1 Corinthians 9:1-14. St Paul's Defence of his Apostolic Authority
1. _Am I not an apostle? am I not free?_ This chapter is devoted to a
defence of the Apostolic authority of St Paul, but there is an
under-current of thought connecting it with the last which may easily
be missed. In ch. 8. St Paul h... [ Continue Reading ]
_for the seal of mine apostleship are ye in the Lord_ If any Church
had less right than another to question his Apostolic authority, it
was the Church of Corinth, which he had founded (ch. 1 Corinthians
4:15), and on which so many spiritual gifts had been poured forth (ch.
1Co 1:5; 1 Corinthians 1:7... [ Continue Reading ]
_Mine answer to them that do examine me is this_ The Judaizers of whom
we hear in the Epistle to the Galatians and in Acts 15, are now heard
of here also, and this Epistle seems to have stirred them up to a
still stronger antagonism, for St Paul is obliged to travel over the
same ground in his secon... [ Continue Reading ]
_Have we not power to eat and to drink?_ i.e. at the expense of the
Church, cf. St Luke 10:7. This privilege, said St Paul's opponents,
was confined to the original twelve Apostles of the Lord.... [ Continue Reading ]
_Have we not power to lead about a sister, a wife_ The ordinary
interpretation of this passage is (1) that St Paul here asserts his
right, if he pleased, to take with him a wife who was a member of the
Christian body, and to have her maintained at the expense of the
community. The word _sister_, lik... [ Continue Reading ]
_Or I only and Barnabas_ St Paul and St Barnabas (1) resigned their
claim to support on the part of the Church, (2) they were not of the
number of the twelve, (3) they were left by the Apostles to undertake
the sole charge of the missions to the heathen (Galatians 2:9). On
these grounds a charge was... [ Continue Reading ]
_Who goeth a warfare any time at his own charges?_ The charge is now
refuted on five different grounds. The first argument is derived from
the analogy of human conduct. Three instances are given, (1) the
soldier, (2) the vine-dresser, (3) the shepherd, who all derive their
subsistence from their lab... [ Continue Reading ]
_Say I these things as a man?_ i.e. from a purely human point of view.
Cf. Romans 3:5 and Galatians 3:15. This _second_argument is drawn from
the law of Moses, and its force would be admitted by the Judaizing
section of St Paul's opponents.... [ Continue Reading ]
_Doth God take care for oxen?_ Luther and Estius are here fully of one
mind against those who suppose the Apostle to mean that God does
_not_care for oxen. "God cares for all," says the former, and the
latter gives proofs of this care from Holy Writ, for example, Psalms
36:6; Psalms 147:9. But the p... [ Continue Reading ]
_he that thresheth in hope should be partaker of his hope_ In this
verse we may observe (1) that the word translated _treadeth out_in 1
Corinthians 9:9 is here rendered threshing, because the usual Eastern
mode of threshing corn was by means of oxen. See Art "Agriculture" in
Smith's _Dictionary of t... [ Continue Reading ]
_If we have sown unto you spiritual things_ St Paul's third argument
is drawn from the principles of natural gratitude. If we have
conferred on you such inestimable benefits, it is surely no very
burdensome return to give us our maintenance. Not, says Estius, that
the one is in any sense the price p... [ Continue Reading ]
_If others be partakers of this power over you, are not we rather?_
Fourth argument. You have admitted the cogency of these arguments in
the case of teachers who have less claim upon you than we have, to
whom (ch. 1 Corinthians 4:15) you owe your Christian life itself.
_Nevertheless we have not use... [ Continue Reading ]
_Do ye not know that they which minister about holy things_ Fifth
argument. The Jewish priests are maintained by the sacrifices of the
worshippers. See Leviticus 6:17; Numbers 5:8-10, and especially
Numbers 18:8-20. So also Deuteronomy 10:9; Deuteronomy 18:1. This was
an argument of which in dealing... [ Continue Reading ]
_Even so hath the Lord ordained_ In St Matthew 10:10, and St Luke
10:7.... [ Continue Reading ]
St Paul's use of his Christian liberty is restrained by the thought of
the needs of others
15. _But I have used none of these things_ Having disposed of the
objections against his claims to Apostleship, he proceeds to the
instance he had been intending to give of his voluntary abandonment of
his ri... [ Continue Reading ]
_necessity is laid upon me_ See Acts 9:6; Acts 22:21.... [ Continue Reading ]
_For if I do this thing willingly_ Whether St Paul did his work
willingly or unwillingly, he could not escape his responsibility. He
had been chosen (Acts 9:15; Acts 13:2; Romans 1:5; Romans 15:16;
Galatians 1:15-16; 1 Timothy 2:7; 2 Timothy 1:2) to bear the good
tidings to the Gentiles, and ho man... [ Continue Reading ]
_What is my reward then?_ Literally, WAGES (see last verse). Either
(1) as in our version, the preaching the Gospel without charge, and
the consciousness of having served God faithfully thus obtained; or
(2) as some would interpret, suspending the construction until the end
of 1 Corinthians 9:19, th... [ Continue Reading ]
_made myself servant_ Literally, ENSLAVED MYSELF.
_the more_ Not necessarily _more than other people_, but as our
version implies, _more than he would otherwise have gained_.... [ Continue Reading ]
_unto the Jews I became as a few_ As in Acts 16:3; Acts 18:18; Acts
21:26; Acts 23:6; Acts 26:4-6; Acts 26:22; Acts 26:27. Some of these
passages, though they refer to events which occurred after these words
were written, are none the less useful as illustrations of St Paul's
principle of action.... [ Continue Reading ]
_to them that are without law, as without law_ Literally, TO THE
LAWLESS, AS A LAWLESS MAN, i.e. to those who had received no external
laws or statutes from God. St Paul's accommodation to the prejudices
of Gentiles may be seen in Galatians 2:3; Galatians 2:12; Galatians
2:14.
_being not without law... [ Continue Reading ]
_To the weak became I as weak_ i.e. by an affectionate condescension
to their prejudices (ch. 1 Corinthians 8:13; cf. Romans 15:1; 2
Corinthians 11:29).
_I am made_(literally, BECOME) _all things to all men_ Not in the
sense of sacrifice of principle, but by the operation of a wide
reaching sympathy... [ Continue Reading ]
Exhortation to Self-restraint
24. _Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one
receiveth the prize?_ Not that this is the case in the Christian
course, but that each should manifest the same eagerness and sustained
effort as if the prize could be given to one only. The Corinthians are... [ Continue Reading ]
_And every man that striveth for the mastery is temperate in all
things_ The temperance of which the Apostle speaks was no light
matter. For ten months had the candidates for a prize at these games
to abstain from every kind of sensual indulgence, and to undergo the
most severe training of the body.... [ Continue Reading ]
_not as uncertainly_ i.e. _with no definite object_, but "looking to
some goal," as St Chrysostom observes, and that goal the salvation of
himself and others.
_so fight I_ The Christian career is not merely a race, but a
conflict, and a conflict not only with others, but with oneself. St
Paul had t... [ Continue Reading ]
_but I keep under my body_ Literally, I STRIKE UNDER THE EYE, I BEAT
BLACK AND BLUE. So the ancient Latin version of Irenæus renders it
_Corpus meum lividum facio_. The Vulgate, less forcibly, _castigo_.
Tyndale, _tame_. The same word is used in St Luke 18:5 of the effect
of the repeated complaints... [ Continue Reading ]