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												Verses 1-61 Corinthians 6:1-6. The 
												apostle, having mentioned one 
												very great irregularity among 
												the professors of Christianity 
												at Corinth, proceeds now to 
												animadvert upon another, namely, 
												their entering into suits of law 
												with each other in heathen 
												courts: Dare any of you — Have 
												you so little regard for the 
												glory of God, and the credit of 
												Christianity, that, having a 
												matter against another — Any 
												controversy about civil affairs; 
												you go to law before the unjust 
												— Heathen judges, who generally 
												were very corrupt, and from whom 
												a Christian could expect no 
												justice: and not before the 
												saints — Who might easily decide 
												these smaller differences in a 
												private and friendly manner. Do 
												ye not know — This expression 
												occurs six times in this single 
												chapter, and that with a 
												peculiar force: for the 
												Corinthians knew, and gloried in 
												their knowledge, but their 
												conduct was not consistent 
												therewith. That the saints — 
												After having been judged 
												themselves; shall judge the 
												world — Shall be assessors with 
												Christ in the judgment wherein 
												he shall condemn all the wicked, 
												as well angels as men, Matthew 
												19:28; Revelation 20:4. And if 
												the world shall be judged by 
												you, are ye unworthy — Unfit, 
												unable for such a work; to judge 
												the smallest matters — 
												Differences about worldly 
												affairs, which are of small 
												moment, in comparison of 
												spiritual and heavenly matters. 
												Know ye not that we shall judge 
												angels? — Namely, evil angels: 
												as Christ is their judge, we 
												shall be honoured to join with 
												him in that judgment also, when 
												all his enemies shall be put 
												under his feet and ours. How 
												much more are ye fit to decide 
												in these low and transitory 
												secular affairs? If then ye have 
												judgments — Differences to be 
												decided; of things pertaining to 
												this life, set them to judge who 
												are least esteemed in the church 
												— Even the weakest among you 
												might be adequate to that work, 
												and certainly fitter for it than 
												unjust heathen. I speak to your 
												shame — To make you ashamed of 
												your proceedings. The apostle 
												certainly did not seriously 
												design that they should set 
												persons to judge in these 
												matters, (though of little 
												importance, in comparison of 
												spiritual things,) who were the 
												weakest and of least esteem 
												among them, as appears from the 
												next clause; but he spoke 
												ironically. Is it so, that there 
												is not a wise man among you — 
												Among you who are such admirers 
												of wisdom, who is wise enough to 
												decide in such causes? Not one 
												able to judge between his 
												brethren — In those disputes 
												which they have about earthly 
												things? But brother goeth to law 
												with brother — One Christian 
												with another; and that before 
												the unbelievers — To the great 
												discredit of the Christian name; 
												yea, to the scandal of the whole 
												Christian institution; for they 
												cannot but take occasion, from 
												your mutual quarrels and 
												accusations, to brand the whole 
												body of you as injurious and 
												avaricious; who, while you 
												pretend to be so far superior to 
												secular views, are yet so 
												strongly attached to them, that, 
												with all your professions of 
												universal benevolence and 
												brotherly love, you cannot 
												forbear wronging one another.
 
 Verse 7-8
 1 Corinthians 6:7-8. Now 
												therefore — But, indeed, there 
												is plainly a fault in you, 
												whoever may have the right on 
												his side; that ye go to law with 
												one another — Or that ye quarrel 
												with one another at all, whether 
												ye go to law or not. Why do ye 
												not rather take, or suffer, 
												wrong — Endure it patiently, and 
												sit down with the loss? Why do 
												ye not suffer yourselves to be 
												defrauded — Rather than seek a 
												remedy in such a way as this? 
												All men cannot, or will not, 
												receive this saying. Many aim 
												only at this, “I will neither do 
												wrong nor suffer it.” These are 
												honest heathen, but no 
												Christians. Nay — αλλα, but, ye 
												are so far from bearing injuries 
												and frauds, that ye do wrong to, 
												or injure openly, and defraud — 
												Privately, and that even your 
												Christian brethren.
 
 Verses 9-11
 1 Corinthians 6:9-11. Know ye 
												not — With all your boasted 
												knowledge; that the unrighteous 
												— That is, not only the unjust, 
												but those destitute of true 
												righteousness and holiness, 
												comprehending the various 
												classes of sinners afterward 
												mentioned, the term unrighteous 
												here including them all: shall 
												not inherit the kingdom of God — 
												Namely, the kingdom of eternal 
												glory. And can you contentedly 
												sacrifice this great and 
												glorious hope which the gospel 
												gives you, for the sake of those 
												pleasures of sin which are but 
												for a short season? Be not 
												deceived — By a vain imagination 
												that the Christian name and 
												privileges will save you, while 
												you continue in the practice of 
												your vices. Neither fornicators, 
												nor idolaters, &c. — Idolatry is 
												here placed between fornication 
												and adultery, because these 
												things generally accompanied it. 
												Indeed, among the heathen 
												idolatry was not only a great 
												crime in itself, but was the 
												parent of many other crimes. For 
												the heathen were encouraged in 
												the commission of fornication, 
												adultery, sodomy, drunkenness, 
												theft, &c., by the example of 
												their gods. Nor effeminate — Who 
												live in an easy, indolent way, 
												taking up no cross, enduring no 
												hardship. But how is this, that 
												these good-natured, harmless 
												people are ranked with idolaters 
												and sodomites, those infamous 
												degraders of human nature? We 
												may learn hence, that we are 
												never secure from the greatest 
												sins, till we guard against 
												those which are thought to be 
												the least; nor indeed till we 
												think no sin is little, since 
												every one is a step toward hell. 
												And such were some of you — 
												Namely, in some kind or other; 
												but ye are washed — Delivered 
												from the guilt and power of 
												those gross abominations. Ye are 
												sanctified — Renewed in the 
												spirit of your minds, dedicated 
												to, and employed in the service 
												of God; conformed, at least in a 
												measure, to his image, and 
												possessed of his divine nature, 
												and this not before, but in 
												consequence of your being 
												justified. Or, Ye are 
												regenerated and purified, as 
												well as discharged, from the 
												condemnation to which ye were 
												justly obnoxious. See the nature 
												of justification explained in 
												the notes on Romans 3:21-22; and 
												its fruits, on Romans 5:1-5. In 
												the name of the Lord Jesus — 
												Through his merits, or his 
												sacrifice and intercession; and 
												by the Spirit of our God — 
												Creating you anew, and inspiring 
												you with all those blessed 
												graces which are the genuine 
												fruits of his divine influences, 
												Galatians 5:22-23. You ought 
												therefore, as if he had said, to 
												maintain the most grateful sense 
												of these important blessings 
												which God hath conferred upon 
												you, to stand at the utmost 
												distance from sin, and to be 
												tender of the peace and honour 
												of a society which God hath 
												founded by his extraordinary 
												interposition, and into which he 
												hath been pleased in so 
												wonderful a manner to bring even 
												you, who were in a most infamous 
												and deplorable state.
 
 Verses 12-14
 1 Corinthians 6:12-14. All 
												things — That are indifferent in 
												their own nature, and neither 
												commanded nor forbidden; are 
												lawful unto me — Or, as some 
												paraphrase the clause, All 
												things which are lawful for you 
												are lawful for me. Since the 
												apostle could not say, in any 
												sense, that absolutely all 
												things were lawful for him, the 
												sentence must be considered as 
												elliptical, and what is wanting 
												to complete it must be supplied, 
												according to the apostle’s 
												manner, from the subsequent 
												verse. But all things are not 
												expedient — Proper to be used, 
												in regard of circumstances; as 
												when they would offend our weak 
												brethren, or when they would 
												enslave our own souls. Although 
												all things — Of the above 
												description; are lawful for me, 
												yet I will not be brought under 
												the power of any — So enslaved 
												to any thing, as to be uneasy 
												when I abstain from it, for in 
												that case I should be under the 
												power of it. Meats for the 
												belly, &c. — As if he had said, 
												I speak this chiefly with regard 
												to meats; particularly with 
												regard to those offered to 
												idols, and those forbidden in 
												the Mosaic law. These, I grant, 
												are all indifferent, and have 
												their use, but it is only for a 
												time, for soon, meats, and the 
												organs which receive them, will 
												together moulder into dust. For 
												God will destroy both it and 
												them — Namely, when the earth, 
												and the things which it 
												contains, are burned. From this 
												it is evident, that at the 
												resurrection, the parts of the 
												body which minister to its 
												nutrition are not to be 
												restored; or, if they are to be 
												restored, that their use will be 
												abolished. Now — Or rather but; 
												the body is not for fornication 
												— As if he had said, The case is 
												quite otherwise with 
												fornication; this is not a thing 
												indifferent, but at all times 
												evil; for the body is for the 
												Lord — Designed only for his 
												service: and the Lord — In an 
												important sense; is for the body 
												— Being the Saviour of this as 
												well as of the soul, and 
												consequently must rule and 
												employ it. And as a further 
												proof that the body was made for 
												glorifying the Lord, God hath 
												both raised up the body of the 
												Lord, and will also raise up our 
												bodies, and render them immortal 
												like his.
 
 Verses 15-18
 1 Corinthians 6:15-18. Know ye 
												not that your bodies are the 
												members of Christ — Mystically 
												united to him, as well as your 
												souls, if you are his true 
												disciples, as you profess to be. 
												Shall I then take the members of 
												Christ — My body, which is 
												united to him, with its members; 
												and make them the members of a 
												harlot — United to her, and used 
												to gratify her sinful 
												inclinations? Know ye not — Need 
												I inform you; that he who is 
												joined to a harlot is one body 
												with her? But he that is joined 
												unto the Lord — By faith and 
												love; is one spirit with him. 
												And shall he make himself one 
												flesh with a harlot? Flee 
												fornication — All unlawful 
												commerce with women, with speed, 
												with abhorrence, with all your 
												might. Every sin that a man 
												doeth — Every other sin, except 
												gluttony and drunkenness, or 
												every other sin that a man 
												commits against his neighbour; 
												is without the body — Terminates 
												in an object out of himself, and 
												does not so immediately pollute 
												his body, though it does his 
												soul. But he that committeth 
												fornication — Or any kind of 
												lewdness; sinneth against his 
												own body — Pollutes, dishonours, 
												and degrades it to a level with 
												brute beasts; and perhaps 
												infects and enfeebles, wastes 
												and consumes it, which these 
												vices have a manifest tendency 
												to do. Inasmuch as the person 
												who is addicted to gluttony and 
												drunkenness sins against his own 
												body, as well as a fornicator, 
												and debilitates it by 
												introducing into it many painful 
												and deadly diseases: in this 
												prohibition of fornication, 
												those vices likewise are 
												comprehended, being indeed the 
												ordinary concomitants of it. And 
												the way to flee whoredom, is to 
												banish out of the mind all 
												lascivious imaginations, and to 
												avoid carefully the objects and 
												occasions of committing that 
												vice, and to maintain habitual 
												temperance in the use of meat 
												and drink.
 
 Verse 19-20
 1 Corinthians 6:19-20. Know ye 
												not, &c. — As if he had said, 
												There is another view in which 
												the baseness of this crime must 
												appear to you, Christians, in 
												consequence of your relation to 
												that blessed agent, the Spirit 
												of God. For your body is the 
												temple of God — Dedicated to 
												him, and inhabited by him; even 
												by that Spirit which is in you — 
												As true believers in Jesus, John 
												7:37-38; Ephesians 1:13. Which 
												ye have — Which you receive; of 
												God — As a most important, most 
												necessary gift, without which 
												you could not be Christ’s, 
												Romans 8:9. What the apostle 
												calls elsewhere, the temple of 
												God, (chap. 1 Corinthians 
												3:16-17,) and the temple of the 
												living God, (2 Corinthians 
												6:16,) he here styles the temple 
												of the Holy Ghost; plainly 
												showing that the Holy Ghost is 
												the living God. The two things, 
												as Whitby observes, necessary to 
												constitute a temple of God, 
												belong to the bodies of 
												believers: they are consecrated 
												to God, and he resides in them. 
												“Excellent, therefore,” says he, 
												“is the inference of Tertullian; 
												that since all Christians are 
												become the temple of God, by 
												virtue of his Holy Spirit sent 
												into their hearts, and 
												consecrating their bodies to his 
												service, we should make chastity 
												the keeper of this sacred house, 
												and suffer nothing unclean or 
												profane to enter into it, lest 
												the God who dwells in it, being 
												displeased, should desert his 
												habitation thus defiled.” And ye 
												are not your own — Even as to 
												your bodies, any more than your 
												souls. Both are God’s, not only 
												by creation and preservation, 
												but by redemption, being bought 
												with a price; and that 
												infinitely beyond what you can 
												pretend to be worth, even the 
												precious blood of Christ, by 
												which you have been redeemed out 
												of the hands of divine justice, 
												and through which, being put in 
												possession of the Holy Spirit, 
												you are rescued from the bondage 
												of sin and Satan, and have 
												become subjects and servants of 
												Christ, who has thus obtained an 
												eternal dominion over you: whose 
												you are too by a voluntary 
												donation of yourselves to him, 
												and a mystical union with him as 
												his temples. Therefore glorify 
												God in your body — By 
												temperance, chastity, purity; 
												and in your spirit — By faith, 
												hope, and love; humility, 
												resignation, patience; by 
												meekness, gentleness, 
												long-suffering, and universal 
												benevolence. Or, as the words 
												may with equal propriety be 
												rendered, Glorify him with your 
												body and your spirit; that is, 
												yield your bodies and all your 
												members, as well as your souls 
												and all their faculties, as 
												instruments of righteousness to 
												God: or devote and employ all 
												you have, and all you are, 
												entirely, unreservedly, and for 
												ever, to his glory.
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