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THE FIRST EPISTLE
OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
CORINTHIANS
Commentary by A. R.
FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 15
@1Co
15:1-58. THE RESURRECTION PROVED AGAINST THE DENIERS OF
IT AT CORINTH.
Christ's resurrection rests on the evidence of many
eye-witnesses, including Paul himself, and is the great fact
preached as the groundwork of the Gospel: they who deny the
resurrection in general, must deny that of Christ, and the
consequence of the latter will be, that Christian preaching
and faith are vain.
1. Moreover--"Now" [ALFORD and ELLICOTT].
I declare--literally,
"I make known": it implies some degree of reproach
that it should be now necessary to make it known to them
afresh, owing to some of them "not having the knowledge
of God" (@1Co
15:34). Compare @Ga
1:11.
wherein ye stand--wherein
ye now take your stand. This is your present actual
privilege, if ye suffer not yourselves to fall from your
high standing.
2. ye are saved--rather, "ye are being
saved."
if ye keep in memory what
I preached unto you--Able critics, BENGEL and others,
prefer connecting the words thus, "I declare unto you
the Gospel (@1Co
15:1) in what words I preached it unto you." Paul
reminds them, or rather makes known to them, as if anew, not
only the fact of the Gospel, but also with what words,
and by what arguments, he preached it to them.
Translate in that case, "if ye hold it fast." I
prefer arranging as English Version, "By which
ye are saved, if ye hold fast (in memory and personal
appropriation) with what speech I preached it unto
you."
unless--which is
impossible, your faith is vain, in resting on Christ's
resurrection as an objective reality.
3. I delivered unto you--A short creed, or summary of
articles of faith, was probably even then existing; and a
profession in accordance with it was required of candidates
for baptism (@Ac
8:37).
first of all--literally,
"among the foremost points" (@Heb
6:2). The atonement is, in Paul's view, of primary
importance.
which I . . .
received--from Christ Himself by special revelation
(compare @1Co
11:23).
died for our sins--that
is, to atone FOR them; for taking away our sins
(@1Jo
3:5; compare @Ga
1:4): "gave Himself for our sins" (@Isa
53:5 2Co 5:15 Tit 2:14). The "for" here does
not, as in some passages, imply vicarious substitution, but
"in behalf of" (@Heb
5:3 1Pe 2:24). It does not, however, mean merely
"on account of," which is expressed by a different
Greek word (@Ro
4:25), (though in English Version translated
similarly, "for").
according to the
scriptures--which "cannot be broken." Paul
puts the testimony of Scripture above that of those
who saw the Lord after His resurrection [BENGEL]. So our
Lord quotes @Isa
53:12, in @Lu
22:37; compare @Ps
22:15, &c. @Da
9:26.
4. buried . . . rose again--His burial is
more closely connected with His resurrection than His death.
At the moment of His death, the power of His
inextinguishable life exerted itself (@Mt
27:52). The grave was to Him not the destined receptacle
of corruption, but an apartment fitted for entering into
life (@Ac
2:26-28) [BENGEL].
rose again--Greek,
"hath risen": the state thus begun, and its
consequences, still continue.
5. seen of Cephas--Peter (@Lu
24:34).
the twelve--The round
number for "the Eleven" (@Lu
24:33,36). "The Twelve" was their ordinary
appellation, even when their number was not full. However,
very possibly Matthias was present (@Ac
1:22,23). Some of the oldest manuscripts and versions
read, "the Eleven": but the best on the whole,
"the Twelve."
6. five hundred--This appearance was probably on the
mountain (Tabor, according to tradition), in Galilee, when
His most solemn and public appearance, according to His
special promise, was vouchsafed (@Mt
26:32 28:7,10,16). He "appointed" this place,
as one remote from Jerusalem, so that believers might
assemble there more freely and securely. ALFORD'S theory of Jerusalem
being the scene, is improbable; as such a multitude of
believers could not, with any safety, have met in one place
in the metropolis, after His crucifixion there. The number
of disciples (@Ac
1:15) at Jerusalem shortly after, was one hundred and
twenty, those in Galilee and elsewhere not being reckoned.
Andronicus and JUNIUS were, perhaps, of the number (@Ro
16:7): they are said to be "among the
apostles" (who all were witnesses of the resurrection,
@Ac
1:22).
remain unto this present--and,
therefore, may be sifted thoroughly to ascertain the
trustworthiness of their testimony.
fallen asleep--in the
sure hope of awaking at the resurrection (@Ac
7:60).
7. seen of James--the Less, the brother of our Lord
(@Ga
1:19). The Gospel according to the Hebrews, quoted by
JEROME [On Illustrious Men, p. 170 D.], records that
"James swore he would not eat bread from the hour that
he drank the cup of the Lord, till he should see Him rising
again from the dead."
all the apostles--The
term here includes many others besides "the
Twelve" already enumerated (@1Co
15:5):perhaps the seventy disciples (@Lu
10:1) [CHRYSOSTOM].
8. One born out of due time--Greek, "the
one abortively born": the abortion in the family of the
apostles. As a child born before the due time is
puny, and though born alive, yet not of the proper size, and
scarcely worthy of the name of man, so "I am the
least of the apostles," scarcely "meet to be
called an apostle"; a supernumerary taken into the
college of apostles out of regular course, not led to Christ
by long instruction, like a natural birth, but by a sudden
power, as those prematurely born [GROTIUS]. Compare the
similar image from childbirth, and by the same spiritual
power, the resurrection of Christ (@1Pe
1:3). "Begotten again by the resurrection
of Jesus." Jesus' appearance to Paul, on the way to
Damascus, is the one here referred to.
9. least--The name, "Paulus," in Latin,
means "least."
I persecuted the church--Though
God has forgiven him, Paul can hardly forgive himself at the
remembrance of his past sin.
10. by . . . grace . . . and his
grace--The repetition implies the prominence which God's
grace had in his mind, as the sole cause of his
marvellous conversion and subsequent labors. Though
"not meet to be called an apostle," grace has
given him, in Christ, the meetness needed for the office.
Translate as the Greek, "His grace which was
(showed) towards me."
what I am--occupying
the honorable office of an apostle. Contrast with this the
self-sufficient prayer of another Pharisee (@Lu
18:11).
but I laboured--by
God's grace (@Php
2:16).
than they all--than
any of the apostles (@1Co
15:7).
grace of God
. . . with me--Compare "the Lord working
with them" (@Mr
16:20). The oldest manuscripts omit "which
was." The "not I, but grace," implies, that
though the human will concurred with God when brought
by His Spirit into conformity with His will, yet
"grace" so preponderated in the work, that his own
co-operation is regarded as nothing, and grace as virtually
the sole agent. (Compare @1Co
3:9 Mt 10:20 2Co 6:1 Php 2:12,13).
11. whether it were I or they--(the apostles) who
"labored more abundantly" (@1Co
15:10) in preaching, such was the substance of our
preaching, namely, the truths stated in @1Co
15:3,4.
12. if--Seeing that it is an admitted fact that
Christ is announced by us eye-witnesses as having risen from
the dead, how is it that some of you deny that which is a
necessary consequence of Christ's resurrection, namely, the
general resurrection?
some--Gentile
reasoners (@Ac
17:32 26:8) who would not believe it because they did
not see "how" it could be (@1Co
15:35,36).
13. If there be no general resurrection, which is the
consequent, then there can have been no resurrection of
Christ, which is the antecedent. The head and the members of
the body stand on the same footing: what does not hold good
of them, does not hold good of Him either: His resurrection
and theirs are inseparably joined (compare @1Co
15:20-22 Joh 14:19).
14. your faith . . . vain--(@1Co
15:11). The Greek for "vain" here is, empty,
unreal: in @1Co
15:17, on the other hand, it is, without use,
frustrated. The principal argument of the first
preachers in support of Christianity was that God had raised
Christ from the dead (@Ac
1:22 2:32 4:10,33 13:37 Ro 1:4). If this fact were
false, the faith built on it must be false too.
15. testified of God--that is, concerning God. The
rendering of others is, "against God" [Vulgate,
ESTIUS, GROTIUS]: the Greek preposition with the
genitive implies, not direct antagonism (as the accusative
would mean), but indirect to the dishonor of
God. English Version is probably better.
if so be--as they
assert. It is not right to tell untrue stories, though they
are told and seem for the glory of God (@Job
13:7).
16. The repetition implies the unanswerable force of
the argument.
17. vain--Ye are, by the very fact (supposing the
case to be as the skeptics maintained), frustrated of
all which "your faith" appropriates: Ye are still
under the everlasting condemnation of your sins (even in the
disembodied state which is here referred to), from
which Christ's resurrection is our justification (@Ro
4:25): "saved by his life" (@Ro
5:10).
18. fallen asleep in Christ--in communion with Christ
as His members. "In Christ's case the term used is death,
to assure us of the reality of His suffering; in our case, sleep,
to give us consolation: In His case, His resurrection having
actually taken place, Paul shrinks not from the term death;
in ours, the resurrection being still only a matter of hope,
he uses the term falling asleep" [PHOTIUS, Quęstiones
Amphilochię, 197].
perished--Their souls
are lost; they are in misery in the unseen world.
19. If our hopes in Christ were limited to this life
only, we should be, of all men, most to be pitied; namely,
because, while others live unmolested, we are exposed to
every trial and persecution, and, after all, are doomed to
bitter disappointment in our most cherished hope; for all
our hope of salvation, even of the soul (not merely of the
body), hangs on the resurrection of Christ, without which
His death would be of no avail to us (@Eph
1:19,20 1Pe 1:3). The heathen are "without
hope" (@Eph
2:12 1Th 4:13). We should be even worse, for we should
be also without present enjoyment (@1Co
4:9).
20. now--as the case really is.
and become--omitted in
the oldest manuscripts.
the first-fruits--the
earnest or pledge, that the whole resurrection harvest will
follow. so that our faith is not vain, nor our hope limited
to this life. The time of writing this Epistle was probably
about the Passover (@1Co
5:7); the day after the Passover sabbath was that for
offering the first-fruits (@Le
23:10,11), and the same was the day of Christ's
resurrection: whence appears the appropriateness of the
image.
21. by man . . . by man--The first-fruits
are of the same nature as the rest of the harvest; so
Christ, the bringer of life, is of the same nature as the
race of men to whom He brings it; just as Adam, the bringer
of death, was of the same nature as the men on whom he
brought it.
22. in Adam all--in union of nature with Adam, as
representative head of mankind in their fall.
in Christ . . .
all--in union of nature with Christ, the representative
head of mankind in their recovery. The life brought in by
Christ is co-extensive with the death brought in by Adam.
23. But every man in his own order--rather,
"rank": the Greek is not in the abstract,
but concrete: image from troops, "each in his own
regiment." Though all shall rise again, let not any
think all shall be saved; nay, each shall have his proper
place, Christ first (@Col
1:18), and after Him the godly who die in Christ (@1Th
4:16), in a separate band from the ungodly, and then
"the end," that is, the resurrection of the rest
of the dead. Christian churches, ministers, and individuals
seem about to be judged first "at His coming" (@Mt
25:1-30); then "all the nations" (@Mt
25:31-46). Christ's own flock shall share His glory
"at His coming," which is not to be confounded
with "the end," or general judgment (@Re
20:4-6,11-15). The latter is not in this chapter
specially discussed, but only the first resurrection,
namely, that of the saints: not even the judgment of
Christian hollow professors (@Mt
25:1-30) at His coming, is handled, but only the glory
of them "that are Christ's," who alone in the
highest sense "obtain the resurrection from the
dead" (@Lu
14:14 20:35,36 Php 3:11; see on Php 3:11). The second
coming of Christ is not a mere point of time, but a period
beginning with the resurrection of the just at His
appearing, and ending with the general judgment. The ground
of the universal resurrection is the union of all mankind in
nature with Christ, their representative Head, who has done
away with death, by His own death in their stead: the ground
of the resurrection of believers is not merely this, but
their personal union with Him as their
"Life" (@Col
3:4), effected causatively by the Holy Spirit,
and instrumentally by faith as the subjective,
and by ordinances as the objective means.
24. Then--after that: next in the succession of
"orders" or "ranks."
the end--the general
resurrection, and final judgment and consummation (@Mt
25:46).
delivered up
. . . kingdom to . . . Father--(Compare
@Joh
13:3). Seeming at variance with @Da
7:14, "His dominion is an everlasting
dominion which shall not pass away." Really,
His giving up of the mediatorial kingdom to the
Father, when the end for which the mediatorial economy was
established has been accomplished, is altogether in harmony
with its continuing everlastingly. The change which shall
then take place, shall be in the manner of
administration, not in the kingdom itself; God shall
then come into direct connection with the earth,
instead of mediatorially, when Christ shall have fully and
finally removed everything that severs asunder the holy God
and a sinful earth (@Col
1:20). The glory of God is the final end of Christ's
mediatorial office (@Php
2:10,11). His co-equality with the Father is independent
of the latter, and prior to it, and shall, therefore,
continue when its function shall have ceased. His manhood,
too, shall everlastingly continue, though, as now,
subordinate to the Father. The throne of the Lamb
(but no longer mediatorial) as well as of God, shall be in
the heavenly city (@Re
22:3; compare @Re
3:21). The unity of the Godhead, and the unity of the
Church, shall be simultaneously manifested at Christ's
second coming. Compare @Zep
3:9 Zec 14:9 Joh 17:21-24. The oldest manuscripts for
"shall have delivered up," read, "delivereth
up," which suits the sense better. It is "when He shall
have put down all rule," that "He delivereth
up the kingdom to the Father."
shall have put down all
rule--the effect produced during the millennary reign of
Himself and His saints (@Ps
110:1 8:6 2:6-9), to which passages Paul refers, resting
his argument on the two words, "all" and
"until," of the Psalmist: a proof of verbal
inspiration of Scripture (compare @Re
2:26,27). Meanwhile, He "rules in the midst of His
enemies" (@Ps
110:2). He is styled "the King" when He takes
His great power (@Mt
25:34 Re 11:15,17). The Greek for "put
down" is, "done away with," or
"brought to naught." "All" must be
subject to Him, whether openly opposed powers, as Satan and
his angels, or kings and angelic principalities (@Eph
1:21).
25. must--because Scripture foretells it.
till--There will be no
further need of His mediatorial kingdom, its object having
been realized.
enemies under his feet--(@Lu
19:27 Eph 1:22).
26. shall be--Greek, "is done away
with" (@Re
20:14; compare @Re
1:18). It is to believers especially this applies (@1Co
15:55-57); even in the case of unbelievers, death is
done away with by the general resurrection. Satan brought in
sin, and sin brought in death! So they
shall be destroyed (rendered utterly powerless) in the same
order (@1Co
15:56 Heb 2:14 Re 19:20 20:10,14).
27. all things--including death (compare @Eph
1:22 Php 3:21 Heb 2:8 1Pe 3:22). It is said, "hath
put," for what God has said is the same as if it were
already done, so sure is it. Paul here quotes @Ps
8:6 in proof of his previous declaration, "For (it
is written), 'He hath put all things under His feet.'"
under his feet--as His
footstool (@Ps
110:1). In perfect and lasting subjection.
when he--namely, God,
who by His Spirit inspired the Psalmist.
28. Son . . . himself . . . subject--not
as the creatures are, but as a Son voluntarily
subordinate to, though co-equal with, the Father. In the
mediatorial kingdom, the Son had been, in a manner, distinct
from the Father. Now, His kingdom shall merge in the
Father's, with whom He is one; not that there is thus any
derogation from His honor; for the Father Himself wills
"that all should honor the Son, as they honor the
Father" (@Joh
5:22,23 Heb 1:6).
God . . . all in
all--as Christ is all in all (@Col
3:11; compare @Zec
14:9). Then, and not till then, "all
things," without the least infringement of the divine
prerogative, shall be subject to the Son, and the Son
subordinate to the Father, while co-equally sharing His
glory. Contrast @Ps
10:4 14:1. Even the saints do not fully realize God as
their "all" (@Ps
73:25) now, through desiring it; then each shall feel, God
is all to me.
29. Else--if there be no resurrection.
what shall they do?--How
wretched is their lot!
they . . . which
are baptized for the dead--third person; a class
distinct from that in which the apostle places himself,
"we" (@1Co
15:30); first person. ALFORD thinks there is an allusion
to a practice at Corinth of baptizing a living person in
behalf of a friend who died unbaptized; thus Paul,
without giving the least sanction to the practice, uses an ad
hominem argument from it against its practicers, some of
whom, though using it, denied the resurrection: "What
account can they give of their practice; why are they at the
trouble of it, if the dead rise not?" [So Jesus used an
ad hominem argument, @Mt
12:27]. But if so, it is strange there is no direct
censure of it. Some Marcionites adopted the practice at a
later period, probably from taking this passage, as ALFORD
does; but, generally, it was unknown in the Church. BENGEL
translates, "over (immediately upon) the dead,"
that is, who will be gathered to the dead immediately
after baptism. Compare @Job
17:1, "the graves are ready for me." The price
they get for their trouble is, that they should be gathered
to the dead for ever (@1Co
15:13,16). Many in the ancient Church put off baptism
till near death. This seems the better view; though there
may have been some rites of symbolical baptism at Corinth,
now unknown, perhaps grounded on Jesus' words (@Mt
20:22,23), which Paul here alludes to. The best
punctuation is, "If the dead rise not at all, why are
they then baptized for them" (so the oldest
manuscripts read the last words, instead of "for the
dead")?
30. we--apostles (@1Co
15:9 1Co 4:9). A gradation from those who could only for
a little time enjoy this life (that is, those baptized at
the point of death), to us, who could enjoy it
longer, if we had not renounced the world for Christ [BENGEL].
31. by your rejoicing--by the glorying which I
have concerning you, as the fruit of my labors in the
Lord. Some of the earliest manuscripts and fathers read
"our," with the same sense. BENGEL understands
"your rejoicing," to be the enjoyable state of
the Corinthians, as contrasted with his dying daily to
give his converts rejoicing or glorying (@1Co
4:8 2Co 4:12,15 Eph 3:13 Php 1:26). But the words,
"which I have," favor the explanation--"the
rejoicing which I have over you." Many of the
oldest manuscripts and Vulgate insert
"brethren" here.
I die daily--This
ought to stand first in the sentence, as it is so put
prominently forward in the Greek. I am day by day in
sight of death, exposed to it, and expecting it (@2Co
4:11,12 1:8,9 11:23).
32. Punctuate thus: "If after the manner of men
I have fought with beasts at Ephesus, what advantageth it
me? If the dead rise not, let us eat and drink,"
&c. [BENGEL]. If "merely as a man"
(with the mere human hope of the present life; not with the
Christian's hope of the resurrection; answering to "If
the dead rise not," the parallel clause in the next
sentence), I have fought with men resembling savage beasts.
Heraclitus, of Ephesus, had termed his countrymen "wild
beasts" four hundred years before. So Epimenides called
the Cretians (@Tit
1:12). Paul was still at Ephesus (@1Co
16:8), and there his life was daily in danger (@1Co
4:9; compare @2Co
1:8). Though the tumult (@Ac
19:29,30) had not yet taken place (for after it
he set out immediately for Macedonia), this Epistle
was written evidently just before it, when the storm was
gathering; "many adversaries" (@1Co
16:9) were already menacing him.
what advantageth it me?--seeing
I have renounced all that, "as a mere man,"
might compensate me for such sufferings, gain, fame, &c.
let us eat,
&c.--Quoted from the Septuagint, (@Isa
22:13), where the prophet describes the reckless
self-indulgence of the despisers of God's call to mourning,
Let us enjoy the good things of life now, for it soon will
end. Paul imitates the language of such skeptics, to reprove
both their theory and practice. "If men but persuade
themselves that they shall die like the beasts, they soon
will live like beasts too" [SOUTH].
33. evil communications corrupt good manners--a
current saying, forming a verse in MENANDER, the comic poet,
who probably took it from Euripides [SOCRATES, Ecclesiastical
History, 3.16]. "Evil communications" refer to
intercourse with those who deny the resurrection. Their
notion seems to have been that the resurrection is merely
spiritual, that sin has its seat solely in the body, and
will be left behind when the soul leaves it, if, indeed, the
soul survive death at all.
good--not only good-natured,
but pliant. Intimacy with the profligate society
around was apt to corrupt the principles of the Corinthians.
34. Awake--literally, "out of the sleep"
of carnal intoxication into which ye are thrown by the
influence of these skeptics (@1Co
15:32 Joe 1:5).
to righteousness--in
contrast with "sin" in this verse, and corrupt
manners (@1Co
15:33).
sin not--Do not give
yourselves up to sinful pleasures. The Greek
expresses a continued state of abstinence from sin. Thus,
Paul implies that they who live in sinful pleasures readily
persuade themselves of what they wish, namely, that there is
to be no resurrection.
some--the same as in @1Co
15:12.
have not the knowledge of
God--and so know not His power in the
resurrection (@Mt
22:29). Stronger than "are ignorant of God."
An habitual ignorance: wilful, in that they prefer to
keep their sins, rather than part with them, in order to know
God (compare @Joh
7:17 1Pe 2:15).
to your shame--that
you Corinthian Christians, who boast of your knowledge,
should have among you, and maintain intercourse with, those
so practically ignorant of God, as to deny the resurrection.
35. How--It is folly to deny a fact of REVELATION,
because we do not know the "how." Some
measure God's power by their petty intelligence, and won't
admit, even on His assurance, anything which they
cannot explain. Ezekiel's answer of faith to the
question is the truly wise one (@Eze
37:3). So Jesus argues not on principles of philosophy,
but wholly from "the power of God," as declared by
the Word of God (@Mt
19:26 Mr 10:27 12:23 Lu 18:27).
come--The dead are
said to depart, or to be deceased: those
rising again to come. The objector could not
understand how the dead are to rise, and with what
kind of a body they are to come. Is it to be the same
body? If so, how is this, since the resurrection bodies will
not eat or drink, or beget children, as the natural bodies
do? Besides, the latter have mouldered into dust. How
then can they rise again? If it be a different body, how can
the personal identity be preserved? Paul answers, In one
sense it will be the same body, in another, a distinct body.
It will be a body, but a spiritual, not a natural, body.
36. fool--with all thy boasted philosophy (@Ps
14:1).
that which thou--"thou,"
emphatical: appeal to the objector's own experience:
"The seed which thou thyself sowest." Paul,
in this verse and in @1Co
15:42, answers the question of @1Co
15:35, "How?" and in @1Co
15:37-41,43, the question, "With what kind
of body?" He converts the very objection (the death of
the natural body) into an argument. Death, so far from
preventing quickening, is the necessary prelude and
prognostication of it, just as the seed "is not
quickened" into a new sprout with increased produce,
"except it die" (except a dissolution of its
previous organization takes place). Christ by His death for
us has not given us a reprieve from death as to the life
which we have from Adam; nay, He permits the law to take its
course on our fleshly nature; but He brings from Himself new
spiritual and heavenly life out of death (@1Co
15:37).
37. not that body that shall be--a body
beautiful and no longer a "bare grain" [BENGEL].
No longer without stalk or ear, but clothed with blade and
ears, and yielding many grains instead of only one [GROTIUS].
There is not an identity of all the particles of the old and
the new body. For the perpetual transmutation of matter is
inconsistent with this. But there is a hidden germ which
constitutes the identity of body amidst all outward changes:
the outward accretions fall off in its development, while
the germ remains the same. Every such germ
("seed," @1Co
15:38) "shall have its own body," and be
instantly recognized, just as each plant now is known from
the seed that was sown (see on 1Co
6:13). So Christ by the same image illustrated the truth
that His death was the necessary prelude of His putting on
His glorified body, which is the ground of the regeneration
of the many who believe (@Joh
12:24). Progress is the law of the spiritual, as of the
natural world. Death is the avenue not to mere revivification
or reanimation, but to resurrection and regeneration
(@Mt
19:28 Php 3:21). Compare "planted,"
&c., @Ro
6:5.
38. as it hath pleased him--at creation, when He gave
to each of the (kinds of) seeds (so the Greek
is for "to every seed") a body of its own
(@Ge
1:11, "after its kind," suited to its
species). So God can and will give to the blessed at the
resurrection their own appropriate body, such as
it pleases Him, and such as is suitable to their
glorified state: a body peculiar to the individual,
substantially the same as the body sown.
39-41. Illustrations of the suitability of bodies,
however various, to their species: the flesh of the several
species of animals; bodies celestial and terrestrial; the
various kinds of light in the sun, moon, and stars,
respectively.
flesh--animal organism
[DE WETTE]. He implies by the word that our resurrection
bodies shall be in some sense really flesh, not mere
phantoms of air [ESTIUS]. So some of the oldest creeds
expressed it, "I believe in the resurrection of the flesh."
Compare as to Jesus' own resurrection body, @Lu
24:39 Joh 20:27; to which ours shall be made like,
and therefore shall be flesh, but not of animal
organism (@Php
3:21) and liable to corruption. But @1Co
15:50 below implies, it is not "flesh and
blood" in the animal sense we now understand them; for
these "shall not inherit the kingdom of God."
not the same--not
flesh of the same nature and excellency. As the kinds of
flesh, however widely differing from one another, do not
cease to be flesh, so the kinds of bodies, however differing
from one another, are still bodies. All this is to
illustrate the difference of the new celestial body from its
terrestrial seed, while retaining a substantial identity.
beasts--quadrupeds.
another of fishes
. . . another of birds--Most of the oldest
manuscripts read thus, "another FLESH of birds
. . . another of fishes": the order of
nature.
40. celestial bodies--not the sun, moon, and stars,
which are first introduced in @1Co
15:41, but the bodies of angels, as distinguished
from the bodies of earthly creatures.
the glory of the celestial--(@Lu
9:26).
glory of . . .
terrestrial--(@Mt
6:28,29 1Pe 1:24).
41. one glory of . . . sun . . .
another . . . of . . . moon--The
analogy is not to prove different degrees of glory among the
blessed (whether this may be, or not, indirectly
hinted at), but this: As the various fountains of light,
which is so similar in its aspect and properties, differ
(the sun from the moon, and the moon from the stars; and
even one star from another star, though all seem so much
alike); so there is nothing unreasonable in the doctrine
that our present bodies differ from our
resurrection bodies, though still continuing bodies.
Compare the same simile, appropriate especially in the clear
Eastern skies (@Da
12:3 Mt 13:43). Also that of seed in the same
parable (@Mt
13:24 Ga 6:7,8).
42. sown--Following up the image of seed. A
delightful word instead of burial.
in corruption--liable
to corruption: corruptible: not merely a prey when
dead to corruption; as the contrast shows, "raised
in incorruption," that is, not liable to corruption:
incorruptible.
43. in dishonour--answering to "our vile
body" (@Php
3:21); literally, "our body of humiliation":
liable to various humiliations of disease, injury, and decay
at last.
in glory--the garment
of incorruption (@1Co
15:42,43) like His glorious body (@Php
4:21), which we shall put on (@1Co
15:49,53 2Co 5:2-4).
in weakness--liable to
infirmities (@2Co
13:4).
in power--answering to
a "spiritual body" (@1Co
15:44; compare @Lu
1:17, "Spirit and power"). Not liable to the
weaknesses of our present frail bodies (@Isa
33:24 Re 21:4).
44. a natural body--literally, "an animal
body," a body moulded in its organism of
"flesh and blood" (@1Co
15:50) to suit the animal soul which predominates in it.
The Holy Spirit in the spirit of believers, indeed,
is an earnest of a superior state (@Ro
8:11), but meanwhile in the body the animal soul
preponderates; hereafter the Spirit shall predominate, and
the animal soul be duly subordinate.
spiritual body--a body
wholly moulded by the Spirit, and its organism not conformed
to the lower and animal (@Lu
20:35,36), but to the higher and spiritual, life
(compare @1Co
2:14 1Th 5:23).
There is, &c.--The
oldest manuscripts read, "IF there is a natural (or animal-souled)
body, there is also a spiritual body." It is no
more wonderful a thing, that there should be a body fitted
to the capacities and want of man's highest part, his spirit
(which we see to be the case), than that there should be one
fitted to the capacities and wants of his subordinate part,
the animal soul [ALFORD].
45. so--in accordance with the distinction just
mentioned between the natural or animal-souled body
and the spiritual body.
it is written--(@Ge
2:7); "Man became (was made to become) a living
soul," that is, endowed with an animal soul, the
living principle of his body.
the last Adam--the
LAST Head of humanity, who is to be fully manifested in the
last day, which is His day (@Joh
6:39). He is so called in @Job
19:25; see on Job 19:25 (compare @Ro
5:14). In contrast to "the last," Paul calls
"man" (@Ge
2:7) "the FIRST Adam."
quickening--not only
living, but making alive (@Joh
5:21 6:33,39,40,54,57,62,63 Ro 8:11). As the natural
or animal-souled body (@1Co
15:44) is the fruit of our union with the first Adam, an
animal-souled man, so the spiritual body is
the fruit of our union with the second Adam, who is the
quickening Spirit (@2Co
3:17). As He became representative of the whole of
humanity in His union of the two natures, He exhausted in
His own person the sentence of death passed on all men, and
giveth spiritual and everlasting life to whom He will.
46. afterward--Adam had a soul not necessarily
mortal, as it afterwards became by sin, but "a living
soul," and destined to live for ever, if he had eaten
of the tree of life (@Ge
3:22); still his body was but an animal-souled
body, not a spiritual body, such as believers shall
have; much less was he a "life-giving spirit," as
Christ. His soul had the germ of the Spirit, rather than the
fulness of it, such as man shall have when restored
"body, soul, and spirit," by the second Adam (@1Th
5:23). As the first and lower Adam came before the
second and heavenly Adam, so the animal-souled body comes
first, and must die before it be changed into the spiritual
body (that is, that in which the Spirit predominates over
the animal soul).
47. of the earth--inasmuch as being sprung from the
earth, he is "earthy" (@Ge
2:7 3:19, "dust thou art"); that is, not
merely earthly or born upon the earth, but terrene,
or of earth; literally, "of heaped
earth" or clay. "Adam" means red earth.
the Lord--omitted in
the oldest manuscripts and versions.
from heaven--(@Joh
3:13,31). Humanity in Christ is generic. In Him man is
impersonated in his true ideal as God originally designed
him. Christ is the representative man, the federal head of
redeemed man.
48. As is the earthy--namely, Adam.
they . . . that
are earthy--All Adam's posterity in their natural
state (@Joh
3:6,7).
the heavenly--Christ.
they . . . that
are heavenly--His people in their regenerate state (@Php
3:20,21). As the former precedes the latter state, so
the natural bodies precede the spiritual bodies.
49. as--Greek, "even as" (see @Ge
5:3).
we shall also bear--or
wear as a garment [BENGEL]. The oldest manuscripts and
versions read, "We must also bear," or "let
us also bear." It implies the divine appointment
(compare "must," @1Co
15:53) and faith assenting to it. An exhortation, and
yet implying a promise (so @Ro
8:29). The conformity to the image of the heavenly
Representative man is to be begun here in our souls, in
part, and shall be perfected at the resurrection in both
bodies and souls.
50. (See on 1Co 15:37; 1Co 15:39). "Flesh and
blood" of the same animal and corruptible nature as our
present (@1Co
15:44) animal-souled bodies, cannot inherit the
kingdom of God. Therefore the believer acquiesces gladly in
the unrepealed sentence of the holy law, which appoints the
death of the present body as the necessary preliminary to
the resurrection body of glory. Hence he "dies
daily" to the flesh and to the world, as the necessary
condition to his regeneration here and hereafter (@Joh
3:6 Ga 2:20). As the being born of the flesh
constitutes a child of Adam, so the being born of the
Spirit constitutes a child of God.
cannot--Not merely is
the change of body possible, but it is necessary.
The spirit extracted from the dregs of wine does not so much
differ from them, as the glorified man does from the mortal
man [BENGEL] of mere animal flesh and blood (@Ga
1:16). The resurrection body will be still a body though
spiritual, and substantially retaining the personal
identity; as is proved by @Lu
24:39 Joh 20:27, compared with @Php
3:21.
the kingdom of God--which
is not at all merely animal, but altogether spiritual. Corruption
doth not inherit, though it is the way to, incorruption
(@1Co
15:36,52,53).
51. Behold--Calling attention to the
"mystery" heretofore hidden in God's purposes, but
now revealed.
you--emphatical in the
Greek; I show (Greek, "tell,"
namely, by the word of the Lord, @1Th
4:15) You, who think you have so much knowledge, "a
mystery" (compare @Ro
11:25) which your reason could never have discovered.
Many of the old manuscripts and Fathers read, "We shall
all sleep, but we shall not all be changed"; but this
is plainly a corrupt reading, inconsistent with @1Th
4:15,17, and with the apostle's argument here, which is
that a change is necessary (@1Co
15:53). English Version is supported by some of
the oldest manuscripts and Fathers. The Greek is
literally "We all shall not sleep, but," &c.
The putting off of the corruptible body for an incorruptible
by an instantaneous change will, in the case of
"the quick," stand as equivalent to death,
appointed to all men (@Heb
9:27); of this Enoch and Elijah are types and
forerunners. The "we" implies that Christians in
that age and every successive age since and hereafter were
designed to stand waiting, as if Christ might come again in
their time, and as if they might be found among "the
quick."
52. the last trump--at the sounding of the trumpet on
the last day [VATABLUS] (@Mt
24:31 1Th 4:16). Or the Spirit by Paul hints that the
other trumpets mentioned subsequently in the Apocalypse
shall precede, and that this shall be the last of all
(compare @Isa
27:13 Zec 9:14). As the law was given with the sound of
a trumpet, so the final judgment according to it (@Heb
12:19; compare @Ex
19:16). As the Lord ascended "with the sound of a
trumpet" (@Ps
47:5), so He shall descend (@Re
11:15). The trumpet was sounded to convoke the people on
solemn feasts, especially on the first day of the seventh
month (the type of the completion of time; seven
being the number for perfection; on the tenth of the
same month was the atonement, and on the fifteenth the feast
of tabernacles, commemorative of completed salvation out of
the spiritual Egypt, compare @Zec
14:18,19); compare @Ps
50:1-7. Compare His calling forth of Lazarus from the
grave "with a loud voice," @Joh
11:43, with @Joh
5:25,28.
and--immediately, in
consequence.
53. this--pointing to his own body and that of
those whom he addresses.
put on--as a garment
(@2Co
5:2,3).
immortality--Here
only, besides @1Ti
6:16, the word "immortality" is found. Nowhere
is the immortality of the soul, distinct from the
body, taught; a notion which many erroneously have derived
from heathen philosophers. Scripture does not contemplate
the anomalous state brought about by death, as the
consummation to be earnestly looked for (@2Co
5:4), but the resurrection.
54. then--not before. Death has as yet a sting
even to the believer, in that his body is to be under
its power till the resurrection. But then the sting and
power of death shall cease for ever.
Death is swallowed up in
victory--In Hebrew of @Isa
25:8, from which it is quoted, "He (Jehovah)
will swallow up death in victory"; that is, for
ever: as "in victory" often means in Hebrew
idiom (@Jer
3:5 La 5:20). Christ will swallow it up so altogether
victoriously that it shall never more regain its power
(compare @Ho
6:2 13:14 2Co 5:4 Heb 2:14,15 Re 20:14 21:4).
55. Quoted from @Ho
13:14, substantially; but freely used by the warrant of
the Spirit by which Paul wrote. The Hebrew may be
translated, "O death, where are thy plagues? Where, O
Hades, is thy destruction?" The Septuagint,
"Where is thy victory (literally, in a lawsuit),
O death? Where is thy sting, O Hades? . . .
Sting" answers to the Hebrew
"plagues," namely, a poisoned sting causing
plagues. Appropriate, as to the old serpent (@Ge
3:14,15 Nu 21:6). "Victory" answers to the Hebrew
"destruction." Compare @Isa
25:7, "destroy . . . veil
. . . over all nations," namely, victoriously
destroy it; and to "in victory" (@1Co
15:54), which he triumphantly repeats. The
"where" implies their past victorious destroying
power and sting, now gone for ever; obtained through Satan's
triumph over man in Eden, which enlisted God's law on the
side of Satan and death against man (@Ro
5:12,17,21). The souls in Hades being freed by .the
resurrection, death's sting and victory are gone. For
"O grave," the oldest manuscripts and versions
read, "O death," the second time.
56. If there were no sin, there would be no death.
Man's transgression of the law gives death its lawful power.
strength of sin is
the law--Without the law sin is not perceived or imputed
(@Ro
3:20 4:15 5:13). The law makes sin the more grievous by
making God's will the clearer (@Ro
7:8-10). Christ's people are no longer "under the
law" (@Ro
6:14).
57. to God--The victory was in no way due to
ourselves (@Ps
98:1).
giveth--a present
certainty.
the victory--which
death and Hades ("the grave") had aimed at, but
which, notwithstanding the opposition of them, as well as of
the law and sin, we have gained. The repetition of the word
(@1Co
15:54,55) is appropriate to the triumph gained.
58. beloved--Sound doctrine kindles Christian love.
steadfast--not turning
aside from the faith of the resurrection of yourselves.
unmovable--not turned
aside by others (@1Co
15:12 Col 1:23).
the work of the Lord--the
promotion of Christ's kingdom (@Php
2:30).
not in vain--as the
deniers of the resurrection would make it (@1Co
15:14,17).
in the Lord--applying
to the whole sentence and its several clauses: Ye, as being
in the Lord by faith, know that your labor in the Lord (that
is, labor according to His will) is not to be without its
reward in the Lord (through His merits and according to His
gracious appointment).
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