Chapter 15:
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| Geneva
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| Jamieson Faussett Brown
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Romans 2 Corinthians
1 Corinthians 15
Verse 2. Ye are saved, if ye hold fast - Your salvation is begun, and will
be perfected, if ye continue in the faith. Unless ye have believed
in vain - Unless indeed your faith was only a delusion.
Verse
3. I received - From Christ himself. It was not a fiction of my
own. Isaiah liii, 8, 9.
Verse
4. According to the scriptures - He proves it first from scripture,
then from the testimony of a cloud of witnesses. Psalm xvi, 10.
Verse
5. By the twelve - This was their standing appellation; but their
full number was not then present.
Verse
6. Above five hundred - Probably in Galilee. A glorious and
incontestable proof! The greater part remain - Alive.
Verse
7. Then by all the apostles - The twelve were mentioned ver. 5.
This title here, therefore, seems to include the seventy; if not all
those, likewise, whom God afterwards sent to plant the gospel in
heathen nations.
Verse
8. An untimely birth - It was impossible to abase himself more
than he does by this single appellation. As an abortion is not
worthy the name of a man, so he affirms himself to be not worthy
the name of an apostle.
Verse
9. I persecuted the church - True believers are humbled all their
lives, even for the sins they committed before they believed.
Verse
10. I laboured more than they all - That is, more than any of them,
from a deep sense of the peculiar love God had shown me. Yet, to
speak more properly, it is not I, but the grace of God that is with
me - This it is which at first qualified me for the work, and still
excites me to zeal and diligence in it.
Verse
11. Whether I or they, so we preach - All of us speak the same
thing.
Verse
12. How say some - Who probably had been heathen
philosophers.
Verse
13. If there be no resurrection - If it be a thing flatly impossible.
Verse
14. Then is our preaching - From a commission supposed to be
given after the resurrection. Vain - Without any real foundation.
Verse
15. If the dead rise not - If the very notion of a resurrection be, as
they say, absurd and impossible.
Verse
17. Ye are still in your sins - That is, under the guilt of them. So
that there needed something more than reformation, (which was
plainly wrought,) in order to their being delivered from the guilt
of sin even that atonement, the sufficiency of which God attested
by raising our great Surety from the grave.
Verse
18. They who sleep in Christ - Who have died for him, or
believing in him. Are perished - Have lost their life and being
together.
Verse
19. If in this life only we have hope - If we look for nothing
beyond the grave. But if we have a divine evidence of things not
seen, if we have "a hope full of immortality," if we now taste of
"the powers of the world to come," and see "the crown that fadeth
not away," then, notwithstanding" all our present trials, we are
more happy than all men.
Verse
20. But now - St. Paul declares that Christians "have hope," not
"in this life only." His proof of the resurrection lies in a narrow
compass, ver. 12-19. Almost all the rest of the chapter is taken up
in illustrating, vindicating, and applying it. The proof is short, but
solid and convincing, that which arose from Christ's resurrection.
Now this not only proved a resurrection possible, but, as it proved
him to be a divine teacher, proved the certainty of a general
resurrection, which he so expressly taught. The first fruit of them
that slept - The earnest, pledge, and insurance of their resurrection
who slept in him: even of all the righteous. It is of the resurrection
of these, and these only, that the apostle speaks throughout the
chapter.
Verse
22. As through Adam all, even the righteous, die, so through
Christ all these shall be made alive - He does not say, "shall
revive," (as naturally as they die,) but shall be made alive, by a
power not their own.
Verse
23. Afterward - The whole harvest. At the same time the wicked
shall rise also. But they are not here taken into the account.
Verse
24. Then - After the resurrection and the general judgment.
Cometh the end - Of the world; the grand period of all those
wonderful scenes that have appeared for so many succeeding
generations. When he shall have delivered up the kingdom to the
Father, and he (the Father) shall have abolished all adverse rule,
authority, and power - Not that the Father will then begin to reign
without the Son, nor will the Son then cease to reign. For the
divine reign both of the Father and Son is from everlasting to
everlasting. But this is spoken of the Son's mediatorial kingdom,
which will then be delivered up, and of the immediate kingdom or
reign of the Father, which will then commence. Till then the Son
transacts the business which the Father hath given him, for those
who are his, and by them as well as by the angels, with the Father,
and against their enemies. So far as the Father gave the kingdom
to the Son, the Son shall deliver it up to the Father, John xiii, 3.
Nor does the Father cease to reign, when he gives it to the Son;
neither the Son, when he delivers it to the Father: but the glory
which he had before the world began, John xvii, 5; Heb. i, 8, will
remain even after this is delivered up. Nor will he cease to be a
king even in his human nature, Luke i, 33. If the citizens of the
new Jerusalem" shall reign for ever," Rev. xxii, 5, how much
more shall he?
Verse
25. He must reign - Because so it is written. Till he - the Father
hath put all his enemies under his feet. Psalm cx, 1.
Verse
26. The last enemy that is destroyed is death - Namely, after
Satan, Heb. ii, 14, and sin, ver. 56, are destroyed. In the same
order they prevailed. Satan brought in sin, and sin brought forth
death. And Christ, when he of old engaged with these enemies,
first conquered Satan, then sin, in his death; and, lastly, death, in
his resurrection. In the same order he delivers all the faithful from
them, yea, and destroys these enemies themselves. Death he so
destroys that it shall be no more; sin and Satan, so that they shall
no more hurt his people.
Verse
27. Under him - Under the Son. Psalm viii, 6, 7.
Verse
28. The Son also shall be subject - Shall deliver up the mediatorial
kingdom. That the three-one God may be all in all - All things,
(consequently all persons,) without any interruption, without the
intervention of any creature, without the opposition of any enemy,
shall be subordinate to God. All shall say, "My God, and my all."
This is the end. Even an inspired apostle can see nothing beyond
this.
Verse
29. Who are baptized for the dead - Perhaps baptized in hope of
blessings to be received after they are numbered with the dead.
Or, "baptized in the room of the dead" - Of them that are just
fallen in the cause of Christ: like soldiers who advance in the
room of their companions that fell just before their face.
Verse
30. Why are we - The apostles. Also in danger every hour - It is
plain we can expect no amends in this life.
Verse
31. I protest by your rejoicing, which I have - Which love makes
my own. I die daily - I am daily in the very jaws of death. Beside
that I live, as it were, in a daily martyrdom.
Verse
32. If to speak after the manner of men - That is, to use a
proverbial phrase, expressive of the most imminent danger I have
fought with wild beasts at Ephesus - With the savage fury of a
lawless multitude, Acts xix, 29, &c. This seems to have been but
just before. Let as eat, &c. - We might, on that supposition, as
well say, with the Epicureans, Let us make the best of this short
life, seeing we have no other portion.
Verse
33. Be not deceived - By such pernicious counsels as this. Evil
communications corrupt good manners - He opposes to the
Epicurean saying, a well - known verse of the poet Menander.
Evil communications - Discourse contrary to faith, hope, or love,
naturally tends to destroy all holiness.
Verse
34. Awake - An exclamation full of apostolical majesty. Shake off
your lethargy! To righteousness - Which flows from the true
knowledge of God, and implies that your whole soul be broad
awake. And sin not - That is, and ye will not sin Sin supposes
drowsiness of soul. There is need to press this. For some among
you have not the knowledge of God - With all their boasted
knowledge, they are totally ignorant of what it most concerns
them to know. I speak this to your shame - For nothing is more
shameful, than sleepy ignorance of God, and of the word and
works of God; in these especially, considering the advantages
they had enjoyed.
Verse
35. But some one possibly will say, How are the dead raised up,
after their whole frame is dissolved? And with what kind of
bodies do they come again, after these are mouldered into dust?
Verse
36. To the inquiry concerning the manner of rising, and the
quality of the bodies that rise, the Apostle answers first by a
similitude, ver. 36-42, and then plainly and directly, ver. 42, 43.
That which thou sowest, is not quickened into new life and
verdure, except it die - Undergo a dissolution of its parts, a change
analogous to death. Thus St. Paul inverts the objection; as if he
had said, Death is so far from hindering life, that it necessarily
goes before it.
Verse
37. Thou sowest not the body that shall be - Produced from the
seed committed to the ground, but a bare, naked grain, widely
different from that which will afterward rise out of the earth.
Verse
38. But God - Not thou, O man, not the grain itself, giveth it a
body as it hath pleased him, from the time he distinguished the
various Species of beings; and to each of the seeds, not only of the
fruits, but animals also, (to which the Apostle rises in the
following verse,) its own body; not only peculiar to that species,
but proper to that individual, and arising out of the substance of
that very grain.
Verse
39. All flesh - As if he had said, Even earthy bodies differ from
earthy, and heavenly bodies from heavenly. What wonder then, if
heavenly bodies differ from earthy? or the bodies which rise from
those that lay in the grave?
Verse
40. There are also heavenly bodies - As the sun, moon, and stars;
and there are earthy - as vegetables and animals. But the brightest
lustre which the latter can have is widely different from that of the
former.
Verse
41. Yea, and the heavenly bodies themselves differ from each
other.
Verse
42. So also is the resurrection of the dead - So great is the
difference between the body which fell, and that which rises. It is
sown - A beautiful word; committed, as seed, to the ground. In
corruption - Just ready to putrefy, and, by various degrees of
corruption and decay, to return to the dust from whence it came. It
is raised in incorruption - Utterly incapable of either dissolution or
decay.
Verse
43. It is sown in dishonour - Shocking to those who loved it best,
human nature in disgrace! It is raised in glory - Clothed with
robes of light, fit for those whom the King of heaven delights to
honour. It is sown in weakness - Deprived even of that feeble
strength which it once enjoyed. It is raised in power - Endued with
vigour, strength, and activity, such as we cannot now conceive.
Verse
44. It is sown in this world a merely animal body - Maintained by
food, sleep, and air, like the bodies of brutes: but it is raised of a
more refined contexture, needing none of these animal
refreshments, and endued with qualities of a spiritual nature, like
the angels of God.
Verse
45. The first Adam was made a living soul - God gave him such
life as other animals enjoy: but the last Adam, Christ, is a
quickening spirit - As he hath life in himself, so he quickeneth
whom he will; giving a more refined life to their very bodies at
the resurrection. Gen. ii, 7.
Verse
47. The first man was from the earth, earthy; the second man is
the Lord from heaven-The first man, being from the earth, is
subject to corruption and dissolution, like the earth from which he
came. The second man - St. Paul could not so well say, "Is from
heaven, heavenly:" because, though man owes it to the earth that
he is earthy, yet the Lord does not owe his glory to heaven. He
himself made the heavens, and by descending from thence
showed himself to us as the Lord. Christ was not the second man
in order of time; but in this respect, that as Adam was a public
person, who acted in the stead of all mankind, so was Christ. As
Adam was the first general representative of men, Christ was the
second and the last. And what they severally did, terminated not
in themselves, but affected all whom they represented.
Verse
48. They that are earthy - Who continue without any higher
principle. They that are heavenly - Who receive a divine principle
from heaven.
Verse
49. The image of the heavenly - Holiness and glory.
Verse
50. But first we must be entirely changed; for such flesh and
blood as we are clothed with now, cannot enter into that kingdom
which is wholly spiritual: neither doth this corruptible body
inherit that incorruptible kingdom.
Verse
51. A mystery - A truth hitherto unknown; and not yet fully
known to any of the sons of men. We - Christians. The Apostle
considers them all as one, in their succeeding generations. Shall
not all die - Suffer a separation of soul and body. But we shall all
- Who do not die, be changed - So that this animal body shall
become spiritual.
Verse
52. In a moment - Amazing work of omnipotence! And cannot the
same power now change us into saints in a moment? The trumpet
shall sound - To awaken all that sleep in the dust of the earth.
Verse
54. Death is swallowed up in victory - That is, totally conquered,
abolished for ever.
Verse
55. O death, where is thy sting? - Which once was full of hellish
poison. O hades, the receptacle of separate souls, where is thy
victory - Thou art now robbed of all thy spoils; all thy captives are
set at liberty. Hades literally means the invisible world, and
relates to the soul; death, to the body. The Greek words are found
in the Septuagint translation of Hosea xiii, 14. Isaiah xxv, 8.
Verse
56. The sting of death is sin - Without which it could have no
power. But this sting none can resist by his own strength. And the
strength of sin is the law - As is largely declared, Rom. vii, 7, &c.
Verse
57. But thanks be to God, who hath given us the victory - Over
sin, death, and hades.
Verse
58. Be ye steadfast - In yourselves. Unmovable - By others;
continually increasing in the work of faith and labour of love.
Knowing your labour is not in vain in the Lord - Whatever ye do
for his sake shall have its full reward in that day. Let us also
endeavour, by cultivating holiness in all its branches, to maintain
this hope in its full energy; longing for that glorious day, when, in
the utmost extent of the expression, death shall be swallowed up
for ever, and millions of voices, after the long silence of the grave,
shall burst out at once into that triumphant song, O death, where is
thy sting? O hades, where is thy victory?
Chapter 15:
| 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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