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THE FIRST EPISTLE
OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
CORINTHIANS
Commentary by A. R.
FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 3
@1Co
3:1-23. PAUL COULD NOT SPEAK TO THEM OF DEEP SPIRITUAL
TRUTHS, AS THEY WERE CARNAL, CONTENDING FOR THEIR SEVERAL
TEACHERS; THESE ARE NOTHING BUT WORKERS FOR GOD, TO WHOM
THEY MUST GIVE ACCOUNT IN THE DAY OF FIERY JUDGMENT. THE
HEARERS ARE GOD'S TEMPLE, WHICH THEY MUST NOT DEFILE BY
CONTENTIONS FOR TEACHERS, WHO, AS WELL AS ALL THINGS, ARE
THEIRS, BEING CHRIST'S.
1. And I--that is, as the natural (animal) man cannot
receive, so I also could not speak unto you the deep
things of God, as I would to the spiritual; but
I was compelled to speak to you as I would to
MEN OF FLESH. The oldest manuscripts read this for
"carnal." The former (literally,
"fleshy") implies men wholly of flesh, or natural.
Carnal, or fleshly, implies not they were wholly
natural or unregenerate (@1Co
2:14), but that they had much of a carnal tendency;
for example their divisions. Paul had to speak to them as he
would to men wholly natural, inasmuch as they are still
carnal (@1Co
3:3) in many respects, notwithstanding their conversion
(@1Co
1:4-9).
babes--contrasted with
the perfect (fully matured) in Christ (@Col
1:28; compare @Heb
5:13,14). This implies they were not men wholly of
flesh, though carnal in tendencies. They had life in
Christ, but it was weak. He blames them for being still in a
degree (not altogether, compare @1Co
1:5,7; therefore he says as) babes in
Christ, when by this time they ought to have "come unto
a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the
fulness of Christ" (@Eph
4:13). In @Ro
7:14, also the oldest manuscripts read, "I am a man
of flesh."
2. (@Heb
5:12).
milk--the elementary
"principles of the doctrine of Christ."
3. envying--jealousy, rivalry. As this refers
to their feelings, "strife" refers to their
words, and "divisions" to their actions
[BENGEL]. There is a gradation, or ascending climax: envying
had produced strife, and strife divisions
(factious parties) [GROTIUS]. His language becomes severer
now as He proceeds; in @1Co
1:11 he had only said "contentions," he now
multiplies the words (compare the stronger term, @1Co
4:6, than in @1Co
3:21).
carnal--For
"strife" is a "work of the flesh" (@Ga
5:20). The "flesh" includes all feelings that
aim not at the glory of God, and the good of our neighbor,
but at gratifying self.
walk as men--as
unregenerate men (compare @Mt
16:23). "After the flesh, not after the
Spirit" of God, as becomes you as regenerate by the
Spirit (@Ro
8:4 Ga 5:25,26).
4. (@1Co
1:12).
are ye not carnal--The
oldest manuscripts read, "Are ye not men?"
that is, "walking as men" unregenerate (@1Co
3:3).
5. Who then--Seeing then that ye severally strive so
for your favorite teachers, "Who is (of what intrinsic
power and dignity) Paul?" If so great an apostle
reasons so of himself, how much more does humility, rather
than self-seeking, become ordinary ministers!
Paul . . .
Apollos--The oldest manuscripts read in the reverse
order, "Apollos," &c. Paul." He puts
Apollos before himself in humility.
but ministers,
&c.--The oldest manuscripts have no "but."
"Who is Apollos . . . Paul? (mere) ministers
(a lowly word appropriate here, servants), by whom
(not "in whom"; by whose ministrations)
ye believed."
as . . . Lord
gave to every man--that is, to the several hearers, for
it was GOD that "gave the increase" (@1Co
3:6).
6. I . . . planted, Apollos watered--(@Ac
18:1 19:1). Apollos at his own desire (@Ac
18:27) was sent by the brethren to Corinth, and there
followed up the work which Paul had begun.
God gave the increase--that
is, the growth (@1Co
3:10 Ac 18:27). "Believed through grace."
Though ministers are nothing, and God all in all, yet God
works by instruments, and promises the Holy Spirit in the
faithful use of means. This is the dispensation of the
Spirit, and ours is the ministry of the Spirit.
7. neither is he that . . . anything . . .
but God--namely, is all in all. "God" is
emphatically last in the Greek, "He that giveth
the increase (namely), GOD." Here follows a
parenthesis, @1Co
3:8-21, where "Let no man glory in men" stands
in antithetic contrast to "God" here.
8. one--essentially in their aim they are one,
engaged in one and the same ministry; therefore they ought
not to be made by you the occasion of forming separate
parties.
and every man--rather
"but every man." Though in their service or
ministry, they are essentially "one," yet every
minister is separately responsible in "his own"
work, and "shall receive his own (emphatically
repeated) reward, according to his own labor."
The reward is something over and above personal
salvation (@1Co
3:14,15 2Jo 1:8). He shall be rewarded according to, not
his success or the amount of work done, but "according
to his own labor." It shall be said to him, "Well
done, thou good and (not successful, but) faithful
servant, enter thou into the joy of thy Lord" (@Mt
25:23).
9. Translate, as the Greek collocation of
words, and the emphasis on "God" thrice repeated,
requires, "For (in proof that "each shall receive
reward according to his own labor," namely, from God)
it is of God that we are the fellow workers (laboring with,
but under, and belonging to Him as His
servants, @2Co
5:20 6:1; compare @Ac
15:4; see on 1Th 3:2) of God that ye are the field (or
tillage), of God that ye are the building" [ALFORD].
"Building" is a new image introduced here, as
suited better than that of husbandry, to set forth the
different kinds of teaching and their results, which he is
now about to discuss. "To edify" or "build
up" the Church of Christ is similarly used (@Eph
2:21,22 4:29).
10. grace . . . given unto me--Paul puts
this first, to guard against seeming to want humility, in
pronouncing himself "a WISE master builder," in
the clause following [CHRYSOSTOM]. The "grace" is
that "given" to him in common with all Christians
(@1Co
3:5), only proportioned to the work which God had for
him to do [ALFORD].
wise--that is,
skilful. His skill is shown in his laying a
foundation. The unskilful builder lays none (@Lu
6:49). Christ is the foundation (@1Co
3:11).
another--who ever
comes after me. He does not name Apollos; for he
speaks generally of all successors, whoever they be.
His warning, "Let every man (every teacher) take
heed how," &c. refers to other successors rather
than Apollos, who doubtless did not, as they, build wood,
hay, &c., on the foundation (compare @1Co
4:15). "I have done my part, let them who follow me
see (so the Greek for 'take heed') to theirs" [BENGEL].
how--with what
material [ALFORD]. How far wisely, and in
builder-like style (@1Pe
4:11).
buildeth thereupon--Here
the building or superstructure raised on
Christ the "foundation," laid by Paul (@1Co
2:2) is not, as in @Eph
2:20,21, the Christian Church made up of believers, the
"lively stones" (@1Pe
2:5), but the doctrinal and practical teaching
which the teachers who succeeded Paul, superadded to his
first teaching; not that they taught what was false, but
their teaching was subtle and speculative reasoning, rather
than solid and simple truth.
11. (@Isa
28:16 Ac 4:12 Eph 2:20).
For--my warning
("take heed," &c. @1Co
3:10) is as to the superstructure ("buildeth thereupon"),
not as to the foundation: "For other foundation
can no man lay, than that which has (already) been laid (by
God) Jesus Christ," the person, not the mere abstract
doctrine about Him, though the latter also is included; Jesus,
GOD-SAVIOUR; Christ, MESSIAH or ANOINTED.
can--A man can
not lay any other, since the only one recognized by God has
been already laid.
12. Now--rather, "But." The image is that
of a building on a solid foundation, and partly composed of
durable and precious, partly of perishable, materials. The
"gold, silver, precious stones," which all can
withstand fire (@Re
21:18,19), are teachings that will stand the
fiery test of judgment; "wood, hay, stubble," are
those which cannot stand it; not positive heresy, for that
would destroy the foundation, but teaching mixed up with
human philosophy and Judaism, curious rather than useful.
Besides the teachings, the superstructure represents
also the persons cemented to the Church by them, the
reality of whose conversion, through the teachers'
instrumentality, will be tested at the last day. Where there
is the least grain of real gold of faith, it shall never be
lost (@1Pe
1:7; compare @1Co
4:12). On the other hand, the lightest straw feeds the
fire [BENGEL] (@Mt
5:19).
13. Every man's work--each teacher's superstructure
on the foundation.
the day--of the Lord
(@1Co
1:8 Heb 10:25 1Th 5:4). The article is emphatic, "The
day," that is, the great day of days, the long expected
day.
declare it--old
English for "make it clear" (@1Co
4:4).
it shall be revealed by
fire--it, that is, "every man's work." Rather,
"He," the Lord, whose day it is (@2Th
1:7,8). Translate literally, "is being revealed
(the present in the Greek implies the certainty
and nearness of the event, @Re
22:10,20) in fire" (@Mal
3:3 4:1). The fire (probably figurative
here, as the gold, hay, &c.). is not purgatory
(as Rome teaches, that is, purificatory and punitive),
but probatory, not restricted to those dying in
"venial sin"; the supposed intermediate class
between those entering heaven at once, and those dying in
mortal sin who go to hell, but universal, testing the
godly and ungodly alike (@2Co
5:10; compare @Mr
9:49). This fire is not till the last day, the supposed
fire of purgatory begins at death. The fire of Paul
is to try the works, the fire of purgatory the persons,
of men. Paul's fire causes "loss" to the
sufferers; Rome's purgatory, great gain, namely, heaven at
last to those purged by it, if only it were true. Thus this
passage, quoted by Rome for, is altogether against,
purgatory. "It was not this doctrine that gave rise to
prayers for the dead; but the practice of praying for the
dead [which crept in from the affectionate but mistaken
solicitude of survivors] gave rise to the doctrine" [WHATELY].
14. abide--abide the testing fire (@Mt
3:11,12).
which he hath built
thereupon--which he built on the foundation.
reward--wages,
as a builder, that is, teacher. His converts built on Christ
the foundation, through his faithful teaching, shall be his
"crown of rejoicing" (@2Co
1:14 Php 2:16 1Th 2:19).
15. If . . . be burnt--if any teacher's
work consist of such materials as the fire will destroy
[ALFORD].
suffer loss--that is,
forfeit the special "reward"; not that he shall
lose salvation (which is altogether a free gift, not
a "reward" or wages), for he remains still on the
foundation (@1Co
3:12 2Jo 1:6).
saved; yet so as by fire--rather,
"so as through fire" (@Zec
3:2 Am 4:11 Jude 1:23). "Saved, yet not without
fire" (@Ro
2:27) [BENGEL]. As a builder whose building, not the
foundation, is consumed by fire, escapes, but with the loss
of his work [ALFORD]; as the shipwrecked merchant, though he
has lost his merchandise, is saved, though having to pass through
the waves [BENGEL]; @Mal
3:1,2 4:1, give the key to explain the imagery. The
"Lord suddenly coming to His temple" in flaming
"fire," all the parts of the building which will
not stand that fire will be consumed; the builders will
escape with personal salvation, but with the loss of their
work, through the midst of the conflagration [ALFORD].
Again, a distinction is recognized between minor and
fundamental doctrines (if we regard the superstructure as
representing the doctrines superadded to the
elementary essentials); a man may err as to the former, and
yet be saved, but not so as to the latter (compare @Php
3:15).
16. Know ye not--It is no new thing I tell you, in
calling you "God's building"; ye know and ought to
remember, ye are the noblest kind of building, "the
temple of God."
ye--all Christians
form together one vast temple. The expression is not,
"ye are temples," but "ye are the
temple" collectively, and "lively stones"
(@1Pe
2:5) individually.
God . . . Spirit--God's
indwelling, and that of the Holy Spirit, are one; therefore
the Holy Spirit is God. No literal "temple" is
recognized by the New Testament in the Christian Church. The
only one is the spiritual temple, the whole body of
believing worshippers in which the Holy Spirit dwells (@1Co
6:19 Joh 4:23,24). The synagogue, not the temple,
was the model of the Christian house of worship. The temple
was the house of sacrifice, rather than of prayer.
Prayers in the temple were silent and individual (@Lu
1:10 18:10-13), not joint and public, nor with reading
of Scripture, as in the synagogue. The temple, as the name
means (from a Greek root "to dwell"), was
the earthly dwelling-place of God, where alone He put
His name. The synagogue (as the name means an assembly)
was the place for assembling men. God now too has His
earthly temple, not one of wood and stone, but the
congregation of believers, the "living stones" on
the "spiritual house." Believers are all spiritual
priests in it. Jesus Christ, our High Priest, has the only
literal priesthood (@Mal
1:11 Mt 18:20 1Pe 2:5) [VITRINGA].
17. If any . . . defile . . . destroy--rather
as the Greek verb is the same in both cases, "destroy
. . . destroy." God repays in kind by a
righteous retaliation. The destroyer shall himself be
destroyed. As temporal death was the penalty of marring the
material temple (@Le
16:2 Da 5:2,3,30), so eternal death is the penalty of
marring the spiritual temple--the Church. The destroyers
here (@1Co
3:16,17), are distinct from the unwise or
unskilful builders (@1Co
3:12,15); the latter held fast the
"foundation" (@1Co
3:11), and, therefore, though they lose their work of
superstructure and the special reward, yet they are
themselves saved; the destroyers, on the contrary, assailed
with false teaching the foundation, and so subvert the
temple itself, and shall therefore be destroyed. (See on 1Co
3:10), [ESTIUS and NEANDER]. I think Paul passes here from
the teachers to all the members of the Church, who, by
profession, are "priests unto God" (@Ex
19:6 1Pe 2:9 Re 1:6). As the Aaronic priests were doomed
to die if they violated the old temple (@Ex
28:43), so any Christian who violates the sanctity of
the spiritual temple, shall perish eternally (@Heb
12:14 10:26,31).
holy--inviolable (@Hab
2:20).
which temple ye are--rather,
"the which (that is, holy) are ye" [ALFORD], and,
therefore, want of holiness on the part of any of you (or,
as ESTIUS, "to tamper with the foundation in teaching
you") is a violation of the temple, which cannot be let
to pass with impunity. GROTIUS supports English Version.
18. seemeth--that is, is, and is regarded by
himself and others.
wise in this world--wise
in mere worldly wisdom (@1Co
1:20).
let him become a fool--by
receiving the Gospel in its unworldly simplicity, and so becoming
a fool in the world's sight [ALFORD]. Let him no
longer think himself wise, but seek the true wisdom from
God, bringing his understanding into captivity to the
obedience of faith [ESTIUS].
19. with God--in the judgment of God.
it is written--in @Job
5:13. The formula of quoting SCRIPTURE used here,
establishes the canonicity of Job.
He taketh . . .
wise in . . . own craftiness--proving the
"foolishness" of the world's wisdom, since it is
made by God the very snare to catch those who think
themselves so wise. Literally, "He who taketh . . .
the whole of the sentence not being quoted, but only the
part which suited Paul's purpose.
20. Quotation from @Ps
94:11. There it is of men; here it is "of
the wise." Paul by inspiration states the class of men
whose "thoughts" (or rather, "reasonings,"
as suits the Greek and the sense of the context) the
Spirit designated in the Psalm, "vanity," namely,
the "proud" (@Ps
94:2) and worldly-wise, whom God in @Ps
94:8 calls "fools," though they "boast
themselves" of their wisdom in pushing their
interests (@Ps
94:4).
21. let no man glory in men--resuming the subject
from @1Co
3:4; compare @1Co
1:12,31, where the true object of glorying is stated:
"He that glorieth, let him glory in THE LORD."
Also @1Co
4:6, "That no one of you be puffed up for one
against another."
For all things--not
only all men. For you to glory thus in men, is
lowering yourselves from your high position as heirs of all
things. All men (including your teachers) belong to
Christ, and therefore to you, by your union with Him; He
makes them and all things work together for your good (@Ro
8:28). Ye are not for the sake of them, but they for the
sake of you (@2Co
4:5,15). They belong to you, not you to them.
22. Enumeration of some of the "all
things." The teachers, in whom they gloried, he puts
first (@1Co
1:12). He omits after "Cephas" or Christ
(to whom exclusively some at Corinth, @1Co
1:12, professed to belong); but, instead, substitutes
"ye are Christ's" (@1Co
3:23).
world . . . life
. . . death . . . things present . . .
things to come--Not only shall they not "separate
you from the love of God in Christ" (@Ro
8:38,39), but they "all are yours," that is,
are for you (@Ro
8:28), and belong to you, as they belong to Christ your
Head (@Heb
1:2).
things present--"things
actually present" [ALFORD].
23. ye are Christ's--not Paul's, or Apollos,' or
Cephas' (@1Co
11:3 Mt 23:8-10). "Neither be ye called masters;
for one is your Master, even Christ" (@Ro
14:8). Not merely a particular section of you, but ye
all are Christ's (@1Co
1:12).
Christ is God's--(@1Co
11:3). God is the ultimate end of all, even of Christ,
His co-equal Son (@1Co
15:28 Php 2:6-11).
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