offered
it to an *idol. So, they thought that it would be better not to eat it. Some
new Christians find it hard to stop *worshipping their *ancestors.
Verse 8 These may be the words of the Christians at Corinth, with
which Paul would agree. To eat or not to eat food makes no difference to God.
They are like Paul?s words in 1 Corinthians 7:19 that *circumcision or lack of
*circumcision was not important.
Verses 9-10 To eat food that *pagans had offered to *idols might,
however, cause a problem for someone with a troubled conscience. The ?weak?
Christian may copy the ?strong? Christian if he sees him eat in a *pagan
*temple.
Verse 11 Now the weak Christian has eaten food that someone has
offered to an *idol. So now the weak Christian may lose his *faith completely.
He is a *brother for whom Christ died.
Verse 12 The ?strong? Christians had forgotten that they were
part of a Christian family. Anything that made a Christian ?*brother? *sin was
a *sin against Christ himself.
Verse 13 Paul was willing to limit his own freedom. He would
never make it difficult for another Christian. His action might be good in
itself. But it would be wrong if it caused another believer to *sin.
Chapter 9
The rights of an *apostle 9:1-27
Paul is a real *apostle 9:1-2
v1 You know that I am free. You know that I am an
*apostle. I have seen Jesus our *Lord. After all, you are the result of my work
in the *Lord. v2 I may not be an *apostle to other people. But I certainly
am to you. Because you are the *seal that I am the *Lord?s *apostle.
Verse 1 Paul continued to speak about his own freedom. Some
Christians at Corinth denied that he was a real *apostle. This was because he
did not expect to receive pay for his work. So Paul mentioned two facts. They
showed that he was an *apostle.
1. He had seen Jesus. Paul?s experience on the road to Damascus
was an appearance of Jesus after his *resurrection. ?Last of all, he appeared
to me also? (1 Corinthians 15:8).
2. The Christians at Corinth themselves showed that Paul was an
*apostle. Paul calls them his ?*seal?. A *seal was an official stamp on a legal
record. It showed that it was genuine. The church at Corinth was the ?*seal?
that Paul was a genuine *apostle. Paul?s successful work in Corinth was a proof
that God?s power was working by him.
Paul compares himself with other people 9:3-6
v3 This is my defence to those who are trying to
judge me. v4 We must have the right to food and drink. v5 We
travel. We could take a wife who is a believer with us. I suppose that we have
that right. The other *apostles do it. The *Lord?s brothers and Cephas do it. v6
It cannot only be Barnabas and I who must work for ourselves.
Verse 5 Paul does not say who he means by the ?other *apostles?.
The ?*Lord?s brothers? were James, Joseph (also called Joses), Judas (or Jude)
and Simon (Mark 6:3). They were sons of Joseph and Mary after Jesus was born.
(However, some people think that they were Jesus? cousins, or sons from a
previous marriage of Joseph.)
James and the other brothers did not believe in Jesus until after
his *resurrection. Jesus made a special appearance to James (1 Corinthians
15:7). Later, James became a leader in the church in Jerusalem (Acts 15:13-21;
21:18).
Cephas is the Aramaic word for Peter. Aramaic is the language
that Jesus spoke. Jesus also made a special appearance to Peter (Luke 24:34; 1
Corinthians 15:5). We know that Peter had a wife, because Jesus healed his
wife?s mother (Luke 4:38-39). Paul may have met her when he first visited
Jerusalem (Galatians 1:18).
Verse 6 Barnabas had introduced Paul to the Christians in
Jerusalem. They sent Barnabas to help the church in Antioch. He brought Paul
from Tarsus to work with him there. He and Paul worked together in Asia Minor
(Acts chapters 13-14). But they could not agree that they should take Mark, a
relative of Barnabas, on a second journey. So Paul and Barnabas separated.
Barnabas went to *preach in Cyprus, the country where he was born. And Paul
went to Syria and Cilicia (Acts 15:36-39).
Examples from ordinary life 9:7-12a
v7 You do not hear about a soldier who does not get
any pay. Nor does a man plant a *vineyard and not eat any of its fruit. No one
looks after the sheep and the goats and does not use their milk. v8 You
must not think that I depend on these human examples alone. v9 In the
law of Moses we read this: ?You must not prevent a male cow from eating some of
the corn that it is *threshing.? I do not believe that God was only thinking
about male cows. v10 I believe that he was also thinking about us. Of
course he was. Yes, these words were for us. A farmer ploughs and someone
separates the grain from the straw. They both do so because they hope for a
share in the harvest. v11 We have planted *spiritual seed among you. We
expect from you some of the things that we need. I suppose that it is not too
much to expect that. v12a Other people have the right to receive help
from you. Then we should have even more right to do so.
Verses 7-8 The example in verses 1-6 could mean that his right to
receive help was because of his position in the church. Paul mentions important
*apostles. He makes it clear that their right to receive help was because they
spread the *gospel. So he had the same right. A person deserves a reward for
his work. He used the examples of a soldier, a farmer and a person who looks
after sheep. They all expected a reward for their work. Paul was Christ?s
soldier in the war against *Satan. He was like a farmer because he was
spreading the *gospel like seed. He was like a person who looked after sheep
because he was looking after God?s people. The Bible often compares God?s
people with sheep (Acts 20:28).
Verses 8-9 Someone in Corinth might say that these examples were
nothing to do with God?s work. So Paul also used words from the Law. In
Deuteronomy 25:4, there is a law about animals that were working on a farm. A
male cow is called an ox. It would drag a wooden board with nails in it over
grain. The nails would separate the grain from the straw. The ox must not have
anything over its mouth to stop it from eating some of the grain. If God cares
about animals, he must care about people as well.
Verses 10-11 The farmer who ploughs expects to receive a reward
for his work. So does the person who prepares the grain. Paul had acted like a
farmer because he spread the *gospel like seed in Corinth. They had received a
*spiritual harvest by becoming Christians. So it was normal for Paul and other
people to expect to receive things that they needed for *physical life.
Verse 12a Other *apostles had the right to receive help. Paul may
mean Apollos and Peter. Paul had spread the *gospel in Corinth. Therefore, he
had an even greater right to receive help from them.
Two more reasons for help 9:12b-14
v12b But we did not use this right. Instead, we
accept any difficulties rather than prevent the good news from spreading. v13
You must know that those who work in the *temple get their food from the
*temple. Also those who serve at the *altar share in the *offering on the
*altar. v14 In the same way, those who *preach the good news should
receive enough to live on from their work.
Verse 12b Paul begins to say that he did not use the right that
he had spoken about in verses 1-12a. Then he thinks of two more reasons why he
has the right to receive financial help.
Verse 13 1. Priests in the *Jewish *temple and in *pagan *temples
get part of what people offer on the *altar.
Verse 14 2. Paul uses Jesus? words when he sent out the 70
*disciples. Jesus told them not to take money with them. They should let people
invite them into their homes. That is because ?the worker deserves his wages?
(Luke 10:7). This was not a command. It was probably a well-known sentence.
Why Paul did not ask for help 9:15-18
v15 But I have not used any of these rights. And I do
not hope that you will do such things for me. That is not why I am writing
this. I would rather die than let anyone take away my pride in my work. v16
I *preach the good news. But I cannot praise myself when I do so. I have to
*preach it. I would be very miserable if I did not spread the good news. v17
If I chose to *preach, I could expect to receive a reward. But I have to
*preach because God has chosen me. So I am only doing my duty. v18 I
have the satisfaction to *preach the *gospel free of charge. I can *preach but
not use my rights. That is my reward.
Verse 15 Paul had worked for himself when he went to Corinth. He
had used his skill to make tents and other leather goods (Acts 18:3). When he
was in Thessalonica, he had worked. He worked so that he would not make things
hard for the people there (1 Thessalonians 2:9). He had also provided for
himself so that lazy Christians could see the right way to live (2
Thessalonians 3:8).
In Corinth, he did not want people to think that he was teaching
in order to become rich. Also, there were people who might have helped him for
the wrong reason. It would be a way to gain honour for themselves. While Paul
was in Thessalonica, he had received gifts from the Christians in Philippi. It
seems from 2 Corinthians 11:7-9 that the Christians at Corinth discovered this.
And they were not pleased when they discovered it.
Verse 16 Paul was like Jeremiah. Jeremiah said that God?s message
was like a fire inside him (Jeremiah 20:9). Even if he wanted to, Paul could
not stop *preaching. To stop would have made him miserable.
Verse 17 Paul might have expected a reward if he had chosen to
*preach. But he had no choice, because God had trusted him with this work. So
he was only carrying out his responsibility.
Verse 18 His reward was to receive no reward! People do not have
to pay for their *salvation. *Eternal life is God?s gift. So, when he refused
to accept pay, Paul was acting the message of the *gospel. He was showing that
he was free to choose not to make them pay.
Paul?s freedom 9:19-23
v19 I am free and I do not belong to anyone. But I
make myself a slave to everyone. I do so to win as many as possible to Christ. v20
To the *Jews, I became like a *Jew to win the *Jews. To those with the law, I
became like someone with the law. (Although I myself am not under the law.) v21
There are those who do not have the law. To those people, I became like someone
who does not have the law. (I am not free from God?s law. I am under Christ?s
law.) v22 To those who are weak, I became weak. That was to win the
weak. I have become all things to all people. This is so that in all possible
ways I might *save some. v23 I do all these things because of the
*gospel. I want to share in its *blessings.
Verse 19 Paul had shown that he had a right to receive help. But
he was free not to accept it. He is free to do what he feels to be right in
other situations too. He shows that now. This freedom is always so that he can
help the *gospel to spread.
Paul was free to act as he decided. But he thought about himself
as everyone?s slave. His purpose was to win people to be followers of Christ.
He described four different groups of people:
1. *Jews (verse 20). Paul did not believe that *circumcision was
essential. He refused to let anyone *circumcise Titus (Galatians 2:3). But in a
different situation, Paul *circumcised Timothy. (Timothy had a *Jewish mother
and a Greek father.) Timothy was going to work with Paul and Silas. So it was
necessary for him to be allowed into *Jewish *synagogues. This was where they
usually began to *preach the *gospel (Acts 16:3).
Later, Paul returned to Jerusalem. Then James asked him to take
part in a *religious promise that four men were making. This was to show that
Paul did not expect *Jews to give up all their *religious practices (Acts
21:23-26). So Paul agreed with some *Jewish customs. But he taught that these customs
were not necessary for *salvation.
2. Those with the law. These words usually meant ?*Jews?. But
Paul was not speaking about a person?s nationality. He was speaking about the
person?s attitude to the law. Paul may mean *Gentiles who were interested in
the *Jewish religion. Or he may mean *Gentiles who had believed the *Jewish
*faith.
3. Those who do not have the law (verse 21). Paul here refers to
*pagans. The Christians at Corinth might misunderstand what Paul said. They
might think that he was saying, ?I am free to behave in a wicked way.? So, he
explained that he was not free from God?s commands. Christ?s law was the law of
love towards other people (John 13:34-35). Paul?s speeches at Lystra (Acts
14:14-17) and Athens (Acts 17:22-31) show how Paul tried to explain the
*gospel. He chose to talk in a way that those without the law would understand.
4. The weak (verse 22). Paul meant all those who had no power in
society. Some people were anxious about meat that someone had offered to an
*idol. He included those people. He would give up his own freedom to eat it if
this might cause them to *sin.
Verses 22-23 Paul tried to understand all kinds of people. When
he acted differently with some people, it was to help them to become
Christians. He was not hiding his true character. His great desire was to use
every opportunity to spread the *gospel. Paul hoped to share in the *blessings
of the *gospel. He wanted everyone else to share in its *blessings too.
Christians should control themselves 9:24-27
v24 You must know that in a race all the runners run.
But only one gets the prize. Run in such a way as to get the prize. v25
Everyone who competes in the games trains himself strictly. They do it to get a
crown that will not last. We do it to get a crown that will last for ever. v26
So I do not run as if I were uncertain. I do not fight like a man who hits the
air. v27 No, I beat my body and I make it my slave. I do not want to
lose the prize after I have *preached to other people. That is why I do this to
my body.
Verses 24-25 Paul knew about the games at Isthmia near Corinth.
They happened every two years. Paul was in Corinth on one of these occasions.
The games happened every two years in a *pagan *temple. There were great
numbers of visitors and they had to live in tents. So, Paul was able to use his
trade. And he knew what happened. Those who took part in the games had to train
hard for about ten months before the event. Christians must be as serious as
someone who is training himself. They must control their desires to live an
easy life. The reward for a winner in the games was a crown that people made
from a wild plant?s leaves. However, these leaves soon died. They must learn to
control their desires to live an easy life. But Christians look forward to an
*eternal reward. It will not be a reward that lasts only for a very short time.
Verses 26-27 A runner has to keep his attention on the line at
the end. A man who boxes must not waste his efforts. He must aim at the one
that he is fighting. Christians must remember that they are aiming for heaven.
Nothing should take their attention away from their *eternal home.
Paul spoke about the way that he trained. ?Beat? is a word from
boxing which means ?give a black eye to?. Paul meant that he controlled his own
body. He made a great effort. He was the master of his body. Paul practised
what he *preached. His fear was not that he might lose his *salvation. But he
might fail to satisfy his *Lord and then he would lose his ?crown?. By this, he
probably meant his reward in heaven.
Chapter 10
*Warnings from Israel?s history 10:1-13
*Spiritual food and drink 10:1-5
v1 *Brothers and *sisters, I do not want you to
forget that all our *ancestors were under the cloud. And all of them passed
through the sea. v2 They all received *baptism into Moses in the cloud
and in the sea. v3 They all ate the same *spiritual food. v4 And
they drank the same *spiritual drink. Because they drank from the *spiritual
rock that went with them. That rock was Christ. v5 But God was not
pleased with most of them. Their dead bodies lay all over the desert.
Verses 1-2 The book of Exodus (chapters 13-17) and Psalm
105:39-41 record the escape of the *Israelites from Egypt. They had been
slaves. But Moses led them out and through the desert. The ?cloud? was a sign
that God was with them to guide and to protect them (Exodus 13:21-22;
14:19-20). They were able to go through the Red Sea on dry land. God sent a
strong east wind to push back the water. So they could cross safely (Exodus 14:21-22).
Perhaps the ?cloud? was a picture of the *Holy Spirit as he
guides the Church. Some writers think that it was. Christian *baptism is like
the *Israelites as they went through the sea. This is what Paul is saying. God
used Moses to rescue the *Israelites from being slaves in Egypt. In the same
way, God used Christ to rescue us from being slaves to *sin. ?*Baptism into
Moses? is a phrase similar to that in Romans 6:3. Believers receive ?*baptism
into Christ?. ?*Baptism? meant that the *Israelites accepted Moses as their
leader. ?*Baptism into Christ? means that we must be loyal to Christ. He is our
leader.
Verses 3-4 The *spiritual food was manna. It was a special kind
of bread that God gave the *Israelites during their time in the desert (Exodus
16:11-15). When they were without water, Moses struck a rock. Water came out
(Exodus 17:1-7; Numbers 20:1-11). Moses got water from a rock at the beginning
and end of their time in the desert. There was a popular *Jewish belief that
the rock followed the *Israelites. It always gave them water to drink.
Christ is like the rock in the desert. He gives Christians a
continuous supply of *spiritual water to keep them *spiritually alive. To call
Christ the rock is a way to show that Christ is God. It is a name for God in
the *Old Testament, for example in Psalm 18:2, 31.
Verse 5 Although God had done so much for them, the *Israelites
did not obey him. So they died in the desert. Only Joshua and Caleb and the
very young people entered the promised land. Paul was warning all Christians.
They may have received *baptism. They may take the bread and wine during the
*Lord?s Supper. But they must trust and obey God. Otherwise, there is a danger
that they will lose their *spiritual life.
The examples of Israel?s *sins in the desert 10:6-10
v6 Now these things happened as examples. They are to
stop us from wanting evil things as they did. v7 Do not *worship *idols
as some of them did. The *scripture says, ?The people sat down to eat and
drink. They got up to dance.? (See Exodus 32:6.) v8 We should not be
guilty of *sexual *sins as some of them were. And in one day, 23 000 people
died. v9 We should not test the *Lord?s patience as some of them did.
Snakes killed them. v10 Do not complain about your leaders. That is what
some of the *Israelites did. The *angel of death destroyed them.
Paul described four different occasions when the *Israelites
*sinned. They are a warning to all Christians. God will punish those who do not
obey him.
1. The *worship of *idols, verse 7
While Moses was up the mountain, Aaron made a gold *idol in the
shape of a young cow (Exodus 32:1-6). Many of the people *worshipped it. As a
punishment, the *Levites killed three thousand people. Other people died from a
disease (Exodus 32:28, 35).
2. *Sexual *sins, verse 8
?They got up to dance? was a way to describe wild behaviour that
included *sexual *sins. Paul must have thought also about the time when the
*Israelites had sex with women from Moab (Numbers 25:1). This led them to
*worship the gods of the people from Moab. Because of a disease that followed,
24 000 *Israelites died (Numbers 25:9). Paul said ?23 000?. Perhaps the other
1000 did not die on the same day. Or perhaps the number was between 23 000 and
24 000 and is given approximately in each place.
3. Testing the *Lord?s patience, verse 9
The *Israelites began to complain about the *manna that God had
given to them and the lack of water. They said that Moses had brought them out
of Egypt to die in the desert. Poisonous snakes then bit the people and many people
died (Numbers 21:5-6).
4. Complaining, verse 10
The *Israelites complained against Moses as their leader (Numbers
4:1-38). They complained because Moses had spoken about God?s punishment of
Korah and those who followed him (Numbers 16:41). This time, many people died
from a disease. Then God said that only Joshua, Caleb and the very young people
would enter the promised land (Numbers 14:20-31). All the rest would die in the
desert. Paul used words from Exodus 12:23 when he spoke about the ?*angel of death?.
The Christians in Corinth had complained about Paul. When they
did this, they were complaining about God. Paul was warning them by these
examples. They must be careful. If not, they would fail to receive what God has
promised to Christians.
Warning and promise 10:11-13
v11 These things happened to them as examples for us.
They are in *Scripture to warn us who are living now. The world is near to its
end. v12 So be careful. You may think that you are standing firm in your
*faith. If you think that, you might easily *sin. v13 All other people
have the same *temptations as you. God is *faithful. He will not allow you to
suffer a *temptation that is too strong for you to deal with. But when
*temptation happens, God will also give you a way out. He will do this so that
it does not defeat you.
Verses 11-12 Paul believed that God told Moses to write these
*scriptures. Then, in the future, people could avoid the *sins of the
*Israelites. The Christians at Corinth lived after the death and *resurrection
of Jesus. They were in the new age that leads to the final time of God?s plan
for the world.
Verse 12 Although God had done so much for them, the *Israelites
failed. It can be easy for someone who is too confident to *sin. Peter said
that he would be loyal to Jesus, whatever happened. Instead, he said three
times that he did not even know Jesus.
Verse 13 After the warning, Paul encourages the Christians in
Corinth:
1. They are not the only people who suffer *temptations. Other
people also suffer *temptations. And they defeat them with God?s help.
2. God does not allow anyone to suffer a test that is beyond his
*spiritual strength.
3. There is always an end to a *temptation. Christians can defeat
it with God?s help. They are like an army in a narrow mountain route who find a
way to escape from their enemy.
The reason that they should avoid *pagan *temple *feasts 10:14-22
v14 Therefore, my dear friends, run away from the
worship of *idols. v15 I am talking to sensible people. Judge for
yourselves what I say. v16 We give thanks for the cup of wine at the
*Lord?s Supper. It is then that we are sharing in the blood of Christ. When we
break the bread, we are sharing in the body of Christ. v17 We all eat
from the one loaf. So, we, who are many, are one body.
v18 Think about Israel?s people. Those who eat the
*sacrifices share in the *offering on the *altar. v19 I do not mean that
what the *pagans give to a god is of value. I do not mean that the *pagan god
is real. v20 No, I do not. But the gifts of *pagans are to *demons, not
to God. And I do not want you to share with *demons. v21 You cannot
drink the cup of the *Lord and the cup of *demons as well. You cannot eat bread
at the *Lord?s table and at the table of *demons. v22 We are not trying
to make the *Lord jealous. We are not stronger than he is.
Verses 14-15 In 1 Corinthians 10:1-13, Paul had warned the
Christians at Corinth by reminding them about events in Israel?s history. Now
he gives them a strong order. They must keep far away from the worship of
*idols. They are sensible people. So, they should be able to understand that
his words are true.
Verses 16-17 They share the *Lord?s Supper. The *Lord?s Supper
has a special meaning. They eat the bread and they drink the wine together to
remember Christ. This shows them that there is a unity between them and Christ.
There is also unity of Christians with each other. This is because they share
the cup of wine and eat the bread together. They become like one body because
they share one loaf.
Verse 18 When the *Israelites shared a meal after a *sacrifice,
they became united in their *worship of God.
Verses 19-21 When *pagans offer a *sacrifice, they are not
offering it to a real god. The Christians at Corinth had agreed that *idols do
not really exist (8:4). But they were wrong to think that they could therefore
share a meal in a *pagan *temple. It was not just a social occasion. Paul gave
two reasons why they were wrong:
1. To share a meal in a *pagan *temple united them with *pagan
guests. Therefore Christians would appear to believe that the god of the
*pagans was real.
2. People were really *worshipping non-human evil *beings
(usually called ?*demons?) when they *worshipped *idols. So because they were
sharing a *pagan meal, Christians were becoming partners with *demons. These
Christians had shown by their actions that they were carrying out the purpose
of *demons. They were doing the *demons? work because they were destroying the
*faith of other Christians (8:11). They were preventing *pagan guests from
knowing the proper *faith. It is not possible to *worship Christ and also to
*worship *demons.
Verse 22 Paul includes himself in his statement because he says
?we?. He warns them about the danger of making God ?jealous?. The second
*commandment forbade the worship of *idols because God is a ?jealous? God
(Exodus 20:4). God is holy and powerful. He will not allow anything to take his
place. In the song of Moses, God blamed the *Israelites for their *worship of
*idols (Deuteronomy 32:2). By their actions, the Christians in Corinth showed
that they doubted God?s right to punish them. They were quarrelling with God as
if pieces of a broken pot could question the maker of the pot (Isaiah 45:9-10).
They would fail to please God.
The problem of meat from the market 10:23?11:1
v23 You say, ?Everything is allowed!? But not
everything is good for us. Again, you say, ?Everything is allowed!? But not
everything builds us up *spiritually. v24 No one should look out for his
own advantage. Instead, we should look out for the advantage of other people. v25
Eat anything that they sell in the meat market. Do not ask any questions
because of your conscience. v26 Because *Scripture says ?The earth
belongs to the *Lord. And so does everything in it.? v27 Suppose that a
non-Christian invites you to a meal. And suppose that you want to go. Then eat
anything that your host puts in front of you. Do not ask any questions about
it. v28 But someone may say to you ?This food has been part of a
*sacrifice to an *idol.? Then do not eat it. Think about the man who told you.
Think about what is good for him. Do not eat it, because of his sense of what
is right and wrong. v29 I am talking about the other person?s feeling
about it, not yours. What someone else thinks should not affect my freedom. v30
Perhaps I give thanks when I take part in the meal. I am eating food that I
thank God for. People should not blame me forthat. v31 So eat
and drink and do everything else for the *glory of God. v32 Do not cause
anyone to *sin. It does not matter whether they are *Jews, Greeks, or members
of the Christian church. v33 I try to please everyone in every way. I am
looking out for what is best for other people. I do it to help them to accept
the way to heaven. (Chapter 11)v1 Imitate me, just as I imitate
Christ.
Verses 23-24 The Christians at Corinth are emphasising their
freedom to act as they choose. But not everything that they are free to do will
be good for their *faith. It will not help their Christian *faith to become
strong. And Christians should think about what is best for other people rather
than for themselves.
Verses 25-26 They can eat any meat that they buy in the market.
They need not ask where it came from. Paul uses the words from P