Am not I free? The apostle in this place wishes to teach the
Corinthians, how careful and solicitous they should be not to give
cause for scandal to their neighbour, and how anxious for his
spiritual welfare, informing them, that as he refused to take even
what he had a just right to, as a minister... [ Continue Reading ]
It appears certain, from the testimony of the fathers, that St. Paul
was not in the state of wedlock. St. Jerome informs us that the
apostle is here speaking of such holy women who, according to the
Jewish custom, supplied their teachers with the necessaries of life,
as we see was done to Christ him... [ Continue Reading ]
_Is it a great matter? The apostle is here speaking of what he had
given to the Corinthians, and what he had received from them; and this
he does under the comparison of the sower and the reaper. Can any of
you think it hared that we receive some part of your temporal goods,
when we have bestowed up... [ Continue Reading ]
_It is no glory. That is, I have nothing to glory of. (Challoner) ---
If I preach the gospel through compulsion, fear, or mere necessity,
having no other means of maintenance, I must not look for a reward in
heaven; but now doing it through charity and freely, I shall have my
reward from God; and th... [ Continue Reading ]
_But if against my will. That is, if I do not do it with alacrity and
zeal, but instigated by the sole motive of punishment, woe unto me, as
he says in the preceding verse, if I am instigated by this motive
alone; still the dispensation of the gospel is entrusted to me, and I
must comply with that o... [ Continue Reading ]
_Free as to all. That is, whereas I was under no obligation to any
man, yet I made myself the servant of all, &c. (Calmet)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_I became to the Jews as a Jew. That is, upon occasions, not to hinder
their conversion, I practised the ceremonies of their law; though I am
not under their law, which is no longer obligatory, but only under the
new law of Christ. (Witham)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_To them that were without the law. That is, to the Gentiles, who
never were under the law of Moses. (Witham)_... [ Continue Reading ]
How convincing it this and many similar texts against those who deny
the merit of good works, and who would not have men to act with a view
to any recompense, though rewards and recompenses are very frequently
mentioned in holy writ. (Haydock)... [ Continue Reading ]
_Know you not? Nothing is more famous in the annals of history than
the public games in Greece: it is to these the apostle is here
alluding. (Calmet) --- All run indeed, &c. He brings the examples of
runners and wrestlers for a prize in the Grecian games, where only one
could gain the prize. It is t... [ Continue Reading ]
He _refraineth himself, &c. Curbs his inclinations, abstains from
debauchery, and any thing that may weaken him, or hinder him from
gaining this corruptible crown, how much more ought we to practise
self-denials for an eternal crown?_
In the fifth verse, where we translate, a woman, a sister, or a
s... [ Continue Reading ]
_I chastise, &c. Here St. Paul shews the necessity of self-denial and
mortifications to subdue the flesh, and its inordinate desires.
(Challoner) --- Not even the labours of an apostle are exemptions from
voluntary mortifications and penance._... [ Continue Reading ]