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1st Corinthians
Chapter 5

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1st Corinthians Chapter
Five
Commentary by Ron Beckham

Verse 1.  "It is actually reported that there is immorality among you, and immorality of such a kind as does not exist even among the Gentiles, that someone has his father's wife.

Our "modern" standards of morality are not very high (and are getting lower).  Studying this verse, I remembered all the "flack" of a few years ago, about the actor Woody Allen and his stepdaughter.  They allegedly had a sexual relationship and most people did believe this was very bad behavior.  I do notice that nobody seems to talk about it much any more, or even care.  And he is continuing to make movies that people pay to see.  Jimmy Swaggart the evangelist (remember him?) had a much smaller ministry, last I heard, but nobody seems to care about his behavior either.  We ALL can fall and must look to God continually.

Paul had received the news about the man and his (step?) mother from "those of Chloe’s household" (1:11) but the Greek phrase "it is…reported" implies "it is NOTORIOUS" that there is uncleanness among you.  This kind of activity shocked even non-Christians of the day.  Cicero (not a Christian) called this kind of behavior "a crime" and said about it, "Oh incredible wickedness, unheard of in all experience…" Rumors were flying around about the Emperor Nero, in relation to similar behavior, and the nation was shocked.  This was a crime no matter who did it. And even if it was regarded as a "lesser sin," remember that James informed us that if we are guilty of one sin, we are guilty of them all (James 2:10).

Such behavior is CURSED in Scripture. In Deuteronomy 27:20, it is reported "Cursed is the one who lies with his father’s wife, because he has uncovered his father’s bed."  That is to say, he has brought shame to his father.   Many years ago, a man confided to me he had "lain" with his father-in-law’s wife.  He was filled with tremendous guilt, which had led directly to his own eventual divorce.

Note that the socially immoral find their way into churches.  I always look at the church as a sort of hospital for sinners, and often a person with a serious infectious disease is kept away from other patients in a hospital.  Occasionally, such a person finds his way into the wrong hospital ward.  Those who are in Christ generally must be kept separate from the so-called "Christian" who is an active sinner --- just like a bad piece of fruit, such a person infects others.  J. Vernon McGee said that "a pure church is a powerful church, and an impure church is not powerful."  We only have to look around and see that there is comparatively little power in our churches today.

Verse 2.  "You have become arrogant and have not mourned instead, so that the one who had done this deed would be removed from your midst."

I read an excellent mini-study on the relationship between arrogance and sensuality.   The conclusion was that the latter (sensual behavior) often springs from the former (pride).  Paul had an excellent perspective (he was looking from the vantage point of the Holy Spirit of God) which gave him great concern for the Corinthians he was writing to.  Behavior like theirs, left unchecked, would have spread to others in the church.

To be "arrogant" or "puffed up" (some translations), certainly implies PRIDE, the source of many a fall.  The verb contained in this verse is in the past aorist, which therefore makes it possible the deed was done in the past.   However, the context of this chapter would indicate it was still going on at the time of Paul’s letter.

One of the interesting characters within the Czar’s household in Russia, was Rasputin, called the "Mad Monk."  He actually taught the Czar’s household that they should sin more and more, in order that "Grace might abound."   This, of course, was specifically forbidden by Scripture, 1900 years before Rasputin was even thought of.  Paul said "God forbid" to such a practice (Romans 6:1).  We are saved to holiness, and not to sin.

It is amazing that the Corinthians tolerated such behavior in their midst.  We tend to miss the point, just like in Revelation Chapter 2, where the Church at Ephesus is unmasked by the Lord.  Those people were very busy, doctrinally sound, but it was pointed out they had "lost their first love."  They loved correct religious behavior and teachings, more than they loved other people, more than they loved God.   In Corinth, they were very religious, but outright sin was occurring right in front of them, and they were doing nothing to stop it.  Incredibly, they seemed to even be glad it was occurring.  They should have "mourned" instead.

Verse 3.  "For I, on my part, though absent in body but present in spirit, have already judged him who has so committed this, as though I were present."

Jesus, in Matthew 7, said "Judge not, lest ye be judged."  We all have "specks" in our eyes, and "logs" as well.  Our job is to use the Holy Spirit’s ruler (measuring device) and not our own, when judging the condition and needs of others.

Wordsworth examined this verse in the Greek and remarked that the passage "is as it were written with sobs" – implied are the tears of Paul, who cared for these people.  I knew a woman supervisor who was very protective of her workers.   Julie was like a mama lion, protecting her cubs.  Paul cared for his little ones, as well, and watched out for them.  Just like Paul and Julie the Supervisor, WE should care and watch out for those around us.

Paul had the Holy Spirit of God, in a way that was higher and more complete than we usually understand.  He did not need to be with the Corinthians, in order to understand very well their present condition.  The Holy Spirit is available to us, just like He was with Paul, and He longs to give us understanding.

Verse 4.  "In the name of our Lord Jesus, when you are assembled, and I with you in spirit, with the power of our Lord Jesus,"

It’s the "power of our Lord Jesus" that we need in life, and not our own.  Indeed, our "power" tends to interfere with the work of God in our lives.  There are, by the way, those who teach that "God is bound by law to answer our prayers, if we truly claim it in faith."  The power we need in life is found in GOD, and not directly in our prayers, or even in our faith.  Real "power," real faith, is found in Him.

Prayer IS applied faith (we would not pray if we did not believe), but the power we need is in GOD, not in us.  "Jesus is the Author and Finisher of our faith" (Hebrews 12:2) and so even our faith is God’s creation and not our own. It is Christ in us, when we are alone or when we "are assembled" that is important, and not anything of ourselves.  Faith is good, but good faith is actually HIS faith operating within each one.

Verse 5.  "I have decided to deliver such a one to Satan for the destruction of his flesh, so that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus."

In Luke 22:31, the Lord said to Simon Peter, "Satan has asked for you, that he may sift you as wheat." Such sifting drives away the chaff in our lives, and makes us see our need for the Grace of God.   You can reach a point in trouble, when you finally want NOTHING but God.  Note that Satan cannot operate in such a manner, without the express permission of God, and if our good God does allow suffering in your life, you can be SURE it is there for a good reason.

Satan certainly causes problems for people, as in Luke 13:16, where a woman was "bound" by Satan, for 18-years.  Here in this verse, though, there is something more than bodily discomfort --- The man who had lain with his father's wife (Verse 1) was committing sin, and such "carnality" is a cancer of the soul, which needs to be removed. The man apparently LIKED what he was doing; even gloried in it!  He needed an attitude adjustment.

Today we would not think much about being kicked out of a local church.  We could simply go to another church, perhaps right next door to the old one.  Cutting off the offender from the Church, however, no matter what we might think from a jaded 21st century perspective, is just the OUTWARD MANIFESTATION of something much deeper.  It is the outward symbol that GOD HIMSELF has cut off that person.  There is no escape from the Judgment of God, and this was a bitter remedy for the man who would pretend that unsanctified behavior was some kind of faith in God.

As Calvin said about this verse, this was "not for destruction but for edification."  Hymenaeus and Alexander (1 Timothy 1:20) were handed over that they might "learn to not blaspheme."  This man would learn that we are called, in Christ, to a life of HOLINESS.  Chrysostom, an early teacher, pointed out about this verse that Paul "laid down His (God’s) laws to the devil, telling Satan just how far, and how far only, he could proceed."   God would act in this man’s life with surgical precision, to SAVE the man; and save him He would.

Verse 6.  "Your boasting is not good. Do you not know that a little leaven leavens the whole lump of dough?"

The word "kalon" (in the Greek) is the word chosen as "good" and means, as far as it can be translated, "righteous" or "noble" in English.  Paul is pointing out that not only the man, but the whole community was in danger of drifting into unrighteousness, because of what they were condoning in the man's behavior.

Leaven is often used in Scripture as an example of the effect of sin in our lives.   Hugh MacMillan said "Leaven consists of a myriad of the cells of common green mould in an undeveloped state.  If a fragment of the dough with the leaven in it is put aside into a shady place, the cells of the fungus in the leaven will vegetate and cover the dough with a slight downy substance, which is just the plant in its complete form.  The swelling of the dough is due to the multiplication of the plant-cells, which happens with great rapidity."  Leaven is not "bad" in itself – it’s just used as a type or principle in Scripture.  In it, we see the effect of sin in our lives – it starts small, grows bigger, and then takes us over altogether."

The Church today is very much like the world.  The ideas of holiness and purity are addressed by believers, but are not generally followed.  Paul indicates we are to be pure, and if we are not pure, we are in great danger, for sin will rule us.  Just like the Jews would search their houses at Passover to find and discard even the smallest bit of leaven, let us search our hearts, and give up even the smallest bit of sin in our lives.

Verse 7.  "Clean out the old leaven so that you may be a new lump, just as you are in fact unleavened. For Christ our Passover also has been sacrificed."

The Jews commenced the Feast of Unleavened Bread with the slaying, roasting, and eating of a lamb (a figure of Christ).  They had been delivered from the tyranny of the Pharaoh centuries before, just as Christ has set us free from the tyranny and drudgery of sin.  The picture of our freedom in Him is presented in communion, where His total giving of Himself to us is acted out, so we might better understand the wonder of what has happened in our hearts, and lives.

Our Passover Lamb is Jesus Christ.  As Isaiah indicated, it "pleased the Lord to bruise Him" for you and for me.  He did not die for His own sins (He had no sin — Hebrews 7:26) but died for your sins and mine.  He was "without blemish" (1 Peter 1:19).  Receiving Christ is so good (to those who have tried Him) that describing it is compared to the receiving and eating of good food.  "Oh taste and see that the Lord is good" (Psalm 34:8).

Note that the original Passover Lamb was eaten on the edge of Egypt, in the wilderness.  The lamb was innocent and did nothing "wrong" that it should die.   The whole lamb was utilized – nothing was left.  We receive ALL of our Lord, including full salvation (not just the parts that please us), and we do so here in the "Egypt" of this earth.  We safely "taste and see that the Lord is good" right here in the presence of our enemies.

Note there were two parts to the Passover:  1) the sacrifice of an unspotted lamb, and 2) the feast itself.  Note the first part is done in Christ.  We have no need for an altar, for Christ has died for us.  Our life now becomes a "feast" in Him.  Our circumstances may sometimes be bad, but, as Corrie Ten Boom said, "Jesus is Victor" and He gives victory in you and in me.

The Passover was eaten with bitter herbs, representing sin.  Our sins are very bitter to a Holy God, and we should come to Him with sorrow, for we have offended Him greatly.  He tasted the bitterness of our sin for us, that we might never have to face its’ full impact.

Verse 8.  "Therefore let us celebrate the feast, not with old leaven, nor with the leaven of malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth."

There is a saying within 12-step programs: "Keep it simple."  We tend to make things unnecessarily complicated. "Sincerity and truth" is simple.   Instead of complexity, we need simplicity, which means – be yourself (in Him).

Notice this is not a FAST, it’s a FEAST, a time of joy.  We don’t lose, when we become Christians, we gain.  To put away "malice and wickedness" is to take steps, true steps for perhaps the first time, towards real happiness in life.   Note that the real nature of sin includes hypocrisy – in sin, we often seem to be one thing, but really are another.  To hide behind a mask is actually to be lonely, and to be truly alone is perhaps the worst ache of all.  "What a FRIEND we have in Jesus" goes the old song – Let Him in to your heart.  We FEAST on the Word of God; FEAST on the Holy Spirit of God; FEAST in Christ.  Taste and SEE that He is good.

Verse 9.  "I wrote you in my letter not to associate with immoral people;"

Apparently, 1st Corinthians is really 2nd Corinthians, and what we call the "2nd" would then be the "3rd."  I think it’s interesting the first letter did not survive.  The One who Selected the Scriptures we now enjoy, was the Sovereign Holy Spirit of God, acting through men and also through "circumstances."  We HAVE the letters and books that God intended us to read; the ones designed to bring us to the Son, Jesus Christ.  The "1st" letter was NOT kept, on purpose – God made the choices that created what we call the "Bible."

Not only are we not to keep company with immoral people (as in this verse), but I always recall Romans 1:32 in this context.  After a round of condemning specific sinful behavior in the 1st Chapter of Romans, we are told, "…those who practice such things are worthy of death, not only those who do the same but also those who APPROVE of those who practice them."  If you seem to be righteous but spend your time giggling over a questionable magazine, you’ve got a problem.  We are called to HOLINESS.  We need to not only talk like Christians – We are to WALK like our Lord.

Are you a salesman or business person who gloats in cheating his clients (or walking very close to the line with them?)  There are wonderful churches around, and great Christians in them, but we are living in a Godless time, and we must give thought to HOLINESS before God, both in behavior and in our associations.  There is a danger for all of us, that in our "modern" understanding, we often do not really know sin actually is!  We must turn to Him and receive the spiritual "eyes" that will cause us to finally see clearly.

Verse 10.  "I did not at all mean with the immoral people of this world, or with the covetous and swindlers, or with idolaters, for then you would have to go out of the world."

Joseph Exell said of Emperor Constantine that "he feared the Lord and served his own gods."  Constantine acted in a puzzling manner, forcing whole cities to be baptized on fear of death, with no apparent concern about changed hearts and changed lives in Christ Jesus.  Paul, had he been alive when Constantine ruled the Empire, would probably have written a letter or two about such a man.  People in the Church are supposed to have CHANGED lives.

Now, Corinth was a sinful place and it would have been impossible for any of them to make a living, except to do business with non-Christians.  Paul is saying it is reasonable for many of us to enter into the normal business community of this world.   It is not that we should be taken out of the world (John 17:15) but that the world should be taken out of us.

Does the "idolatry" in this verse include the "worship" of a TV, a car, a computer, or of another person?  If we give them our time and our devoted attention, it may well be that we actually become idolaters, extorting time from God that rightly belongs to Him.

To be "covetous" is to want something we do not have, to an unhealthy degree.  If we love others, we will be pleased for them.  To covet what others have is to NOT love them.   In the letter of 1 John, we learn that if we do not love each other, we do not love God (1 John 3:14).

Verse 11.  "But actually, I wrote to you not to associate with any so-called brother if he is an immoral person, or covetous, or an idolater, or a reviler, or a drunkard, or a swindler -- not even to eat with such a one."

A basic problem with the "Christian" who goes on willfully sinning after "conversion," is that he is a hypocrite, and neither God nor man likes a phony.   It’s time for every one of us to take off the masks we cling to, and simply be what we are.  Will we be misunderstood in our honesty?  Probably.  But it’s better to be honest than be a hypocrite.

When we associate with a "Christian" person who is a notorious sinner, we should truly look to the Lord our God, and the leading of the Holy Spirit.  I think there are times when He will lead us to extend a hand of comfort to the one who has fallen.  But, as in all other things, let us look to God and let HIM direct the extended hand THROUGH us.

Verse 12.  "For what have I to do with judging outsiders? Do you not judge those who are within the church?"

"Outsiders" or "those who are outside" (in some translations) was a very Jewish phrase, though written in Greek for this letter.  Those who were not a part of the Jewish community, were termed "outsiders" and treated accordingly.   Most of the American Indian tribes had a name for themselves that would translate as "the people."  Those outside the tribe were not fully people; as they were considered lesser forms of being (which explains why the tribes had such a hard time banding together against the European invaders).

Paul’s usage of words was consistent with his time and place --- Those who say these letters were written by someone else at a much later time, have to deal with the intense Jewishness of the author.  Paul FITS as the author of these letters.

We really don’t need to worry so much about the behavior of persons outside the Church.  A careful reading of Psalm 73, indicates that God will suddenly and permanently judge the "lost" person, and He does not need our help.  For them, this world will flit away like a dream, as they enter the awful reality of a Godless, lonely eternity.  Instead of attacking such people, pray for them – they certainly need our prayers.

Verse 13.  "But those who are outside, God judges.   ‘Remove the wicked man from among yourselves.’"

Paul was not highly regarded by many in Corinth.  Indeed, those who preach that we should live holy lives are not well thought of in our modern world, either.  Yet so many of our problems (and theirs) would simply go away, if our hearts and minds were pure before God and man.  What if a Godly holiness swept our land?  Why, we could safely walk the streets once again!

God is actively promoting moral purity throughout the Church.  We are to be like wholesome "food" for the rest of the world, bringing Christ within our very bodies, souls and words, to a starving populace.  But we tend to bring bad "food" because our hearts tend to be hypocritical.  Let us "purge out the old leaven," for we are to be "perfect," even as our Father in heaven is perfect.

It is HIS perfection we must exhibit, not some imitation of our own.  He who is in us IS perfect.  Let Him shine forth from you into this troubled world - today.

Ron Beckham, Pastor
Friday Study Ministries

www.FirstChurchOnTheNet.org
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"While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us" (Romans 5:8)
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