Verses 1-3
1 Corinthians 3:1-3. And I,
brethren — The apostle having,
in the latter part of the
preceding chapter, observed that
mere natural men, still
unenlightened and unrenewed,
receive not the things of the
Spirit, begins this chapter with
informing the Corinthians, that
though he was an apostle, fully
instructed in the mind of
Christ, he could not, during his
abode with them, speak to them
as to truly spiritual persons:
inasmuch as they really were not
such, but still in a great
measure carnal, even mere babes
in Christ; as little acquainted
with, and experienced in, the
things of God, as babes are with
respect to the things of the
world. He had spoken before (1
Corinthians 2:1) of his
entrance, now he speaks of his
progress among them. I have fed
you with milk — With the first
and plainest truths of the
gospel, alluding to milk being
the proper food of babes: not
with meat — The higher truths of
Christianity; such as are more
difficult to be understood,
received, and practised, and
therefore belong to those
believers who have made some
considerable progress in
Christian knowledge and
holiness. For ye were not able
to bear it — Your state of grace
has been, and still is, so low,
that it would not properly admit
of such a way of teaching. So
should every preacher suit his
doctrine to the state and
character of his hearers. For ye
are yet carnal — That is, the
greater part of you are so in
some degree; for whereas there
is among you envying — One
another’s gifts in your hearts,
or uneasiness of mind that
others have greater gifts than
yourselves: or the word ζηλος
may be rendered, emulation, a
kind of rivalry, or a desire of
superiority over others; and
strife — Outward contentions in
words and deeds; and actual
divisions — Of one party from
another; are ye not carnal — Is
not this a clear proof that you
are so; and walk as men? — κατα
ανθρωπον, according to man; as
worldly men walk, who have no
higher principle from which to
act than that of mere nature,
and not according to God, as
thorough Christians walk.
Verses 4-7
1 Corinthians 3:4-7. For while
one saith, I am of Paul — I am
one of Paul’s disciples,
admiring his sublime sentiments,
and being greatly edified by his
instructive discourses: and
another, I am of Apollos — I
give the preference to Apollos,
being delighted with his fine
language, and the pleasing
manner of his address. St. Paul
names himself and Apollos, to
show that he would condemn any
division among them, even though
it were in favour of himself, or
the dearest friend he had in the
world. Are ye not carnal? — For
the Spirit of God allows no
party zeal. Who then is Paul —
That some of you are so attached
to him; and who is Apollos —
That others of you are so
charmed with him? Are they the
authors of your faith and
salvation? Surely not: they are
but ministers — Or servants; by
whom — As instruments; ye
believed — The word of the truth
of the gospel, as the Lord — Of
those servants gave to each of
them gifts and grace for the
work. I have planted — A
Christian Church at Corinth,
being instrumental in converting
many of you to the faith of
Christ: Apollos came afterward,
and, by his affecting and useful
addresses, watered what I had
planted; but God gave the
increase — Caused the plantation
thus watered to grow, quickened
and rendered effectual the means
used to produce the fruit of the
conversion of souls to God, and
their confirmation in the faith
and hope of the gospel. So then,
the inference to be drawn is,
neither is he that planteth any
thing — Comparatively speaking;
neither he that watereth — When
you compare our part with that
of God, it appears even as
nothing: but God that giveth the
increase — Who by his
efficacious operation causes
fruit to be produced, is all in
all: for without him, neither
planting nor watering avails.
Verse 8-9
1 Corinthians 3:8-9. He that
planteth and he that watereth
are one — United in affection,
and engaged in one general
design, the design of glorifying
God in the salvation of souls,
though their labours may be in
some respect different: and
hence, instead of being pleased,
we are rather displeased and
grieved with those invidious
comparisons in favour of one
against another. Our great
concern is to please our common
Lord, to whom we are shortly to
give up our account; and from
whom every man — He primarily
means every minister of Christ;
shall receive his own reward —
The reward in some respects
peculiar to himself; according
to his own peculiar labour — For
as some labour with greater zeal
and diligence, and others with
less, so they shall be rewarded
with different degrees of
felicity and glory. He does not
say, according to his success,
because he who labours much,
supposing he labours with a
single eye to the glory of God,
from a principle of love to him,
and a conscientious regard to
his will, shall have a great
reward, though it may please God
to give him little success. Has
not all this reasoning the same
force still? Ministers are still
barely instruments in God’s
hand, and depend as entirely as
ever on his blessing, to give
the increase to their labours.
Without this they are nothing;
with it their part is so small,
that they hardly deserve to be
mentioned. May their hearts and
hands be more united; and,
retaining a due sense of the
honour God doth them in
employing them, may they
faithfully labour, not as for
themselves, but for the great
Proprietor of all, till the day
come when he will reward them in
full proportion to their
fidelity and diligence! For we
are labourers together, &c. —
Greek, θεου γαρ εσμεν συνεργοι,
we are fellow- labourers of God;
or, we are God’s labourers, and
fellow-labourers with each
other. Ye are God’s husbandry —
Or God’s tillage, God’s
cultivated ground: a
comprehensive word, taking in a
field, a garden, and a vineyard.
This is the sum of what went
before. Ye are God’s building —
This refers to what follows.
Verse 10-11
1 Corinthians 3:10-11. According
to the grace of God — This he
premises, lest he should seem to
ascribe any thing to himself; as
a wise master-builder — A
skilful architect, directed by
divine wisdom; I have laid the
foundation — Jesus Christ and
him crucified, a foundation
sufficient to support the whole
fabric of Christianity, with all
its blessed effects: and another
buildeth thereon — Succeeding
teachers bestow further labour
for your instruction and
edification. But let every man —
Every minister; take heed how he
buildeth thereon — That all the
doctrines which he teaches may
be consistent with the
foundation. For other foundation
— On which the whole church,
with all its doctrines,
privileges, and duties, may be
built; can no man lay — How much
soever he may endeavour to do
it; than that which is laid — In
the counsels of divine wisdom,
in the prophecies and promises
of the Old Testament, and in the
preaching of Christ himself and
his apostles, St. Paul in
particular; which is Jesus
Christ — Who in his person and
offices, in his love and
sufferings, his humiliation and
exaltation, his atoning death,
his victorious resurrection, his
glorious ascension, and his
prevalent intercession, is the
firm, immoveable rock of ages; a
foundation every way sufficient
to bear all the weight that God
himself, or the sinner, when he
believes, can lay upon him, even
to support his immortal hopes.
Christ, in his prophetic office,
as a teacher come from God, is
the foundation of all the
doctrines of Christianity, and
as made of God unto us wisdom,
the source of our knowledge of,
and faith in those doctrines: in
his priestly office, atoning and
interceding for us, he is the
foundation of all the privileges
of Christianity; and, when made
of God unto us righteousness,
puts us in possession of those
privileges; in his kingly office
he is the foundation of all the
duties of Christianity, and when
made of God unto us
sanctification, of our power to
perform those duties; for when
the tree is good, the fruit is
good; when we are created anew
in Christ Jesus, good works are
the never-failing consequence,
Ephesians 2:10. Add to this,
that as the firstborn of them
that sleep, and our forerunner
into glory, he is the foundation
of all our hopes; and when made
of God unto us complete and
eternal redemption, he brings us
to the enjoyment of the
blessings hoped for.
Verse 12
1 Corinthians 3:12. If any man
build upon this foundation —
Thus firmly laid; gold, silver,
precious stones — The most
valuable materials in nature,
the most solid, durable, and
precious, and which can bear the
fire. And here they stand for
true, firm, and important
doctrines; doctrines necessary
to be known, believed, and laid
to heart, and which, when so
received, fail not to build up
the people of God in faith,
love, and obedience; rendering
them wise unto salvation, holy
and useful here, and preparing
them for eternal life hereafter.
The apostle mentions next, as
materials wherewith some might
possibly build, and with which
indeed many have built in all
ages, wood, hay, and stubble;
materials flimsy, unsubstantial,
worthless, if compared with the
former, and which cannot bear
the fire. And these are here
put, not merely for false
doctrines, condemned or
unsupported by the word of God,
or doctrines of human invention,
but all ceremonies, forms, and
institutions, which have not God
for their author, and are
neither connected with, nor
calculated to promote, the
edification and salvation of
mankind: all doctrines that are
unimportant, and not suited to
the state and character of the
hearers; all but the vital,
substantial truths of
Christianity. To build with such
materials as these, if it do not
absolutely destroy the
foundation, yet disgraces it; as
a mean edifice, suppose a hovel,
consisting of nothing better
than planks of wood, roughly put
together, and thatched with hay
and stubble, would disgrace a
grand and expensive foundation,
laid with great pomp and
solemnity.
Verse 13
1 Corinthians 3:13. Every man’s
work shall be made manifest —
God will bring every work into
judgment, with every secret
thing, whether it be good, or
whether it be evil, Ecclesiastes
12:14. There is nothing covered
that shall not be revealed,
neither hid, that shall not be
known. But the apostle’s primary
meaning here is, that it shall
be made manifest what kind of
materials every spiritual
builder uses, that is, what kind
of doctrines every minister of
Christ preaches, whether they
are true or false, important or
trivial, calculated to produce
genuine repentance, faith, and
holiness in the hearers, or not;
to promote the real conversion
of sinners, and edification of
believers, or otherwise: and of
consequence, what kind of
converts every minister makes,
whether they be such as can
stand the fiery trial or not.
For the day shall declare it —
Perhaps, 1st, η ημερα δηλωσει,
might be rendered, time will
declare it; for time, generally
a little time, manifests whether
a minister’s doctrine be
Scriptural and sound, and his
converts genuine or not. If his
preaching produce no saving
effect upon his hearers, if none
of them are reformed in their
manners, and renewed in their
hearts; if none of them are
turned from sin to
righteousness, and made new
creatures in Christ Jesus, there
is reason to suspect the
doctrine delivered to them is
not of the right kind, and
therefore is not owned of God.
2d, The expression means, The
day of trial shall declare it;
(see 1 Peter 4:12;) for a day of
trial is wont to follow a day of
merciful visitation; a time of
suffering to succeed a season of
grace. Where the gospel is
preached, and a church is
erected for Christ, the religion
of such as profess to receive
the truth is generally, in the
course of divine providence, put
to the test; and if it be a
fabric of wood, hay, and
stubble, and not of gold,
silver, and precious stones, it
will not be able to bear the
fiery trial, but will certainly
be consumed thereby. The
religion (if it can be called
religion) of those who are not
grounded on, and built up in
Christ, (Colossians 2:7,) will
evaporate like smoke from wood,
hay, and stubble, in the day of
trial. But, 3d, and especially
the day of final judgment, the
great day of the Lord, is here
intended, and this day shall
declare it; shall declare every
man’s work to all the universe:
because it shall be revealed by
fire — Which shall consume the
earth with its increase, and
shall melt down the foundations
of the mountains; the heavens
and the earth, which are now,
being kept in store, reserved
unto fire, against the day of
judgment and perdition of
ungodly men, 2 Peter 3:7. And
the fire shall try every man’s
work — As fire tries metals, and
finds out and separates whatever
dross is mixed with them; or, as
the fire of that great and awful
day will penetrate the earth to
its centre, and consume whatever
is combustible, so shall the
strict process of the final
judgment try, not only the
religion of every private
Christian, but the doctrine of
every public teacher, and
manifest whether it came up to
the Scripture standard or not.
Although there is here a plain
allusion to the general
conflagration, yet the
expression, when applied to the
trying of doctrines, and
consuming those that are wrong,
and the trying of the characters
of professors, is evidently
figurative; because no material
fire can have such an effect on
what is of a moral nature.
Verse 14-15
1 Corinthians 3:14-15. If any
maws work abide which he hath
built, &c. — If the
superstructure which any
minister of Christ raises on the
true foundation, if the
doctrines which he preaches can
bear the test by which they
shall be tried at that day, as
being true, important, and
adapted to the state of his
hearers; and the converts which
he makes by preaching these
doctrines, be of the right kind,
truly regenerated and holy
persons, he shall receive a
reward — In proportion to his
labours. If any man’s work shall
be burned — If the doctrines
which any minister preaches
cannot bear the test of the
great day, as being false or
trivial, or not calculated to
convert and edify his hearers;
or if the converts which he
makes by preaching such
doctrines be only converts to
some particular opinion, or mode
of worship, or form of church
government, or to a certain sect
or party, and not converts to
Christ and true Christianity, to
the power as well as the form of
godliness, to the experience and
practice, as well as to the
theory of true religion, and
therefore cannot stand in that
awful judgment, he shall suffer
loss — Shall lose his labour and
expectation, and the future
reward he might have received,
if he had built with proper
materials; as a man suffers loss
who bestows his time and labour
on the erection of a fabric of
wood, hay, and stubble, which is
afterward consumed. But he
himself — That preacher himself;
shall be saved — Supposing he
himself be a true disciple of
Christ, built up in faith and
holiness on the true foundation;
yet so as by fire — As narrowly
as a man escapes through the
fire, when his house is all in
flames about him: or rather, if
so be that his own religion, his
personal faith and holiness, can
bear both the fiery trial which
he may be called to pass through
on earth, whether of reproach
and persecution, or of pain and
affliction, or any other
trouble, and also the decisive
trial of the last day. Let it
not be supposed by any that the
apostle is here putting a case
that never occurs, or can occur:
such cases, there is reason to
believe, have often occurred,
and still do and will occur; in
which ministers, who are
themselves real partakers of the
grace of Christ, and truly
pious, yet, through error of
judgment, attachment to certain
opinions, or a particular party,
or under the influence of
peculiar prejudices, waste their
time, and that of their hearers,
in building wood, hay, and
stubble, when they should be
labouring to raise an edifice of
gold, silver, and precious
stones; employ themselves in
inculcating unessential or
unimportant, if not even false
doctrines, when they ought to be
testifying with sincerity, zeal,
and diligence, the genuine
gospel of the grace of God. Dr.
Macknight, who considers the
apostle as speaking in these
verses, not of the foundation
and superstructure of a system
of doctrines, “but of the
building or temple of God,
consisting of all who profess to
believe the gospel,” gives us
the following commentary on the
passage: “Other foundation of
God’s temple, no teacher, if he
teaches faithfully, can lay,
except what is laid by me, which
is Jesus, the Christ, promised
in the Scriptures. Now if any
teacher build on the foundation,
Christ, sincere disciples,
represented in this similitude
by gold, silver, valuable
stones; or if he buildeth
hypocrites, represented by wood,
hay, stubble, every teacher’s
disciples shall be made manifest
in their true characters; for
the day of persecution, which is
coming on them, will make every
one’s character plain, because
it is of such a nature as to be
revealed by the fire of
persecution: and so that fire,
falling on the temple of God,
will try every teacher’s
disciples, of what sort they
are. If the disciples, which any
teacher has introduced into the
church, endure persecution for
the gospel without apostatizing,
such a teacher shall receive the
reward promised to them who turn
others to righteousness, Daniel
12:3. If the disciples of any
teacher shall, in time of
persecution, fall away, through
the want of proper instruction,
he will lose his reward; he
himself, however, having in
general acted sincerely, shall
be saved; yet, with such
difficulty, as one is saved who
runs through a fire.” But, as by
the foundation, which he says he
had laid, the apostle
undoubtedly meant the doctrine
concerning Christ, and salvation
through him, it seems more
consistent with his design to
interpret what refers to the
superstructure attempted to be
raised by different builders, of
doctrines also, and not of
persons introduced by them into
the Christian Church: and to
understand him as cautioning the
Corinthians against disfiguring
and destroying the beautiful
edifice, by inculcating tenets
which were heretical, and
pernicious to the souls of men,
and would not stand the test of
the approaching fiery trial.
Thus what follows.
Verse 16-17
1 Corinthians 3:16-17. Know ye
not, &c. — As if he had said,
You should also lake heed what
doctrine you deliver, lest by
teaching what is false,
unimportant, or improper to be
taught, you should defile or
destroy the temple of God; that
ye — True believers, genuine
Christians; are the temple of
God — Whether considered
collectively as a church,
(Ephesians 2:21; 1 Timothy
3:15,) or as individuals and
members of one, (1 Corinthians
6:19; 2 Corinthians 6:16;
Ephesians 2:22; Hebrews 3:6; 1
Peter 2:5,) being set apart from
profane uses, and dedicated to
his service, among whom, and in
whom, he manifests his gracious
presence by his Spirit. See on
Romans 8:9. If any man defile,
corrupt — Or destroy rather, (as
it seems the word φθειρει should
be rendered,) that is, should
divide and scatter a Christian
church or society, by schisms or
unscriptural doctrines, or
leaven with error, and lead into
sin, a real Christian; him shall
God destroy — Punish with
eternal condemnation and wrath;
so that he shall not be saved at
all, not even as through fire:
for the temple of God is holy —
Consecrated to him, separated
from all pollution, and to be
considered as peculiarly sacred;
and therefore it is an awful
thing to do any thing which
tends to destroy it. Which
temple ye are — Called and
intended to be such.
Verses 18-20
1 Corinthians 3:18-20. Let no
man deceive himself — Neither
teacher, by propagating errors
through pride of his own
understanding; nor hearers, by a
factious preferring of one above
another for his gifts. If any
man among you seemeth to be wise
in this world — Be wise with
respect to the things of this
world only, and on that account
be puffed up with pride; let him
become a fool — Such as the
world accounts so; let him
renounce his carnal wisdom, and
submit to the doctrine of the
gospel, which the world
considers as folly; that he may
be — Prove himself to be, wise —
Namely, spiritually, and in
God’s account; wise in matters
that concern his everlasting
salvation. For the wisdom of
this world — However men may
boast of it, and think highly of
themselves because they suppose
they possess it; is foolishness
with God — Is accounted so by
him. For it is written, (Job
5:13, where see the note,) He
taketh the wise in their own
craftiness — Not only while they
think they are acting wisely,
but by their very wisdom, which
itself is their snare, and the
occasion of their destruction.
In other words, they are
entangled and brought to ruin by
those subtle contrivances,
whereby they thought to secure
themselves. The Lord knoweth the
thoughts of the wise — The
worldly wise, or of those that
think themselves wise; that they
are vain — Empty, foolish,
unprofitable, ineffectual to
secure themselves against God.
Verses 21-23
1 Corinthians 3:21-23. Therefore
— Upon the whole, considering
all that has been advanced, and
especially considering in what
view the great God regards these
things which we are so ready to
value ourselves upon; let no man
glory in men — So as to divide
into parties on their account;
for all things are yours — And
we in particular. We are not
your lords, but rather your
servants: whether Paul, or
Apollos, or Cephas — We are all
equally yours, to serve you for
Christ’s sake: or the world —
This leap, from Peter to the
world, greatly enlarges the
thought, and argues a kind of
impatience of enumerating the
rest. Peter, and every one in
the whole world, however
excellent in gifts, or grace, or
office, are also your servants
for Christ’s sake; or life or
death — These, with all their
various circumstances, are
disposed as will be most for
your advantage; or things
present — On earth, or things to
come — In heaven. Contend
therefore no more about these
little things, but be ye united
in love as ye are in blessings.
And ye are Christ’s — His
property, his subjects, his
members; and Christ is God’s —
As Mediator, he acted as his
Father’s servant, and referred
all his services to his Father’s
glory. Others understand the
passage thus: “All things are
appointed for your good, and ye
are appointed for Christ’s
honour, and Christ for God’s
glory.” |