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												Verses 1-31 Corinthians 10:1-3. Moreover — 
												Or now; brethren — That you may 
												be induced to attend to the 
												exhortation which I have been 
												giving you, and may run your 
												Christian race with resolution, 
												zeal, and diligence, and not 
												become reprobates, consider how 
												highly favoured your fathers 
												were, who were God’s elect and 
												peculiar people, and 
												nevertheless were rejected by 
												him. They were all under the 
												cloud, that eminent token of 
												God’s gracious presence with 
												them, which defended them from 
												the Egyptians; (Exodus 14:20;) 
												being to the latter a cloud of 
												darkness, but giving light by 
												night to the Israelites; the 
												cloud which accompanied them in 
												their journeyings, and was 
												spread over them like a 
												covering, to screen them from 
												the heat of the sun, intense in 
												the deserts of Arabia, Numbers 
												14:14. And all passed through 
												the sea — God opening a way 
												through the midst of the waters; 
												and were all baptized, as it 
												were, unto Moses — Initiated 
												into the religion which he 
												taught them; in the cloud and in 
												the sea — Perhaps sprinkled here 
												and there with drops of water 
												from the sea, and from the 
												cloud, by which baptism might be 
												more evidently signified. But 
												whether or not, as the 
												Israelites, by being hid from 
												the Egyptians under the cloud, 
												and by passing through the sea, 
												were made to declare their 
												belief in the Lord and in his 
												servant Moses, (Exodus 14:31,) 
												the apostle very properly 
												represents them as being thereby 
												baptised unto Moses. And did all 
												eat the same spiritual meat — 
												That is, the manna, which was an 
												emblem of the bread of life; 
												that came down from heaven — 
												Namely, 1st, Of Christ’s flesh 
												and blood, or his obedience unto 
												death, which is meat indeed, 
												John 6:55. 2d, Of his heavenly 
												doctrine, whereby the souls of 
												the faithful are supported and 
												nourished, John 6:63. And 3d, Of 
												the sacramental bread which we 
												eat at his table. The word 
												spiritual is here used for 
												typical, as it is also 
												Revelation 11:8, where we read, 
												Which great city spiritually, 
												(that is, typically,) is called 
												Sodom and Egypt. That the 
												feeding of the Israelites with 
												manna had a typical meaning, 
												appears from Deuteronomy 8:3; 
												and that it signified true 
												doctrine in particular, appears 
												from its being called angels’ 
												food, Psalms 78:25. And it is 
												termed spiritual meat, because 
												the spiritual blessings which it 
												typified were the same with 
												those typified by the bread in 
												the Lord’s supper, which the 
												Corinthians ate.
 
 Verse 4
 1 Corinthians 10:4. And did all 
												drink the same spiritual — That 
												is, typical; drink — Namely, 
												typical of Christ and of the 
												living water, the divine 
												influence derived from him, John 
												8:37. For they drank of that 
												spiritual — Or mysterious; rock 
												— The wonderful streams of which 
												followed them in their several 
												journeyings for many years 
												through the wilderness. It must 
												be observed, water was twice 
												brought from a rock by a 
												miracle, for the Israelites in 
												the wilderness; once in 
												Rephidim, which was their 
												eleventh station, and in the 
												first year after they came out 
												of Egypt; of which miracle we 
												have an account, Exodus 17.; the 
												second time was at Kadesh, which 
												was their thirty-third station, 
												and in the fortieth year after 
												their leaving Egypt, Numbers 
												20:1. To both places the name of 
												Meribah was given; but the 
												latter was called 
												Meribah-Kadesh, to distinguish 
												it from Meribah of Rephidim. It 
												is the miracle performed in 
												Rephidim of which the apostle 
												here speaks. The water, it 
												appears, that issued from this 
												rock formed a brook, which 
												(Deuteronomy 9:21) is said to 
												have descended out of the mount, 
												that is, out of Horeb; (Exodus 
												17:5-6;) for before that miracle 
												there was no brook in these 
												parts. And it issued in such 
												abundance as to be termed a 
												river, Psalms 78:16; Psalms 
												105:41. Indeed, six hundred 
												thousand men, with their women 
												and children, and cattle, 
												required a river to supply them 
												with drink. And Horeb being a 
												high mountain, there seems to 
												have been a descent from it to 
												the sea; and the Israelites, 
												during the thirty-seven years of 
												their journeying, appear to have 
												gone by those tracts of country 
												in which the waters from Horeb 
												could follow them, till in the 
												thirty-ninth year they came to 
												Ezion-Gaber, (Numbers 33:36,) a 
												port of the Red sea, far down 
												the Arabian side, where it is 
												supposed the water from Horeb 
												went into that sea. The country 
												through which the Israelites 
												journeyed so long a time, being 
												watered by this river, produced, 
												no doubt, herbage for the cattle 
												of the Israelites, which, in 
												this desert, must otherwise have 
												perished. And that Rock was 
												Christ — A manifest type of him, 
												the Rock of ages, who, being 
												smitten in his death and 
												sufferings, poured forth streams 
												of redemption, grace, and 
												heavenly blessings, which follow 
												his people through all this 
												wilderness, and will end in 
												rivers of pleasure at the right 
												hand of God for ever.
 
 Verse 5-6
 1 Corinthians 10:5-6. But with 
												many of them — Although they had 
												so many tokens of the divine 
												presence with them, and enjoyed 
												such singular favours; God was 
												not well pleased — So far from 
												it, that he swore in his wrath 
												they should not enter into the 
												rest he had provided for them; 
												and therefore they were 
												overthrown in the wilderness — 
												With the most terrible marks of 
												his wrath. Even the whole 
												generation that came adult out 
												of Egypt died there, and 
												sometimes in such multitudes, 
												that the ground was overspread 
												with carcasses, as a field is in 
												which a battle has been fought. 
												Now these things — These 
												punishments; were our examples — 
												Showing what we are to expect, 
												notwithstanding our profession 
												of Christianity, if we act like 
												them; if, enjoying the like 
												benefits, we commit the like 
												sins. The benefits are here set 
												down in the same order as by 
												Moses in Exodus; the sins and 
												punishments in a different 
												order: evil desire first, as 
												being the foundation of all; 
												next idolatry, 1 Corinthians 
												10:7; 1 Corinthians 10:14; then 
												fornication, which usually 
												accompanied it, 1 Corinthians 
												10:8; tempting and murmuring 
												against God in the following 
												verses. To the intent we should 
												not lust after evil things — 
												Should not indulge irregular and 
												luxurious desires; as they also 
												lusted — After flesh, in 
												contempt of the manna, and 
												thereby brought the wrath of God 
												upon themselves, and were 
												consumed with pestilential 
												distempers, while the meat was 
												yet between their teeth, Psalms 
												78:30-31. Learn, therefore, as 
												if he had said, by what they 
												suffered, to cultivate that 
												temperance and self-denial which 
												I have just been recommending to 
												you.
 
 Verse 7-8
 1 Corinthians 10:7-8. Neither be 
												ye idolaters — By partaking of 
												their idolatrous feasts: by no 
												means join the heathen in these, 
												because if the persons whose 
												friendship you wish to 
												cultivate, tempt you to commit 
												idolatry, neither your superior 
												knowledge, nor the spiritual 
												gifts which ye possess, will 
												secure you against their 
												allurements: of these things you 
												have a striking proof in the 
												ancient Israelites. As it is 
												written — Exodus 32:6; Exodus 
												32:19, with relation to the 
												feast of the golden calf; The 
												people sat down to eat and drink 
												— Of the sacrifices and 
												libations which were offered to 
												the calf. He says, sat down to 
												eat, for in ancient times the 
												Hebrews always sat at meat: see 
												Genesis 43:33. It was in later 
												times only that, in compliance 
												with the manners of eastern 
												nations, they lay on couches at 
												their meals. And rose up to play 
												— Or to dance, as the word 
												παιζειν here signifies, in 
												honour of their idol. Dancing 
												was one of the rites practised 
												by the heathen in the worship of 
												their gods. And that the 
												Israelites worshipped the golden 
												calf by dancing, is evident from 
												Exodus 32:19, where it is said 
												of Moses, that he saw the calf 
												and the dancing, and his anger 
												waxed hot. Neither let us commit 
												fornication — A sin commonly 
												committed at the idolatrous 
												feasts among the heathen. And it 
												was the more proper for the 
												apostle to caution the 
												Corinthians against it, because 
												in their heathen state they had 
												practised it even as an act of 
												worship, acceptable to their 
												deities; nay, and after their 
												conversion, some of them, it 
												appears, had not altered their 
												manners in that particular, 2 
												Corinthians 12:21. As some of 
												them committed — With the 
												Midianitish women, when they 
												partook of the sacrifices 
												offered to Baal-peor: the sad 
												consequence of which was, that 
												there fell in one day three and 
												twenty thousand — By the plague, 
												besides the princes who were 
												afterward hanged, and those whom 
												the judges slew; so that there 
												died in all twenty-four 
												thousand, Numbers 25:1-9.
 
 Verse 9-10
 1 Corinthians 10:9-10. Neither 
												let us tempt Christ — By our 
												unbelief and distrusting his 
												providence, after the tokens he 
												hath given us to encourage our 
												faith, and engage our 
												dependance; as some of them — Of 
												the next generation; tempted him 
												— While he resided among them as 
												the angel of God’s presence, who 
												led them through the wilderness, 
												Exodus 23:20-21; Isaiah 63:9; 
												and were destroyed of serpents — 
												From the venom of which others 
												were recovered by looking at the 
												brazen serpent, which was so 
												illustrious a type of the 
												Messiah. “In the history, these 
												are called fiery serpents, 
												Deuteronomy 8:15; and Gesner is 
												of opinion that these serpents 
												were of the dipsas kind, (a name 
												taken from the thirst they cause 
												in those they sting,) which 
												Lucian hath described in his 
												treatise, entitled Dipsades, 
												where, speaking of the deserts 
												of Lybia, he says, ‘Of all the 
												serpents which inhabit these 
												solitudes, the most cruel is the 
												dipsas, no bigger than a viper, 
												but whose sting causes most 
												dismal pains, even till death. 
												For it is a gross venom, which 
												burns, breeds thirst, and 
												putrifies; and those who are 
												afflicted with it, cry as if 
												they were in the fire.’ For an 
												account of this serpent, see 
												Kolben’s State of the Cape of 
												Good Hope, vol. 2. p. 165.” — 
												Macknight. Neither murmur ye — 
												Under those dispensations of 
												providence, which may seem at 
												present very afflictive, 
												particularly on account of the 
												malice and power of your 
												enemies; as some of them 
												murmured — When they heard the 
												report of the spies, Numbers 
												14:2; and were destroyed of the 
												destroyer — The destroying 
												angel, who was commissioned by 
												one judgment after another to 
												take them off. The Jews 
												generally interpret this of him 
												whom they fancy to be the angel 
												of death, and whom they called 
												Sammael. See on Hebrews 2:14.
 
 Verses 11-13
 1 Corinthians 10:11-13. Now all 
												these things — These various 
												calamitous events; happened unto 
												them for ensamples — That we 
												might learn wisdom at their 
												expense, and not trust to 
												external privileges, while we go 
												on in a course of disobedience 
												to the divine authority. The 
												apostle’s meaning is, that 
												punishment inflicted on sinners 
												in a public and extraordinary 
												manner, makes them examples of 
												the divine vengeance to their 
												own generation, and to all 
												succeeding ones which have any 
												knowledge of their history. And 
												they are written for our 
												admonition — To warn us 
												Christians; upon whom the ends 
												of the world — Or, of the ages; 
												των αιωνων, are come — That is, 
												at the end of the Mosaic 
												dispensation, whose duration was 
												measured by ages or jubilees. Or 
												it may signify the last 
												dispensation of religion, 
												namely, that of the gospel, 
												which succeeded the patriarchal 
												and the Jewish. The expression 
												has great force. All things meet 
												together and come to a crisis 
												under the last, the gospel 
												dispensation; both benefits and 
												dangers, punishments and 
												rewards. And under it Christ 
												will come as an avenger and a 
												judge. Wherefore — As if he had 
												said, Seeing that so many who 
												enjoyed great spiritual 
												privileges, yet were punished 
												for their sins, therefore let 
												him that thinketh he standeth — 
												Or rather, that most assuredly 
												standeth, (for the word δοκει, 
												rendered thinketh, most 
												certainly strengthens, rather 
												than weakens the sense,) or is 
												confident that he is able to 
												resist temptation, and to 
												continue steadfast in the 
												practice of his duty; and that, 
												thereupon, he shall be secure 
												from punishment; take heed lest 
												he fall — Into sin and 
												perdition. There hath no 
												temptation — πειρασμος, trial, 
												of any kind, whether by way of 
												suffering, as the word means, 
												James 1:2; 1 Peter 1:6; and in 
												many other places; or of 
												inducement to sin, as the 
												expression signifies, James 
												1:13-14; but such as is common 
												to man — Usual and ordinary 
												among men: or, as the Greek word 
												more especially imports, 
												proportioned to human strength. 
												At the time the apostle wrote 
												this, the Christians at Corinth 
												had not been much persecuted; 
												see chap. 1 Corinthians 4:8. But 
												— Or and; God is faithful — To 
												his promise, and therefore will 
												not suffer you to be tempted — 
												Or tried; above that ye are able 
												— Through the strength which he 
												imparts, to endure the trial, 
												and stand in the evil day; but 
												will, with the temptation — By 
												which he suffers you to be 
												assaulted; make a way to escape 
												— Greek, την εκβασιν, a passage 
												out — That is, will provide for 
												your deliverance; that — If you 
												be not wanting to yourselves; 
												you may be able to bear it — 
												Yea, and may acquire new 
												strength by, and comfort from 
												the combat.
 
 Verse 14-15
 1 Corinthians 10:14-15. 
												Wherefore, my dearly beloved, 
												&c. — To understand what 
												follows, it seems necessary to 
												suppose that the Corinthians, in 
												their letter, put three 
												questions to the apostle 
												concerning meats sacrificed to 
												idols. 1st, Whether they might 
												innocently go with their heathen 
												acquaintance into the idol’s 
												temple, and partake of the 
												feasts on the sacrifices which 
												were eaten there in honour of 
												the idol? 2d, Whether they might 
												buy and eat meat sold in the 
												markets which had been 
												sacrificed to idols? 3d, 
												Whether, when invited to the 
												houses of the heathen, they 
												might eat of meats sacrificed to 
												idols, which were set before 
												them as a common meal? To the 
												first of these questions the 
												apostle answered, chap. 8., that 
												their joining the heathen in 
												their feasts on the sacrifices 
												in the idol’s temple, even on 
												the supposition that it was a 
												thing in itself innocent, might 
												be a stumbling-block to their 
												weak brethren, in which case it 
												ought to be avoided; but whether 
												such a practice were a thing 
												innocent or sinful in itself, he 
												did not on that occasion 
												consider. Here, therefore, he 
												resumes the subject, that he 
												might treat of it fully, and 
												answer the other questions 
												proposed to him by the 
												Corinthians relative to that 
												matter. Flee from idolatry — And 
												from all approaches to it, 
												whatever circumstances of 
												allurement or danger may seem to 
												plead for some degrees of 
												compliance. I speak as to wise 
												men — I use a rational argument, 
												which will bear the strictest 
												examination, and which I am 
												willing should be canvassed as 
												accurately as you please; judge 
												you, therefore, what I say — 
												What I advance, to show you that 
												the eating of the sacrifices in 
												the idol’s temple is, or leads 
												to, a real worshipping of the 
												idol: and that, therefore, you 
												will naturally bring guilt upon 
												your consciences, by such 
												associations and participations 
												of their idolatrous feasts.
 
 Verse 16-17
 1 Corinthians 10:16-17. The cup 
												of blessing — In the Lord’s 
												supper, the sacramental cup; 
												which we bless — Set apart to a 
												sacred use, solemnly invoking 
												the blessing of God upon it. Dr. 
												Macknight renders the original 
												expression, ο ευλογουμεν, for 
												which we bless God, a sense 
												which he thinks is sanctioned by 
												1 Corinthians 11:24, “where this 
												blessing is interpreted by the 
												giving of thanks. And he 
												considers it as denoting the 
												whole communicants’ joining 
												together in blessing God over 
												the cup, for his mercy in 
												redeeming the world through the 
												blood of Christ. Thus both Luke 
												and Paul, in their account of 
												the institution, express this 
												part of the action by 
												ευχαριστησας, having given 
												thanks. And hence the service 
												itself hath long borne the name 
												of the eucharist, or 
												thanksgiving, by way of 
												eminence.” Is it not the 
												communion of the blood of 
												Christ? — The means of our 
												partaking of those invaluable 
												benefits which are the purchase 
												of the blood of Christ? The 
												bread which we break — And which 
												was appointed in the first 
												institution of the ordinance for 
												this purpose; is it not the 
												communion of the body of Christ? 
												— In the like sense? That is, 
												the means and token of our 
												sharing in the privileges which 
												he procured by the offering up 
												of his body for us, to be torn, 
												broken, and put to death. For 
												we, being many, are yet, as it 
												were, one bread — One loaf, as 
												the word αρτος often signifies, 
												and is translated, Matthew 16:9; 
												where Jesus asks, Do ye not 
												remember the five αρτους, 
												loaves, of the five thousand? 
												and Matthew 4:3, Command that 
												these stones be made, αρτους, 
												loaves. The sense is, It is this 
												communion which makes us all 
												one: by partaking of one and the 
												same bread, we are united and 
												formed into one mystical body. 
												“This account of the Lord’s 
												supper, the apostle gave to show 
												the Corinthians, that as by 
												eating thereof, the partakers 
												declare they have the same 
												object of worship, the same 
												faith, the same hope, and the 
												same dispositions with the 
												persons whom they join in that 
												act of religion, and that they 
												will follow the same course of 
												life; so, in all reasonable 
												construction, by eating the 
												sacrifices of idols, the 
												partakers declare they are of 
												the same faith and practice with 
												the worshippers of idols, that 
												they have the same objects of 
												worship with them, and that they 
												expect to share with them in the 
												benefits to be derived from that 
												worship.”
 
 Verse 18
 1 Corinthians 10:18. Behold — 
												Consider, by way of 
												illustration; Israel after the 
												flesh — How it is with the 
												present Jews, the natural 
												descendants of Jacob, who 
												worship God by sacrifices, 
												according to the Mosaic law. He 
												says, after the flesh, to 
												distinguish them from the 
												spiritual Israel, consisting of 
												believers of all nations, called 
												the Israel of God, Galatians 
												6:16. Are not they who eat of 
												the sacrifices — Who feast upon 
												the remainders of the sacrifices 
												offered at the altar; see 
												Leviticus 7:15; 1 Samuel 1:4-5; 
												partakers of the altar — Do they 
												not join in the worship there 
												performed, and own the God there 
												worshipped? And is not this an 
												act of communion with that God 
												to whom such sacrifices are 
												offered? And is not the case the 
												same with those who eat of the 
												sacrifices offered to idols? 
												This argument, drawn from the 
												sentiments of the Jews, was used 
												with peculiar propriety, 
												especially in reasoning with the 
												false teachers at Corinth, who, 
												it seems, were Jews, and who, to 
												ingratiate themselves with the 
												Corinthians, are supposed to 
												have encouraged them to eat of 
												the idol’s sacrifices.
 
 Verses 19-22
 1 Corinthians 10:19-22. What say 
												I then — Do I, in saying this, 
												allow that an idol is any thing 
												divine? Or that which is offered 
												in sacrifice to idols is any 
												thing — Is a sacrifice to a real 
												deity? Or is made either better 
												or worse, or to differ from 
												ordinary meat, by being thus 
												offered to idols? You well know 
												that I intend to maintain 
												nothing of this kind: so far 
												from it, that I aver the things 
												which the Gentiles sacrifice — 
												To supposed deities; they 
												sacrifice to devils — For, 
												though I grant the idol is 
												nothing, yet those spirits that 
												sometimes dwell in the images of 
												these idols, and give answers 
												from them, are something: they 
												are demons, most wicked and 
												unclean spirits, defiling every 
												person and thing that has any 
												relation to them. We may observe 
												here, “The word δαιμωνια, 
												demons, is used in the LXX. to 
												denote the ghosts of men 
												deceased; and Josephus (Bell., 
												lib. 1 Corinthians 7:6) says, 
												demons are the spirits of wicked 
												men. It is therefore probable, 
												that the writers of the New 
												Testament use the word demons in 
												the same sense, especially as it 
												is well known that the greatest 
												part of the heathen gods were 
												dead men. The heathen worshipped 
												two kinds of demons: the one 
												kind were the souls of kings and 
												heroes, deified after death, but 
												who could have no agency in 
												human affairs; the other kind of 
												demons were those evil spirits 
												who, under the names of Jupiter, 
												Apollo, Trophonius, &c., moving 
												the heathen priests and 
												priestesses to deliver oracles, 
												greatly promoted idolatry.” — 
												Macknight. Such in reality, as 
												if he had said, are the gods of 
												the heathen, and with such only 
												can ye hold communion in those 
												sacrifices. And not to God — The 
												heathen in general had no idea 
												of God; that is, of an 
												unoriginated, eternal, 
												immutable, and infinitely 
												perfect being, the Creator and 
												Governor of all things. And I 
												would not ye should have 
												fellowship with devils — Or with 
												their votaries, either in their 
												worship, their principles, their 
												practices, or their hopes; — ye 
												who have at your baptism 
												solemnly renounced the devil and 
												all his adherents. For certainly 
												it is not a small sin, nor a 
												thing to be made light of, to 
												have fellowship with them. Ye 
												cannot of right — Or in reason, 
												you ought not, it is contrary to 
												your Christian profession so to 
												do; drink the cup of the Lord, 
												and the cup of devils — Ye 
												cannot have communion with both; 
												cannot reasonably make 
												profession of the worship of 
												God, (which you do in the Lord’s 
												supper in the highest instance,) 
												and also of the worship of 
												devils, (as you do in the idol 
												feasts,) these being so contrary 
												one to the other. Do we provoke 
												the Lord to jealousy — Namely, 
												by joining devils in competition 
												with him? or by thus caressing 
												his rivals? Are we stronger than 
												He? — Able to resist or to bear 
												his wrath? Can we secure 
												ourselves against his judgments, 
												when he comes forth to punish 
												for such sins?
 
 Verse 23-24
 1 Corinthians 10:23-24. All 
												things, &c. — He here comes to 
												speak of another case, namely, 
												the buying and eating privately, 
												meats which had been offered to 
												idols: are lawful for me — All 
												kinds of meats according to the 
												gospel. See on 1 Corinthians 
												6:12. But — Granting this, it 
												must also be acknowledged that 
												all such things are not, in 
												every circumstance, expedient — 
												For the reasons mentioned 
												before; (see on 1 Corinthians 
												8:9-13;) and all things edify 
												not others — Do not help them 
												forward in holiness. And we 
												ought certainly to consider what 
												may most effectually conduce to 
												the edification of our brethren, 
												and of the church of God in 
												general, as well as what may 
												suit our own particular 
												inclinations or conveniences; 
												for we may find good reasons for 
												declining many things as 
												insnaring to others, which, were 
												we to consider ourselves alone, 
												might be perfectly indifferent. 
												Let no man, therefore, seek his 
												own — Advantage or pleasure; but 
												every man another’s wealth — Or 
												weal, namely, spiritual; the 
												edification and salvation of his 
												soul, 1 Corinthians 10:33. Or, 
												let no man prefer his own 
												temporal profit or satisfaction 
												before another’s spiritual and 
												eternal welfare.
 
 Verse 25-26
 1 Corinthians 10:25-26. The 
												apostle now applies this 
												principle to the point in 
												question; and on the ground of 
												it, gives the following rules 
												concerning meats. Whatsoever is 
												sold in the shambles — Though it 
												were offered to idols before, 
												yet being now set openly to 
												sale, the idol is no more 
												honoured therewith, and it is 
												common meat; that you may buy, 
												and eat it in private, either in 
												a friend’s house or your own, 
												asking no question — Whether it 
												has been offered in sacrifice to 
												an idol or not; for conscience’ 
												sake — With a view to satisfy 
												your conscience respecting the 
												lawfulness of eating it. Or the 
												expression, for conscience’ 
												sake, may mean, lest any 
												needless scruple should arise, 
												either in your own or your 
												brother’s conscience, so that 
												you could not eat of it freely, 
												without doubting in yourself, or 
												giving offence to your brother. 
												For the earth is the Lord’s, as 
												the psalmist has expressed it, 
												Psalms 24:1, and the fulness 
												thereof — All creatures therein, 
												which were made for man’s use, 
												and are given us freely to enjoy 
												in Christ, 1 Timothy 4:4; 1 
												Timothy 6:17. And no demon hath 
												any power or dominion over them. 
												“By this argument the apostle 
												showed the Corinthians that 
												their knowledge and faith, as 
												Christians, ought to prevent 
												them from asking any questions 
												concerning their food, which 
												might lead the heathen to think 
												that they acknowledged the power 
												of their deities, either to give 
												or to withhold any part of the 
												fulness of the earth from the 
												worshippers of the true God.”
 
 Verses 27-30
 1 Corinthians 10:27-30. If any 
												of them that believe not — Any 
												heathen who lives in your 
												neighbourhood; bid you to a 
												feast — Invite you to his house; 
												and ye be disposed — To accept 
												the invitation; whatever is set 
												before you — At the 
												entertainment; eat, asking no 
												question — About its having been 
												sacrificed to idols; for 
												conscience’ sake. See on 1 
												Corinthians 10:25. But receiving 
												it, whatever it may be, as that 
												supply which Divine Providence 
												has then been pleased to send 
												you. But if any man say, This 
												food is part of what hath been 
												offered in sacrifice unto idols, 
												eat not, for his sake that 
												showed it — Whether he be a 
												heathen, who might thereby be 
												confirmed in his idolatry, or a 
												brother, who might otherwise be 
												insnared by thy example, and 
												tempted to violate the dictates 
												of his own mind; and for 
												conscience’ sake — For the sake 
												of his weak conscience, lest it 
												should be wounded by seeing thee 
												do what he judged to be 
												unlawful. To explain this 
												further, “The heathen often, in 
												their own houses, made an 
												ordinary feast of a part of the 
												sacrifice, see on chap. 1 
												Corinthians 8:1; to these 
												entertainments, the apostle told 
												the Corinthian brethren, they 
												might lawfully go when invited. 
												But on such occasions, if a 
												Christian domestic or slave, by 
												informing them that this or that 
												dish consisted of things which 
												had been sacrificed to an idol, 
												signified that they considered 
												their eating these things as 
												sinful, they were to abstain 
												from them, for the reasons 
												mentioned in the text.” For the 
												earth is the Lord’s, &c. — This 
												clause, inserted in our copies, 
												is omitted in the Alex. 
												Clermont, and other manuscripts, 
												and the Syriac, Arabic, and 
												Vulgate versions; and some other 
												critics think it disturbs the 
												sense. “But,” says Macknight, 
												“it renders the argument more 
												complete; for the meaning is, 
												The Lord, to whom the earth and 
												all its fulness belong, having 
												allowed men a sufficiency of 
												other wholesome food, no one is 
												under any necessity of offending 
												those who are either ignorant or 
												scrupulous, by eating a 
												particular kind.” Conscience, I 
												say, not thine own — I speak of 
												his conscience, not thine, lest 
												it be troubled, and his mind be 
												disquieted; for why is my 
												liberty judged by another’s 
												conscience — I ought not to use 
												my liberty so as to do that 
												which another man thinks in his 
												conscience to be evil, and so 
												judges me a transgressor for it. 
												Or, as Dr. Doddridge paraphrases 
												the verse, “I mean not thine own 
												conscience immediately, but that 
												of another person; for how 
												indifferent soever thou mayest 
												esteem the matter, thou art 
												obliged in duty to be very 
												cautious that thou dost not 
												wound and grieve that of thy 
												brother: but you will observe, 
												that I here speak only of acts 
												obvious to human observation; 
												for, as to what immediately lies 
												between God and my own soul, why 
												is my liberty to be judged, 
												arraigned, and condemned at the 
												bar of another man’s conscience? 
												I am not, in such cases, to 
												govern myself by the judgment 
												and apprehension of others; nor 
												have they any authority to judge 
												or censure me for not concurring 
												with them in their own narrow 
												notions and declarations.” 
												Others think it is an objection 
												in the mouths of the 
												Corinthians, and to be thus 
												understood: “But why should I 
												suffer myself to be thus imposed 
												on, and receive law from any, 
												where Christ has left me free?” 
												But the above interpretation 
												seems more probable, which 
												supposes that this and the 
												following verse come in as a 
												kind of parenthesis, to prevent 
												their extending the former 
												caution beyond what he designed 
												by it. For if I, by grace — The 
												divine favour; be a partaker — 
												Of the common gifts of 
												Providence; why am I evil spoken 
												of for my free and cheerful use 
												of that for which I give thanks 
												— As tracing it up to the hand 
												of the great Supreme Benefactor?
 
 Verses 31-33
 1 Corinthians 10:31-33. Whether, 
												therefore, &c. — To close the 
												present point with a general 
												rule, applicable not only in 
												this, but in all cases, see to 
												it that whether ye eat or drink, 
												or whatsoever ye do — In all 
												things whatsoever, whether of a 
												religious or civil nature, in 
												all the common as well as sacred 
												actions of life, keep the glory 
												of God in view, and steadily 
												pursue, in all, this one end of 
												your being, the planting or 
												advancing the vital knowledge 
												and love of God, first in your 
												own souls, then in the souls of 
												as many others as you can have 
												access to, or by any means 
												influence. Give none offence — 
												If, and as far as, it is 
												possible, neither to the 
												unbelieving Jews — By lessening 
												their abhorrence of idols; nor 
												to the unbelieving Greeks — By 
												confirming them in their 
												idolatry; nor to the church of 
												God — By making the ignorant 
												think you idolaters. Even as I — 
												As much as lieth in me; please 
												all men in all things — 
												Innocent; not seeking mine own 
												profit — Mine own temporal 
												interest or gratification; but 
												the profit — The everlasting 
												advantage; of many, that they 
												may be saved — By being brought 
												to and confirmed in that 
												religion, on which their eternal 
												happiness depends.
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