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1 Corinthians 1
1 Corinthians opens with gratitude — but also with grief. Paul writes to a church that is genuinely saved. They are sanctified in Christ. They are gifted. They lack no spiritual ability. God is faithful, and He will sustain them to the end.
1 Corinthians 2
Paul reminds the Corinthians that when he first preached to them, he did not rely on impressive rhetoric or philosophical argument. He centered his message on “Jesus Christ and Him crucified.” His goal was not intellectual admiration but genuine faith grounded in the power of God.
1 Corinthians 3
Paul addresses spiritual immaturity in the Corinthian church. Though they are believers, they are acting like infants in Christ because jealousy and division still mark their behavior.
1 Corinthians 4
Paul continues correcting pride and division. He instructs the Corinthians to view apostles as servants and stewards of God’s revealed mysteries. The essential requirement for a steward is faithfulness, not popularity.
1 Corinthians 5
Paul confronts a serious case of sexual immorality within the Corinthian church — a man living in an ongoing relationship with his father’s wife. Instead of grieving, the church has tolerated the sin.
1 Corinthians 6
Paul addresses two major issues: believers suing one another and sexual immorality. First, he rebukes Christians for taking disputes before secular courts instead of resolving them within the church. Since believers will one day participate in Christ’s reign and judgment, they should be capable of handling minor disputes now. It would be better to suffer wrong than damage the witness of Christ through public conflict.
1 Corinthians 7
Paul responds to questions about marriage, singleness, divorce, and calling. He affirms marriage as honorable and protective. Husbands and wives belong to one another in mutual responsibility and care. Intimacy within marriage is not selfish but covenantal.
1 Corinthians 8
Paul addresses food sacrificed to idols. He affirms that idols are nothing and that there is only one true God and one Lord, Jesus Christ. However, not every believer has the same understanding or spiritual strength. Some who previously worshiped idols still associate such food with their former life. Their conscience is sensitive.
1 Corinthians 9
Paul defends his apostleship and his right to financial support. He explains that apostles, like soldiers, farmers, and shepherds, have a right to benefit from their labor. Even the Law of Moses affirms that workers should share in what they produce.
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