Verse 1
1 Corinthians 2:1. And I,
brethren, &c. — As if he had
said, I have been showing that
God is wont to call and convert
persons to himself by unlikely
and contemptible means; and that
his design in the gospel is of a
very humbling nature, and
admirably calculated to stain
human pride, and bring men to
glory in him alone; therefore,
in perfect harmony with this
wise and excellent scheme, when
I came to you — To preach the
gospel; I came not with
excellency of speech, &c. — I
did not affect either deep
wisdom, or commanding eloquence;
declaring the testimony of God —
What God gave me to testify
concerning his Son, namely,
concerning his incarnation, his
doctrine, his miracles, his
life, his death, his
resurrection and exaltation to
be a Prince and a Saviour. This
is called the testimony of God,
1 John 5:9, because God bore
witness to the truth of these
things by signs, and wonders,
and divers miracles, and
distributions of the Holy Ghost,
Hebrews 2:4. The expression
implies that the evidence of the
great facts of Christianity, and
of the truth and importance of
the doctrines of the gospel, is
not founded on proofs drawn from
human reason, but on the
authority of God, who hath
revealed them by his Spirit, and
confirmed them by miracles, and
by the extraordinary influence
which they had on the hearts and
lives of multitudes.
Verses 2-5
1 Corinthians 2:2-5. For I
determined not to know any
thing, &c. — To act as one who
knew nothing, or to waive all my
other knowledge, and not to
preach any thing save Jesus
Christ and him crucified — That
is, what he taught, did, and
suffered. Or, not only to preach
the gospel sincerely, without
any mixture of human wisdom, but
chiefly to insist upon that part
of it which seems most
contemptible, and which human
wisdom does most abhor, namely,
concerning the sufferings and
crucifixion of Christ. And I was
with you — At my first entrance;
in weakness — Of body, 2
Corinthians 12:7; and in fear —
Lest I should offend any; and in
much trembling — The emotion of
my mind affected my very body.
For I knew that I had enemies
about me on every side, Acts
18:6; Acts 18:9, and laboured
under natural disadvantages, 2
Corinthians 10:10; and the force
of the prejudice which I had to
encounter was strong. And my
speech — In private; and my
preaching — In public; was not
with enticing words — Or
persuasive discourses; of man’s
wisdom — With eloquence or
philosophy, or with that pomp
and sophistry of argument, which
the learned men of the world are
so ready to affect; but in
demonstration of the Spirit and
of power — With that powerful
kind of demonstration which
flows from the Holy Spirit;
which works on the conscience
with the most convincing light,
and the most persuasive
evidence. That your faith should
not stand in the wisdom of men,
&c. — That your belief of the
gospel, and the various
important truths of it, might
not be grounded on, or appear to
be gained by, human wisdom or
eloquence; but in the wisdom and
power of God — Teaching men’s
ignorance, guiding their
foolishness, and giving efficacy
to such weak means as he has
seen fit to use.
Verses 6-8
1 Corinthians 2:6-8. Howbeit, we
speak wisdom — Yea, the truest
and most excellent wisdom: for
the subject matter of our
preaching is the most wise
contrivance and counsel of God
concerning the salvation of
mankind by Christ crucified,
which will be acknowledged to be
the highest wisdom, though not
by learned philosophers, yet by
humble, sincere, and well-
instructed Christians. Such are
here meant by them that are
perfect — That is, perfectly
enlightened by the Word and
Spirit of God, and renewed by
his grace, so as to have
attained to a maturity of
Christian knowledge and
experience: being no longer
children, but men in
understanding, (1 Corinthians
14:20,) having arrived at
spiritual manhood, called,
Ephesians 4:13, the measure of
the stature of the fulness of
Christ. See also Hebrews 5:14;
Hebrews 6:1, where τελειοι,
perfect, is taken in the same
sense, and is rendered, of full
age, and signifies those who no
longer need to be fed with milk,
being able to digest strong
meat, having, by reason of use,
or habit, their senses exercised
to discern both good and evil.
What the apostle here calls
wisdom, includes, as Macknight
justly observes, “the doctrine
concerning the person and
offices of Christ, treated of in
his epistles to the Ephesians
and Colossians; the
justification of sinners by
faith counted to them for
righteousness, explained in his
epistle to the Romans; the
rejection and resumption of the
Jews, foretold in the same
epistle; the coming and
destruction of the man of sin,
foretold 2 Thessalonians 2.; the
priesthood, sacrifice, and
intercession of Christ,
explained in his epistle to the
Hebrews; and the resurrection of
the dead, foretold in this
epistle: in short, the whole
doctrine of the gospel, taken
complexly.” Yet not the wisdom
of this world — The wisdom
admired and taught by the men of
this world, such as that which
teaches men how to manage their
temporal affairs properly, in
order to their living
comfortable lives upon earth,
and the various branches of
human learning. Nor of the
princes — Or rulers; of this
world — The wisdom admired and
sought by the great politicians
of the age, whether Jews or
Gentiles; that come to naught —
Both they, and their wisdom, and
the world itself. But — Being
taught of God to despise the
transient vanities which delude
the generality of mankind; we
speak the wisdom of God —
Infinitely more worthy, surely,
of the attentive consideration
and regard of all rational and
immortal beings, than the
short-lived wisdom of this
world: in a mystery — Such as no
creature could discover without
supernatural revelation,
Ephesians 3:9-10, and which was
especially kept secret from the
wise and learned of the world, 1
Corinthians 2:8 : even the
hidden wisdom — Hidden formerly
under holy mysteries and Jewish
types, and but darkly revealed
to and by the prophets; and
altogether unknown to the
heathen: which God ordained
before the world — Purposed from
everlasting to reveal in the
gospel; unto our glory — To
bring us to glory by the saving
knowledge of it: glory arising
from the glory of our Lord, and
then to be revealed when all
worldly glory vanishes. So far
is this wisdom from coming to
naught, like worldly wisdom!
Which none of the princes of
this world knew — Whether Jewish
or heathen; for had they known
it — Had they understood this
wisdom, and known that the only
way to attain happiness was to
receive in faith, love, and new
obedience, Jesus of Nazareth, as
the true Messiah and only
Saviour, and the great truths of
his everlasting gospel; surely
they would not have crucified —
Punished as a slave; the Lord of
glory — The glorious Head of his
church and of the world, the
final Judge of men and angels,
and the author of eternal
salvation to all that obey him,
Hebrews 5:9. The giving Christ
this august title, peculiar to
Deity, plainly shows him to be,
in union with the Father and the
Holy Spirit, the true God. Thus
the Father is styled, the Father
of glory, Ephesians 1:17, and
the Holy Ghost, the Spirit of
glory, 1 Peter 4:14. The
application of this title to all
the three, shows that the
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are
the God of glory, as the only
true God is called, Psalms 29:3,
Acts 7:2.
Verses 9-11
1 Corinthians 2:9-11. But — This
ignorance fulfils what is
written concerning the blessings
of the Messiah’s kingdom; eye
hath not seen, &c. — No merely
natural or unenlightened man
hath either seen, heard, or
known; the things which God hath
prepared, saith the prophet, for
them that love him — “These
words do not immediately respect
the blessings of another world,
but are spoken by the prophet of
the gospel state, and the
blessings then to be enjoyed by
them that should love God,
Romans 8:28. For all the
prophets, say the Jews,
prophesied only of the days of
the Messiah.” — Whitby. Indeed,
as he adds, both the context and
the opposition of these words to
the revelation of these things
by the Spirit, show the primary
intent of the apostle to be,
that no human wisdom, by any
thing that may be seen, heard
of, or conceived by us, can
acquaint us with the things
taught by the Holy Spirit,
without a supernatural
illumination. But God hath
revealed — Yea, and freely
given, 1 Corinthians 2:12, them
to us by his Spirit — Who
intimately and fully knows them;
for the Spirit searcheth — Knows
and enables us to search and
find out; all things — Which it
concerns us, and would be for
our profit, to be acquainted
with; even the deep things of
God — Be they ever so hidden and
mysterious; the depths both of
his nature and attributes, and
of his kingdom of providence and
grace. Or, these deep things of
God “are the various parts of
that grand plan which the wisdom
of God hath formed for the
salvation of mankind, their
relation to and dependance on
each other, and operation and
effect upon the system of the
universe, the dignity of the
person by whom that plan had
been executed, and the final
issue thereof in the salvation
of believers; with many other
particulars, which we shall not
know till the light of the other
world break in upon us.” —
Macknight. For what man knoweth
the things of a man — What
individual of the human race
could know the things belonging
to human nature; save the spirit
of man which is in him — Unless
he were possessed of a human
spirit? Surely the spirit of a
creature inferior to man, can
neither discern nor comprehend
the things peculiar to the human
nature. Even so the things of
God — Things that belong to the
divine nature; knoweth no man —
No mere man; no man devoid of
divine teaching; the teaching of
the Spirit of God. In other
words, as soon might brute
creatures, by the help of the
faculties peculiar to them,
understand human things, as a
man, only possessed of human
faculties, could, merely by the
aid of them, understand divine
things; and indeed much sooner;
for God is infinitely more
elevated above man, than man is
above the brutes.
Verse 12-13
1 Corinthians 2:12-13. Now we
have received, not the spirit of
the world — Which suggests
worldly wisdom; the spirit that
is in worldly, carnal people,
and which guides and governs
them; a spirit which is earthly,
sensual, and devilish. This
spirit is not, properly
speaking, received, for the
carnal and unregenerate always
had it; but true believers
properly receive the Spirit of
God, which before they had not.
That we might know — Might
discern, understand, form just
ideas of, and be experimentally
acquainted with; the things
freely given to us of God —
Which, without that Spirit, it
is as impossible we should know,
as it is that the inferior
creatures should know the things
belonging to man. Which things
also we speak — Make it our
business to communicate to
others; not in the words which
man’s wisdom teacheth — To
excite men’s curiosity, amuse
their imaginations, or gain
their applause; but which the
Holy Ghost teacheth — And
consequently must be best
adapted to convey such ideas as
he would impart; and to impress
the hearts and consciences of
men with a reverent and deep
sense of those holy mysteries:
comparing spiritual things with
spiritual — Or rather, as the
apostle seems to mean,
explaining spiritual things by
spiritual words; or, adapting
spiritual words to spiritual
things; being taught by the
Spirit to express the things of
the Spirit. The original word,
συγκρινοντες, is rightly
translated interpreting, or
explaining, being used by the
LXX. to denote the
interpretation of dreams,
Genesis 40:16; Genesis 40:22;
Genesis 41:12-13; Genesis 41:15;
Daniel 2:4; Daniel 5:7; Daniel
5:12. Pearce translates the
clause, explaining spiritual
things to spiritual men; a sense
which the original will
doubtless bear; but it does not
agree so well with the first
part of the verse, where words
taught by the Holy Spirit are
mentioned. This language of the
apostle, as Doddridge justly
observes, “may certainly
convince us of the great regard
which we ought always to
maintain to the words of
Scripture; and may especially
teach ministers how attentively
they should study its beauties,
and how careful they should be
to make it the support of their
discourses.” Indeed, “this
language, in which the doctrines
of the gospel were revealed to
the apostles, and in which they
delivered these doctrines to the
world, is what Paul calls the
form of sound words, which
Timothy had heard from him, and
was to hold fast, 2 Timothy
1:13. Every one, therefore,
ought to beware of altering or
wresting the inspired language
of Scripture, in their
expositions of the articles of
the Christian faith. Taylor, in
the sixth chapter of his Key,
explains the verse under
consideration thus: Which things
we speak, not in philosophical
terms of human invention, but
which the Spirit teacheth in the
writings of the Old Testament;
and contends that the apostle’s
meaning is, that he expressed
the Christian privileges in the
very same words and phrases by
which the Spirit expressed the
privileges of the Jewish Church,
in the writings of the Old
Testament. But if the Spirit
suggested these words and
phrases to the Jewish prophets,
why might not he suggest to the
apostles the words and phrases
in which they communicated the
gospel revelation to the world?
especially as there are many
discoveries in the gospel, which
could not be expressed clearly,
if at all, in the words by which
the prophets expressed the
privileges of the Jewish Church.
Besides, it is evident, that
when the apostles introduce into
their writings the words and
phrases of the Jewish prophets,
they explain them in other words
and phrases, which no doubt were
suggested to them by the
Spirit.” — See Macknight, and 2
Timothy 3:16.
Verse 14
1 Corinthians 2:14. But the
natural man — The man who has
only the powers of nature, the
faculties derived from Adam, but
not a supernatural principle of
saving grace; who has a soul in
his body, (as the word ψυχικος,
derived from ψυχη, a soul,
implies,) but no divine
inspiration in that soul; or who
is not truly enlightened and
renewed by the Word and Spirit
of God, and therefore has no
other way of obtaining knowledge
but by his senses and natural
understanding; receiveth not —
Does not understand or
apprehend; the things of the
Spirit of God — Whether relating
to his nature or kingdom. For
they are foolishness to him — He
is so far from understanding,
that he utterly despises them.
Neither can he know them — As he
has not the will, so neither has
he the power; because they are
spiritually discerned — They can
only be discerned by the aid of
that Spirit, and by those
spiritual senses which he has
not. Some commentators consider
these declarations of the
apostle as being only applicable
to mere animal or sensual
persons, who are under the
guidance and government of their
natural senses, appetites, and
passions; and it must be
acknowledged that the word above
mentioned, rendered natural in
the beginning of this verse, is
translated sensual James 3:15;
1:19. And yet it is certain that
the word ψυχη, from which it is
derived, frequently signifies
the rational and immortal soul;
even that soul which they that
kill the body, cannot kill,
Matthew 10:28; Matthew 10:39;
and therefore the epithet formed
from it may justly be considered
as referring to the powers of
the mind, as well as to the
inferior faculties. Besides,
though the word is rendered
sensual, in the before-mentioned
passages, yet in the latter of
them (Judges 19) it is explained
as signifying those who have not
the Spirit. And it is evident
that in this verse St. Paul is
not opposing a man that is
governed by his appetites and
passions, or by his mere animal
nature, and his prejudices
arising therefrom, to one that
is governed by his reason; or
one destitute of consideration
and judgment, and of amiable,
moral qualities, to one
possessed of them; but a carnal
to a spiritual man; or a mere
natural and unrenewed, to a
truly enlightened and
regenerated man. Indeed, “the
apostle’s argument,” as Mr.
Scott justly observes,
“absolutely requires that by the
natural man, we should
understand the unregenerate man,
however sagacious, learned, or
abstracted from sensual
indulgences, for he opposes him
to the spiritual man: and the
pride of carnal reasoning is at
least as opposite to
spirituality, as the most
grovelling sensuality can be. No
man, as naturally born into the
world, and not supernaturally
born again of the Spirit, can
see the kingdom of God, or
receive, in faith and love, the
spiritual mysteries of
redemption by the cross of
Christ. To all unregenerate men,
these things will, in one way or
other, appear foolishness,
uninteresting, unnecessary,
inconsistent, absurd: and
doubtless proud reasoners have
scoffed at them, more than ever
mere sensualists did. No
ingenuity, address, or reasoning
of the preacher can prevent this
effect: no application of a
man’s own mind, except in humble
dependance on the teaching of
the Holy Spirit, can enable him
to perceive the real nature and
glory of them. For they are
spiritually discerned — That is,
by the illuminating and
sanctifying work of the Spirit
of God upon the mind, by which a
spiritual capacity is produced,
which discerns, loves, admires,
and delights in, the divine
excellence of heavenly things.
When this change has taken
place, and a man’s spiritual
senses have been matured by
growth and exercise, he may be
called a spiritual man: and he
perceives the spiritual glory
and excellence of every truth
and precept in the Word of God;
he distinguishes one object from
another by a spiritual taste, or
a kind of extempore judgment,
and so he becomes a competent
judge in these matters.”
Verse 15-16
1 Corinthians 2:15-16. But he
that is spiritual — Whose mind
is enlightened, and his heart
renewed by the Spirit of God;
judgeth — Or rather discerneth;
all things — Namely, all the
things of God whereof we have
been speaking; yet he himself is
judged — Is discerned; by no
man, by no natural men; they
neither understand what he is,
nor what he says, while,
perhaps, they are very forward
and confident in their censures
of him: he remains, says
Doddridge, like a man endowed
with sight among those born
blind, who are incapable of
apprehending what is clear to
him, and amidst their own
darkness cannot participate of,
nor understand, those beautiful
ideas and pleasing sensations,
which light pours upon him. And
surely if matters be considered
aright, this cannot be any cause
of wonder. For who — That is not
supernaturally enlightened, but
is a mere natural man; hath
known the mind of the Lord —
Those counsels of his respecting
the salvation of mankind, which
exist in his eternal mind, or
his deep designs concerning us;
that he may instruct him? — So
as to take upon him to judge of
his schemes, and arraign his
conduct. “There must undoubtedly
be in the divine counsels many
secret and hidden things, and a
man must have a mind capacious
as that of the blessed God
himself, to take upon him to
judge of his schemes. See note
on Isaiah 40:13-14, the passage
here referred to. But many
approved commentators suppose,
although the words of the
prophet evidently refer to God,
yet that, as they are here
varied, they were intended by
the apostle of the spiritual
man, intending thereby chiefly a
divinely-inspired teacher, and
that the question means, What
unenlightened, carnal man, hath
known the mind of the Lord, his
deep counsels, (1 Corinthians
2:10,) so that he can instruct
the spiritual man? that is, as
the expression, συμβιβασει αυτον,
seems to imply, prove to him
that the principles on which he
judges of spiritual things are
false, inform him of things he
is ignorant of, and show him,
that in believing the gospel he
hath fallen into error. “The
truth implied in this questions”
says Macknight, “must afford
great satisfaction to all the
faithful. No man, no infidel,
hath been, or ever will be, able
to confute the gospel; or to
show a better method of
instructing, reforming, and
saving mankind, than that which
God hath chosen, and made known
by revelation.” But we —
Spiritual men, apostles in
particular; have — Know,
understand; the mind of Christ —
Concerning the whole plan of
gospel salvation. |