Verses 1-3
1 Corinthians 8:1-3. Now — As to
the next question you proposed,
namely, touching things offered
— Meats sacrificed, and so
consecrated; unto idols — When
the heathen offered sacrifices
of such animals as were fit for
food, a part of the carcass was
burned on the altar, a part was
given to the priest or priests,
and on the remainder the
offerers feasted with their
friends, either in the idol’s
temple or at home. Sometimes
also a part was sent as a
present to such as they wished
to oblige, and if the sacrifice
was large, a part of it was sold
in the public market. To these
idolatrous feasts the heathen
often invited the Christians of
their acquaintance in Corinth,
and some of the brethren there,
desirous of preserving the
friendship of their neighbours,
accepted these invitations. They
knew an idol was nothing in the
world: and therefore they judged
that their partaking of the
sacrifice, given in the idol’s
temple, could not be reckoned a
worshipping of the idol.
Besides, such a feast was
considered, by enlightened
Christians, as a common meal,
which under the gospel they were
at liberty to eat; especially if
they did it to show their belief
that idols had no existence as
gods. These arguments, indeed,
are not explicitly stated by the
apostle; but the things he hath
written in this and in chap. 10.
being direct confutations of
them, we may believe they were
mentioned by the Corinthian
brethren, in their letter
referred to 1 Corinthians 7:1.
The apostle here, and in 1
Corinthians 10:20-21, treats of
the meats which, having been
sacrificed to idols, were
afterward eaten in the idol’s
temple, and in honour of the
idol: of that which was sold in
the shambles, or eaten in
private houses, he speaks 1
Corinthians 10:25-33. We all
have knowledge — That is, the
generality, for some had not, 1
Corinthians 8:7 : we are well
instructed in the nature of
Christian liberty, concerning
meats, and the nature of idols.
Knowledge — That is, mere
knowledge, knowledge without
grace; puffeth up — Often has
that tendency, and is the
occasion of self-conceit and
arrogance; a gentle reproof this
of the self-conceit of the
Corinthians. But charity — Love
to God and our brethren;
edifieth — Builds people up in
holiness. If any man think he
knoweth any thing aright —
Unless so far as he is taught by
God, and has love in proportion
to his knowledge; he knoweth
nothing — To any good purpose;
yet, as he ought to know —
Namely, to answer the proper
ends of knowledge, or to make
him humble in himself, and
useful to others. If any man
love God — In deed and in truth,
in consequence of a persuasion
of God’s love to him, 1 John
4:19; if any man, being
justified by faith, and having
peace with God, hath also the
love of God shed abroad in his
heart, Romans 5:1; Romans 5:5;
the same is known of him — That
is, approved by him, Psalms 1:6.
Or, if ουτος, he, refers to God,
the immediate antecedent, as
some think the sense is, he,
God, is known of him; namely, in
a proper manner. See an example
of the same phraseology, Acts
10:36.
Verses 4-6
1 Corinthians 8:4-6. As, &c. —
To proceed, therefore, to the
question in debate; concerning
the eating of those things that
are offered unto idols — Meats
of whatever kind sacrificed to
them. We know that an idol — Or
the supposed deity residing
therein; is nothing — A mere
nominal god, having no real
divinity, virtue, or power; and
that there is none other God but
one — Jehovah, the
self-existent, independent,
infinite, and eternal Being, to
whom the Scripture in general,
and the gospel in particular,
hath taught us to appropriate
our worship. “The Greek word
ειδωλον, translated idol,
signifies an image formed in the
mind, and which exists nowhere
else. Wherefore, to show that
the gods of the heathen were
mere creatures of the human
imagination, the Jews, who used
the Greek language, termed them
ειδωλα, idols. By this word,
likewise, they signified the
pictures and statues which the
heathen set up in their temples,
as representations of their
gods; and by giving them the
appellation of idols, they
declared their persuasion that
the things of which they were
the representations had no
existence. Nevertheless, as the
apostle knew that some of the
heathen worshipped their dead
ancestors, legislators, kings,
&c., others of them the heavenly
bodies, others certain kinds of
brute animals, he cannot be
understood to say that an idol
is nothing, in the sense of its
having no existence as a being,
but of its having no existence
as a god, and no share in the
government of the world.” For
though there be that are called
gods, whether in heaven or in
earth — Or even under the earth;
for the heathen had not only
their celestial and terrestrial,
but likewise their infernal
deities: as there be gods many,
and lords many — Who are in
their various subordinations
adored by the Gentiles, and have
great, though very absurd
worship paid to them. But to us
— Christians; there is — In the
whole universe; but one God —
One supreme essence; the Father
— Of angels and men. This is
exclusive not of the Word which
was in the beginning with God,
and was God, termed the one
Lord, in the next clause, any
more than of the Holy Spirit,
but only of the idols, to which
the one God is opposed. Of — Or
from; whom are all things — By
creation, providence, and grace;
and we in him — Living, moving,
and having our being; or we are,
εις αυτον, for him, for his
glory, the end of all we are,
have, and do. And one Lord — The
Word and Son of the eternal
Father, equally the object of
divine worship; by whom are all
things — Created, sustained, and
governed; and we by him —
Thankfully acknowledging
ourselves obliged to his agency
and care for all we are, have,
or hope for, and by whom, as the
only Mediator between God and
man, we have access to the
Father and all spiritual
blessings.
Verse 7-8
1 Corinthians 8:7-8. Howbeit,
there is not in every man — In
every professing Christian; that
knowledge — Namely, that there
is but one God, and one Lord,
and that an idol is nothing, and
has no power to defile the meat:
some Christian converts may not
sufficiently apprehend this, but
may imagine there is really some
invisible spirit present in the
idol, and acting by and upon it:
for some with conscience of the
idol — Out of some respect to
it, as if it were a kind of
deity; unto this hour — Even
since their embracing of
Christianity; eat it — The meat;
as a thing offered unto an idol
— With some religious regard to
the idol, intending thereby to
pay some kind of homage to it;
and their conscience being weak,
is defiled — “The weakness of
their conscience,” says
Macknight, “consisted in their
believing that idols had a real
existence as gods, and were
employed by God in the
government of particular
countries and cities. And the
defiling of their conscience
consisted in their hoping to
receive benefit from the idol,
or at least to avoid the effects
of his wrath, by joining in the
sacrifice that was offered to
him.” Others interpret the verse
more consistently with the
context, thus: Some eat with
consciousness of the idol, that
is, fancying it is something,
and that it makes the meat
unlawful to be eaten; and their
conscience being weak — That is,
not rightly informed; is defiled
— Contracts guilt by so doing.
But — Why should we occasion
this inconvenience? for we know
that meat commendeth us not in
any degree to the acceptance and
favour of God — Abstracted from
circumstances; neither by our
eating, nor by our refraining
from it: eating and not eating
are in themselves things merely
indifferent. For neither if we
eat — What has been offered to
an idol, are we the better, more
holy in God’s sight; neither if
we eat not — But conscientiously
abstain from such meat; are we
the worse — Disapproved of by
him, and exposed to his
displeasure. “The great God does
not so much esteem a man for
being, or disapprove of him for
not being, superior to such
little scruples: but the
tenderness of his conscience,
together with the zeal and
charity of his heart, are the
grand qualities he regards.” —
Doddridge.
Verses 9-13
1 Corinthians 8:9-13. But take
heed lest this liberty of yours
— To eat indifferently of such
meats; become a stumbling-block
— An occasion of doing what they
judge unlawful; to them that are
weak — Uninformed in the truth,
or unsettled as to their
knowledge of it. For if any man
see thee — Whom he believes to
have more knowledge than
himself, and who really hast
this knowledge, that an idol is
nothing; sit at meat in the
idol’s temple — To an
entertainment there; shall not
the conscience of him that is
weak — Scrupulous; be imboldened
— Encouraged by thy example; to
eat those things which are
offered to idols — Though with a
doubting, or perhaps condemning
conscience. And through thy
knowledge — Thy abuse and
unseasonable discovery of thy
knowledge; shall the weak
brother perish — Be drawn into
sin, which is the way to
destruction; for whom Christ
died — And for whom thou wilt
not lose a meal’s meat: so far
art thou from laying down thy
life for him! We see Christ died
even for them that perish.
Observe this, reader. But when
ye sin so — Act so uncharitably
and contrary to your duty;
against the brethren — Who, as
well as you, are the children
and heirs of God, and
joint-heirs with Christ; and
wound their weak conscience —
Their ill-informed and
scrupulous consciences, leading
them into guilt, and hazarding
their salvation; ye sin against
Christ — Whose members they are,
and who had such regard for
their souls, that he died in
ignominy and torture to redeem
them, and hath done all that
example or precept could do, to
make his followers enter into
such humane and compassionate
views. Wherefore — For a
conclusion, I lay down this
general rule, that all things
indifferent in their own nature
are to be forborne, when the use
of them would be a cause of
scandal, or an occasion of
falling to others, of turning
them out of the right way, or
hindering them therein; yea,
though such things may have a
great deal of apparent
expediency in them. So that if
meat — Of what sort soever it
be; make my brother to offend —
Lead him into sin, and cause him
to contract guilt, and wound his
conscience — I will eat no flesh
while the world standeth — But
live entirely on vegetables;
lest I make my brother to offend
— That I may not scandalize and
insnare him in evil, if there be
no other way of avoiding it. Of
such importance do I esteem the
preservation of one endangered
soul: and in this, and other
things of a similar nature, I
pray that God may incline you to
use the like self-denial for
your own sakes, and for the
peace and honour of the
Christian Church. But who will
follow this example? What
preacher or private Christian
will abstain from any thing and
every thing, lawful in itself,
when it offends a weak brother? |