Verse 1-2
1 Corinthians 5:1-2. It is, &c.
— As if he had said, I have
spoken of coming to you with a
rod of correction, and it is too
probable I maybe laid under a
necessity of using it, though it
be an unwilling necessity: for
it is commonly reported that
there is fornication practised
among you — The original word,
πορνεια, implies criminal
conversation of any kind
whatever; and is used by the LXX.,
and by the writers of the New
Testament, in the latitude which
its correspondent word hath in
the Hebrew language, namely, to
denote all the different kinds
of uncleanness committed,
whether between men and women,
or between men, or with beasts.
Accordingly it is used in the
plural number, chap. 1
Corinthians 7:2. Here the word
signifies incest joined with
adultery, the woman’s husband
being still living, as appears
from 2 Corinthians 7:12. In the
Old Testament whoredom sometimes
signifies idolatry, because the
union of the Israelites with God
as their king being represented
by God himself as a marriage,
their giving themselves up to
idolatry was considered as
adultery. Such fornication as is
not named among the Gentiles —
Degenerate as they are, and
abandoned to very vile
practices; but is generally much
condemned and detested.
Accordingly many quotations
brought by Whitby and others on
this text, show that incest was
held in high abomination among
the heathen. And an enormity of
this kind, as is well known, is
called by Cicero, scelus
incredibile et inauditum, an
incredible and unheard-of
wickedness. That one should have
— Should cohabit with, or should
marry, his father’s wife — His
step-mother, and that during his
father’s life. And ye,
notwithstanding, are puffed up —
Glory in your present condition,
(1 Corinthians 4:8; 1
Corinthians 4:10,) and make an
ostentation of your spiritual
gifts to the neglect of your
duty. And have not rather
mourned — Given evident proofs
of sorrow, such as one would
have supposed a crime like this
should have occasioned to the
whole society, throwing every
member of it into a state of
humiliation and self-abasement;
that he who hath done this deed
might be taken from among you —
Might, at that time of solemn
mourning, have been expelled
from your communion. From the
Corinthians tolerating this
crime, Macknight infers “that
the guilty person was of some
note among them; perhaps one of
the teachers of the faction,
who, being greatly admired for
his personal qualifications, had
escaped censure by arguing that
such marriages were not
forbidden by the gospel.” “It is
remarkable, that neither here,
nor in any of the passages where
this affair is spoken of, is the
woman mentioned, who was the
other party in the crime.
Probably she was a heathen,
consequently not subject to the
discipline of the church.”
Verses 3-5
1 Corinthians 5:3-5. I verily,
as absent — Or though absent; in
body, but present in spirit —
Having a full (it seems a
miraculous) view of the whole
fact; have judged already —
Passed sentence upon him by my
apostolical authority, since you
have neglected doing it; as
though I were present — As
deliberately, justly, and
authoritatively; that hath so
done — Hath acted in such a
scandalous manner. In the name
of our Lord Jesus — By his
authority and command; when ye
are gathered together — In an
assembly for judgment, and
calling upon his name, Matthew
18:20; and my spirit — Being
present with you; with the power
of our Lord Jesus — To confirm
what you do; to deliver such a
one to Satan — To expel him from
your communion. This was the
highest degree of punishment in
the Christian Church; and we may
observe, the passing this
sentence was the act of the
apostle, not of the Corinthians:
whereupon usually followed
terrors of conscience, and
bodily pains or diseases
inflicted by Satan, the terrible
executioner of the divine
justice and displeasure. For the
destruction — Though slowly and
gradually; of the flesh — Unless
prevented by speedy repentance;
that the spirit — Being brought
to true contrition and
humiliation; may be saved — From
those infinitely more
insupportable and everlasting
agonies to which it might
otherwise be doomed. It was
observed, in the note on 1
Corinthians 4:21, that the
apostles were empowered to
punish notorious offenders
miraculously with diseases and
death. And doubtless the command
here given by the apostle to
deliver the incestuous person to
Satan, was an exertion of that
power, especially as it was to
be done at the command of the
inspired apostle, and by the
power of the Lord Jesus.
“Accordingly Chrysostom,
Theophylact, and Œcumenius
conjectured, that in consequence
of his being delivered to Satan,
the offender’s body was weakened
and wasted by some painful
disease. The Latin fathers and
Beza, however, thought no such
effect followed that sentence;
because when the Corinthians
were ordered (2 Corinthians 2:7)
to forgive him, no mention is
made of any bodily disease that
was to be removed from him.
Wherefore, by the destruction of
the flesh, they understood the
destruction of the offender’s
pride, lust, and other fleshly
passions; which they thought
would be mortified, when he
found himself despised and
shunned by all. This
interpretation, however, does
not, in my opinion,” says
Macknight, “agree with the
threatenings written 1
Corinthians 4:21; 2 Corinthians
13:1-2; 2 Corinthians 13:10; nor
with the apostle’s design in
inflicting that punishment. For
when the faction found the
offender’s flesh wasted by some
grievous disease, in consequence
of the apostle’s sentence, it
could not fail to terrify such
of them as were capable of
serious thought.”
Verses 6-8
1 Corinthians 5:6-8. Your
glorying — Of the flourishing
state of your church, or of your
gifts, at such a time as this;
is not good — Is very
unseasonable, your church being
defiled by tolerating such
vices, and thereby exposed to
God’s judgments, and also in
danger of infection from such an
example. Know ye not — Who boast
so much of your knowledge; that
a little leaven — One sin or one
sinner; leaveneth the whole lump
— Diffuses guilt and infection
perhaps through a whole
religious society or
congregation; that is, this
single example, if tolerated,
will infect others, and draw
them to the like evil practices.
Purge out, therefore, the old
leaven — Both of sinners and of
sin; that ye may be a new lump —
That your whole church may be a
holy society; as ye are
unleavened — As, by profession,
you are obliged to be saints,
and separated from sin, or that,
being unleavened, ye may be a
new lump, holy unto the Lord.
For even Christ our passover —
Who was represented by the
paschal lamb, John 1:29; is
sacrificed for us — Has been
slain to make satisfaction for
our sins, 1 Corinthians 15:3. As
if he had said, It concerns you
to let nothing of leaven,
nothing of sin, be found about
you, because as Christians we
are now keeping a perpetual
passover, of which the Jewish
passover (about the time of
which this epistle was written)
was only a type. What exquisite
skill, both here and everywhere,
conducts the zeal of the
inspired writer! How surprising
a transition is here! And yet
how perfectly natural! The
apostle, speaking of the
incestuous criminal, slides into
his darling topic, a crucified
Saviour! Who would have expected
it on such an occasion? Yet when
it is thus brought in, who does
not see and admire both the
propriety of the subject, and
the delicacy of its
introduction? Therefore let us
keep the feast — Let us feed on
him by faith; or let the whole
of our lives be like the Jewish
feast of passover and unleavened
bread. Here is a plain allusion
to the Lord’s supper, which was
instituted in the room of the
passover; not with the old
leaven — Of heathenism or
Judaism; or with such errors and
vices as we were formerly
addicted to, and influenced by:
neither with the leaven of
malice and wickedness — Nor
allowing ourselves in any unkind
and corrupt affections, or
sinful practices, or tolerating
among us any scandalous conduct.
Malice is ill-will in the mind;
but wickedness is ill-will
expressed by actions, especially
such as are accompanied with
treachery. Hence the devil is
styled ο πονηρος, the wicked
one. But with the unleavened
bread of sincerity and truth —
With the most simple and sincere
desire of knowing and practising
every branch of our duty; which
if we really have, it will keep
us from all these evils, and
will ensure such a uniformity of
behaviour, as will be honourable
to our profession, and agreeable
to the design of its glorious
author. The apostle gives the
epithet of unleavened to the
graces of sincerity and truth,
in allusion to the emblematical
meaning of the unleavened bread,
which the Israelites were to eat
during the feast of the
passover; for thereby they were
taught to celebrate that feast
with pious and holy
dispositions.
Verses 9-11
1 Corinthians 5:9-11. I wrote to
you in a former epistle —
Doubtless both Paul and the
other apostles wrote many things
which are not extant now; not to
company — ΄η συναναμιγνυσθαι,
not to be intermixed, not to
associate with fornicators, and
such scandalous sinners; not to
contract any intimacy or
acquaintance with them, more
than is absolutely necessary.
Yet not altogether — I did not
mean thereby that ye should
altogether refrain from
conversing with heathen, who are
guilty of that sin, or others
equally heinous; or with the
covetous, or extortioners, or
idolaters — Sinners against
themselves, their neighbour, and
God. For then must ye needs go
out of the world — Then all
civil commerce must cease, the
citizens of Corinth being
generally such. So that going
out of the world, which some
account a perfection, Paul
accounts an utter absurdity. But
now I have written unto you —
Now I explain my mind more
fully, that I meant it of
persons professing Christianity:
not to keep company — To abstain
from ordinary, familiar,
unnecessary converse with them.
If any man that is called a
brother — A Christian, and a
member of your church; be a
fornicator, &c., with such a
one, no not to eat — Which is
the lowest degree of
familiarity. The sense of this
is, that a conscientious
Christian should choose, as far
as he can, the company,
intercourse, and familiarity of
good men, and such as fear God;
and avoid, as far as his
necessary affairs will permit,
the conversation and fellowship
of such as Paul here describes.
This is a thing (what decay
soever of public discipline
there may be) in each particular
Christian’s power.
Verse 12-13
1 Corinthians 5:12-13. For, &c.
— I speak of Christians only:
for what have I to do to judge
them that are without — Namely,
heathen: do not ye judge them
that are within? — Ye, as well
as I, judge those of your own
community: them that are
without, God judgeth — The
passing sentence on these God
hath reserved to himself, and
they shall not go unpunished,
though they fall not under your
censure. Therefore — In
consideration of this, both in
one view and the other, let it
be your immediate care, as you
regard the peace of the church,
and the safety of your own
souls; to put away from among
yourselves — Speedily, and with
all due solemnity; that wicked
person — Whom I have mentioned,
and any others, whose characters
may, like his, be scandalous and
infections. The apostle is
thought, by some, to have
written this, and the preceding
verse, to show the Corinthians
the reason why, after commanding
them to pass so severe a
sentence on the man, he said
nothing to them concerning the
woman, who was guilty with him.
The discipline of the church was
not to be exercised on persons
out of it. Hence it appears that
this woman was a heathen. |