Verse 1-2
1 Corinthians 12:1-2. Now
concerning spiritual gifts —
Miraculous gifts of the Holy
Ghost, bestowed on many
believers in those times, for
their confirmation in the faith,
and the conviction of infidels.
The abundance of these gifts in
the churches of Greece, strongly
refuted the idle learning of the
Greek philosophers. But the
Corinthians did not use those
gifts wisely, which occasioned
the apostle’s writing concerning
them. In doing this, after
putting the brethren at Corinth
in mind that before their
conversion they were worshippers
of idols, which, being
themselves dumb, could not
impart to their votaries the
ability of speaking foreign
languages, as Christ had done to
many of his disciples; and after
giving the Corinthians a rule by
which they might judge correctly
of every one who pretended to
possess those gifts by divine
inspiration, He, 1st, Speaks of
the diversity of the gifts,
which God by his Spirit had
conferred on his church, of the
various administrations and
offices appointed by the same
Lord, and of the different
operations of Him that worketh
all in all, 1 Corinthians 12:1
to 1Co_11:2 dly, He describes
the unity of the body, with its
various members, and their uses,
1 Corinthians 12:12-30. 3dly,
Shows the way of exercising
gifts rightly, namely, by love,
1 Corinthians 12:31 to 1
Corinthians 13:13. throughout;
and adds, 4thly, A comparison of
several gifts with each other in
chap. 14. I would not have you
ignorant — Of the Author,
nature, ends, and uses of these
gifts. Ye know that ye were
Gentiles — Idolatrous heathen,
and were then destitute of all
spiritual gifts. Whatever gifts,
therefore, ye possess, ye have
received them from the free
grace of God; carried away — By
a blind credulity; unto, and
after, these dumb idols — The
blind to the dumb: idols of wood
and stone, unable to speak
themselves, and much more to
open your mouths, as God has
done; even as ye were led — By
the subtlety of your priests, or
by some diabolical imposture, or
pretended miracles.
Verse 3
1 Corinthians 12:3. Wherefore —
Since it was so with you once,
and it is otherwise now, this is
a full demonstration of the
truth of the Christian religion,
through your faith in, and
reception of, which, you
received these gifts, which none
of the heathen idols, blind, and
dumb, and lifeless as they were,
could possibly confer upon you.
I give you to understand, that
no man, speaking by the Spirit
of God — Who is endued with
these spiritual gifts, or is at
all inspired by the Holy Spirit;
calleth Jesus accursed —
Pronounces him to be an
impostor, and therefore justly
punished with death. It seems
that some, who pretended to be
inspired, did this; probably the
Jewish exorcists, together with
the heathen priests and
priestesses, who in their
enthusiastic fits reviled Jesus.
Now the apostle intended here to
teach the Corinthians, that if
any such persons were really
inspired, that is, if they spake
by any supernatural impulse, it
certainly proceeded from evil
spirits, and not from the Spirit
of God, who never would move any
one to speak in that manner of
Jesus. By this the apostle cuts
off all who spoke blasphemously
and irreverently of Christ,
whether Jews or heathen, from
all pretences to the possession
of spiritual gifts, or of any
supernatural influence from the
true God. These gifts and
inspirations could only be found
among true Christians. On the
other hand, no man can say that
Jesus is the Lord — Can receive
him as such; can think or speak
reverently of him; can make
profession of his name, when
that profession would expose him
to imprisonment and martyrdom;
can worship him aright, and
heartily acknowledge his
divinity and lordship, (against
which there was then the
greatest opposition made,) so as
to subject himself sincerely and
entirely to his government: but
by the Holy Ghost — By his
directing, renewing, and
purifying influences. The sum
is, None have the Holy Spirit
but true Christians; true
believers in, and disciples of,
the Lord Jesus; and all such
have the Spirit, at least in his
enlightening and sanctifying
graces.
Verses 4-6
1 Corinthians 12:4-6. Now there
are diversities of gifts —
χαρισματων, gifts of grace, both
as to kind and degree; but the
same Spirit — Divers streams,
but all from one fountain. This
verse speaks of the Holy Ghost,
the next of Christ, the sixth of
God the Father. And there are
differences of administrations —
Of offices or functions in the
church, wherein those gifts are
to be exercised, which are
indeed but services, and
therefore not fit fuel for
pride; but the same Lord —
Appoints them all. Christ, who,
as King of his church,
instituted all these offices,
prescribes the manner of
executing them all; and calls
one person to one kind of
ministry, and another to
another. And there are
diversities of operations —
ενεργηματων, of energies, or
effects produced. The word is of
a larger extent than either
gifts or administrations, the
two former words used: but it is
the same God who worketh all
these effects in all — The
persons concerned.
Verses 7-9
1 Corinthians 12:7-9. But the
manifestation of the Spirit —
That ability to exercise some
spiritual gift, whereby the
Spirit manifests his presence
with the person possessed of the
gift; is given to every man —
That has it; to profit withal —
For the profit of the whole
body; to edify the different
members of the church, and to be
only thus used, and not for the
purposes of pride and division.
For to one is given, by the
immediate influence of the
Spirit, the word of wisdom —
Ability to speak what is
instructive and prudent, by way
of information, counsel,
caution, warning, encouragement,
exhortation, &c., in any matters
of duty or privilege: to
another, the word of knowledge —
An acquaintance with, and
ability to expound, the Holy
Scriptures aright, and to
understand and explain the
mysteries of redemption and
salvation. To another, faith —
Faith may here mean, 1st, An
extraordinary trust in God,
under the most difficult or
dangerous circumstances;
producing that supernatural
courage which enabled our Lord’s
apostles, and other disciples,
to bear testimony to the gospel,
not only in the presence of
kings and magistrates, but
before the most enraged enemies.
In consequence of this gift, we
find Peter and John speaking
with such boldness before the
chief priests and council, as
astonished them, Acts 4:13; Acts
4:29. 2d, It signifies that firm
persuasion of the power, love,
and faithfulness of God, and
confidence therein, which led
the apostles to attempt and
succeed in the performing of
miraculous works, when they felt
an inward impulse so to do. Of
this faith Christ speaks Matthew
17:20; and Paul, 1 Corinthians
13:2. To another, the gifts of
healing — Power to heal various
bodily diseases in an
extraordinary way. In the
original it is ιαματων,
healings; in the plural,
denoting the variety of diseases
that were healed. This gift was
promised by Christ, not only to
the apostles and public teachers
in the first church, but
generally to those who should
believe, Mark 16:18.
Accordingly, many of the first
Christians possessed it; and by
exercising it, they not only
confirmed the gospel, but they
conciliated the good-will of the
more considerate heathen, who
could not but esteem the
Christians when, in these
miracles, they discerned the
beneficent nature of their
religion. The apostles, however,
possessed these gifts in a more
eminent degree, and exercised
them in a superior manner. See
Acts 5:15; Acts 19:12. It must
be observed, however, that, in
the exercise of this gift, none
endued with it, not even the
apostles, were permitted to act
according to their own pleasure;
but were always directed to the
exercise of it by an impression
on their minds from God;
otherwise Paul would not have
left Trophimus sick at Miletus;
nor have suffered his beloved
Timothy to labour under his
infirmities; nor Epaphroditus to
be sick nigh unto death. This
gift, however, need not be
wholly confined to the healing
of diseases by a word or touch.
It may exert itself, also,
though in a lower degree, where
natural remedies are applied.
And it may often be this, and
not superior skill, which makes
some physicians more successful
than others. And thus it may be
with regard to other gifts
likewise. “As, after the golden
shields were lost,” says
Bengelius, “the king of Judah
put brazen ones in their place,
so, after the pure gifts of the
Spirit were lost, the power of
God exerted (and still exerts)
itself in a more covert manner,
under human studies and helps:
and that the more plentifully,
according as there is the more
room given for it.”
Verse 10-11
1 Corinthians 12:10-11. To
another, the working of miracles
— That is, miracles of a
different kind; such as taking
up serpents, drinking any deadly
draught without hurt, and
especially casting out devils.
But it may not be improper to
observe here, that the original
expression, ενεργηματα δυναμεων,
here rendered the working of
miracles, is translated by Dr.
Macknight, the inworkings of
powers, the former word being
derived from ενεργεω, signifying
not to work simply, but to work
in another. And he thinks it is
here intended to express the
power which the apostles had of
conferring the miraculous gifts
of the Holy Ghost on those on
whom they laid their hands: a
power which was peculiar to the
apostles, by which they were
raised above all the other
spiritual men, and by which they
spread the gospel everywhere
with the greatest success. To
another, prophecy — The
foretelling of things to come.
To another, the discerning of
spirits — That is, ability to
discern whether professors of
Christianity were of an upright
spirit, or not; whether they had
natural or supernatural gifts
for offices in the church; and
whether they who professed to
speak by inspiration spoke from
a divine, a natural, or
diabolical spirit; and
consequently to distinguish,
with certainty, true doctrine
from false. For, as there
appeared very early among the
professed disciples of Christ,
false teachers, who, to gain
credit to their errors,
pretended to deliver them by
inspiration, a gift of this kind
was very necessary for
preventing the faithful from
being led away by them,
especially in the first age,
before the writings of the
apostles and evangelists were
generally spread abroad. Hence
the caution, 1 John 4:1, Believe
not every spirit, but try the
spirits, whether they are from
God, because many false prophets
are gone forth into the world.
Again, the gift of discerning
spirits was bestowed on some, to
enable them, on certain
occasions, to discover what
passed in the minds of their
enemies, that they might make it
known for the benefit of the
church; 1 Corinthians 14:25.
Thus Peter knew the fraudulent
purpose of Ananias and Sapphira,
and Paul the malice of Elymas.
But here it is to be observed,
that neither the knowledge of
what passed in the minds of
enemies, nor the knowledge of
the characters of private
Christians, or of the
qualifications of those who
aspired after sacred offices,
was bestowed as a habit. On most
occasions, it seems, the rulers
were left in these matters to
guide themselves by their own
sagacity, or by that ordinary
illumination which they received
from the Spirit of wisdom.
To another, divers kinds of
tongues — Ability to speak
languages which they had not
learned. This gift was one of
the primary causes of the rapid
growth of Christianity. For by
it the preachers of the gospel
were able, immediately on their
coming into any country, to
declare the wonderful things of
God, without waiting till, in
the ordinary course, they
learned the language of the
country. The persons who were
endowed with this faculty, had
not the knowledge of all
languages communicated to them,
but of such only as they had
occasion for. This appears from
1 Corinthians 14:18, where the
apostle told the Corinthians
that he spake more foreign
tongues than they all did. And
even the languages which were
given them, may not have been
communicated to them all at
once, but only as they had
occasion for them. To another,
the interpretation of tongues —
Ability to interpret into a
language known, suppose into the
common language of the place,
that which others, suppose
foreigners, or those to whom a
language was given by
inspiration, delivered in a
tongue with which the hearers
were not acquainted. From this
being mentioned as a distinct
gift from that of speaking
foreign languages, Macknight
infers, that not every one who
understood the foreign language,
in which an inspired teacher
spake, was allowed to interpret
what he spake. The only person,
he thinks, permitted to do this,
was the interpreter, endowed
with an especial inspiration for
that end. Because, “the
doctrines of the gospel, being
entirely different from all the
ideas which the heathen had been
accustomed to entertain on
religious subjects, any
interpretation of what was
delivered by the Spirit in a
foreign language, made without a
supernatural direction, might
have led the church into errror.
Further, the faculty of
interpreting foreign languages
by inspiration was, in another
respect, a gift very necessary
in the first age; for the books
of the Old Testament being
written in Hebrew, a language
not then understood by the
vulgar, even in Judea, and the
writings of the apostles and
evangelists being all in the
Greek tongue, on account of its
emphasis and precision; and that
tongue being nowhere spoken by
the common people, except in
Greece and some cities of the
Lesser Asia, if there had not
been in every church inspired
interpreters, who could
translate these
divinely-inspired writings into
the common language, they would
have been, in a great measure,
useless; especially at the
beginning, when the knowledge of
them was most wanted. Whereas
every church having inspired
interpreters of foreign
languages commonly present in
their religious assemblies, to
translate the Hebrew and Greek
Scriptures into the language of
the country, the common people,
everywhere, had an opportunity
of deriving from these writings
all the knowledge and comfort
they are fitted to yield. Such
were the supernatural gifts with
which the first preachers and
ministers of the gospel were
endowed; and by which they
effectually and speedily
established the gospel in the
most populous and civilized
provinces of the Roman empire.”
And all these — Diversities of
gifts, the apostle adds, worketh
that one and the self-same
Spirit — They all flow from one
and the same fountain; dividing
to every man severally, καθως
βουλεται, as he willeth — An
expression which does not so
much imply arbitrary pleasure,
as a determination founded on
wise counsel.
Verse 12-13
1 Corinthians 12:12-13. For as
the human body is one, and yet
hath many members — For
different offices; and all the
members, though many, constitute
but one body — United in one
well-regulated system; so also
is Christ — That is, mystically
considered, namely, the whole
church or society, of which
Christ is the head: in which,
though there are several
members, having different gifts,
yet they do not constitute
several churches, but only one
church, and therefore they
should all use their gifts for
the good of that one. For by one
Spirit — When it is indeed
received by us; we are all
baptized into one body — Are
constituted true members
thereof, united to the head of
that body by faith, and to all
the other members thereof by
love: we are pardoned,
regenerated, and created anew,
and so made members of the true,
invisible, or spiritual church;
whether we be Jews or Gentiles —
Who are at the greatest distance
from each other by nature;
whether we be bond or free —
Slaves or freemen, who are at
the greatest distance from each
other by law and custom: we have
all been made to drink into one
Spirit — In other words, The
religion we before professed,
whether true or false; the rank
which we now hold in life,
whether high or low; makes no
difference as to the grand
point: our union with the body,
and its various members, as well
as with the head, is the same,
and the same happy consequences
follow from that union; we all
imbibe the influences of the
same Spirit, by which the divine
life was at first produced, and
is continually preserved in our
souls.
Verses 14-20
1 Corinthians 12:14-20. For the
body is not one member, but many
— All of which are necessary,
that the various sorts of
offices belonging to the body
may be all performed: thus there
must be different gifts and
offices in the church of Christ,
which all conduce to the
advantage and perfection of the
whole. If the foot — One of
inferior gifts and place; shall
say, Because I am not the hand —
Do not appear in a more
honourable place, and have not a
more important office; I am not
of the body — I am separated
from, or despised by it, in my
low situation; is it therefore
not of the body — Is the
inference good? Would it have
reason on this account to
represent or think itself an
outcast? The foot here is
elegantly introduced as speaking
of the hand, the ear of the eye;
each of a part that has some
resemblance to it. So among men,
each is apt to compare himself
with those whose gifts some way
resemble his own, rather than
with those who are at a
distance, either above or
beneath him. Perhaps the foot
may represent private
Christians; the hand, active
officers in the church; the eye,
discerning teachers; and the
ear, attentive hearers. If the
whole body were an eye — And a
man could look, at will, through
every pore; where were the
hearing — That important sense,
which admits so much pleasing
entertainment and improvement?
And if the whole were hearing,
where were the smelling — A
sense which, though less
important than the former, is
not destitute of its proper
delight and its proper use. The
sense is, If all the members of
the church had the same gifts,
though the most excellent, as
seeing or hearing, what would
become of the church? There must
be different offices and gifts
for different uses, and each
ought to employ his gift,
according to the nature of it,
for the service of the whole.
But now we see God — The wise
and great Creator; hath set the
members in the body as it hath
pleased him — With the most
exquisite wisdom and goodness.
If they were all one member — Or
if the members were all of one
form and use; where were the
body — How could it possibly
subsist? But now they are many
members — Different from each
other, possessed of different
powers, and intended for
different uses; yet but one
harmonious, regular body —
Furnished for the various animal
functions, and capable of a
variety of sensations and
actions. And it is a necessary
consequence of this unity, that
the several members need one
another.
Verses 21-23
1 Corinthians 12:21-23. And the
eye — In its commanding station,
and possessed as it is of light
and discernment; cannot say to
the hand — Endowed with neither
of these qualities, and the mere
instrument of action; I have no
need of thee — For by the hand
the whole body is maintained and
fed, and the eye itself
preserved and defended. Nor
again the head — Elevated as it
is, and so admirably furnished
with all the nerves and organs
planted in it, cannot say to the
feet — The most distant and
extreme parts, mean as their
form and office seems; I have no
need of you — Since by them the
head and all the other parts of
the body are supported, and are
removed from place to place.
“The apostle mentions the two
principal members of the body,
the eye and the head, and
affirms that they need the
service of the inferior members,
to teach such as hold the most
honourable offices in the church
not to despise those who are
placed in the lowest stations:
for as in the body, the hand
needs the direction of the eye,
and the eye the assistance of
the hands, so in the church they
who follow the active
occupations of life, need the
direction of the teachers. On
the other hand, the teachers
need to be supported by the
labour of the active members.”
Nay, those members which seem to
be more feeble — Because unable
to endure external injury, such
as the brain, the lungs, the
heart, and bowels; or the veins,
arteries, and other minute
channels in the body; are more
abundantly necessary — For
without them the animal
functions can by no means be
discharged, nor the body
preserved in life and health.
And likewise those members which
we think to be less honourable —
Or graceful, on account of their
place and use; upon these we
bestow — Greek, περιτιθεμεν,
these we surround with more
abundant honour — By carefully
covering them. And our uncomely
parts have — By virtue of the
dress we put upon them; more
abundant comeliness — Than most
of the rest. It is as if he had
said, The face, on which the
image of God is particularly
stamped, we leave uncovered; but
as for those parts which decency
or custom teaches us to conceal,
we contrive not only to cover,
but also, as far as we
conveniently can, to adorn by
covering. “This observation,
concerning the pains which we
take in adorning or concealing
the weak and uncomely members of
our body, the apostle makes to
teach the higher members of the
church to advance the honour of
the whole body, by concealing
the weakness and imperfections
of the lowest, and by setting
off their gifts and graces,
whatever they may be, to the
best advantage, for the reason
mentioned 1 Corinthians 12:25.
And when such attention is paid
to the inferior, by the superior
members of the church, the
inferior, laying aside all envy,
should willingly suffer the
superior members to recommend
themselves to the esteem of the
whole body, by the lustre and
usefulness of their more
excellent gifts.”
Verses 24-26
1 Corinthians 12:24-26. For our
comely and graceful parts have
no need — Of being so adorned,
as they appear to greater
advantage uncovered; but God
hath tempered the body together
— συνεκερασε, hath attempered
and united in just proportions
the several parts thereof;
having given — To such as are
naturally weak and without
beauty; more abundant honour —
Through their greater efficacy
in the nourishment and
preservation of the body, and by
causing them to be cared for and
served by the noblest parts.
That there should be no schism
in the body — No division of
separate interests; but that the
members should have the same
care one for another — As being
each an important part of the
whole. And whether one member
suffer, all the members — In
consequence of their close union
with, and dependance on each
other, should suffer with it —
As losing the assistance of the
disabled member, and concerned
to remove the cause of its
suffering. Or one member be
honoured — Clothed and
gratified; all the members
should rejoice with it —
Deriving advantage from its
welfare, and the ornament of one
part being looked upon as that
of the whole. “By comparing
schism in the church to schism
in the body, we are taught that
it consists in a natural want of
affection in some of the members
toward their fellow-members,
whereby contentions and
animosities are produced.
Further, by showing that the
members of the body are so
united as to be necessary to
each other’s existence, the
apostle hath taught us that
there should be no envy nor
strife among the disciples of
Christ; but that each, by the
right exercise of his proper
gift, should assist his
neighbour, and rejoice when his
welfare is promoted.”
Verse 27
1 Corinthians 12:27. Now ye —
Believers at Corinth; are the
body of Christ — A part of it,
not the whole body; and members
in particular — That is, each
believer is a particular member
thereof, and ought to behave
himself accordingly. This is the
application of the foregoing
allegory, which the apostle is
thought by some to have formed
on our Lord’s words, Matthew
25:35-45. As if he had said, Ye
believers are formed into one
church or body, of which Christ
is the head, soul, and ruler.
And in the application he
signifies, that “what he had
said concerning the order, the
situation, and the offices of
the members of the human body,
the union which subsists among
them, and the care which they
have of each other, and
concerning the perniciousness of
dissensions among its members,
was all applicable to the
members of the church of Christ.
They were therefore to attend to
the things he had written, that
there might be no envy among
them, nor discontent, nor
arrogant preferring of
themselves before others, but
that in peace and love they
might all promote each other’s
happiness.” — Macknight.
Verses 28-31
1 Corinthians 12:28-31. And God
hath set in the church first
apostles — Who planted the
gospel in the heathen nations,
being honoured with an office of
the highest distinction, and
furnished with endowments
peculiar to themselves;
secondly, prophets — Who either
foretold things to come, or
spake by extraordinary
inspiration for the edification
of the church; thirdly, teachers
— Of an inferior class. Under
prophets and teachers, are
comprised evangelists and
pastors. After that, miracles —
Persons endowed on some
particular occasions with
miraculous powers; then gifts of
healing — Diseases, by anointing
the sick with oil, and praying
for their recovery: the
expression denotes the persons
who possessed these gifts. Helps
— Or helpers, who, speaking by
inspiration to the edification
of the church, were fitted to
assist the superior officers,
and to help the faith and joy of
others. Governments — Or
governors, the thing performed,
as in the former clause, being
put for the persons who
performed it. The word
κυβερνησεις, is properly the
steering of a ship with skill by
a pilot; and seems to be put
here metaphorically for persons
directing or managing affairs
with judgment. It does not
appear, however, that these two
last expressions were intended
by the apostle to signify
distinct offices. Rather any
persons might be called helps or
helpers, from a particular
dexterity in helping the
distressed; and governors or
governments, from a peculiar
talent for governing or
presiding in assemblies. Are all
the members or ministers of the
church apostles, &c. — Seeing
God has not given all sorts of
gifts to one, but some to one,
and others to another, that each
one might stand in need of the
others; therefore let none
despise another, but all join
together in employing their
gifts for the common good of the
church. But covet earnestly the
best gifts — For they are well
worth your desire and pursuit,
though but few of you can attain
them; and yet I show you a more
excellent way — I point out unto
you a more excellent gift than
any or all of them, and one
which all may, yea, must attain,
or perish.
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