Chapter 1:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Romans 2 Corinthians
1 Corinthians 1
Verse 1. Paul, called to be an apostle - There is great propriety in every
clause of the salutation, particularly in this, as there were some in
the church of Corinth who called the authority of his mission in
question. Through the will of God - Called "the commandment of
God," 1 Tim. i, 1 This was to the churches the ground of his
authority; to Paul himself, of an humble and ready mind. By the
mention of God, the authority of man is excluded, Gal. i, 1; by the
mention of the will of God, the merit of Paul, chap. xv, 8, &c.
And Sosthenes - A Corinthian, St. Paul's companion in travel. It
was both humility and prudence in the apostle, thus to join his
name with his own, in an epistle wherein he was to reprove so
many irregularities. Sosthenes the brother - Probably this word is
emphatical; as if he had said, Who, from a Jewish opposer of the
gospel, became a faithful brother.
Verse
2. To the church of God which is in Corinth - St. Paul, writing in a
familiar manner to the Corinthians, as also to the Thessalonians
and Galatians, uses this plain appellation. To the other churches
he uses a more solemn address. Sanctified through Jesus Christ -
And so undoubtedly they were in general, notwithstanding some
exceptions. Called - Of Jesus Christ, Rom. i, 6 And - As the fruit
of that calling made holy. With all that in every place - Nothing
could better suit that catholic love which St. Paul labours to
promote in this epistle, than such a declaration of his good wishes
for every true Christian upon earth. Call upon the name of our
Lord Jesus Christ - This plainly implies that all Christians pray to
Christ, as well as to the Father through him.
Verse
4. Always - Whenever I mention you to God in prayer.
Verse
5. In all utterance and knowledge - Of divine things. These gifts
the Corinthians particularly admired. Therefore this
congratulation naturally tended to soften their spirits, and I make
way for the reproofs which follow.
Verse
6. The testimony of Christ - The gospel. Was confirmed among
you - By these gifts attending it. They knew they had received
these by the hand of Paul: and this consideration was highly
proper, to revive in them their former reverence and affection for
their spiritual father.
Verse
7. Waiting - With earnest desire. For the glorious Revelation of
our Lord Jesus Christ - A sure mark of a true or false Christian, to
long for, or dread, this Revelation.
Verse
8. Who will also - if you faithfully apply to him. Confirm you to
the end. In the day of Christ - Now it is our day, wherein we are to
work out our salvation; then it will be eminently the day of Christ,
and of his glory in the saints.
Verse
9. God is faithful - To all his promises; and therefore "to him that
hath shall be given." By whom ye are called - A pledge of his
willingness to save you unto the uttermost.
Verse
10. Now I exhort you - Ye have faith and hope; secure love also.
By the endearing name of our Lord Jesus Christ - lnfinitely
preferable to all the human names in which ye glory. That ye all
speak the same thing - They now spoke different things, ver. 12
And that there be no schisms among you - No alienation of
affection from each other. Is this word ever taken in any other
sense in scripture? But that ye be joined in the same mind -
Affections, desires. And judgment - Touching all the grand truths
of the gospel.
Verse
11. It hath been declared to me by them of the family of Chloe -
Whom some suppose to have been the wife of Stephanas, and the
mother of Fortunatus and Achaicus. By these three the
Corinthians had sent their letter to St. Paul, chap. xvi, 17. That
there are contentions - A word equivalent with schisms in the
preceding verse.
Verse
12. Now this I say - That is, what I mean is this: there are various
parties among you, who set themselves, one against an other, in
behalf of the several teachers they admire. And I of Christ - They
spoke well, if they had not on this pretense despised their
teachers, chap. iv, 8 Perhaps they valued themselves on having
heard Christ preach in his own person.
Verse
13. Is Christ divided - Are not all the members still under one
head? Was not he alone crucified for you all; and were ye not all
baptized in his name? The glory of Christ then is not to be divided
between him and his servants; neither is the unity of the body to
be torn asunder, seeing Christ is one still.
Verse
14. I thank God - (A pious phrase for the common one, "I
rejoice,") that, in the course of his providence, I baptized none of
you, but Crispus, once the ruler of the synagogue, and Caius.
Verse
15. Lest any should say that I had baptized in my own name - In
order to attach them to myself.
Verse
16. I know not - That is, it does not at present occur to my
memory, that I baptized any other.
Verse
17. For God did not send me to baptize - That was not my chief
errand: those of inferior rank and abilities could do it: though all
the apostles were sent to baptize also, Matt. xxviii, 19 But to
preach the gospel - So the apostle slides into his general
proposition: but not with wisdom of speech - With the artificial
ornaments of discourse, invented by human wisdom. Lest the
cross of Christ should be made of none effect - The whole effect
of St. Paul's preaching was owing to the power of God
accompanying the plain declaration of that great truth, "Christ
bore our sins upon the cross." But this effect might have been
imputed to another cause, had he come with that wisdom of
speech which they admired.
Verse
18. To them that perish - By obstinately rejecting the only name
whereby they can be saved. But to us who are saved - Now saved
from our sins, and in the way to everlasting salvation, it is the
great instrument of the power of God.
Verse
19. For it is written - And the words are remarkably applicable to
this great event. Isaiah xxix, 14.
Verse
20. Where is the wise? &c. - The deliverance of Judea from
Sennacherib is what Isaiah refers to in these words; in a bold and
beautiful allusion to which, the apostle in the clause that follows
triumphs over all the opposition of human wisdom to the
victorious gospel of Christ. What could the wise men of the
gentiles do against this? or the Jewish scribes? or the disputers of
this world? - Those among both, who, proud of their acuteness,
were fond of controversy, and thought they could confute all
opponents. Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world -
That is, shown it to be very foolishness. Isaiah xxxiii, 18.
Verse
21. For since in the wisdom of God - According to his wise
disposals, leaving them to make the trial. The world - Whether
Jewish or gentile, by all its boasted wisdom knew not God -
Though the whole creation declared its Creator, and though he
declared himself by all the prophets; it pleased God, by a way
which those who perish count mere foolishness, to save them that
believe.
Verse
22. For whereas the Jews demand of the apostles, as they did of
their Lord, more signs still, after all they have seen already; and
the Greeks, or gentiles, seek wisdom - The depths of philosophy,
and the charms of eloquence.
Verse
23. We go on to preach, in a plain and historical, not rhetorical or
philosophical, manner, Christ crucified, to the Jews a
stumblingblock - Just opposite to the "signs" they demand. And to
the Greeks foolishness - A silly tale, just opposite to the wisdom
they seek.
Verse
24. But to them that are called - And obey the heavenly calling.
Christ - With his cross, his death, his life, his kingdom. And they
experience, first, that he is the power, then, that he is the wisdom,
of God.
Verse
25. Because the foolishness of God - The gospel scheme, which
the world judge to be mere foolishness, is wiser than the wisdom
of men; and, weak as they account it, stronger than all the strength
of men.
Verse
26. Behold your calling - What manner of men they are whom
God calls. That not many wise men after the flesh - In the account
of the world. Not many mighty - Men of power and authority.
Verse
28. Things that are not - The Jews frequently called the gentiles,
"Them that are not," 2 Esdras vi. 56, 57. In so supreme contempt
did they hold them. The things that are - In high esteem.
Verse
29. That no flesh - A fit appellation. Flesh is fair, but withering as
grass. May glory before God - In God we ought to glory.
Verse
30. Of him - Out of his free grace and mercy. Are ye Engrafted
into Christ Jesus, who is made unto us that believe wisdom, who
were before utterly foolish and ignorant. Righteousness - The sole
ground of our justification, who were before under the wrath and
curse of God. Sanctification - A principle of universal holiness,
whereas before we were altogether dead in sin. And redemption -
That is, complete deliverance from all evil, and eternal bliss both
of soul and body.
Verse
31. Let him glory in the Lord - Not in himself, not in the flesh, not
in the world. Jer. ix, 23, 24.
Chapter 1:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Romans 2 Corinthians
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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