Notes on First
Corinthians
From the Original
1599 Geneva Bible Notes
1Co 1:1
1:1 Paul, {1} called [to be] an
{2} apostle of Jesus Christ through the will of God, and {3} Sosthenes
[our] brother,
(1) The inscription of the epistle,
in which he mainly tries to procure the good will of the Corinthians towards
him, yet nonetheless in such a way that he always lets them know that he
is the servant of God and not of men.
(2) If he is an apostle, then he
must be heard, even though he sometimes sharply reprehends them, seeing
he has not his own cause in hand, but is a messenger that brings the commandments
of Christ.
(3) He has Sosthenes with himself,
that this doctrine might be confirmed by two witnesses.
1Co 1:2
1:2 {4} Unto the church of God which
is at Corinth, to them that are {5} sanctified in {a} Christ Jesus, {b}
called [to be] saints, with all that in every place {c} call upon the name
of Jesus Christ our Lord, both theirs and ours:
(4) It is a church of God, even
though it has great faults in it, as it obeys those who admonish them.
(5) A true definition of the universal
church, which is:
(a) The Father sanctifies us, that
is to say, separates us from the wicked in giving us to his Son, that he
may be in us, and we in him.
(b) Whom God by his gracious goodness
and absolute love has separated for himself: or whom God has called to
holiness: the first of these two expositions, shows from where our sanctification
comes: and the second shows to what end it strives for.
(c) He is correctly said to call
on God who cries to the Lord when he is in danger, and craves help from
his hands, and by the figure of speech synecdoche, it is taken for all
the service of God: and therefore to call upon Christ's name, is to acknowledge
and take him for very God.
1Co 1:3
1:3 {6} Grace [be] unto you, and
peace, from God our Father, and [from] the Lord Jesus Christ.
(6) The foundation and the life
of the Church is Christ Jesus given from the Father.
1Co 1:4
1:4 {7} I thank my God always on
your behalf, for the grace of God which is given you by Jesus Christ;
(7) Going about to condemn many
vices, he begins with a true commendation of their virtues, lest he might
seem after to descend to chiding, being moved with malice or envy: yet
in such a way that he refers all to God as the author of them, and that
in Christ, that the Corinthians might be more ashamed to profane and abuse
the holy gifts of God.
1Co 1:5
1:5 That in every thing ye are enriched
by him, {8} in {d} all utterance, and [in] all knowledge;
(8) He refers to that by name which
they abused the most.
(d) Seeing that while we live here
we know but in part, and prophesy in part, this word "all" must be limited
by the present state of the faithful: and by "utterance" he does not mean
a vain kind of babbling, but the gift of holy eloquence, which the Corinthians
abused.
1Co 1:6
1:6 {9} Even as the testimony of
Christ was {e} confirmed in you:
(9) He shows that the true use
of these gifts consists in this, that the mighty power of Christ might
be set forth in them, that hereafter it might evidently appear how wickedly
they abused them for glory and ambition.
(e) By those excellent gifts of
the Holy Spirit.
1Co 1:7
1:7 So that ye come behind in no
gift; {10} waiting for the {f} coming of our Lord Jesus Christ:
(10) He says along the way that
there is no reason why they should be so pleased in those gifts which they
had received, seeing that those were nothing in comparison of those which
are to be looked for.
(f) He speaks of the last coming
of Christ.
1Co 1:8
1:8 {11} Who shall also confirm
you unto the end, [that ye may be] {g} blameless in the day of our Lord
Jesus Christ.
(11) He testifies that he hopes
that things go well with them from now on, that they may more patiently
abide his reprehension afterward. And yet together in addition shows, that
the beginning as well as the accomplishing of our salvation is only the
work of God.
(g) He calls them blameless, not
whom man never found fault with, but with whom no man can justly find fault,
that is to say, those who are in Christ Jesus, in whom there is no condemnation.
See Lu 1:6 .
1Co 1:9
1:9 God [is] {h} faithful, by whom
ye were called unto the fellowship of his Son Jesus Christ our Lord.
(h) True and constant, who not
only calls us, but also gives to us the gift of perseverance.
1Co 1:10
1:10 {12} Now I beseech you, brethren,
by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that {13} ye all speak the same thing,
and [that] there be no divisions among you; but [that] ye be {i} perfectly
joined together in the same mind and in the same judgment.
(12) Having made an end of the
preface, he comes to the matter itself, beginning with a most grave testimony,
as though they should hear Christ himself speaking, and not Paul.
(13) The first part of this epistle,
in which his purpose is found, to call back the Corinthians to brotherly
harmony, and to take away all occasion of discord. So then this first part
concerns the taking away of divisions. Now a division occurs when men who
otherwise agree and consent together in doctrine, yet separate themselves
from one another.
(i) Knit together, as a body that
consists of all its parts, fitly knit together.
1Co 1:11
1:11 {14} For it hath been declared
unto me of you, my brethren, by them [which are of the house] of Chloe,
that there are contentions among you.
(14) He begins his reprehension
and chiding by taking away an objection, because he understood from good
witnesses that there were many factions among them. And in addition he
declares the cause of dissentions, because some depended on one teacher,
some on another, and some were so addicted to themselves that they neglected
all teachers and learned men, calling themselves the disciples of Christ
alone, completely ignoring their teachers.
1Co 1:12
1:12 Now {k} this I say, that every
one of you saith, I am of Paul; and I of Apollos; and I of Cephas; and
I of Christ.
(k) The matter I would say to you
is this.
1Co 1:13
1:13 {15} Is Christ divided? was
{16} Paul crucified for you? or were ye {17} baptized in the name of Paul?
(15) The first reason why divisions
ought to be avoided: because Christ seems by that means to be divide and
torn in pieces, who cannot be the head of two different and disagreeing
bodies, being himself one.
(16) Another reason: because they
cannot without great injury to God so depend on men as on Christ: which
thing those no doubt do who allow whatever some man speaks, and do it for
their own sakes: as these men allowed one and the very same Gospel being
uttered by one man, and did loathe it being uttered by another man. So
that these factions were called by the names of their teachers. Now Paul
sets aside his own name, not simply to grieve no man, but also to show
that he does not plead his own cause.
(17) The third reason taken from
the form and end of baptism, in which we make a promise to Christ, calling
also on the name of the Father, and the Holy Spirit. Therefore although
a man does not fall from the doctrine of Christ, yet if he depends upon
certain teachers, and despises others, he forsakes Christ: for if he holds
Christ as his only master, he would hear him, no matter who Christ taught
by.
1Co 1:14
1:14 {18} I thank God that I baptized
none of you, but Crispus and Gaius;
(18) He protests that he speaks
so much the more boldly of these things, because through God's providence,
he is void of all suspicion of gathering disciples to himself, and taking
them from others. By which we may understand, that not the scholars only,
but the teachers also are here reprehended, who gathered flocks separately
and for themselves.
1Co 1:17
1:17 {19} For Christ sent me not
to baptize, but to preach the gospel: {20} not with {l} wisdom of words,
lest the {21} cross of Christ should be made of none effect.
(19) The taking away of an objection:
that he gave not himself to baptize many amongst them: not for the contempt
of baptism, but because he was mainly occupied in delivering the doctrine,
and committed those that received his doctrine to others to be baptized.
And so he declared sufficiently how far he was from all ambition: whereas
on the other hand they, whom he reprehends, as though they gathered disciples
to themselves and not to Christ, bragged most ambitiously of numbers, which
they had baptized.
(20) Now he turns himself to the
teachers themselves, who pleased themselves in brave and glory-seeking
eloquence, to the end that they might draw more disciples after them. He
openly confesses that he was not similar to them, opposing gravely, as
it became an apostle, his example against their perverse judgments: so
that this is another place in this epistle with regard to the observing
of a godly simplicity both in words and sentences in teaching the Gospel.
(l) With eloquence: which Paul
casts off from himself not only as unnecessary, but also as completely
contrary to the office of his apostleship: and yet Paul had this kind of
eloquence, but it was heavenly, not of man, and void of fancy words.
(21) The reason why he did not
use the pomp of words and fancy speech: because it was God's will to bring
the world to his obedience by that way, by which the most foolish among
men might understand that this work was done by God himself, without the
skill of man. Therefore as salvation is set forth to us in the Gospel by
the cross of Christ, which nothing is more contemptible than, and more
far from life, so God would have the manner of the preaching of the cross,
most different from those means with which men do use to draw and entice
others, either to hear or believe: therefore it pleased him by a certain
kind of most wise folly, to triumph over the most foolish wisdom of the
world, as he had said before by Isaiah that he would. And by this we may
gather that both these teachers who were puffed up with ambitious eloquence,
and also their hearers, strayed far away from the goal and mark of their
calling.
1Co 1:18
1:18 For the {m} preaching of the
cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us which are saved it
is the {n} power of God.
(m) The preaching of Christ crucified,
or the type of speech which we use.
(n) It is that in which he declares
his marvellous power in saving his elect, which would not so evidently
appear if it depended upon any help of man, for if it did man might attribute
that to himself which is to be attributed only to the cross of Christ.
1Co 1:19
1:19 {22} For it is written, I will
destroy the wisdom of the wise, and will bring to nothing the understanding
of the prudent.
(22) The apostle proves that this
should not seem strange, seeing that it was foretold so long before, and
declares further that God often punishes the pride of the world in such
a way, which so pleases itself in its own wisdom: and therefore that it
is vain, indeed a thing of no value, and such as God rejects as unprofitable,
which they so carefully laboured for, and considered to be so important.
1Co 1:20
1:20 Where [is] the wise? where
[is] the {o} scribe? where [is] the {p} disputer of this world? hath not
God made foolish the wisdom of this world?
(o) Where are you, O you learned
fellow, and you that spend your days in turning your books?
(p) You that spend all your time
in seeking out the secret things of this world, and in expounding all hard
questions: and thus he triumphs against all the men of this world, for
there was not one of them that could so much as dream of this secret and
hidden mystery.
1Co 1:21
1:21 {23} For after that in the
{q} wisdom of God the {r} world by wisdom knew not God, {24} it pleased
God by the {s} foolishness of preaching to save them that believe.
(23) He shows that the pride of
men was worthily punished by God, because they could not behold God, as
they properly should have, in the most clear mirror of the wisdom of the
world, and this wisdom is the workmanship of the world.
(q) By the world he means all men
who are not born again, but remain as they were, when they were first born.
(r) In the workmanship of this
world, which has the marvellous wisdom of God engraved on it, so that every
man may behold it.
(24) The goodness of God is wonderful,
for while he goes about to punish the pride of this world, he is very provident
and careful for the salvation of it, and teaches men to become fools, so
that they may be wise to God.
(s) So he calls the preaching of
the Gospel, as the enemies supposed it to be: but in the mean time he taunts
those very sharply who had rather charge God with folly than acknowledge
their own, and crave pardon for it.
1Co 1:22
1:22 {25} For the Jews require a
sign, and the Greeks seek after wisdom:
(25) A declaration of that which
he said: that the preaching of the Gospel is foolish. It is foolish, he
says, to those whom God has not endued with new light, that is to say,
to all men being considered in themselves: for the Jews require miracles,
and the Greeks arguments, which they may comprehend by their intellect
and wisdom: and therefore they do not believe the Gospel, and also mock
it. Nonetheless, in this foolish preaching there is the great power and
wisdom of God, but such that only those who are called perceive: God showing
most plainly, that even then when mad men think him most foolish, he is
far wiser than they are, and that he surmounts all their might and power,
when he uses most vile and abject things, as it has appeared in the fruit
of the preaching of the Gospel.
1Co 1:26
1:26 {26} For ye see your {t} calling,
brethren, how that not many wise men {u} after the flesh, not many mighty,
not many noble, [are called]:
(26) A confirmation taken from
those things which came to pass at Corinth, where the church especially
consisted of the lowly and common people, insomuch that the philosophers
of Greece were driven to shame when they saw that they could do nothing
with their wisdom and eloquence in comparison with the apostles, whom nonetheless
they called idiots and unlearned. And in this he beats down their pride:
for God did not prefer them before those noble and wise men so that they
should be proud, but that they might be constrained, whether they wished
to or not, to rejoice in the Lord, by whose mercy, although they were the
most abject of all, they had obtained in Christ both this wisdom as well
as all things necessary to salvation.
(t) What way the Lord has taken
in calling you.
(u) After that type of wisdom which
men consider to be important, as though there were none else: but because
they are carnal, they do not know spiritual wisdom.
1Co 1:28
1:28 And base things of the world,
and things which are despised, hath God chosen, [yea], and things which
{x} are not, to bring to {y} nought things that are:
(x) Which in man's judgment are
almost nothing.
(y) To show that they are vain
and unprofitable, and worth nothing. See Geneva "Ro 3:31"
1Co 1:29
1:29 That no {z} flesh should glory
in his presence.
(z) "Flesh" is often, as we see,
taken for the whole man: and he uses this word "flesh" very well, to contrast
the weak and miserable condition of man with the majesty of God.
1Co 1:30
1:30 But {a} of him are ye in Christ
Jesus, {27} who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification,
and redemption:
(a) Whom he cast down before, now
he lifts up, indeed, higher than all men: yet in such a way that he shows
them that all their worthiness is outside of themselves, that is, it stands
in Christ, and that of God.
(27) He teaches that especially
and above all things, the Gospel ought not to be condemned, seeing that
it contains the principal things that are to be desired, that is, true
wisdom, the true way to obtain righteousness, the true way to live honestly
and godly, and the true deliverance from all miseries and calamities.
1Co 1:31
1:31 That, according as it is written,
{b} He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord.
(b) Let him yield all to God and
give him thanks: and so by this place is man's free will beaten down, which
the papists so dream about.
1Co 2:1
2:1 And {1} I, brethren, when I
came to you, came not with excellency of speech or of wisdom, declaring
unto you the {a} testimony of God.
(1) He returns to 1Co 1:17 , that
is to say, to his own example: confessing that he did not use among them
either excellency of words or enticing speech of man's wisdom, but with
great simplicity of speech both knew and preached Jesus Christ crucified,
humbled and abject, with regard to the flesh.
(a) The Gospel.
1Co 2:2
2:2 For I {b} determined not to
know any thing among you, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified.
(b) I did not profess any knowledge
but the knowledge of Christ and him crucified.
1Co 2:3
2:3 And I was with you in {c} weakness,
and in fear, and in much trembling.
(c) He contrasts weakness with
excellency of words, and therefore joins with it fear and trembling, which
are companions of true modesty, not such fear and trembling as terrify
the conscience, but such as are contrary to vanity and pride.
1Co 2:4
2:4 And my speech and my preaching
[was] not with enticing words of man's wisdom, {2} but in {d} demonstration
of the Spirit and of power:
(2) He turns now to the commendation
of his ministry, which he had granted to his adversaries: for his strength
and power, which they knew well enough, was so much the more excellent
because it had no worldly help behind it.
(d) By "demonstration" he means
such a proof as is made by reasons both certain and necessary.
1Co 2:5
2:5 {3} That your faith should not
stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God.
(3) And he tells the Corinthians
that he did it for their great profit, because they might by this know
manifestly that the Gospel was from heaven. Therefore he privately rebukes
them, because in vainly seeking to be noticed, they willingly deprived
themselves of the greatest help of their faith.
1Co 2:6
2:6 {4} Howbeit we speak wisdom
among them that are {e} perfect: yet not the wisdom of this world, nor
of the {f} princes of this world, that come to nought:
(4) Another argument taken from
the nature of the thing, that is, of the Gospel, which is true wisdom,
but known only to those who are desirous of perfection: and it is unsavoury
to those who otherwise excel in the world, but yet vainly and frailly.
(e) They are called perfect here,
not who had already gotten perfection, but those who are striving for it,
as in Php 3:15 : so that perfect is contrasted with weak.
(f) Those that are wiser, richer,
or mightier than other men are.
1Co 2:7
2:7 {5} But we speak the wisdom
of God in a {g} mystery, [even] the hidden [wisdom], {6} which God ordained
before the world unto our glory:
(5) He shows the reason why this
wisdom cannot be perceived by those excellent worldly intellects: that
is, because it is indeed so deep that they cannot attain to it.
(g) Which men could not so much
as dream of.
(6) He takes away an objection:
if it is so hard, when and how is it known? God, he says, determined with
himself from the beginning, that which his purpose was to bring forth at
this time out of his secrets, for the salvation of men.
1Co 2:8
2:8 {7} Which none of the princes
of this world knew: for had they known [it], they would not have crucified
the {h} Lord of glory.
(7) He takes away another objection:
why then, how comes it to pass that this wisdom was so rejected by men
of the highest authority, that they crucified Christ himself? Paul answers:
because they did not know Christ such as he was.
(h) That mighty God, full of true
majesty and glory: now this place has in it a most evident proof of the
divinity of Christ, and of the joining of the two natures in one in him,
which has this in it, that which is proper to the manhood alone is confirmed
of the Godhead joined with the manhood. This type of speech is called,
by the old fathers, a making common of things belonging to someone with
another to whom they do not belong.
1Co 2:9
2:9 {8} But as it is written, Eye
hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the {i} heart of
man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him.
(8) Another objection: but how
could it be that those intelligent men could not perceive this wisdom?
Paul answers: because we preach those things which surpass all man's understanding.
(i) Man cannot so much as think
of them, much less conceive them with his senses.
1Co 2:10
2:10 {9} But God hath revealed [them]
unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit {k} searcheth all things, yea, the
deep things of God.
(9) A question: if it surpasses
the capacity of men, how can it be understood by any man, or how can you
declare and preach it? By a special enlightening of God's Spirit, with
which whoever is inspired, he can enter even into the very secrets of God.
(k) There is nothing so secret
and hidden in God, but the Spirit of God penetrates it.
1Co 2:11
2:11 {10} For what man knoweth the
things of a man, save the {l} spirit of man which is in him? even so the
things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God.
(10) He sets it forth in comparison,
which he spoke by the inspiration of the Sprit. As the power of man's intellect
searches out things pertaining to man, so does our mind by the power of
the Holy Spirit understand heavenly things.
(l) The mind of man which is endued
with the ability to understand and judge.
1Co 2:12
2:12 Now we have received, not the
{m} spirit of the world, but the spirit which is of God; {11} that we might
{n} know the things that are freely given to us of God.
(m) The Spirit which we have received
does not teach us things of this world, but lifts us up to God, and this
verse teaches us the opposite of what the papists teach: what faith is,
from where it comes, and from what power it originates.
(11) That which he spoke generally,
he confines now to those things which God has opened to us of our salvation
in Christ: so that no man should separate the Spirit from the preaching
of the word and Christ: or should think that those fanciful men are governed
by the Spirit of God, who wandering besides the word, thrust upon us their
vain imaginations for the secrets of God.
(n) This word "know" is taken here
in its proper sense for true knowledge, which the Spirit of God works in
us.
1Co 2:13
2:13 {12} Which things also we speak,
not in the words which man's wisdom teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost
teacheth; {o} comparing spiritual things with spiritual.
(12) Now he returns to his purpose,
and concludes the argument which he began in verse six 1Co 2:6 , and it
is this: the words must be applied to the matter, and the matter must be
set forth with words which are proper and appropriate for it: now this
wisdom is spiritual and not from man, and therefore it must be delivered
by a spiritual type of teaching, and not by enticing words of man's eloquence,
so that the simple, and yet wonderful majesty of the Holy Spirit may appear
in it.
(o) Applying the words to the matter,
that is, that as we teach spiritual things, so must our type of teaching
be spiritual.
1Co 2:14
2:14 {13} But the {p} natural man
receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness
unto him: neither can he know [them], because they are {q} spiritually
discerned.
(13) Again he anticipates an offence
or stumbling block: how does it come to pass that so few allow these things?
This is not to be marvelled at, the apostle says, seeing that men in their
natural powers (as they call them) are not endued with that faculty by
which spiritual things are discerned
(which faculty comes another way)
and therefore they consider spiritual wisdom as folly: and it is as if
he should say, "It is no marvel that blind men cannot judge of colours,
seeing that they lack the light of their eyes, and therefore light is to
them as darkness."
(p) The man that has no further
light of understanding, than that which he brought with him, even from
his mother's womb, as Jude defines it; Jude 19 .
(q) By the power of the Holy Spirit.
1Co 2:15
2:15 {14} But he that is spiritual
{r} judgeth all things, yet {15} he himself is judged of {s} no man.
(14) He amplifies the matter by
opposites.
(r) Understands and discerns.
(15) The wisdom of the flesh, Paul
says, determines nothing certainly, no not in its own affairs, much less
can it discern strange, that is, spiritual things. But the Spirit of God,
with which spiritual men are endued, can by no means be deceived, and therefore
be reproved by any man.
(s) Of no man: for when the prophets
are judged of the prophets, it is the Spirit that judges, and not the man.
1Co 2:16
2:16 {16} For who hath known the
mind of the Lord, that he may {t} instruct him? But we have {u} the mind
of Christ.
(16) A reason from the former saying:
for he is called spiritual, who has learned that by the power of the Spirit,
which Christ has taught us. Now if that which we have learned from that
Master could be reproved by any man, he must be wiser than God: whereupon
it follows that they are not only foolish, but also wicked, who think that
they can devise something that is either more perfect, or that they can
teach the wisdom of God a better way than those knew or taught who were
undoubtedly endued with God's Spirit.
(t) Lay his head to his, and teach
him what he should do.
(u) We are endued with the Spirit
of Christ, who opens to us those secrets which by all other means are unsearchable,
and also any truth at all.
1Co 3:1
3:1 And {1} I, brethren, could not
speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto {a} carnal, [even] as unto
babes in Christ.
(1) Having declared the worthiness
of heavenly wisdom, and of the Gospel, and having generally condemned the
blindness of man's mind, now at length he applies it particularly to the
Corinthians, calling them carnal, that is, those in whom the flesh still
prevails against the Spirit. And he brings a twofold testimony of it: first,
because he had proved them to be such, in so much that he dealt with them
as he would with ignorant men, and those who are almost babes in the doctrine
of godliness, and second, because they showed indeed by these dissensions,
which sprang up by reason of the ignorance of the power of the Spirit,
and heavenly wisdom, that they had profited very little or nothing.
(a) He calls them carnal, who are
as yet ignorant, and therefore to express it better, he calls them "babes".
1Co 3:2
3:2 I have fed you with milk, and
not with {b} meat: for hitherto ye were not {c} able [to bear it], neither
yet now are ye able.
(b) Substantial meat, or strong
meat.
(c) To be fed by me with substantial
meat: therefore as the Corinthians grew up in age, so the apostle nourished
them by teaching, first with milk, then with strong meat. The difference
was only in the manner of teaching.
1Co 3:3
3:3 For ye are yet carnal: for whereas
[there is] among you envying, and strife, and divisions, are ye not carnal,
and walk as {d} men?
(d) Using the tools of man's intellect
and judgment.
1Co 3:5
3:5 {2} Who then is Paul, and who
[is] Apollos, but ministers by whom ye believed, even as the Lord gave
to every man?
(2) After he has sufficiently reprehended
ambitious teachers, and those who foolishly esteemed them, now he shows
how the true ministers are to be esteemed, that we do not attribute to
them more or less than we ought to do. Therefore he teaches us that they
are those by whom we are brought to faith and salvation, but yet as the
ministers of God, and such as do nothing of themselves, but God so working
by them as it pleases him to furnish them with his gifts. Therefore we
do not have to regard or consider what minister it is that speaks, but
what is spoken: and we must depend only upon him who speaks by his servants.
1Co 3:6
3:6 {3} I have planted, Apollos
watered; but God gave the increase.
(3) He beautifies the former sentence,
with two similarities: first comparing the company of the faithful to a
field which God makes fruitful, when it is sown and watered through the
labour of his servants. Second, be comparing it to a house, which indeed
the Lord builds, but by the hands of his workmen, some of whom he uses
in laying the foundation, others in building it up. Now, both these similarities
are for this purpose, to show that all things are wholly accomplished only
by God's authority and might, so that we must only have an eye to him.
Moreover, although God uses some in the better part of the work, we must
not therefore condemn others, in respect of them, and much less may we
divide or set them apart (as these factious men did) seeing that all of
them labour in God's business. They work in such a way, that they serve
to finish the very same work, although by a different manner of working,
in so much that they all need one another's help.
1Co 3:9
3:9 For we are {e} labourers together
with God: ye are God's husbandry, [ye are] God's building.
(e) Serving under him: now they
who serve under another do nothing by their own strength, but as it is
given them of grace, which grace makes them fit for that service. See 1Co
15:10, 2Co 3:6 . All the increase that comes by their labour proceeds from
God in such a way that no part of the praise of it may be given to the
servant.
1Co 3:10
3:10 According to the grace of God
which is given unto me, as a wise masterbuilder, I have laid the foundation,
and another buildeth thereon. {4} But let every man take heed how he buildeth
thereupon.
(4) Now he speaks to the teachers
themselves, who succeeded him in the church of Corinth, and in this regard
to all that were after or will be pastors of congregations, seeing that
they succeed into the labour of the apostles, who were planters and chief
builders. Therefore he warns them first that they do not persuade themselves
that they may build after their own fantasy, that is, that they may propound
and set forth anything in the Church, either in matter, or in type of teaching,
different from the apostles who were the chief builders.
1Co 3:11
3:11 {5} For other foundation can
no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ.
(5) Moreover, he shows what this
foundation is, that is, Christ Jesus, from whom they may not turn away
in the least amount in the building up of this building.
1Co 3:12
3:12 {6} Now if any man build upon
this foundation gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, stubble;
(6) Thirdly he shows that they
must take heed that the upper part of the building is answerable to the
foundation. That is that admonitions, exhortations, and whatever pertains
to the edifying of the flock, is answerable to the doctrine of Christ,
in the matter as well as in form. This doctrine is compared to gold, silver,
and precious stones: of which material Isaiah also and John in the Revelation
build the heavenly city. And to these are the opposites, wood, hay, stubble,
that is to say, curious and vain questions or decrees: and to be short,
all the type of teaching which serves to vain show. For false doctrines,
of which he does not speak here, are not correctly said to be built upon
this foundation, unless perhaps in show only.
1Co 3:13
3:13 {7} Every man's work shall
be made manifest: for the day shall declare it, because it shall be revealed
by fire; and the fire shall try every man's work of what sort it is.
(7) He testifies, as indeed it
truly is, that all are not good builders, not even all of those who stand
upon this one and only foundation. However, this work of evil builders,
he says, stands for a season, yet it will not always deceive, because the
light of the truth appearing at length, as day, will dissolve this darkness,
and show what it is. And as that stuff is tried by the fire, whether it
is good or not, so will God in his time, by the touch of his Spirit and
word, try all buildings, and so will it come to pass, that those which
are found pure and sound, will still continue so, to the praise of the
workmen. But they that are otherwise will be consumed and vanish away,
and so will the workman be frustrated of the hope of his labour, who pleased
himself in a thing of nothing.
1Co 3:15
3:15 If any man's work shall be
burned, he shall suffer loss: but {8} he himself shall be saved; yet so
as by fire.
(8) He does not take away the hope
of salvation from the unskilful and foolish builders, who hold fast the
foundation, of which sort were those rhetoricians, rather than the pastors
of Corinth. However, he adds an exception, that they must nonetheless suffer
this trial of their work, and also abide the loss of their vain labours.
1Co 3:16
3:16 {9} Know ye not that ye are
the temple of God, and [that] the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?
(9) Continuing still in the metaphor
of building, he teaches us that this ambition is not only vain, but also
sacrilegious: for he says that the Church is as it were the Temple of God,
which God has as it were consecrated to himself by his Spirit. Then turning
himself to these ambitious men, he shows that they profane the Temple of
God, because those vain arts in which they please themselves so much are,
as he teaches, many pollutions of the holy doctrine of God, and the purity
of the Church. This wickedness will not go unpunished.
1Co 3:17
3:17 If any man {f} defile the temple
of God, him shall God destroy; for the temple of God is holy, which [temple]
ye are.
(f) Defiles it and makes it unclean,
being holy: and surely they do defile it, by Paul's judgment, who by fleshly
eloquence defile the purity of the Gospel.
1Co 3:18
3:18 {10} Let no man deceive himself.
If any man among you seemeth to be wise in this world, let him become a
fool, that he may be wise.
(10) He concludes by the opposite,
that they profess pure wisdom in the Church of God, who refuse and cast
away all those vanities of men. Further, if they are mocked by the world,
it is sufficient for them that they are wise according to the wisdom of
God, and as he will have them to be wise.
1Co 3:19
3:19 For the wisdom of this world
is foolishness with God. For it is written, He {g} taketh the wise in their
own craftiness.
(g) Be they ever so crafty, yet
the Lord will take them when he will discover their treachery.
1Co 3:21
3:21 {11} Therefore let no man {h}
glory in men. For all things are {i} yours;
(11) He returns to the proposition
of the second verse, first warning the hearers, that from now on they do
not esteem as lords those whom God has appointed to be ministers and not
lords of their salvation. This is done by those that depend upon men, and
not upon God that speaks by them.
(h) Please himself.
(i) Helps, appointed for your benefit.
1Co 3:22
3:22 Whether Paul, or Apollos, or
Cephas, or the {12} world, or life, or death, or things present, or things
to come; all are yours;
(12) He passes from the persons
to the things themselves, that his argument may be more forcible. Indeed,
he ascends from Christ to the Father, to show that we rest ourselves not
in Christ himself, in that he is man, but because he carries us up even
to the Father, as Christ witnesses of himself everywhere that he was sent
by his Father, that by this band we may be all united with God himself.
1Co 4:1
4:1 Let {1} a {a} man so account
of us, as of the ministers of Christ, and stewards of the mysteries of
God.
(1) He concludes the duty of the
hearers towards their ministers: that they do not esteem them as lords.
Yet nonetheless they are to give ear to them, as to those that are sent
from Christ. Sent I say to this end and purpose, that they may receive
as it were at their hands the treasure of salvation which is drawn out
of the secrets of God.
(a) Every man.
1Co 4:2
4:2 {2} Moreover it is required
in stewards, that a man be found faithful.
(2) Last of all, he warns the ministers
that they also do not behave themselves as lords, but as faithful servants,
because they must render an account of their stewardship to God.
1Co 4:3
4:3 {3} But with me it is a very
small thing that I should be judged of you, {4} or of man's {b} judgment:
yea, {5} I judge not mine own self.
(3) In reprehending others, he
sets himself for an example, and anticipates an objection. Using the gravity
of an apostle, he shows that he does not care for the contrary judgments
that those have of him, in that they esteemed him as a vile person, because
he did not set forth himself as they did. And he brings good reasons why
he was not moved with the judgments which they had of him.
(4) First, because that which men
judge in these cases of their own brains is not to be considered any more
than when the unlearned judge of wisdom.
(b) Literally, "day", after the
manner of Cilician speech.
(5) Secondly, he says, how can
you judge how much or how little I am to be made responsible for, seeing
that I myself who know myself better than you do, and who dare profess
that I have walked in my calling with a good conscience, dare not yet nonetheless
claim anything to myself. Nonetheless, I know that I am not blameless:
much less therefore should I flatter myself as you do.
1Co 4:4
4:4 For I know nothing by myself;
yet am I not hereby justified: but he that judgeth me is the {c} Lord.
(c) I submit myself to the Lord's
judgment.
1Co 4:5
4:5 {6} Therefore judge nothing
before the time, until the Lord come, who both will bring to light the
hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts:
and then shall every man have {d} praise of God.
(6) A third reason proceeding from
a conclusion, as it were, out of the former reasons. It is God's office
to esteem every man according to his value, because he knows the secrets
of the heart, which men for the most part are ignorant of. Therefore this
judgment does not pertain to you.
(d) One could not be praised above
the rest, without the others being blamed: and he mentions praise rather
than lack of praise, because the beginning of this dispute was this, that
they gave more to some men than was appropriate.
1Co 4:6
4:6 {7} And these things, brethren,
I have in a figure transferred to myself and [to] Apollos for your sakes;
that ye might learn {e} in us not to think [of men] above that which is
written, that no one of you be puffed up for one against another.
(7) Having rejected their judgment,
he sets forth himself again as a singular example of modesty, as one who
concealed in this epistle those factious teacher's names, did not hesitate
to put down his own name and Apollos' in their place, and took upon him
as it were their shame. And this shows how far was he from preferring himself
to any.
(e) By our example, who choose
rather to take other men's faults upon us, than to find fault with any
by name.
1Co 4:7
4:7 {8} For who maketh thee to differ
[from another]? and what hast thou that thou didst not receive? now if
thou didst receive [it], why dost thou glory, as if {f} thou hadst not
received [it]?
(8) He shows a good way to bridle
pride. First, if you consider how it is wrong for you to exclude yourself
from the number of others, seeing you are a man yourself. Second, if you
consider that even though you have something more than other men have,
yet you only have it by God's bountifulness. And what wise man is he that
will brag of another's goodness, and that against God?
(f) There is nothing then in us
by nature that is worthy of commendation: but all that we have, we have
it of grace, which the Pelegians and semi-Pelegians will not confess.
1Co 4:8
4:8 {9} Now ye are full, now ye
are rich, ye have reigned as kings without us: and I would to God ye did
reign, that we also might reign with you.
(9) He descends to a most grave
mockery, to cause those glory-seeking men to blush, even though they did
not want to.
1Co 4:9
4:9 For I think that God hath set
forth us the apostles last, as it were appointed to death: for we are made
a {g} spectacle unto the world, and to angels, and to men.
(g) He that thinks that Paul and
the pope are alike, who lyingly boasts that he is his successor, let him
compare the delicacies of the popish court with Paul's state as we see
it here.
1Co 4:13
4:13 Being defamed, we intreat:
we are made as the {h} filth of the world, [and are] the offscouring of
all things unto this day.
(h) Such as is gathered together
by sweeping.
1Co 4:14
4:14 {10} I write not these things
to shame you, but as my beloved sons I warn [you].
(10) Moderating the sharpness of
his mockery, he puts them in mind to remember of whom they were begotten
in Christ, and that they should not doubt to follow him for an example.
Even though he seems vile according to the outward show in respect of others,
yet he is mighty by the efficacy of God's Spirit, as had been shown among
themselves.
1Co 4:17
4:17 For this cause have I sent
unto you Timotheus, who is my beloved son, and faithful in the Lord, who
shall bring you into remembrance of my {i} ways which be in Christ, as
I teach every where in every church.
(i) What way and rule I follow
everywhere in teaching the churches.
1Co 4:18
4:18 {11} Now some are puffed up,
as though I would not come to you.
(11) Last of all he descends also
to apostolic threatenings, but yet chiding them as a father, lest by their
disorder he was forced to come to punish some among them.
1Co 4:19
4:19 But I will come to you shortly,
if the Lord will, and will know, not the {k} speech of them which are puffed
up, but the power.
(k) By words, he means their fancy
and elaborate type of eloquence, which he contrasts with the power of the
Holy Spirit.
1Co 4:21
4:21 {12} What will ye? shall I
come unto you with a rod, or in love, and [in] the {l} spirit of meekness?
(12) A passing over to another
part of this epistle, in which he reprehends most sharply a very odious
offence, showing the use of ecclesiastical correction.
(l) Acting meekly towards you.
1Co 5:1
5:1 It is {1} reported commonly
[that there is] fornication among you, and such fornication as is not so
much as named among the Gentiles, that one should have his father's wife.
(1) They are greatly to be reprehended
who by allowing wickedness, set forth the Church of God to be mocked and
scorned by infidels.
1Co 5:2
5:2 {2} And ye are puffed up, and
have not rather mourned, that he that hath done this deed might be taken
away from among you.
(2) There are none more proud than
they that least know themselves.
1Co 5:3
5:3 {3} For I verily, as absent
in body, but present in {a} spirit, have judged already, as though I were
present, [concerning] him that hath so done this deed,
(3) Excommunication ought not to
be committed to one man's power, but must be done by the authority of the
whole congregation, after the matter is diligently examined.
(a) In mind, thought, and will.
1Co 5:4
5:4 In the {b} name of our Lord
Jesus Christ, when ye are gathered together, and my spirit, {4} with the
power of our Lord Jesus Christ,
(b) Calling upon Christ's name.
(4) There is no doubt that the
judgment is ratified in heaven, in which Christ himself sits as Judge.
1Co 5:5
5:5 {5} To {c} deliver such an one
unto Satan for the {6} destruction of the flesh, that the spirit may be
saved in the day of the Lord Jesus.
(5) The one who is excommunicated
is delivered to the power of Satan, in that he is cast out of the house
of God.
(c) What it is to be delivered
to Satan the Lord himself declares when he says, "Let him be unto thee
as a heathen and publican"; Mt 18:17 . That is to say, to be disfranchised
and put out of the right and privileges of the city of Christ, which is
the Church, outside of which Satan is lord and master.
(6) The goal of excommunication
is not to cast away the excommunicate that he should utterly perish, but
that he may be saved, that is, that by this means his flesh may be tamed,
that he may learn to live to the Spirit.
1Co 5:6
5:6 {7} Your glorying {d} [is] not
good. Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump?
(7) Another goal of excommunication
is that others are not infected, and therefore it must of necessity be
retained in the Church, so that one is not infected by the other.
(d) Is nothing and not grounded
upon good reason, as though you were excellent, and yet there is such wickedness
found among you.
1Co 5:7
5:7 {8} Purge out therefore the
old leaven, that ye may be a new {e} lump, as ye are unleavened. For even
Christ our {f} passover is sacrificed for us:
(8) By alluding to the ceremony
of the passover, he exhorts them to cast out that unclean person from among
them. In times past, he says, it was not lawful for those who celebrated
the passover to eat unleavened bread, insomuch that he was held as unclean
and unworthy to eat the passover, whoever had but tasted of leaven. Now
our whole life must be as it were the feast of unleavened bread, in which
all they that are partakers of that immaculate lamb which is slain, must
cast out both of themselves, and also out of their houses and congregations,
all impurity.
(e) By lump he means the whole
body of the Church, every member of which must be unleavened bread, that
is, be renewed in spirit, by plucking away the old corruption.
(f) The Lamb of our passover.
1Co 5:8
5:8 Therefore let us keep the {g}
feast, not with old leaven, neither with the leaven of malice and wickedness;
but with the unleavened [bread] of sincerity and truth.
(g) Let us lead our whole life
as it were a continual feast, honestly and uprightly.
1Co 5:9
5:9 {9} I wrote unto you in an epistle
not to company with fornicators:
(9) Now he speaks more generally:
and that which he spoke before of the incestuous person he shows that it
pertains to others, who are known to be wicked and those who through their
wicked life are a slander to the Church, who ought also by lawful order
be cast out of the community of the Church. And making mention of eating
meals, either he means that feast of love at which the supper of the Lord
was received, or else their common usage and manner of life. And this is
to be properly understood, lest any man should think that either matrimony
was broken by excommunication, or such duties hindered and cut off by it,
as we owe one to another: children to their parents, subjects to their
rulers, servants to their masters, and neighbour to neighbour, to win one
another to God.
1Co 5:10
5:10 Yet not {h} altogether with
the fornicators of this world, or with the covetous, or extortioners, or
with idolaters; for then must ye needs go out of the world.
(h) If you should utterly abstain
from such men's company, you should go out of the world. Therefore I speak
of those who are in the very bosom of the Church, who must be brought back
into order by discipline, and not of those who are outside of the Church,
with whom we must labour by all means possible, to bring them to Christ.
1Co 5:12
5:12 {10} For what have I to do
to judge them also that are without? do not ye judge them that are within?
(10) Those who are false brethren
ought to be cast out of the congregation. As for those who are outside
of it, they must be left to the judgment of God.
1Co 6:1
6:1 Dare {1} {a} any of you, having
a matter against another, go to law {b} before the unjust, {2} and not
before the saints?
(1) The third question is of civil
judgments. Whether it is lawful for one of the faithful to draw another
of the faithful before the judgment seat of an infidel? He answers that
is not lawful because it is an offence for the faithful to do this, for
it is not evil in itself that a matter be brought before the judgment seat,
even of an infidel.
(a) As if he said, "Have you become
so impudent, that you are not ashamed to make the Gospel a laughing stock
to profane men?"
(b) Before the unjust.
(2) He adds that he does not forbid
that one neighbour may go to law with another, if need so require, but
yet under holy judges.
1Co 6:2
6:2 {3} Do ye not know that the
saints shall judge the world? and if the world shall be judged by you,
are ye unworthy to judge the smallest matters?
(3) He gathers by a comparison
that the faithful cannot seek to be judged by infidels, without great injury
done to the saints, seeing that God himself will make the saints judges
of the world, and of the devils, with his Son Christ. Much more ought they
to judge these light and final causes which may be by equity, and good
conscience determined.
1Co 6:4
6:4 {4} If then ye have {c} judgments
of things pertaining to this life, set them to judge who are {d} least
esteemed in the church.
(4) The conclusion, in which he
prescribes a remedy for this wrong: that is, if they end their private
affairs between themselves by chosen arbiters out of the Church: for which
matter and purpose, the least of you, he says, is sufficient. Therefore
he does not condemn judgment seats, but shows what is expedient for the
circumstance of the time, and that without any diminishing of the right
of the magistrate. For he does not speak of judgments, which are practised
between the faithful and the infidels, neither of public judgments, but
of controversies which may be ended by private arbiters.
(c) Courts and places of judgments.
(d) Even the most abject among
you.
1Co 6:5
6:5 {5} I speak to your shame. Is
it so, that there is not a wise man among you? no, not one that shall be
able to judge between his brethren?
(5) He applies the general proposition
to a particular, always calling them back to this, to take away from them
the false opinion of their own excellency from where all these evils sprang.
1Co 6:7
6:7 {6} Now therefore there is utterly
a {e} fault among you, because ye go to law one with another. {7} Why do
ye not rather take wrong? why do ye not rather [suffer yourselves to] be
defrauded?
(6) Now he goes further also, and
even though by granting them private arbiters out of the congregation of
the faithful, he does not simply condemn, but rather establishes private
judgments, so that they are exercise without offence. Yet he shows that
if they were such as they ought to be, and as it were to be wished, they
should not need to use that remedy either.
(e) A weakness of mind which is
said to be in those that allow themselves to be overcome by their lusts,
and it is a fault that differs greatly from temperance and moderation:
so that he nips those who could not endure an injury done to them.
(7) This pertains chiefly to the
other part of the reprehension, that is, that they went to law even under
infidels, whereas they should rather have suffered any loss, than to have
given that offence. But yet this is generally true, that we ought rather
to depart from our right, than try the uttermost of the law hastily, and
upon an affection to revenge an injury. But the Corinthians cared for neither,
and therefore he says that they must repent, unless they will be shut out
of the inheritance of God.
1Co 6:9
6:9 Know ye not that the unrighteous
shall not inherit the kingdom of God? {8} Be not deceived: neither fornicators,
nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves
with mankind,
(8) Now he prepares himself to
pass over to the fourth treatise of this epistle, which concerns other
matters, concerning this matter first, how men may well use a woman or
not. And this question has three parts: fornication, matrimony, and a single
life. As for fornication, he utterly condemns it. And marriage he commands
to some, as a good and necessary remedy for them: to others he leaves is
free. And others he dissuades from it, not as unlawful, but as inconvenient,
and that not without exception. As for singleness of life (under which
also I comprehend virginity) he enjoins it to no man: yet he persuades
men to it, but not for itself, but for another respect, neither to all
men, nor without exception. And being about to speak against fornication,
he begins with a general reprehension of those vices, with which that rich
and riotous city most abounded: warning and teaching them earnestly, that
repentance is inseparable joined with forgiveness of sins, and sanctification
with justification.
1Co 6:11
6:11 And such were some of you:
but ye are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified in the {f}
name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God.
1Co 6:12
6:12 {9} {g} All things are lawful
unto me, but all things are not expedient: all things are lawful for me,
but I will not be brought under the {h} power of any.
(9) Secondly, he shows that the
Corinthians offend in small matters. First, because they abused them. Next,
because they used indifferent things, without any discretion, seeing the
use of them ought to be brought to the rule of charity. And that he does
not use them correctly, who immoderately abuses them, and so becomes a
slave to them.
(g) Whatever: but this general
word must be restrained to things that are indifferent.
(h) He is in subjection to things
that are indifferent, whoever he is that thinks he may not be without them.
And this is a flattering type of slavery under a pretence of liberty, which
seizes upon such men.
1Co 6:13
6:13 {10} Meats for the belly, and
the belly for meats: but God shall destroy both it and them. Now the body
[is] not for fornication, but for the Lord; and the Lord for the body.
(10) Secondly, because they counted
many things as indifferent which were of themselves unlawful, as fornication,
which they numbered among mere natural and lawful desires, as well as food
and drink. Therefore the apostle shows that they are utterly unlike: for
foods, he says, were made for the necessary use of man's life which is
not perpetual: for both foods, and all this manner of nourishing, are quickly
abolished. But we must not so think of the uncleanness of fornication,
for which the body is not made, but on the other hand is ordained to purity,
as appears by this, that is consecrated to Christ, even as Christ also
is given us by his Father to enliven our bodies with that power with which
he also rose again.
1Co 6:15
6:15 {11} Know ye not that your
bodies are the members of Christ? shall I then take the members of Christ,
and make [them] the members of an harlot? God forbid.
(11) A declaration of the former
argument by opposites, and the application of it.
1Co 6:16
6:16 {12} What? know ye not that
he which is joined to an harlot is one body? for {i} two, saith he, shall
be one flesh.
(12) A proof of the same argument:
a harlot and Christ are completely contrary, so are the flesh and the Spirit.
Therefore he that is one with a harlot (which is done by sexual intercourse
with their bodies) cannot be one with Christ, which unity is pure and spiritual.
(i) Moses does not speak these
words about fornication, but about marriage: but seeing that fornication
is the corruption of marriage, and both of them are a carnal and fleshly
copulation, we cannot say that the apostle abuses his testimony. Again,
Moses does not have this word "two", but it is very well expressed both
here and in Mt 19:5 , because he speaks only of man and wife: whereupon
the opinion of those that vouch it to be lawful to have many wives is overthrown:
for he that companies with many, is broken as it were into many parts.
1Co 6:18
6:18 {13} Flee fornication. Every
sin that a man doeth is without the body; but he that committeth fornication
sinneth against his own body.
(13) Another argument why fornication
is to be avoided, because it defiles the body with a peculiar type of filthiness.
1Co 6:19
6:19 {14} What? know ye not that
your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost [which is] in you, which ye have
of God, and {15} ye are not your own?
(14) The third argument: because
a fornicator is sacrilegious, because our bodies are consecrated to God.
(15) The fourth argument: because
we are not our own men, to give ourselves to any other, much less to Satan
and the flesh, seeing that God himself has bought us, and that with a great
price, to the end that both in body and soul, we should serve to his glory.
1Co 7:1
7:1 Now {1} concerning the things
{a} whereof ye wrote unto me: [It is] {b} good for a man not to touch a
woman.
(1) He teaches concerning marriage
that although a single life has its advantages, which he will declare afterwards,
yet that marriage is necessary for the avoiding of fornication. But so
that neither one man may have many wives, nor any wife many husbands.
(a) Concerning those matters about
which you wrote to me.
(b) Commodious, and (as we say)
expedient. For marriage brings many griefs with it, and that by reason
of the corruption of our first estate.
1Co 7:3
7:3 {2} Let the husband render unto
the wife {c} due benevolence: and likewise also the wife unto the husband.
(2) Secondly, he shows that the
parties married must with singular affection entirely love one another.
(c) The word "due" contains all
types of benevolence, though he speaks more of one sort than of the other,
in that which follows.
1Co 7:4
7:4 {3} The wife hath not power
of her own body, but the husband: and likewise also the husband hath not
power of his own body, but the wife.
(3) Thirdly, he warns them, that
they are in each other's power, with regard to the body, so that they may
not defraud one another.
1Co 7:5
7:5 Defraud ye not one the other,
{4} except [it be] with consent for a time, that ye may {d} give yourselves
to fasting and prayer; and come together again, that Satan tempt you not
for your incontinency.
(4) He adds an exception: unless
the one abstain from the other by mutual consent, that they may the better
give themselves to prayer, in which nonetheless he warns them to consider
what is expedient, lest by this long breaking off as it were from marriage,
they are stirred up to incontinency.
(d) Do nothing else.
1Co 7:6
7:6 {5} But I speak this by permission,
[and] not of commandment.
(5) Fifthly he teaches that marriage
is not necessary for all men, but for those who do not have the gift of
continency, and this gift is by a special grace of God.
1Co 7:7
7:7 For I {e} would that all men
were even as I myself. But every man hath his proper gift of God, one after
this manner, and another after that.
1Co 7:8
7:8 {6} I say therefore to the {f}
unmarried and widows, It is good for them if they abide even as I.
(6) Sixthly, he gives the very
same admonition touching the second marriage, that is, that a single life
is to be allowed, but for those who have the gift of continency. Otherwise
they ought to marry again, so that their conscience may be at peace.
(f) This whole passage is completely
against those who condemn second marriages.
1Co 7:9
7:9 But if they cannot contain,
let them marry: for it is better to marry than to {g} burn.
(g) So to burn with lust, that
either the will yields to the temptation, or else we cannot call upon God
with a peaceful conscience.
1Co 7:10
7:10 {7} And unto the married I
command, [yet] not I, but the Lord, Let not the wife depart from [her]
husband:
(7) Seventhly, he forbids contentions
and the granting of divorces (for he speaks not here of the fault of whoredom,
which was then death even by the law of the Romans also) by which he affirms
that the band of marriage is not dissolved, and that from Christ's mouth.
1Co 7:12
7:12 {8} But to the rest speak I,
not the Lord: If any brother hath a wife that believeth not, and she be
pleased to dwell with him, let him not put her away.
(8) Eighthly, he affirms that those
marriages which are already contracted between a faithful and an unfaithful
or infidel, are firm: so that the faithful may not forsake the unfaithful.
1Co 7:14
7:14 {9} For the unbelieving husband
is {h} sanctified by the {i} wife, and the unbelieving wife is sanctified
by the {k} husband: else were your children unclean; but now are they {l}
holy.
(9) He answers an objection: but
the faithful is defiled by the company of the unfaithful. The apostle denies
that, and proves that the faithful man with good conscience may use the
vessel of his unfaithful wife, by this, that their children which are born
of them are considered holy or legitimate (that is, contained within the
promise): for it is said to all the faithful, "I will be your God, and
the God of your seed."
(h) The godliness of the wife is
of more force to cause their marriage to be considered holy, than the infidelity
of the husband is to profane the marriage.
(i) The infidel is not sanctified
or made holy in his own person, but in respect of his wife, he is sanctified
to her.
(k) To the faithful husband.
(l) The children are holy in the
same sense that their parents are; that is they are sanctified, or lawfully
espoused together, so the children born of them were in a civil and legal
sense holy, that is, legitimate. (Ed.)
1Co 7:15
7:15 {10} But if the unbelieving
depart, let him depart. A brother or a sister is not under bondage in {m}
such [cases]: {11} but God hath called us to peace.
(10) He answers a question: what
if the unfaithful forsake the faithful? Then the faithful is free, he says,
because he is forsaken by the unfaithful.
(m) When any such thing happens.
(11) Lest any man upon pretence
of this liberty should give an occasion to the unfaithful to depart, he
shows that marriage contracted with an infidel ought to be kept peaceably,
that if it is possible the infidel may be won to the faith.
1Co 7:17
7:17 {12} But as God hath distributed
to every man, as the Lord hath {n} called every one, so let him walk. And
so ordain I in all churches.
(12) Taking occasion by that which
he said of the bondage and liberty of matrimony, he digresses to a general
doctrine concerning the outward state and condition of man's life, as circumcision
and uncircumcision, servitude and liberty. And he warns every man generally
to live with a contented mind in the Lord, whatever state or condition
he is in, because those outward things, as to be circumcised or uncircumcised,
to be bond or free, are not of the substance (as they call it) of the kingdom
of heaven.
(n) Has bound him to a certain
type of life.
1Co 7:18
7:18 {13} Is any man called being
circumcised? let him not {o} become uncircumcised. Is any called in uncircumcision?
let him not be circumcised.
(13) Nonetheless he shows us that
in these examples all are not of the same type: because circumcision is
not simply of itself to be desired, but such as are bound may desire to
be free. Therefore herein only they are equal that the kingdom of God consists
not in them, and therefore these are no hindrance to obey God.
(o) He is said to become uncircumcised,
who by the help of a surgeon, recovers an upper skin. And this is done
by drawing the skin with an instrument, to make it to cover the head. Celsus
in book 7, chapter 25.
1Co 7:21
7:21 Art thou called [being] a servant?
{p} care not for it: but if thou mayest be made free, use [it] rather.
(p) As though this calling were
too unworthy a calling for Christ.
1Co 7:22
7:22 For he that is called in the
{q} Lord, [being] a servant, is the Lord's freeman: likewise also he that
is called, [being] free, is Christ's servant.
(q) He that is in the state of
a servant, and is called to be a Christian.
1Co 7:23
7:23 {14} Ye are bought with a price;
be not ye the servants of men.
(14) He shows the reason of the
unlikeness, because he that desired to be circumcised makes himself subject
to man's tradition and not to God. And this may be much more understood
of superstitions, which some do foolishly consider to as things indifferent.
1Co 7:24
7:24 {15} Brethren, let every man,
wherein he is called, therein abide with {r} God.
(15) A repetition of the general
doctrine.
(r) So purely and from the heart,
that your doings may be approved before God.
1Co 7:25
7:25 {16} Now concerning virgins
I have no commandment of the Lord: yet I give my {s} judgment, as {t} one
that hath obtained mercy of the Lord to be faithful.
(16) He commands virginity to no
man, yet he persuades and praised it for another reason, that is, both
for the necessity of the present time, because the faithful could scarce
abide in any place, and use the commodities of this present life because
of persecution. And therefore those who were not troubled with families,
might be the readier, and also for the cares of this life, which marriage
necessarily draws with it, so that they cannot but have their minds distracted:
and this has place in women especially.
(s) The circumstances considered,
this I counsel you.
(t) It is I that speak this which
I am minded to speak: and the truth is I am a man, but yet of worthy credit,
for I have obtained from the Lord to be such a one.
1Co 7:26
7:26 I suppose therefore that {u}
this is good for the {x} present distress, [I say], that [it is] good for
a man so to be.
(u) To remain a virgin.
(x) For the necessity which the
saints are daily subject to, who are continually tossed up and down, so
that their estate may seem most unfit for marriage, were it not that the
weakness of the flesh forced them to it.
1Co 7:28
7:28 But and if thou marry, thou
hast not sinned; and if a virgin marry, she hath not sinned. Nevertheless
such shall have trouble in the {y} flesh: but I {z} spare you.
(y) By the "flesh" he understands
whatever things belong to this present life, for marriage brings with it
many problems. So that he leans more to a single life, not because it is
a service more agreeable to God than marriage is, but for those problems
which (if it were possible) he would wish all men to be avoid, so that
they might give themselves to God alone.
(z) I would your weakness were
provided for.
1Co 7:29
7:29 But this I say, brethren, the
time [is] {a} short: it remaineth, that both they that have wives be as
though they had none;
(a) For we are now in the latter
end of the world.
1Co 7:30
7:30 And they that {b} weep, as
though they wept not; and they that rejoice, as though they rejoiced not;
and they that buy, as though they possessed not;
(b) By "weeping" the Hebrews understand
all adversity, and by "joy", all prosperity.
1Co 7:31
7:31 And they that use this {c}
world, as not abusing [it]: for the {d} fashion of this world passeth away.
(c) Those things which God gives
us here.
(d) The guise, and shape, and fashion:
by which he shows us that there is nothing in this world that continues.
1Co 7:33
7:33 But he that is married {e}
careth for the things that are of the world, how he may please [his] wife.
(e) Those that are married have
their minds drawn here and there, and therefore if any man has the gift
of continency, it is more advantageous for him to live alone. But those
who are married may care for the things of the Lord also. Clement, Strom.
3.
1Co 7:34
7:34 There is difference [also]
between a wife and a virgin. The unmarried woman careth for the things
of the Lord, that she may be holy both in body and in {f} spirit: but she
that is married careth for the things of the world, how she may please
[her] husband.
1Co 7:35
7:35 And this I speak for your own
{g} profit; not that I may cast a snare upon you, but for that which is
comely, and that ye may attend upon the Lord without distraction.
(g) He means that he will force
no man either to marry or not to marry, but to show them plainly what type
of life is most advantageous.
1Co 7:36
7:36 {17} But if any man think that
he behaveth himself uncomely toward his virgin, if she pass the flower
of [her] age, and need so require, let him do what he will, he {h} sinneth
not: let them marry.
(17) Now he turns himself to the
parents, in whose power and authority their children are, warning them
that according to the former doctrine they consider what is proper and
convenient for their children. That they neither deprive them of the necessary
remedy against incontinency, nor force them to marry, if neither their
will does lead them, nor any necessity urges them. And again he praises
virginity, but of itself, and not in all.
(h) He does well: for so he expounds
it in 1Co 7:38 .
1Co 7:37
7:37 Nevertheless he that standeth
stedfast in his {i} heart, having no {k} necessity, but hath power over
his own will, and hath so decreed in his heart that he will keep his virgin,
doeth well.
(i) Resolved himself.
(k) That the weakness of his daughter
does not force him, or any other matter, that that he may safely still
keep her a virgin.
1Co 7:38
7:38 So then he that giveth [her]
in marriage doeth well; but he that giveth [her] not in marriage doeth
{l} better.
(l) Provides better for his children,
and that not in just any way, but by reason of such conditions as are mentioned
before.
1Co 7:39
7:39 {18} The wife is bound by the
{m} law as long as her husband liveth; but if her husband be dead, she
is at liberty to be married to whom she will; only in the {n} Lord.
(18) That which he spoke of a widower,
he speaks now of a widow, that is, that she may marry again, but that she
does it in the fear of God. And yet he does not hide the fact that if she
still remains a widow, she will be free of many cares.
(m) By the law of marriage.
(n) Religiously, and in the fear
of God.
1Co 8:1
8:1 Now {1} as touching things offered
unto idols, we know that we {a} all have knowledge. Knowledge {b} puffeth
up, but charity {c} edifieth.
(1) He begins to entreat of another
type of indifferent things, that is, things offered to idols, or the use
of flesh so offered and sacrificed. And first of all he removes all those
things which the Corinthians pretended in using things offered to idols
without any respect. First of all they affirmed that this difference of
foods was for the unskilful men, but as for them, they knew well enough
the benefit of Christ, which causes all these things to be clean to those
that are clean. Be it so, Paul says: even if we are all sufficiently instructed
in the knowledge of Christ, I say nonetheless that we must not simply rest
in this knowledge. The reason is, that unless our knowledge is tempered
with charity, it does not only not avail, but also does much hurt, because
it is the mistress of pride. Nay, it does not so much as deserve the name
of godly knowledge, if it is separate from the love of God, and therefore
from the love of our neighbour.
(a) This general word is to be
abridged as 1Co 8:7 appears, for there is a type of taunt in it, as we
may perceive by 1Co 8:2 .
(b) Gives occasion of vanity and
pride, because it is void of charity.
(c) Instructs our neighbour.
1Co 8:4
8:4 {2} As concerning therefore
the eating of those things that are offered in sacrifice unto {d} idols,
we know that an idol [is] {e} nothing in the world, and that [there is]
none other God but one.
(2) The application of that answer
to things offered to idols: I grant, he says, that an idol is indeed a
vain imagination, and that there is but one God and Lord, and therefore
that food cannot be made either holy or profane by the idol. But it does
not follow therefore, that a man may, without regard of what they are,
use those foods as any other.
(d) The word "idol" in this place
is taken for an image which is made to represent some godhead, so that
worship might be given to it: whereupon came the word "idolatry", that
is to say, "image service".
(e) Is a vain dream.
1Co 8:6
8:6 But to us [there is but] one
God, the Father, {f} of whom [are] all things, and we {g} in him; and {h}
one Lord Jesus Christ, {i} by whom [are] all things, and we by him.
(f) When the Father is distinguished
from the Son, he is named the beginning of all things.
(g) We have our being in him.
(h) But as the Father is called
Lord, so is the Son therefore God: therefore this word "one" does not regard
the persons, but the natures.
(i) This word "by" does not signify
the instrumental cause, but the efficient: for the Father and the Son work
together, which is not so to be taken that we make two causes, seeing they
have both but one nature, though they are distinct persons.
1Co 8:7
8:7 {3} Howbeit [there is] not in
every man that knowledge: for {4} some with {k} conscience of the idol
unto this hour eat [it] as a thing offered unto an idol; and their conscience
being weak is defiled.
(3) The reason why that does not
follow, is this: because there are many men who do not know that which
you know. Now the judgment of outward things depend not only upon your
conscience, but upon the conscience of those that behold you, and therefore
your actions must be applied not only to your knowledge, but also to the
ignorance of your brethren.
(4) An applying of the reason:
there are many who cannot eat of things offered to idols, except with a
wavering conscience, because they think them to be unclean. Therefore if
by your example they wish to do that which inwardly they think displeases
God, their conscience is defiled with this eating, and you have been the
occasion of this mischief.
(k) By conscience of the idol,
he means the secret judgment that they had within themselves, by which
they thought all things unclean that were offered to idols, and therefore
they could not use them with good conscience. For conscience has this power,
that if it is good, it makes indifferent things good, and if it is evil,
it makes them evil.
1Co 8:8
8:8 {5} But meat commendeth us not
to God: for neither, if we eat, are we the better; neither, if we eat not,
are we the worse.
(5) An anticipation of an objection:
why then will we therefore be deprived of our liberty? Nay, says the apostle,
you will lose no part of Christianity although you abstain for your brethren's
sake, as also if you receive the food, for it makes you in no way the more
holy, for our commendation before God consists not in foods. But to use
our liberty with offence of our brethren is an abuse of liberty, the true
use of which is completely contrary, that is, to use it in such a way that
we have consideration of our weak brethren.
1Co 8:10
8:10 {6} For if any man see thee
which hast knowledge sit at meat in the idol's temple, shall not the conscience
of him which is weak be emboldened to eat those things which are offered
to idols;
(6) Another plain explication of
the same reason, propounding the example of the sitting down at the table
in the idol's temple. This thing the Corinthians did wrongly consider among
things indifferent, because it is simply forbidden for the circumstance
of the place, even though the offence had ceased, as it will be declared
in its place.
1Co 8:11
8:11 {7} And through thy knowledge
shall the weak brother perish, for whom Christ died?
(7) An amplification of the argument
taken both of comparison and opposites: "You wretched man", he says, "pleasing
yourself with your knowledge which indeed is not knowledge, for if you
had true knowledge, you would not sit down to eat food in an idol's temple.
Will you destroy your brother, hardening his weak conscience by this example
to do evil, for whose salvation Christ himself has died?"
1Co 8:12
8:12 {8} But when ye sin so against
the brethren, and wound their weak conscience, ye sin against Christ.
(8) Another amplification: such
offending of our weak brethren, results in the offending of Christ, and
therefore do not let these men think that they have to deal only with their
brethren.
1Co 8:13
8:13 {9} Wherefore, if meat make
my brother to offend, I will eat no flesh while the world standeth, lest
I make my brother to offend.
(9) The conclusion, which Paul
conceives in his own person, that he might not seem to exact that of others
which he will not be first subject to himself. I had rather (he says) abstain
forever from all types of flesh, then give occasion of sin to any of my
brethren. And on a smaller scale, in any certain place or time, I would
refuse to eat flesh offered to idols, for my brother's sake.
1Co 9:1
9:1 Am {1} I not an apostle? am
I not free? {2} have I not seen Jesus Christ our Lord? are not ye {a} my
work in the Lord?
(1) Before he proceeds any further
in his purposed matter of things offered to idols, he would show the cause
of all this evil, and also take it away. That is, that the Corinthians
thought that they did not have to depart from the least amount of their
liberty for any man's pleasure. Therefore he propounds himself for an example,
and that in a matter almost necessary. And yet he speaks of both, but first
of his own person. If (he says) you allege for yourselves that you are
free, and therefore will use your liberty, am I not also free, seeing I
am an apostle?
(2) He proves his apostleship by
the effects, in that he was appointed by Christ himself, and the authority
of his function was sufficiently confirmed to him among them by their conversion.
And all these things he sets before their eyes, to make them ashamed because
they would not in the least way that might be, debase themselves for the
sake of the weak, whereas the apostle himself did all the he could to win
them to God, when they were utterly reprobate and without God.
(a) By the Lord.
1Co 9:2
9:2 If I be not an apostle unto
others, yet doubtless I am to you: for the {b} seal of mine apostleship
are ye in the Lord.
(b) As a seal by which it sufficiently
appears that God is the author of my apostleship.
1Co 9:3
9:3 {3} Mine answer to them that
do {c} examine me is this,
(3) He adds this by the way, as
if he should say, "So far it is off, that you may doubt of my apostleship,
that I use it to refute those who call it into controversy, by opposing
those things which the Lord has done by me among you."
(c) Which like judges examine me
and my doings.
1Co 9:4
9:4 {4} Have we not power to {d}
eat and to drink?
(4) "Now concerning the matter
itself", he says, "seeing that I am free, and truly an apostle, why may
not I (I say not, eat of all things offered to idols) be maintained by
my labours, indeed and keep my wife also, as the rest of the apostles lawfully
do, as by name, John and James, the Lord's cousins, and Peter himself?"
(d) Upon the expense of the Church?
1Co 9:5
9:5 Have we not power to lead about
a {e} sister, a wife, as well as other apostles, and [as] the brethren
of the Lord, and Cephas?
(e) One that is a Christian and
a true believer.
1Co 9:6
9:6 Or I only and Barnabas, have
not we power to {f} forbear working?
(f) Not live by the works of our
hands.
1Co 9:7
9:7 {5} Who {g} goeth a warfare
any time at his own charges? who planteth a vineyard, and eateth not of
the fruit thereof? or who feedeth a flock, and eateth not of the milk of
the flock?
(5) That he may not seem to burden
the apostles, he shows that it is just that they do, by an argument of
comparison, seeing that soldiers live by their wages, and husbandmen by
the fruits of their labours, and shepherds by that which comes of their
flocks.
(g) Goes to warfare?
1Co 9:8
9:8 {6} Say I these things {h} as
a man? or saith not the law the same also?
(6) Secondly, he brings forth the
authority of God's institution by an argument of comparison.
(h) Have I not better ground than
the common custom of men?
1Co 9:9
9:9 For it is written in the law
of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the
corn. Doth God take care for {i} oxen?
(i) Was it God's proper intention
to provide for oxen, when he made this law? For there is not the smallest
thing in the world, but that God has a concern for.
1Co 9:11
9:11 {7} If we have sown unto you
spiritual things, [is it] a great thing if we shall reap your carnal things?
(7) An assumption of the arguments
with an amplification, for neither in so doing do we require a reward appropriate
for our work.
1Co 9:12
9:12 {8} If others be partakers
of [this] {k} power over you, [are] not we rather? Nevertheless we have
not used this power; but suffer all things, lest we should hinder the gospel
of Christ.
(8) Another argument of great force:
others are nourished among you, therefore it was lawful for me, indeed
rather for me than any other. And yet I refused it, and had rather still
suffer any inconvenience, than the Gospel of Christ should be hindered.
(k) The word signifies right and
interest, by which he shows us that the ministers of the word must by right
and duty be supported by the Church.
1Co 9:13
9:13 {9} Do ye not know that they
which minister about holy things live [of the {l} things] of the temple?
and they which wait at the altar are {m} partakers with the altar?
(9) Last of all he brings forth
the express law concerning the nourishing of the Levites, which privilege
nonetheless he will not use.
(l) This is spoken by the figure
of speech metonymy, for those things that are offered in the temple.
(m) Are partakers with the altar
in dividing the sacrifice.
1Co 9:14
9:14 Even so hath the Lord ordained
that they which preach the gospel should live {n} of the gospel.
(n) Because they preach the Gospel.
It follows by this place, that Paul received no living, neither would have
any other man receive, by a commodity of masses, or any other such superstitious
nonsense.
1Co 9:15
9:15 But I have used none of these
things: {10} neither have I written these things, that it should be so
done unto me: for [it were] better for me to die, than that any man should
make my glorying void.
(10) He takes away occasion of
suspicion by the way, that it might not be thought that he wrote this as
though he was demanding his wages that were not payed him. On the contrary,
he says, I had rather die, than not to continue in this purpose to preach
the Gospel freely. For I am bound to preach the Gospel, seeing that the
Lord has given and commanded me this office: but unless I do it willingly
and for the love of God, nothing that I do is to be considered worthwhile.
If I had rather that the Gospel should be evil spoken of, than that I should
not require my wages, then would it appear that I took these pains not
so much for the Gospel's sake, as for my gains and advantages. But I say,
this would not be to use, but rather to abuse my right and liberty: therefore
not only in this thing, but also in all others (as much as I could) I am
made all things to all men, that I might win them to Christ, and might
together with them be won to Christ.
1Co 9:18
9:18 What is my reward then? [Verily]
that, when I preach the gospel, I may make the gospel of Christ {o} without
charge, that I abuse not my power in the gospel.
(o) By taking nothing from those
to whom I preach it.
1Co 9:20
9:20 And unto the Jews I became
as a Jew, that I might gain the Jews; to them that are under the {p} law,
as under the law, that I might gain them that are under the law;
(p) The word "law" in this place
must be limited to the ceremonial Law.
1Co 9:22
9:22 To the weak became I as weak,
that I might gain the weak: I am made all things to {q} all [men], that
I might by all means save some.
(q) In matters that are indifferent,
which may be done or not done with a good conscience. It is as if he said,
"I accommodated all customs and manners, that by all means I might save
some."
1Co 9:23
9:23 And this I do for the gospel's
sake, that I might be partaker thereof with {r} [you].
(r) That both I and those to whom
I preach the Gospel, may receive fruit by the Gospel.
1Co 9:24
9:24 {11} Know ye not that they
which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize? So run, that
ye may obtain.
(11) He brings in another reason
for this wrong, that is, that they were given to gluttony, for there were
solemn banquets of sacrifices, and the loose living of the priests was
always too much celebrated and kept. Therefore it was hard for those who
were accustomed to loose living, especially when they pretended the liberty
of the Gospel, to be restrained in these banquets. But on the other hand,
the apostle calls them by a pleasant similitude, and also by his own example,
to sobriety and mortification of the flesh, showing that they cannot be
fit to run or wrestle (as then the games of Isthmies were) who pamper up
their bodies. And therefore affirming that they can have no reward unless
they take another course and manner of life.
1Co 9:25
9:25 And every man that striveth
for the mastery is {s} temperate in all things. Now they [do it] to obtain
a corruptible crown; but we an incorruptible.
(s) Uses a most excellent and moderate
diet.
1Co 9:27
9:27 But I keep under my {t} body,
and bring [it] into subjection: lest that by any means, when I have preached
to others, I myself should be {u} a castaway.
(t) The old man which strives against
the Spirit.
(u) Or, "reproved". And this word
"reproved" is not contrasted with the word "elect", but with the word "approved",
when we see someone who is experienced not to be such a one as he ought
to be.
1Co 10:1
10:1 Moreover, {1} brethren, I would
not that ye should be ignorant, how that all our {a} fathers were under
the cloud, and all passed through the sea;
(1) He sets out that which he said,
laying before them an example of the horrible judgment of God against those
who had in effect the very same pledges of the same adoption and salvation
that we have. And yet nonetheless when they gave themselves to idol's feasts,
they perished in the wilderness, being horribly and manifoldly punished.
Now, moreover and besides that these things are fitly spoken against those
who frequented idol's feasts, the same also seems to be alleged to this
end and purpose, because many men think that those things are not of such
great weight that God will be angry with them if they use them. And so
they frequent Christian assemblies and are baptized, and receive the communion,
and confess Christ.
(a) Paul says this in respect of
the covenant, and not in respect of the persons, except generally.
1Co 10:2
10:2 {2} And were all {b} baptized
unto {c} Moses in the cloud and in the sea;
(2) In effect the ordinances of
the old fathers were all one with ours, for they respected Christ alone,
who offered himself to them in different forms.
(b) All of them were baptized with
the outward sign, but not indeed, because of which God cannot be blamed,
but they themselves.
(c) Moses being their guide.
1Co 10:3
10:3 And did all eat the {d} same
spiritual {e} meat;
(d) The same that we do.
(e) Manna, which was a spiritual
meat to the believers, who in faith lay hold upon Christ, who is the true
meat.
1Co 10:4
10:4 And did all drink the same
spiritual drink: for they drank of that spiritual Rock that {f} followed
them: and that Rock was {g} Christ.
(f) Of the River and running Rock,
who followed the people.
(g) Did signify Christ as an ordinance,
so that together with the sign, there was the thing signified, and the
truth itself. For God does not offer a bare sign, but the thing signified
by the sign together with it, which is to be received with faith.
1Co 10:6
10:6 {3} Now these things were our
{h} examples, to the intent we should not lust after evil things, as they
also lusted.
(3) An amplifying of the example
against those who are carried away with their lusts beyond the bounds which
God has measured out. For this is the beginning of all evil, as of idolatry
(which has gluttony as a companion), fornication, rebelling against Christ,
murmuring, and such like. And these things God punished most sharply in
that old people, to the end that we who succeed them, and have a more full
declaration of the will of God, might by that means take better heed.
(h) Some read "figures": which
signified our ordinances. For circumcision was to the Jews a seal of righteousness,
to us a symbol of baptism, and so in the other ordinances.
1Co 10:9
10:9 Neither let us tempt {i} Christ,
as some of them also tempted, and were destroyed of serpents.
(i) To tempt Christ is to provoke
him to a combat as it were, which those men do who abuse the knowledge
that he has given them, and make it to serve for a cloak for their lusts
and wickedness.
1Co 10:11
10:11 Now all these things happened
unto them for ensamples: and they are written for our admonition, upon
whom the {k} ends of the world are come.
(k) This our age is called the
end, for it is the culmination of all the ages.
1Co 10:12
10:12 {4} Wherefore let him that
thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall.
(4) In conclusion he descends to
the Corinthians themselves, warning them that they do not please themselves,
but rather that they prevent the wiles of Satan. Yet he uses an declaration
and comforts them, that he may not seem to make them altogether similar
to those wicked idolaters and condemners of Christ, who perished in the
wilderness.
1Co 10:13
10:13 There hath no temptation taken
you but such as is common to {l} man: but God [is] faithful, who will not
suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able; but will with the temptation
also {m} make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear [it].
(l) Which comes from weakness.
(m) He that would have you tempted
for your profit's sake, will make a way for you to escape out of the temptation.
1Co 10:15
10:15 {5} I speak as to wise men;
judge ye what I say.
(5) Now returning to those idol's
feasts, that he may not seem to delay at all: first he promises that he
will use no other reasons, than such as they knew very well themselves.
He gives the following line of reasoning. The holy banquets of the Christians
are pledges, first of all, of the community that they have with Christ,
and next, one with another. The Israelites also do ratify in the sacrifices,
their mutual union in the very same religion. Therefore so do the idolaters
also join themselves with their idols, or demons rather (for idols are
nothing) in those solemn banquets, whereupon it follows, that that table
is a table of demons, and therefore you must avoid it. For you cannot be
partakers of the Lord and of idols together, much less may such banquets
be considered as indifferent things. Will you then strive with God? And
if you do, do you think that you will get the upper hand?
1Co 10:16
10:16 The cup of {n} blessing which
we bless, is it not the {o} communion of the blood of Christ? The bread
which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ?
(n) Of thanksgiving: whereupon,
that holy banquet was called "eucharist", which is Greek for thanksgiving.
(o) A most effectual pledge and
note of your joining together with Christ, and ingrafting to him.
1Co 10:18
10:18 Behold Israel after the {p}
flesh: are not they which eat of the sacrifices {q} partakers of the altar?
(p) That is, those who yet observe
their ceremonies.
(q) Are consenting and guilty,
both of that worship and sacrifice.
1Co 10:20
10:20 But I [say], that the things
which the Gentiles sacrifice, they sacrifice to devils, and not to God:
and I would not that ye should have {r} fellowship with devils.
(r) Have anything to do with the
demons, or enter into that society which is begun in the demon's name.
1Co 10:21
10:21 Ye cannot drink the cup of
the Lord, and the {s} cup of devils: ye cannot be partakers of the Lord's
table, and of the table of devils.
(s) The heathen and profane people
were accustomed to finish up and make an end of their feasts which they
kept to the honour of their gods, in offering meat offerings and drink
offerings to them, with banquets and feastings.
1Co 10:23
10:23 {6} {t} All things are lawful
for me, but all things are not expedient: all things are lawful for me,
but all things edify not.
(6) Coming to another type of things
offered to idols, he repeats that general rule, that in the use of indifferent
things we ought to have consideration not of ourselves only, but of our
neighbours. And therefore there are many things which of themselves are
lawful, which may be evil when done by us, because of offence to our neighbour.
(t) See before in 1Co 6:13 .
1Co 10:25
10:25 {7} Whatsoever is sold in
the {u} shambles, [that] eat, asking no question for conscience sake:
(7) An applying of the rule to
the present matter: whatever is sold in the market, you may indifferently
buy it as if it were from the Lord's hand, and eat it either at home with
the faithful, or being called home to the unfaithful, that is, in a private
banquet. But yet with this exception, unless any man is present who is
weak, whose conscience may be offended by setting meats offered to idols
before them: for then you ought to have a consideration of their weakness.
(u) The flesh that was sacrificed
used to be sold in the markets, and the price returned to the priests.
1Co 10:26
10:26 For the earth [is] the Lord's,
and the {x} fulness thereof.
(x) All those things of which it
is full.
1Co 10:29
10:29 Conscience, I say, not thine
own, but of the other: {8} for why is my liberty judged of another [man's]
conscience?
(8) A reason: for we must take
heed that our liberty is not spoken of as evil, and that the benefit of
God which we ought to use with thanksgiving is not changed into impiety.
And this is through our fault, if we choose rather to offend the conscience
of the weak, than to yield a little of our liberty in a matter of no importance,
and so give occasion to the weak to judge in such sort of us, and of Christian
liberty. And the apostle takes these things upon his own person, that the
Corinthians may have so much the less occasion to oppose anything against
him.
1Co 10:30
10:30 For if I by {y} grace be a
partaker, why am I evil spoken of for that for which I give thanks?
(y) If I may through God's grace
eat this meat or that meat, why should I through my fault cause that benefit
of God to turn to my blame?
1Co 10:31
10:31 {9} Whether therefore ye eat,
or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God.
(9) The conclusion: we must order
ourselves in such a way that we seek not ourselves, but God's glory, and
so the salvation of as many as we may. In which the apostle does not thrust
himself to the Corinthians (even his own flock) as an example, except so
that he calls them back to Christ, to whom he himself has regard.
1Co 11:2
11:2 {1} Now I praise you, brethren,
that ye remember me in all things, and keep the ordinances, as I delivered
[them] to you.
(1) The fifth treatise of this
epistle concerning the right ordering of public assemblies, containing
three points, that is of the comely apparel of men and women, of the order
of the Lord's supper, and of the right use of spiritual gifts. But going
about to reprehend certain things, he begins nonetheless with a general
praise of them, calling those particular laws of comeliness and honesty,
which belong to the ecclesiastical policy, traditions: which afterward
they called cannons.
1Co 11:3
11:3 {2} But I would have you know,
that the head of every man is Christ; and the head of the woman [is] the
man; and the {a} head of Christ [is] God.
(2) He sets down God, in Christ
our mediator, as the end and mark not only of doctrine, but also of ecclesiastical
comeliness. Then applying it to the question proposed, touching the comely
apparel both of men and women in public assemblies, he declares that the
woman is one degree beneath the man by the ordinance of God, and that the
man is so subject to Christ, that the glory of God ought to appear in him
for the preeminence of the sex.
(a) In that Christ is our mediator.
1Co 11:4
11:4 {3} Every {b} man praying or
prophesying, having [his] head covered, dishonoureth his head.
(3) By this he gathers that if
men do either pray or preach in public assemblies having their heads covered
(which was then a sign of subjection), they robbed themselves of their
dignity, against God's ordinance.
(b) It appears, that this was a
political law serving only for the circumstance of the time that Paul lived
in, by this reason, because in these our days for a man to speak bareheaded
in an assembly is a sign of subjection.
1Co 11:5
11:5 {4} But every woman that prayeth
or prophesieth with [her] head uncovered dishonoureth her head: {5} for
that is even all one as if she were shaven.
(4) And in like manner he concludes
that women who show themselves in public and ecclesiastical assemblies
without the sign and token of their subjection, that is to say, uncovered,
shame themselves.
(5) The first argument taken from
the common sense of man, for so much as nature teaches women that it is
dishonest for them to go abroad bareheaded, seeing that they have given
to them thick and long hair which they do so diligently trim and deck,
that they can in no way abide to have it shaved.
1Co 11:7
11:7 {6} For a man indeed ought
not to cover [his] head, forasmuch as he is the image and glory of God:
but the woman is the glory of the man.
(6) The taking away of an objection:
have not men also hair given to them? "I grant that", says the apostle,
"but there is another matter in it. For man was made to this end and purpose,
that the glory of God should appear in his rule and authority. But the
woman was made so that by profession of her obedience, she might more honour
her husband."
1Co 11:8
11:8 {7} For the man is not of the
woman; but the woman of the man.
(7) He proves the inequality of
the woman by the fact that from the man is the substance of which woman
was first made.
1Co 11:9
11:9 {8} Neither was the man created
for the woman; but the woman for the man.
(8) Secondly, by the fact that
the woman was made for man, and not the man for the woman's sake.
1Co 11:10
11:10 {9} For this cause ought the
woman to have {c} power on [her] head because of the {10} angels.
(9) The conclusion: women must
be covered, to show by this external sign their subjection.
(c) A covering which is a token
of subjection.
(10) What this means, I do not
yet understand.
1Co 11:11
11:11 {11} Nevertheless neither
is the man without the woman, neither the woman without the man, {d} in
the Lord.
(11) A digression which the apostle
uses, lest that which he spoke of the superiority of men, and the lower
degree of women, in consideration of the policy of the Church, should be
so taken as though there were no measure of this inequality. Therefore
he teaches that men have in such sort the preeminence, that God made them
not alone, but women also. And woman was so made of man, that men also
are born by the means of women, and this ought to put them in mind to observe
the degree of every sex in such sort, that the marriage relationship may
be cherished.
(d) By the Lord.
1Co 11:13
11:13 {12} Judge in yourselves:
is it comely that a woman pray unto God uncovered?
(12) He urges the argument taken
from the common sense of nature.
1Co 11:15
11:15 But if a woman have long hair,
it is a glory to her: for [her] hair is given her for a {e} covering.
(e) To be a covering for her, and
such a covering as should procure another.
1Co 11:16
11:16 {13} But if any man seem to
be contentious, we have no such custom, neither the churches of God.
(13) Against those who are stubbornly
contentious we have to oppose this, that the churches of God are not contentious.
1Co 11:17
11:17 {14} Now in this that I declare
[unto you] I praise [you] not, that ye come together not for the better,
but for the worse.
(14) He passes now to the next
treatise concerning the right administration of the Lord's supper. And
the apostle uses this harsher preface, that the Corinthians might understand
that whereas they generally observed the apostle's commandments, yet they
badly neglected them in a matter of greatest importance.
1Co 11:18
11:18 {15} For first of all, when
ye come together in the church, I hear that there be divisions among you;
and I partly believe it.
(15) To celebrate the Lord's supper
correctly, it is required that there is not only consent of doctrine, but
also of affections, so that it is not profaned.
1Co 11:19
11:19 {16} For there must be also
heresies among you, that they which are {f} approved may be made manifest
among you.
(16) Although schisms and heresies
proceed from the devil, and are evil, yet they come not by chance, nor
without cause, and they turn to the profit of the elect.
(f) Whom experience has taught
to be of sound religion and godliness.
1Co 11:20
11:20 When ye come together therefore
into one place, [this] is {g} not to eat the Lord's supper.
(g) This is a usual metaphor by
which the apostle flatly denies that which many did not do well.
1Co 11:21
11:21 For in eating every one taketh
{h} before [other] his own supper: and one is hungry, and another is drunken.
(h) Eats his food and does not
wait until others come.
1Co 11:22
11:22 {17} What? have ye not houses
to eat and to drink in? or despise ye the church of God, and shame them
that have not? What shall I say to you? shall I praise you in this? I praise
[you] not.
(17) The apostle thinks it good
to take away the love feasts because of their abuse, although they had
been practised a long time, and with commendation used in churches, and
were appointed and instituted by the apostles.
1Co 11:23
11:23 {18} For I have received of
the Lord that which also I delivered unto you, That the Lord Jesus the
[same] night in which he was betrayed took bread:
(18) We must take a true form of
keeping the Lord's supper, out of the institution of it, the parts of which
are these: touching the pastors, to show forth the Lord's death by preaching
his word, to bless the bread and the wine by calling upon the name of God,
and together with prayers to declare the institution of it, and finally
to deliver the bread broken to be eaten, and the cup received to be drunk
with thanksgiving. And touching the flock, that every man examine himself,
that is to say, to prove both his knowledge, and also faith, and repentance:
to show forth the Lord's death, that is, in true faith to yield to his
word and institution: and last of all, to take the bread from the minister's
hand, and to eat it and to drink the wine, and give God thanks. This was
Paul's and the apostles' manner of ministering.
1Co 11:24
11:24 And when he had given thanks,
he brake [it], and said, Take, eat: this is my body, which is {i} broken
for you: this do in remembrance of me.
(i) This word "broken" denotes
to us the manner of Christ's death, for although his legs were not broken,
as the thieves legs were, yet his body was very severely tormented, and
torn, and bruised.
1Co 11:27
11:27 {19} Wherefore whosoever shall
eat this bread, and drink [this] cup of the Lord, {k} unworthily, shall
be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord.
(19) Whoever condemns the holy
ordinances, that is, uses them incorrectly, are guilty not of the bread
and wine, but of the thing itself, that is, of Christ, and will be grievously
punished for it.
(k) Otherwise than how such mysteries
should properly be handled.
1Co 11:28
11:28 {20} But let {l} a man examine
himself, and so let him eat of [that] bread, and drink of [that] cup.
(20) The examination of a man's
self, is of necessity required in the supper, and therefore they ought
not to be admitted to it who cannot examine themselves: such as children,
furious and angry men, also such as either have no knowledge of Christ,
or not sufficient, although they profess Christian religion: and others
that cannot examine themselves.
(l) This passage overthrows the
idea of the faith of merit, or undeveloped faith, which the papists maintain.
1Co 11:29
11:29 For he that eateth and drinketh
unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself, not {m} discerning
the Lord's body.
(m) He is said to discern the Lord's
body that has consideration of the worthiness of it, and therefore comes
to eat of this food with great reverence.
1Co 11:30
11:30 {21} For this cause many [are]
weak and sickly among you, and many sleep.
(21) The profaning of the body
and blood of the Lord in his mysteries is harshly punished by him, and
therefore such wrongs ought diligently to be prevented by each one judging
and correcting himself.
1Co 11:31
11:31 For if we would {n} judge
ourselves, we should not be judged.
(n) Try and examine ourselves,
by faith and repentance, separating ourselves from the wicked.
1Co 11:33
11:33 {22} Wherefore, my brethren,
when ye come together to eat, tarry one for another.
(22) The supper of the Lord is
a common action of the whole church, and therefore there is no place for
private suppers.
1Co 11:34
11:34 {23} And if any man hunger,
let him eat at home; that ye come not together unto condemnation. {24}
And the rest will I set in order when I come.
(23) The supper of the Lord was
instituted not to feed the belly, but to feed the soul with the communion
of Christ, and therefore it ought to be separated from common banquets.
(24) Such things as pertain to
order, as place, time, form of prayers, and other such like, the apostle
took order for in congregations according to the consideration of times,
places, and persons.
1Co 12:1
12:1 Now {1} concerning spiritual
[gifts], brethren, I would not have you {a} ignorant.
(1) Now he enters into the third
part of this treatise touching the right use of spiritual gifts, in which
he gives the Corinthians plainly to understand that they abused them. For
they that excelled bragged ambitiously of them, and so robbed God of the
praise of his gifts: and having no consideration of their brethren, abused
them to a vain display, and so robbed the church of the use of those gifts.
On the other side the inferior sort envied the better, and went about to
make a departure, so that all the body was as it were scatted and rent
in pieces. So then, going about to remedy these abuses he wills them first
to consider diligently that they have not these gifts of themselves, but
from the free grace and liberality of God, to whose glory they ought to
bestow them all.
(a) Ignorant to what purpose these
gifts are given to you.
1Co 12:2
12:2 {2} Ye know that ye were {b}
Gentiles, carried away unto these dumb idols, even as ye were led.
(2) He reproves the same by comparing
their former state with that in which they were at this time, being endued
with those excellent gifts.
(b) As touching God's service and
the covenant, mere strangers.
1Co 12:3
12:3 {3} Wherefore I give you to
understand, that no man speaking by the Spirit of God calleth Jesus {c}
accursed: and [that] no man can say that Jesus is the Lord, but by the
Holy Ghost.
(3) The conclusion: know you therefore
that you cannot so much as move your lips to honour Christ at all, except
by the grace of the Holy Spirit.
(c) Does curse him, or by any means
whatever diminish his glory.
1Co 12:4
12:4 {4} Now there are diversities
of gifts, but the {d} same Spirit.
(4) In the second place, he lays
another foundation, that is, that these gifts are different, as the functions
also are different and their offices different, but that one self same
Spirit, Lord, and God is the giver of all these gifts, and that to one
end, that is, for the profit of all.
(d) The Spirit is plainly distinguished
from the gifts.
1Co 12:6
12:6 And there are diversities of
{e} operations, but it is the same God which worketh all in all.
(e) So Paul calls that inward power
which comes from the Holy Spirit, and makes men fit for wonderful things.
1Co 12:7
12:7 But the manifestation of the
Spirit is {f} given to every man to {g} profit withal.
(f) The Holy Spirit opens and shows
himself freely in the giving of these gifts.
(g) To the use and benefit of the
church.
1Co 12:8
12:8 {5} For to one is given by
the Spirit the word of {h} wisdom; to another the word of knowledge by
the same Spirit;
(5) He declares this manifold diversity,
and reckons up the principal gifts, beating that into their heads which
he said before, that is, that all these things proceeded from one and the
very same Spirit.
(h) Wisdom is a most excellent
gift, and very needed, not only for those who teach, but also for those
that exhort and comfort. And this thing is proper to the pastor's office,
as the word of knowledge agrees to the teachers.
1Co 12:10
12:10 To another the {i} working
of miracles; to another {k} prophecy; to another {l} discerning of spirits;
to another [divers] kinds of tongues; to another the interpretation of
tongues:
(i) By "working" he means those
great workings of God's mighty power, which pass and excel among his miracles,
as the delivery of his people by the hand of Moses: that which he did by
Elijah against the priests of Baal, in sending down fire from heaven to
consume his sacrifice: and that which he did by Peter, in the matter of
Ananias and Sapphira.
(k) Foretelling of things to come.
(l) By which false prophets are
know from true, in which Peter surpassed Philip in exposing Simon Magus;
Ac 8:20 .
1Co 12:11
12:11 But all these worketh that
one and the selfsame Spirit, dividing to every man severally {6} as he
will.
(6) He adds moreover somewhat else,
that is, that although these gifts are unequal, yet they are most wisely
divided, because the will of the Spirit of God is the rule of this distribution.
1Co 12:12
12:12 {7} For as the body is one,
and hath many members, and all the members of that one body, being many,
are one body: {8} so also [is] {m} Christ.
(7) He sets forth his former saying
by a similitude taken from the body: this, he says, is manifestly seen
in the body, whose members are different, but yet so joined together, that
they make but one body.
(8) The applying of the similitude.
So must we also think, he says, of the mystical body of Christ: for all
we who believe, whether we are Jews or Gentiles, are by one person by the
same baptism, joined together with our head, that by that means, there
may be framed one body compact of many members. And we have drunk one self
same spirit, that is to say, a spiritual feeling, perseverance and motion
common to us all out of one cup.
(m) Christ joined together with
his Church.
1Co 12:13
12:13 For by one Spirit are we all
baptized into {n} one body, whether [we be] Jews or Gentiles, whether [we
be] bond or free; and have been all made to {o} drink into one Spirit.
(n) To become one body with Christ.
(o) By one quickening drink of
the Lord's blood, we are made partakers of his Spirit alone.
1Co 12:14
12:14 {9} For the body is not one
member, but many.
(9) He amplifies that which followed
of the similitude, as if he should say, "The unity of the body is not prevented
by this diversity of members, and furthermore it could not be a body if
it did not consist of many members, and those being different."
1Co 12:15
12:15 {10} If the foot shall say,
Because I am not the hand, I am not of the body; is it therefore not of
the body?
(10) Now he builds his doctrine
upon the foundations which he has laid: and first of all he continues in
his purposed similitude, and afterward he goes to the matter plainly and
simply. And first of all he speaks unto those who would have separated
themselves from those whom they envied, because they had not such excellent
gifts as they. Now this is, he says, as if the foot should say it were
not of the body, because it is not the hand, or the ear, because it is
not the eye. Therefore all parts ought rather to defend the unity of the
body, being coupled together to serve one another.
1Co 12:17
12:17 {11} If the whole body [were]
an eye, where [were] the hearing? If the whole [were] hearing, where [were]
the smelling?
(11) Again speaking to them, he
shows them that if that should come to pass which they desire, that is,
that all should be equal one to another, there would follow a destruction
of the whole body, indeed and of themselves. For it could not be a body
unless it were made of many members knit together, and different from one
another. And that no man might find fault with this division as unequal,
he adds that God himself has joined all these together. Therefore all must
remain joined together, that the body may remain in safety.
1Co 12:21
12:21 {12} And the eye cannot say
unto the hand, I have no need of thee: nor again the head to the feet,
I have no need of you.
(12) Now on the other hand, he
speaks to those who were endued with more excellent gifts, exhorting them
not to despise the inferiors as unprofitable, and as though they served
to no use. For God, he says, has in such sort tempered this inequality,
that the more excellent and beautiful members can in no wise lack the more
abject and such as we are ashamed of, and that they should have more care
to see to them and to cover them: that by this means the necessity which
is on both parts, might keep the whole body in peace and harmony. And that
even though if each part is considered apart, they are of different degrees
and conditions, yet because they are joined together, they have a community
both in prosperity and affliction.
1Co 12:22
12:22 Nay, much more those members
of the body, which seem to be {p} more feeble, are necessary:
(p) Of the smallest and vilest
offices, and therefore mentioned last among the rest.
1Co 12:23
12:23 And those [members] of the
body, which we think to be less honourable, upon these we bestow more abundant
{q} honour; and our uncomely [parts] have more abundant comeliness.
(q) We more carefully cover them.
1Co 12:25
12:25 That there should be no schism
in the body; but [that] the members should have the same {r} care one for
another.
(r) Should bestow their operations
and offices to the profit and preservation of the whole body.
1Co 12:26
12:26 {13} And whether one member
suffer, all the members suffer with it; or one member be honoured, all
the members rejoice with it.
(13) Now he applies this same doctrine
to the Corinthians without any allegory, warning them that as there are
different functions and different gifts, it is their duty not to offend
one another, either by envy or ambition. Instead, in being joined together
in love and charity with one another, every one of them should bestow to
the profit of all that which he has received, according as his ministry
requires.
1Co 12:27
12:27 Now ye are the body of Christ,
and members in {s} particular.
(s) For all churches, wherever
they are dispersed through the whole world, are different members of one
body.
1Co 12:28
12:28 And God hath set some in the
church, first apostles, secondarily prophets, thirdly teachers, after that
miracles, then gifts of healings, {t} helps, {u} governments, diversities
of tongues.
(t) The offices of deacons.
(u) He sets forth the order of
elders, who were the maintainers of the church's discipline.
1Co 12:31
12:31 {14} But covet earnestly the
best gifts: and yet shew I unto you a more excellent way.
(14) He teaches those who are ambitious
and envious, a certain holy ambition and envy. That is, if they give themselves
to the best gifts, and such as are most profitable to the church, and so
if they contend to excel one another in love, which far surpasses all other
gifts.
1Co 13:1
13:1 Though {1} I speak with the
tongues of men and of {a} angels, and have not charity, I am become [as]
sounding brass, or a {b} tinkling cymbal.
(1) He reasons first of charity,
the excellency of which he first shows by this, that without it, all other
gifts are as nothing before God. And this he proves partly by an induction,
and partly also by an argument taken of the end, for what reason those
gifts are given. For, to what purpose are those gifts but to God's glory,
and the profit of the Church as is before proved? So that those gifts,
without charity, have no right use.
(a) A very earnest amplifying of
the matter, as if he said, "If there were any tongues of angels, and I
had them, and did not use them to the benefit of my neighbour, it would
be nothing else except a vain and prattling type of babbling."
(b) That gives a rude and uncertain
sound.
1Co 13:2
13:2 And though I have [the gift
of] prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though
I have all {c} faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity,
I am nothing.
(c) By "faith" he means the gift
of doing miracles, and not that faith which justifies, which cannot be
void of charity as the other may.
1Co 13:4
13:4 {2} Charity {d} suffereth long,
[and] is kind; charity envieth not; charity vaunteth not itself, is not
puffed up,
(2) He describes the force and
nature of charity, partly by a comparison of opposites, and partly by the
effects of charity itself. And by this the Corinthians may understand both
how profitable it is in the church, and how necessary: and also how far
they are from it, and therefore how vainly and without cause they are proud.
(d) Literally, "defers wrath".
1Co 13:5
13:5 Doth {e} not behave itself
unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil;
(e) It is not insolent, or reproachful.
1Co 13:6
13:6 Rejoiceth not in iniquity,
but {f} rejoiceth in the truth;
(f) Rejoices at righteousness in
the righteous. For by "truth" the Hebrews mean "righteousness".
1Co 13:8
13:8 {3} Charity never faileth:
but whether [there be] prophecies, they shall fail; whether [there be]
tongues, they shall cease; whether [there be] {g} knowledge, it shall vanish
away.
(3) Again he commends the excellency
of charity, in that it will never be abolished in the saints, whereas the
other gifts which are necessary for the building up of the church, so long
as we live here, will have no place in the world to come.
(g) The getting of knowledge by
prophesying.
1Co 13:9
13:9 {4} For we know in {h} part,
and we prophesy in part.
(4) The reason: because we are
now in the state that we have need to learn daily, and therefore we have
need of those helps, that is, of the gift of tongues, and knowledge, and
also of those that teach by them. But to what purpose serve they then,
when we have obtained and gotten the full knowledge of God, which serve
now but for those who are imperfect and go by degrees to perfection?
(h) We learn imperfectly.
1Co 13:11
13:11 {5} When I was a child, I
spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when
I became a man, I put away childish things.
(5) He sets forth that which he
said by an excellent similitude, comparing this life to our infancy, or
childhood, in which we mutter and stammer rather than speak, and think
and understand childish things, and therefore have need of such things
as may form and frame our tongue and mind. But when we become men, to what
purpose should we desire that stammering, those childish toys, and such
like things, by which we are formed in our childhood by little and little?
1Co 13:12
13:12 {6} For {i} now we see through
a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall
I know even as also I am known.
(6) The applying of the similitude
of our childhood to this present life, in which we darkly behold heavenly
things, according to the small measure of light which is given to us, through
the understanding of tongues, and hearing the teachers and ministers of
the Church. And our man's age and strength is compared to that heavenly
and eternal life, in which when we behold God himself present, and are
enlightened with his full and perfect light, to what purpose would we desire
the voice of man, and those worldly things which are most imperfect? But
yet then all the saints will be knit both with God, and between themselves
with most fervent love. And therefore charity will not be abolished, but
perfected, although it will not be shown forth and entertained by such
manner of duties as belong only and especially to the infirmity of this
life.
(i) All this must be understood
by comparison.
1Co 13:13
13:13 {7} And now abideth faith,
hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these [is] charity.
(7) The conclusion: as if the apostle
should say, "Such therefore will be our condition then: but now we have
three things, and they remain sure if we are Christ's, without which, true
religion cannot consist, that is, faith, hope, and charity. And among these,
charity is the chiefest because it ceases not in the life to come as the
rest do, but is perfected and accomplished. For seeing that faith and hope
tend to things which are promised and are to come, when we have presently
gotten them, to what purpose would we have faith and hope? But yet there
at length we will truly and perfectly love both God and one another."
1Co 14:1
14:1 Follow {1} after charity, and
desire spiritual [gifts], but rather that ye may {a} prophesy.
(1) He infers now of what he spoke
before: therefore seeing charity is the chiefest of all, before all things
set it before you as chief and principal. And so esteem those things as
most excellent which profit the greater part of men (such as prophecy,
that is to say, the gift of teaching and applying the doctrine: which was
condemned in respect of other gifts, although it is the chiefest and most
necessary for the Church) and not those who for a show seem to be marvellous,
as the gifts of tongues. This was when a man was suddenly endowed with
the knowledge of many tongues, which made men greatly amazed and yet of
itself was not greatly of any use, unless there was an interpreter.
(a) What prophecy is he shows in
the third verse.
1Co 14:2
14:2 {2} For he that speaketh in
an [unknown] {b} tongue speaketh not unto men, but unto God: for no man
understandeth [him]; howbeit in the {c} spirit he speaketh mysteries.
(2) He reprehends their perverse
judgment concerning the gift of tongues. For why was it given? The answer:
so that the mysteries of God might be the better known to a greater number.
By this it is evident that prophecy, which the gift of tongues ought to
serve, is better than this: and therefore the Corinthians judged incorrectly,
in that they made more account of the gift of tongues than of prophesying:
because no doubt the gift of tongues was a thing more to be bragged of.
And hereupon followed another abuse of the gift of tongues, in that the
Corinthians used tongues in the congregation without an interpreter. And
although this thing might be done to some profit of him that spoke them,
yet he corrupted the right use of that gift because there came by it no
profit to the hearers. And common assemblies were instituted and appointed
not for any private man's commodity, but for the profit of the whole company.
(b) A strange language, which no
man can understand without an interpreter.
(c) By that inspiration which he
has received of the Spirit, which nonetheless he abuses, when he speaks
mysteries which none of the company can understand.
1Co 14:3
14:3 But he that prophesieth speaketh
unto men [to] {d} edification, and exhortation, and comfort.
(d) Which may further men in the
study of godliness.
1Co 14:4
14:4 He that speaketh in an [unknown]
tongue edifieth himself; but he that prophesieth edifieth the {e} church.
1Co 14:7
14:7 {3} And even things without
life giving sound, whether pipe or harp, except they give a distinction
in the sounds, how shall it be known what is piped or harped?
(3) He sets forth that which he
said by a similitude, which he borrows and takes from instruments of music,
which although they speak not perfectly, yet they are distinguished by
their sounds, that they may be the better used.
1Co 14:9
14:9 So likewise ye, except ye utter
by the tongue words {f} easy to be understood, how shall it be known what
is spoken? for ye shall speak into the air.
(f) That fitly utter the matter
itself.
1Co 14:10
14:10 {4} There are, it may be,
so many kinds of voices in the world, and none of them [is] without signification.
(4) He proves that interpretation
is necessarily to be joined with the gift of tongues, by the manifold variety
of languages, insomuch that if one speak to another without an interpreter,
it is as if he did not speak.
1Co 14:11
14:11 Therefore if I know not the
meaning of the voice, I shall be unto him that speaketh a barbarian, and
he that {g} speaketh [shall be] a barbarian unto me.
(g) As the papists in all their
sermons, and they that ambitiously pour out some Hebrew or Greek words
in the pulpit before the unlearned people, by this to get themselves a
name of vain learning.
1Co 14:12
14:12 {5} Even so ye, forasmuch
as ye are zealous of spiritual [gifts], seek that ye may excel to the edifying
of the church.
(5) The conclusion: if they will
excel in those spiritual gifts, as it is proper, they must seek the profit
of the church. And therefore they must not use the gift of tongues, unless
there is an interpreter to expound the strange and unknown tongue, whether
it is himself that speaks, or another interpreter.
1Co 14:13
14:13 Wherefore let him that speaketh
in an [unknown] tongue {h} pray that he may interpret.
(h) Pray for the gift of interpretation.
1Co 14:14
14:14 {6} For {i} if I pray in an
[unknown] tongue, my {k} spirit prayeth, but my understanding is {l} unfruitful.
(6) A reason: because it is not
sufficient for us to speak so in the congregation that we ourselves worship
God in spirit
(that is according to the gift
which we have received), but we must also be understood of the company,
lest that is unprofitable to others which we have spoken.
(i) If I pray, when the church
is assembled together, in a strange tongue.
(k) The gift and inspiration which
the spirit gives me does its part, but only to myself.
(l) No fruit comes to the church
by my prayers.
1Co 14:15
14:15 What is it then? I will pray
with the spirit, and I will pray with the {m} understanding also: I will
sing with the spirit, and I will sing with the understanding also.
(m) So that I may be understood
by others, and may instruct others.
1Co 14:16
14:16 {7} Else when thou shalt bless
with the {n} spirit, how shall he that {o} occupieth the room of the unlearned
say {p} Amen at thy giving of thanks, seeing he understandeth not what
thou sayest?
(7) Another reason: seeing that
the whole congregation must agree with him that speaks, and also witness
this agreement, how will they give their assent or agreement who know not
what is spoken?
(n) Alone, without any consideration
of the hearers.
(o) He that sits as a private man.
(p) So then one uttered the prayers,
and all the company answered "amen".
1Co 14:18
14:18 {8} I thank my God, I speak
with tongues more than ye all:
(8) He sets himself as an example,
both that they may be ashamed of their foolish ambition, and also that
he may avoid all suspicion of envy.
1Co 14:19
14:19 Yet in the church I had rather
speak {q} five words with my understanding, that [by my voice] I might
teach others also, than ten thousand words in an [unknown] tongue.
1Co 14:20
14:20 {9} Brethren, be not children
in understanding: howbeit in malice be ye children, but in understanding
be men.
(9) Now he reproves those freely
for their childish folly, who do not see how this gift of tongues which
was given to the profit of the Church, is turned by their ambition into
an instrument of cursing, seeing that this same cursing is also contained
among the punishments with which God punished the stubbornness of his people,
that he dispersed them amongst strangers whose language they did not understand.
1Co 14:21
14:21 In the {r} law it is written,
With [men of] other tongues and other lips will I speak unto this people;
and yet for all that will they not hear me, saith the Lord.
(r) By the "law" he understands
the entire scripture.
1Co 14:22
14:22 {10} Wherefore tongues are
for a sign, not to them that believe, but to them that believe not: but
prophesying [serveth] not for them that believe not, but for them which
believe.
(10) The conclusion: therefore
the gift of tongues serves to punish the unfaithful and unbelievers, unless
it is referred to prophecy (that is to say, to the interpretation of scripture)
and that what is spoken is by the means of prophecy is understood by the
hearers.
1Co 14:23
14:23 {11} If therefore the whole
church be come together into one place, and all speak with tongues, and
there come in [those that are] {s} unlearned, or unbelievers, will they
not say that ye are mad?
(11) Another argument: the gift
of tongues without prophecy is not only unprofitable to the faithful, but
also hurts very much, both the faithful as well as the unfaithful, who
should be won in the public assemblies. For by this means it comes to pass
that the faithful seem to others to be mad, much less can the unfaithful
be instructed by it.
(s) See Ac 4:13 .
1Co 14:26
14:26 {12} How is it then, brethren?
when ye come together, every one of you hath a psalm, hath a doctrine,
hath a tongue, hath a revelation, hath an interpretation. Let all things
be done unto edifying.
(12) The conclusion: the edifying
of the congregation is a rule and measure of the right use of all spiritual
gifts.
1Co 14:27
14:27 {13} If any man speak in an
[unknown] tongue, [let it be] by two, or at the most [by] three, and [that]
by course; and let one interpret.
(13) The manner how to use the
gift of tongues. It may be lawful for one or two, or at the most for three,
to use the gift of tongues, one after another in an assembly, so that there
is someone to expound their utterances. But if there are none to expound,
let him that has the gift speak to himself alone.
1Co 14:29
14:29 {14} Let the prophets speak
two or three, and let the other judge.
(14) The manner of prophesying:
let two or three propound, and let the others judge of that which is propounded,
whether it is agreeable to the word of God or not. If in this examination
the Lord indicates that nothing was wrong, let them give him leave to speak.
Let every man be admitted to prophesy, severally and in his order, so far
forth as it is required for the edifying of the church. Let them be content
to be subject to each other's judgment.
1Co 14:32
14:32 And the {t} spirits of the
prophets are subject to the prophets.
(t) The doctrine which the prophets
bring, who are inspired with God's Spirit.
1Co 14:34
14:34 {15} Let your women keep silence
in the churches: for it is not permitted unto them to speak; but [they
are commanded] to be under obedience, as also saith the law.
(15) Women are commanded to be
silent in public assemblies, and they are commanded to ask of their husbands
at home.
1Co 14:36
14:36 {16} What? came the word of
God out from you? or came it unto you only?
(16) A general conclusion of the
treatise of the right use of spiritual gifts in assemblies. And this is
with a sharp reprehension, lest the Corinthians might seem to themselves
to be the only ones who are wise.
1Co 14:37
14:37 If any man think himself to
be a prophet, or {u} spiritual, let him acknowledge that the things that
I write unto you are the commandments of the Lord.
(u) Skilful in knowing and judging
spiritual things.
1Co 14:38
14:38 {17} But if any man be ignorant,
let him be ignorant.
(17) The church ought not to care
for those who are stubbornly ignorant, and will not abide to be taught,
but to go forward nonetheless in those things which are right.
1Co 14:39
14:39 {18} Wherefore, brethren,
covet to prophesy, and forbid not to speak with tongues.
(18) Prophecy ought certainly to
be retained and kept in congregations, and the gift of tongues is not to
be forbidden, but all things must be done orderly.
1Co 15:1
15:1 Moreover, {1} brethren, I declare
unto you the gospel which I preached unto you, which also ye have received,
and wherein ye {a} stand;
(1) The sixth treatise of this
epistle, concerning the resurrection: and he uses a transition, or passing
over from one matter to another, showing first that he brings no new thing,
to the end that the Corinthians might understand that they had begun to
swerve from the right course. And next that he does not go about to entreat
of a trifling matter, but of another chief point of the Gospel, which if
it is taken away, their faith will necessarily come to nothing. And so
at the length he begins this treatise at Christ's resurrection, which is
the ground and foundation of ours, and confirms it first by the testimony
of the scriptures and by the witness of the apostles, and of more than
five hundred brethren, and last of all by his own.
(a) In the profession of which
you still continue.
1Co 15:2
15:2 By which also ye are saved,
if ye keep in memory what I preached unto you, {b} unless ye have believed
in vain.
(b) Which is very absurd, and cannot
be, for they that believe must reap the fruit of faith.
1Co 15:5
15:5 And that he was seen of Cephas,
then of the {c} twelve:
(c) Of those twelve picked and
chosen apostles, who were commonly called twelve, though Judas was put
out of the number.
1Co 15:6
15:6 After that, he was seen of
above five hundred brethren at {d} once; of whom the greater part remain
unto this present, but some are fallen asleep.
(d) Not at several different times,
but together and at one instant.
1Co 15:8
15:8 {2} And last of all he was
seen of me also, as of one born out of due time.
(2) He maintains along the way
the authority of his apostleship, which was required to be in good credit
among the Corinthians, that this epistle might be of force and weight among
them. In the mean time he compares himself, under divine inspiration, in
such a way with certain others, that he makes himself inferior to them
all.
1Co 15:12
15:12 {3} Now if Christ be preached
that he rose from the dead, how say some among you that there is no resurrection
of the dead?
(3) The first argument to prove
that there is a resurrection from the dead: Christ is risen again, therefore
the dead will rise again.
1Co 15:13
15:13 {4} But if there be no resurrection
of the dead, then is Christ not risen:
(4) The second by an absurdity:
if there is no resurrection of the dead, then Christ is not risen again.
1Co 15:14
15:14 {5} And if Christ be not risen,
then [is] our preaching vain, and your faith [is] also vain.
(5) The proof of that absurdity,
by other absurdities: if Christ is not risen again, the preaching of the
Gospel is in vain, and the credit that you gave to it is vain, and we are
liars.
1Co 15:16
15:16 {6} For if the dead rise not,
then is not Christ raised:
(6) He repeats the same argument
taken from an absurdity, purposing to show how faith is in vain if the
resurrection of Christ is taken away.
1Co 15:17
15:17 And if Christ be not raised,
your faith [is] vain; {7} ye are {e} yet in your sins.
(7) First, seeing death is the
punishment of sin, in vain should we believe that our sins were forgiven
us, if they remain: but they do remain, if Christ did not rise from death.
(e) They are yet in their sins
who are not sanctified, nor have obtained remission of their sins.
1Co 15:18
15:18 {8} Then they also which are
fallen asleep in Christ are perished.
(8) Secondly, unless it is certain
that Christ rose again, all those who died in Christ have perished. So
then, what profit comes of faith?
1Co 15:19
15:19 {9} If in this life only we
have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable.
(9) The third argument which is
also taken from an absurdity: for unless there is another life, in which
those who trust and believe in Christ will be blessed, they are the most
miserable of all creatures, because in this life they would be the most
miserable.
1Co 15:20
15:20 {10} But now is Christ risen
from the dead, {11} [and] become the {f} firstfruits of them that slept.
(10) A conclusion of the former
argument: therefore Christ is risen again.
(11) He puts the last conclusion
for the first proposition of the argument that follows. Christ is risen
again: therefore will we the faithful (for of them he speaks) rise again.
Then follows the first reason of this conclusion: for Christ is set forth
to us to be considered of, not as a private man apart and by himself, but
as the firstfruits: and he takes that which was known to all men, that
is, that the whole heap is sanctified in the firstfruits.
(f) He alludes to the firstfruits
of grain, the offering of which sanctified the rest of the fruits.
1Co 15:21
15:21 {12} For since by man [came]
death, by man [came] also the resurrection of the dead.
(12) Another confirmation of the
same conclusion: for Christ is to be considered as opposite to Adam, that
as from one man Adam, sin came over all, so from one man Christ, life comes
to all. That is to say, that all the faithful, who die because by nature
they were born of Adam, so because in Christ they are made the children
of God by grace, they are made alive and restored to life by him.
1Co 15:22
15:22 For as in Adam all die, even
so in Christ shall all be {g} made alive.
(g) Will rise by the power of Christ.
1Co 15:23
15:23 {13} But every man in his
own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ's at
his coming.
(13) He does two things together:
for he shows that the resurrection is in such sort common to Christ with
all his members, that nonetheless he far surpasses them, both in time (for
he was the first that rose again from the dead) and also in honour, because
from him and in him is all our life and glory. Then by this occasion he
passes to the next argument.
1Co 15:24
15:24 {14} Then [cometh] the {h}
end, when he shall have delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father;
when he shall have put down {i} all rule and all authority and power.
(14) The fourth argument with which
also he confirms the other, has a most sure ground, that is, because God
must reign. And this is the manner of his reign, that the Father will be
shown to be King in his Son who was made man, to whom all things are made
subject (the promiser being the only exception) to the end that the Father
may afterward triumph in his Son the conqueror. And he makes two parts
of this reign and dominion of the Son in which the Father's glory consists:
that is first, the overcoming of his enemies, in which some must be deprived
of all power, as Satan and all the wicked, be they ever so proud and mighty,
and others must be utterly abolished, as death. And second, a plain and
full delivery of the godly from all enemies, that by this means God may
fully set forth the body of the Church cleaving fast to their head Christ,
his kingdom and glory, as a King among his subjects. Moreover he puts the
first degree of his kingdom in the resurrection of the Son, who is the
head: and the perfection, in the full conjunction of the members with the
head, which will be in the latter day. Now all these tend to this purpose,
to show that unless the dead do rise again, neither the Father can be King
above all, neither Christ the Lord of all. For neither should the power
of Satan and death be overcome, nor the glory of God be full in his Son,
nor his Son in his members.
(h) The conclusion and finishing
of all things.
(i) All his enemies who will be
robbed of all the power that they have.
1Co 15:25
15:25 For he must reign, till he
hath put all enemies {k} under his feet.
(k) Christ is considered here as
he appeared in the form of a servant, in which respect he rules the Church
as head, and that because this power was given to him from his Father.
1Co 15:26
15:26 The {l} last enemy [that]
shall be destroyed [is] death.
(l) The conclusion of the argument,
which is taken from the whole to the part: for if all his enemies will
be put under his feet, then it will necessarily be that death also will
be subdued under him.
1Co 15:28
15:28 And when all things shall
be subdued unto him, {m} then shall the Son also himself be subject unto
him that put all things under him, that {n} God may be all in all.
(m) Not because the Son was not
subject to his Father before, but because his body, that is to say, the
Church which is here in distress, and not yet wholly partaker of his glory,
is not yet fully perfect: and also because the bodies of the saints which
are in the graves, will not be glorified until the resurrection. But Christ
as he is God, has us subject to him as his Father has, but as he is Priest,
he is subject to his Father together with us. Augustine, book 1, chap.
8, of the trinity.
(n) By this high type of speech
is set forth an incomprehensible glory which flows from God, and will fill
all of us, as we are joined together with our head, but yet in such a way
that our head will always preserve his preeminence.
1Co 15:29
15:29 {15} Else what shall they
do which are baptized {o} for the dead, if the dead rise not at all? why
are they then baptized for the dead?
(15) The fifth argument taken of
the end of baptism, that is, because those who are baptized, are baptized
for dead: that is to say, that they may have a remedy against death, because
baptism is a token of regeneration.
(o) They that are baptized to this
end and purpose, that death may be put out in them, or to rise again from
the dead, of which baptism is a seal.
1Co 15:30
15:30 {16} And why stand we in jeopardy
every hour?
(16) The sixth argument: unless
there is a resurrection of the dead, why should the apostles so daily cast
themselves into danger of so many deaths?
1Co 15:31
15:31 I protest by your {p} rejoicing
which I have in Christ Jesus our Lord, I die daily.
(p) As though he said, "I die daily,
as all the miseries I suffer can well witness, which I may truly boast
of, that I have suffered among you."
1Co 15:32
15:32 {17} If {q} after the manner
of men I have fought with beasts at Ephesus, what advantageth it me, if
the dead rise not? {18} let us {r} eat and drink; for to morrow we die.
(17) The taking away of an objection:
but you, Paul, were ambitious, as men commonly and are accustomed to be,
when you fought with beasts at Ephesus. That is very likely, says Paul:
for what could that profit me, were it not for the glory of eternal life
which I hope for?
(q) Not upon any godly motion,
nor casting my eyes upon God, but carried away with vain glory, or a certain
headiness.
(18) The seventh argument which
depends upon the last: if there is no resurrection of the dead, why do
we give ourselves to anything else, except for eating and drinking?
(r) These are sayings of the Epicureans.
1Co 15:33
15:33 {19} Be not deceived: evil
communications corrupt good manners.
(19) The conclusion with a sharp
exhortation, that they take heed of the wicked company of certain ones.
And from this he shows where this evil sprang from: warning them to be
wise with sobriety to righteousness.
1Co 15:35
15:35 {20} But some [man] will say,
How are the dead raised up? and with what body do they come?
(20) Now that he has proved the
resurrection, he demonstrates their doltishness, in that they scoffingly
demanded how it could be that the dead could rise again: and if they did
rise again, they asked mockingly, what manner of bodies they should have.
Therefore he sends these fellows, who seemed to themselves to be marvellously
wise and intelligent, to be instructed of poor rude farmers.
1Co 15:36
15:36 {21} [Thou] fool, that which
thou sowest is not quickened, except it die:
(21) You might have learned either
of these, Paul says, by daily experience: for seeds are sown, and rot,
and yet nonetheless they are far from perishing, but rather they grow up
far more beautiful. And whereas they are sown naked and dry, they spring
up green from death by the power of God: and does it seem incredible to
you that our bodies should rise from corruption, and that endued with a
far more excellent quality?
1Co 15:38
15:38 {22} But God giveth it a body
as it hath pleased him, and to every seed his own body.
(22) We see a diversity both in
one and the self same thing which has now one form and then another, and
yet keeps its own type: as it is evident in a grain which is sown bare,
but springs up far after another sort: and also in different types of one
self same sort, as among beasts: and also among things of different sorts,
as the heavenly bodies and the earthly bodies; which also differ very much
one from another. Therefore there is no reason why we should reject either
the resurrection of the bodies, or the changing of them into a better state,
as a thing impossible, or strange.
1Co 15:42
15:42 {23} So also [is] the resurrection
of the dead. It is {s} sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption:
(23) He makes three manner of qualities
of the bodies being raised: first, incorruption, that is, because they
will be sound and altogether of a nature that can not be corrupt. Second,
glory, because they will be adorned with beauty and honour. Third, power,
because they will continue everlasting, without food, drink, and all other
helps, without which this frail life cannot keep itself from corruption.
(s) Is buried, and man is hid as
seed in the ground.
1Co 15:43
15:43 It is sown in {t} dishonour;
it is raised in glory: it is sown in weakness; it is raised in {u} power:
(t) Void of honour, void of glory
and beauty.
(u) Freed from the former weakness,
in which it is subject to such alteration and change, that it cannot maintain
itself without food and drink and such other like helps.
1Co 15:44
15:44 {24} It is sown a natural
body; it is raised a spiritual body. There is a natural body, and there
is a spiritual body.
(24) He shows perfectly in one
word this change of the quality of the body by the resurrection, when he
says that a natural body will become a spiritual body: which two qualities
being completely different the one from the other he straightway expounds,
and sets forth diligently.
1Co 15:45
15:45 {25} And so it is written,
The {x} first man Adam was made a living soul; the last Adam [was made]
a {y} quickening spirit.
(25) That is called a natural body
which is made alive and maintained by a living soul only in the manner
that Adam was, of whom we are all born naturally. And that is said to be
a spiritual body, which together with the soul is made alive with a far
more excellent power, that is, with the Spirit of God, who descends from
Christ the second Adam to us.
(x) Adam is called the first man,
because he is the root as it were from which we spring. And Christ is the
latter man, because he is the beginning of all those that are spiritual,
and in him we are all included.
(y) Christ is called a Spirit,
by reason of that most excellent nature, that is to say, God who dwells
in him bodily, as Adam is called a living soul, by reason of the soul which
is the best part in him.
1Co 15:46
15:46 {26} Howbeit that [was] not
first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; and afterward that
which is spiritual.
(26) Secondly, he wills the order
of this twofold state or quality to be observed, that the natural was first,
Adam being created of the clay of the earth. And the spiritual follows
and came upon it, that is, when the Lord being sent from heaven, endued
our flesh, which was prepared and made fit for him, with the fulness of
the Godhead.
1Co 15:47
15:47 The first man [is] of the
earth, {z} earthy: the second man [is] the Lord from {a} heaven.
(z) Wallowing in dirt, and wholly
given to an earthly nature.
(a) As Adam was the first man,
Christ is the second man; and these two are spoken of, as if they were
the only two men in the world; because as the former was the head and representative
of all his natural posterity, so the latter is the head and representative
of all the spiritual offspring: and that he is "the Lord from heaven";
in distinction from the first man. (Ed.)
1Co 15:48
15:48 {27} As [is] the earthy, such
[are] they also that are earthy: and as [is] the heavenly, such [are] they
also that are heavenly.
(27) He applies both the earthly
naturalness of Adam (if I may so say) to our bodies, so long as they are
naturally conversant upon earth, that is, in this life, and in the grave.
And also the spirituality of Christ to our same bodies, after they are
risen again: and he says that the former goes before, and that this latter
will follow.
1Co 15:49
15:49 And as we have borne the {b}
image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly.
(b) Not a vain and false image,
but such a one as indeed had the truth with it.
1Co 15:50
15:50 {28} Now this I say, brethren,
that {c} flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; neither doth
corruption inherit incorruption.
(28) The conclusion: we cannot
be partakers of the glory of God unless we put off all that gross and filthy
nature of our bodies subject to corruption, that the same body may be adorned
with incorruptible glory.
(c) Flesh and blood are taken here
for a living body, which cannot attain to incorruption, unless it puts
off corruption.
1Co 15:51
15:51 {29} Behold, I shew you a
{d} mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed,
(29) He goes further, declaring
that it will come to pass that those who will be found alive in the latter
day will not descend into that corruption of the grave, but will be renewed
with a sudden change, which change is very necessary. And he further states
that the certain enjoying of the benefit and victory of Christ, is deferred
to that latter time.
(d) A thing that has been hid,
and never known before now, and therefore worthy that you give good care
to it.
1Co 15:52
15:52 In {e} a moment, in the twinkling
of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead
shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed.
(e) He shows that the time will
be very short.
1Co 15:58
15:58 {30} Therefore, my beloved
brethren, be ye stedfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the work of the
Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not in vain in the {f} Lord.
(30) An exhortation taken from
the profit that ensues, that seeing they understand that the glory of the
other life is laid up for faithful workmen, they continue and stand fast
in the truth of the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead.
(f) Through the Lord's help and
goodness working in us.
1Co 16:1
16:1 Now concerning {1} the collection
for the saints, as I have given order to the churches of Galatia, even
so do ye.
(1) Collections in ancient times
were made by the appointment of the apostle appointment to be the first
day of the week, on which day the manner was then to assemble themselves.
1Co 16:2
16:2 Upon the {a} first [day] of
the week let every one of you lay by him in store, as [God] hath {b} prospered
him, that there be no gatherings when I come.
(a) Which in times past was called
Sunday, but now is called the Lord's day.
(b) That every man bestow according
to the ability that God has blessed him with.
1Co 16:3
16:3 And when I come, whomsoever
ye shall approve by [your] {c} letters, them will I send to bring your
liberality unto Jerusalem.
(c) Which you will give to them
to carry.
1Co 16:4
16:4 {2} And if it be meet that
I go also, they shall go with me.
(2) The rest of the epistle is
spent in writing of familiar matters, yet so that all things are referred
to his purposed mark, that is to say, to the glory of God, and the edifying
of the Corinthians.
1Co 16:9
16:9 For a great door and {d} effectual
is opened unto me, and [there are] many adversaries.
(d) Very fit and convenient to
do great things by.
1Co 16:10
16:10 Now if Timotheus come, see
that he may be with you {e} without fear: for he worketh the work of the
Lord, as I also [do].
(e) Without any just occasion of
fear.
1Co 16:11
16:11 Let no man therefore despise
him: but conduct him forth {f} in peace, that he may come unto me: for
I look for him with the brethren.
(f) Safe and sound, and that with
every type of courtesy.
1Co 16:15
16:15 I beseech you, brethren, (ye
know the house of {g} Stephanas, that it is the firstfruits of Achaia,
and [that] they have {h} addicted themselves to the ministry of the saints,)
(g) Stephanas is the name of a
man and not of a woman.
(h) Given themselves wholly to
the ministry.
1Co 16:16
16:16 That ye {i} submit yourselves
unto such, and to every one that helpeth with [us], and laboureth.
(i) That you honour and revere
them, be obedient to them, and be content to be ruled by them, as you properly
should, seeing that they have bestowed themselves and their goods, and
this to help you with them.
1Co 16:18
16:18 For they have refreshed my
{k} spirit and yours: therefore {l} acknowledge ye them that are such.
(k) My heart.
(l) Take them for such men as they
are indeed.
1Co 16:22
16:22 If any man love not the Lord
Jesus Christ, let him be Anathema {m} Maranatha.
(m) By these words are meant the
severest type of curse and excommunication that was among the Jews: and
the words are as much as to say, "As our Lord comes". So that his meaning
may be this, "Let him be accursed even to the coming of the Lord", that
is to say, to the day of his death, even for ever.