The Epistle to the Corinthians presents very different subjects from those
which occupied us in the one addressed to the Romans. We find in it moral
details, and the interior order of an assembly, with regard to which the
Spirit of God here displays His wisdom in a direct way. There is no mention
of elders or of other functionaries of the assembly. Through the labours of
the apostle a numerous assembly had been formed (for God had much people in
that city) in the midst of a very corrupt population, where riches and
luxury were united with a moral disorder which had made the city a proverb.
At the same time, here as elsewhere, false teachers (in general, Jews)
sought to undermine the influence of the apostle. The spirit of philosophy
did not fail also to exercise its baneful influence, although Corinth was
not, like Athens, its principal seat. Morality and the authority of the
apostle were compromised together; and the state of things was most
critical. The Epistle was written from Ephesus, where the tidings of the
sad state of the flock at Corinth had reached the apostle, almost at the
moment when he had determined to visit them on his way into Macedonia
(instead of passing along the coast of Asia Minor as he did), then
returning to pay them a second visit on his way back. These tidings
prevented his doing so, and, instead of visiting them to pour out his heart
among them, he wrote this letter. The second epistle was written in
Macedonia, when Titus had brought him word of the happy effect of the
first.
The subjects of this first epistle are very easily divided into their
natural order. In the first place, before he blames the Christians at
Corinth to whom he writes, the apostle acknowledges all the grace which God
had already bestowed on them, and would still impart. Chapter 1:1-9. From
verse 10 to chapter 4:21 the subject of divisions, schools of doctrine and
human wisdom, is spoken of in contrast with revelation and divine wisdom.
Chapter 5, the corruption of morals, and discipline, whether by power, or
in the responsibility of the assembly. Chapter 6, temporal affairs,
law-suits; and again the subject of fornication, which was of primary
importance for the Christians of this city. Chapter 7, marriage is
considered. Ought people to marry? The obligation of those who had already
married; and the case of a converted husband or of a converted wife, whose
wife or whose husband was not converted. Chapter 8, should they eat things
offered to idols? Chapter 9, his apostleship. Chapter 10, their condition
in general, their danger of being seduced, whether by fornication, or by
idolatry, and idolatrous feasts, with the principles relating thereto,
which introduces the Lord's supper. Chapter 11, questions connected with
their behaviour in religious matters individually or (v. 17) in the
assembly. Afterwards, chapter 12, the exercise of gifts, and their true
value, and the object of their use, magnifying (chap. 13) the comparative
value of charity; to the end of chapter 14, ordering the exercise of gifts
also, with which it is compared. Chapter 15, the resurrection, which some
denied, and specially that of the saints; and chapter 16, the collections
for the poor in Judea, with some salutations, and the principles of
subordination to those whom God has raised up for service, even where there
were no elders. It is of great value to have these directions immediately
from the Lord, independent of a formal organisation, so that individual
conscience and that of the body as a whole should be engaged.
But there are some other considerations as to the character and structure
of the epistle which I must not pass by.
The reader may remark a difference in the address in the Corinthians and
Ephesians. In the Corinthians, "To the church of God," etc., "with all that
in every place call on the name of the Lord Jesus." It is the professing
church, the members being assumed to be faithful, at any rate in character
such till put out, and with that, every one that owned Jesus as Lord,-the
house; hence chapter 10:1-5. In Ephesians it is "Holy and faithful
brethren," and we have the proper privileges of the body. This character of
the epistle, as embracing the professing church, and recognising a local
assembly as representing it in the locality, gives the epistle great
importance. Further, I think it will be found that the outward professing
assembly is dealt with to the middle of chapter 10 (and there the nature of
the Lord's supper introduces the one body of Christ, which is treated of as
to the gifts of the Spirit in chapter 12); comeliness in woman's activities
in the first verses of chapter 11; and afterwards from verse 17 what befits
the coming together in the assembly, and the Lord's supper, with the
government of God. Verses 1-16 do not apply to the assembly. Still, order
in the local assembly is everywhere the subject; only, from chapter 1 to
chapter 10:14, the professing multitude is in view, supposed however
sincere, but possibly not so. From chapter 10:15 to the end of chapter 12
the body is in view.