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THE FIRST EPISTLE
OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
CORINTHIANS
Commentary by A. R.
FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 7
@1Co
7:1-40. REPLY TO THEIR INQUIRIES AS TO MARRIAGE; THE
GENERAL PRINCIPLE IN OTHER THINGS IS, ABIDE IN YOUR STATION,
FOR THE TIME IS SHORT.
1. The Corinthians in their letter had probably asked
questions which tended to disparage marriage, and had
implied that it was better to break it off when contracted
with an unbeliever.
good--that is,
"expedient," because of "the present
distress"; that is, the unsettled state of the world,
and the likelihood of persecutions tearing rudely asunder
those bound by marriage ties. @Heb
13:4, in opposition to ascetic and Romish notions of
superior sanctity in celibacy, declares,
"Marriage is HONORABLE IN ALL." Another reason why
in some cases celibacy may be a matter of Christian expediency
is stated in @1Co
7:34,35, "that ye may attend upon the Lord without
distraction." But these are exceptional cases, and in
exceptional times, such as those of Paul.
2. Here the general rule is given
to avoid
fornication--More literally, "on account of
fornications," to which as being very prevalent at
Corinth, and not even counted sins among the heathen,
unmarried persons might be tempted. The plural,
"fornications," marks irregular lusts, as
contrasted with the unity of the marriage relation [BENGEL].
let every man have--a
positive command to all who have not the gift of continency,
in fact to the great majority of the world (@1Co
7:5). The dignity of marriage is set forth by Paul (@Eph
5:25-32), in the fact that it signifies the mystical
union between Christ and the Church.
3, 4. The duty of cohabitation on the part of the
married.
due benevolence--The
oldest manuscripts read simply, "her due"; that
is, the conjugal cohabitation due by the marriage
contract (compare @1Co
7:4).
4. A paradox. She hath not power over her
body, and yet it is her own. The oneness of body
in which marriage places husband and wife explains this. The
one complements the other. Neither without the other
realizes the perfect ideal of man.
5. Defraud . . . not--namely, of the
conjugal duty "due" (@1Co
7:3; compare the Septuagint, @Ex
21:10).
except it be--"unless
perchance" [ALFORD].
give yourselves to--literally,
"be at leisure for"; be free from interruptions
for; namely, on some special "season,"
as the Greek for "time" means (compare @Ex
19:15 Joe 2:16 Zec 7:3).
fasting and prayer--The
oldest manuscripts omit "fasting and"; an
interpolation, evidently, of ascetics.
come together--The
oldest manuscripts read, "be together," namely, in
the regular state of the married.
Satan--who often
thrusts in his temptations to unholy thoughts amidst the
holiest exercises.
for your incontinency--because
of your inability to "contain" (@1Co
7:9) your natural propensities, which Satan would take
advantage of.
6. by permission . . . not of commandment--not
by God's permission to me to say it: but, "by
way of permission to you, not as a commandment."
"This" refers to the directions, @1Co
7:2-5.
7. even as I--having tile gift of continence (@Mt
19:11,12). This wish does not hold good absolutely, else
the extension of mankind and of the Church would cease; but
relatively to "the present distress" (@1Co
7:26).
8. to the unmarried--in general, of both sexes (@1Co
7:10,11).
and widows--in
particular.
even as I--unmarried
(@1Co
9:5).
9. if they cannot contain--that is, "have not
continency."
burn--with the secret
flame of lust, which lays waste the whole inner man.
(Compare AUGUSTINE [Holy Virginity]). The dew of
God's grace is needed to stifle the flame, which otherwise
would thrust men at last into hell-fire.
10. not I, but the Lord--(Compare @1Co
7:12,25,40). In ordinary cases he writes on inspired
apostolic authority (@1Co
14:37); but here on the direct authority of the Lord
Himself (@Mr
10:11,12). In both cases alike the things written are
inspired by the Spirit of God "but not all for all
time, nor all on the primary truths of the faith"
[ALFORD].
Let not the wife depart--literally,
"be separated from." Probably the separation on
either side, whether owing to the husband or to the wife, is
forbidden.
11. But and if she depart--or "be
separated." If the sin of separation has been
committed, that of a new marriage is not to be added (@Mt
5:32).
be reconciled--by
appeasing her husband's displeasure, and recovering his good
will.
let not . . .
husband put away . . . wife--In @Mt
5:32 the only exception allowed is, "saving for the
cause of fornication."
12. to the rest--the other classes (besides "the
married," @1Co
7:10, where both husband and wife are believers) about
whom the Corinthians had inquired, namely, those involved in
mixed marriages with unbelievers.
not the Lord--by any
direct command spoken by Him.
she be pleased--Greek,
"consents": implying his wish in the first
instance, with which hers concurs.
13. the woman--a believer.
let her not leave him--"her
husband," instead of "him," is the reading of
the oldest manuscripts The Greek for
"leave" is the same as in @1Co
7:12, "put away"; translate, "Let her not
put away [that is, part with] her husband." The
wife had the power of effecting a divorce by Greek and Roman
law.
14. sanctified--Those inseparably connected with the
people of God are hallowed thereby, so that the
latter may retain the connection without impairing their own
sanctity (compare @1Ti
4:5); nay, rather imparting to the former externally
some degree of their own hallowed character, and so
preparing the way for the unbeliever becoming at last
sanctified inwardly by faith.
by . . . by--rather,
"in . . . in"; that is, in virtue of the
marriage tie between them.
by the husband--The
oldest manuscripts read, "by the brother." It is
the fact of the husband being a "brother," that
is, a Christian, though the wife is not so, that
sanctifies or hallows the union.
else . . .
children unclean--that is, beyond the hallowed pale of
God's people: in contrast to "holy," that is, all
that is within the consecrated limits [CONYBEARE and HOWSON].
The phraseology accords with that of the Jews, who regarded
the heathen as "unclean," and all of the elect
nation as "holy," that is, partakers of the holy
covenant. Children were included in the covenant, as God
made it not only with Abraham, but with his "seed
after" him (@Ge
17:7). So the faith of one Christian parent gives to the
children a near relationship to the Church, just as if both
parents were Christians (compare @Ro
11:16). Timothy, the bearer of this Epistle, is an
instance in point (@Ac
16:1). Paul appeals to the Corinthians as recognizing
the principle, that the infants of heathen parents would not
be admissible to Christian baptism, because there is no
faith on the part of the parents; but where one parent is a
believer, the children are regarded as not aliens from, but
admissible even in infancy as sharers in, the Christian
covenant: for the Church presumes that the believing parent
will rear the child in the Christian faith. Infant baptism
tacitly superseded infant circumcision, just as the
Christian Lord's day gradually superseded the Jewish sabbath,
without our having any express command for, or record of,
transference. The setting aside of circumcision and of
sabbaths in the case of the Gentiles was indeed expressly
commanded by the apostles and Paul, but the substitution of
infant baptism and of the Lord's day were tacitly adopted,
not expressly enacted. No explicit mention of it occurs till
IRENÆUS in the third century; but no society of Christians
that we read of disputed its propriety till fifteen hundred
years after Christ. Anabaptists would have us defer baptism
till maturity as the child cannot understand the nature of
it. But a child may be made heir of an estate: it is his,
though incapable at the time of using or comprehending its
advantage; he is not hereafter to acquire the title and
claim to it. he will hereafter understand his claim, and
be capable of employing his wealth: he will then, moreover,
become responsible for the use he makes of it [ARCHBISHOP
WHATELY].
15. if . . . depart--that is, wishes for
separation. Translate, "separateth himself":
offended with her Christianity, and refusing to live with
her unless she renounce it.
brother or a sister is not
under bondage--is not bound to renounce the faith for
the sake of retaining her unbelieving husband [HAMMOND]. So
@De
13:6 Mt 10:35-37 Lu 14:26. The believer does not lie
under the same obligation in the case of a union with an
unbeliever, as in the case of one with a believer. In the
former case he is not bound not to separate, if the
unbeliever separate or "depart," in the latter
nothing but "fornication" justifies separation [PHOTIUS
in Æcumenius].
but God hath called us to
peace--Our Christian calling is one that tends to
"peace" (@Ro
12:18), not quarrelling; therefore the believer should
not ordinarily depart from the unbelieving consort (@1Co
7:12-14), on the one hand; and on the other, in the
exceptional case of the unbeliever desiring to depart, the
believer is not bound to force the other party to stay in a
state of continual discord (@Mt
5:32). Better still it would be not to enter into such
unequal alliances at all (@1Co
7:40 2Co 6:14).
16. What knowest thou but that by staying with thy
unbelieving partner thou mayest save him or her? Enforcing
the precept to stay with the unbelieving consort (@1Co
7:12-14). So Ruth the Moabitess became a convert to her
husband's faith: and Joseph and Moses probably gained over
their wives. So conversely the unbelieving husband may be
won by the believing wife (@1Pe
3:1) [CALVIN]. Or else (@1Co
7:15), if thy unbelieving consort wishes to depart, let
him go, so that thou mayest live "in peace": for thou
canst not be sure of converting him, so as to make it
obligatory on thee at all costs to stay with him against his
will [MENOCHIUS and ALFORD].
save--be the
instrument of salvation to (@Jas
5:20).
17. But--Greek, "If not."
"Only." Caution that believers should not make
this direction (@1Co
7:16; as ALFORD explains it) a ground for separating
"of themselves" (@1Co
7:12-14). Or, But if there be no hope of
gaining over the unbeliever, still let the general principle
be maintained, "As the Lord hath allotted to
each, as God hath called each, so let him walk"
(so the Greek in the oldest reading); let him walk in
the path allotted to him and wherein he was called. The
heavenly calling does not set aside our earthly callings.
so ordain I in all
churches--Ye also therefore should obey.
18. not become uncircumcised--by surgical operation
(1 Maccabees 1:15; JOSEPHUS [Antiquities, 12.5.1]).
Some Christians in excess of anti-Jewish feeling might be
tempted to this.
let him not be circumcised--as
the Judaizing Christians would have him (@Ac
15:1,5,24 Ga 5:2).
19. Circumcision . . . nothing, but . . .
keeping of . . . commandments of God--namely,
is all in all. In @Ga
5:6 this "keeping of the commandments of God"
is defined to be "faith which worketh by love";
and in @Ga
6:15, "a new creature." Circumcision was a
commandment of God: but not for ever, as "love."
20. the same calling--that is, the condition
from which he is called a Jew, a Greek, a slave, or a
freeman.
21. care not for it--Let it not be a trouble to thee
that thou art a servant or slave.
use it rather--Continue
rather in thy state as a servant (@1Co
7:20 Ga 3:28 1Ti 6:2). The Greek, "But if even
thou mayest be made free, use it," and the
context (@1Co
7:20,22) favors this view [CHRYSOSTOM, BENGEL, and
ALFORD]. This advice (if this translation be right) is not
absolute, as the spirit of the Gospel is against slavery.
What is advised here is, contentment under one's existing
condition (@1Co
7:24), though an undesirable one, since in our union
with Christ all outward disparities of condition are
compensated (@1Co
7:22). Be not unduly impatient to cast off "even"
thy condition as a servant by unlawful means (@1Pe
2:13-18); as, for example, Onesimus did by fleeing (@Phm
1:10-18). The precept (@1Co
7:23), "Become not (so the Greek) the
servants of men," implies plainly that slavery is
abnormal (compare @Le
25:42). "Men stealers," or slave dealers, are
classed in @1Ti
1:10, with "murderers" and
"perjurers." NEANDER, GROTIUS, &c., explain,
"If called, being a slave, to Christianity, be
content--but yet, if also thou canst be free (as a
still additional good, which if thou canst not
attain, be satisfied without it; but which, if offered to
thee, is not to be despised), make use of the opportunity
of becoming free, rather than by neglecting it to remain
a slave." I prefer this latter view, as more according
to the tenor of the Gospel, and fully justified by the Greek.
22. the Lord's freeman--(@Phm
1:16)--rather, "freedman." Though a slave
externally, spiritually made free by the Lord: from
sin, @Joh
8:36; from the law, @Ro
8:2; from "circumcision," @1Co
7:19 Ga 5:1.
Christ's servant--(@1Co
9:21). Love makes Christ's service perfect freedom (@Mt
11:29,30 Ga 5:13 1Pe 2:16).
23. be not ye--Greek, "become not
ye." Paul here changes from "thou" (@1Co
7:21) to "ye." YE ALL are "bought"
with the blood of Christ, whatever be your earthly state (@1Co
6:20). "Become not servants to men," either
externally, or spiritually; the former sense applying to the
free alone: the latter to Christian freemen and slaves
alike, that they should not be servile adherents to their
party leaders at Corinth (@1Co
3:21,22 Mt 23:8-10 2Co 11:20); nor indeed slaves to men
generally, so far as their condition admits. The external
and internal conditions, so far as is attainable, should
correspond, and the former be subservient to the latter
(compare @1Co
7:21,32-35).
24. abide with God--being chiefly careful of the
footing on which he stands towards God rather than that
towards men. This clause, "with God," limits the
similar precept in @1Co
7:20. A man may cease to "abide in the calling
wherein he was called," and yet not violate the precept
here. If a man's calling be not favorable to his
"abiding with God" (retaining holy fellowship with
Him), he may use lawful means to change from it (compare Note,
see on 1Co 7:21).
25. no commandment of the Lord: yet . . . my
judgment--I have no express revelation from the
Lord commanding it, but I give my judgment
(opinion); namely, under the ordinary inspiration which
accompanied the apostles in all their canonical writings
(compare @1Co
7:40 1Co 14:37 1Th 4:15). The Lord inspires me in this
case to give you only a recommendation, which you are
free to adopt or reject--not a positive command. In
the second case (@1Co
7:10,11) it was a positive command; for the Lord had
already made known His will (@Mal
2:14,15 Mt 5:31,32). In the third case (@1Co
7:12), the Old Testament commandment of God to put away
strange wives (@Ezr
10:3), Paul by the Spirit revokes.
mercy of the Lord--(@1Ti
1:13). He attributes his apostleship and the gifts
accompanying it (including inspiration) to God's grace
alone.
faithful--in
dispensing to you the inspired directions received by me
from the Lord.
26. I suppose--"I consider."
this--namely,
"for a man so to be," that is, in the same state
in which he is (@1Co
7:27).
for--by reason of.
the present distress--the
distresses to which believers were then beginning to be
subjected, making the married state less desirable than the
single; and which would prevail throughout the world before
the destruction of Jerusalem, according to Christ's prophecy
(@Mt
24:8-21; compare @Ac
11:28).
27. Illustrating the meaning of "so to be,"
@1Co
7:26. Neither the married (those "bound to a
wife") nor the unmarried (those "loosed from a
wife") are to "seek" a change of state
(compare @1Co
7:20,24).
28. trouble in the flesh--Those who marry, he says,
shall incur "trouble in the flesh" (that is, in
their outward state, by reason of the present distress), not
sin, which is the trouble of the spirit.
but I spare you--The
emphasis in the Greek is on "I." My
motive in advising you so is, to "spare you" such
trouble in the flesh. So ALFORD after CALVIN, BENGEL, and
others. ESTIUS from AUGUSTINE explains it, "I spare you
further details of the inconveniences of matrimony, lest
even the incontinent may at the peril of lust be deterred
from matrimony: thus I have regard for your infirmity."
The antithesis in the Greek of "I . . .
you" and "such" favors the former.
29. this I say--A summing up of the whole, wherein he
draws the practical inference from what precedes (@1Co
15:50).
the time--the season
(so the Greek) of this present dispensation up to the
coming of the Lord (@Ro
13:11). He uses the Greek expression which the
Lord used in @Lu
21:8 Mr 13:33.
short--literally,
"contracted."
it remaineth--The
oldest manuscripts read, "The time (season) is
shortened as to what remains, in order that both
they," &c.; that is, the effect which the
shortening of the time ought to have is, "that for the
remaining time (henceforth), both they," &c. The
clause, "as to what remains," though in construction
belonging to the previous clause, in sense belongs to
the following. However, CYPRIAN and Vulgate support English
Version.
as though they had none--We
ought to consider nothing as our own in real or permanent
possession.
30. they that weep . . . wept not--(Compare
@2Co
6:10).
they that buy . . .
possessed not--(Compare @Isa
24:1,2). Christ specifies as the condemning sin of the
men of Sodom not merely their open profligacy, but that
"they bought, they sold," &c., as men whose
all was in this world (@Lu
17:28). "Possessed" in the Greek
implies a holding fast of a possession; this the
Christian will not do, for his "enduring
substance" is elsewhere (@Heb
10:34).
31. not abusing it--not abusing it by an overmuch
using of it. The meaning of "abusing" here is,
not so much perverting, as using it to the full
[BENGEL]. We are to use it, "not to take our fill"
of its pursuits as our chief aim (compare @Lu
10:40-42). As the planets while turning on their own
axis, yet revolve round the sun; so while we do our part in
our own worldly sphere, God is to be the center of all our
desires.
fashion--the present
fleeting form. Compare @Ps
39:6, "vain show"; @Ps
73:20, "a dream"; @Jas
4:14, "a vapor."
passeth away--not
merely shall pass away, but is now actually passing
away. The image is drawn from a shifting scene in
a play represented on the stage (@1Jo
2:17). Paul inculcates not so much the outward denial of
earthly things, as the inward spirit whereby the married and
the rich, as well as the unmarried and the poor, would be
ready to sacrifice all for Christ's sake.
32. without carefulness--I would have you to be not
merely "without trouble," but "without
distracting cares" (so the Greek).
careth--if he uses
aright the advantages of his condition.
34. difference also--Not merely the unmarried and the
married man differ in their respective duties, but also
the wife and the virgin. Indeed a woman
undergoes a greater change of condition than a man in
contracting marriage.
35. for your own profit--not to display my
apostolic authority.
not . . . cast a
snare upon you--image from throwing a noose over
an animal in hunting. Not that by hard injunctions I may
entangle you with the fear of committing sin where there is
no sin.
comely--befitting
under present circumstances.
attend upon--literally,
"assiduously wait on"; sitting down to the
duty. Compare @Lu
10:39, Mary; @Lu
2:37, "Anna . . . a widow, who departed
not from the temple, but served God with fastings and
prayers night and day" (@1Ti
5:5).
distraction--the same Greek
as "cumbered" (@Lu
10:40, Martha).
36. behaveth . . . uncomely--is not
treating his daughter well in leaving her unmarried beyond
the flower of her age, and thus debarring her from the
lawful gratification of her natural feeling as a
marriageable woman.
need so require--if
the exigencies of the case require it; namely, regard to the
feelings and welfare of his daughter. Opposed to
"having no necessity" (@1Co
7:37).
let them marry--the
daughter and her suitor.
37. steadfast--not to be turned from his purpose by
the obloquy of the world.
having no necessity--arising
from the natural inclinations of the daughter.
power over his . . .
will--when, owing to his daughter's will not opposing
his will, he has power to carry into effect his will or
wish.
decreed--determined.
38. her--The oldest manuscripts have "his
own virgin daughter."
but--The oldest
manuscripts have "and."
39. bound by the law--The oldest manuscripts omit
"by the law."
only in the Lord--Let
her marry only a Christian (@2Co
6:14).
40. happier--(@1Co
7:1,28,34,35).
I think also--"I
also think"; just as you Corinthians and your teachers think
much of your opinions, so I also give my opinion by
inspiration; so in @1Co
7:25, "my judgment" or opinion. Think
does not imply doubt, but often a matter of well-grounded
assurance (@Joh
5:39).
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